006111. ^T" mr Your choice of teat'atcHwt Korean & Japanese Cuisine *Low Fat 'Low Calories 'Brown Rice Available Off All Dishes Over $4.25* 1219 Alder St. Across the street from Sacred Heart Hospital Wxxxxxa ora FREE DRINK with coupon “excluding sfxxuil menu Expires Noeember 22, 1999. 006/00 kzrz {oryou a/ ikz l/AlV4rSljy o{ OrzJO A Co>r\-tiki Tou*-: European Wonder 0 DAY TOUR OF 4- COUNTRIES FROM f04^ see lonDon, Amsterdam, Brussels, paris Travel SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY SUBJECT TO CHAISE WITHOUT NOTICE Council GEE: Council on International Educational Exchange University of Oregon In the EMU Building Eugene 877 1/2 East 13th Street Eugene (541)344-2263 ' -- The Campus GLENWOOD VOTED: • “Most Edible Before 9 a.m.” — Comic News • “Best Breakfast” — Eugene Weekly • “Best Dinner Under $8” — Eugene Weekly • “Best Breakfast” — Where The Locals Eat • “Best Place to Take Guests if You’re Paying” — Eugene Weekly • “Best Family Dining” — Eugne Weekly • “Best Breakfast” — In Town Magazine 007809 1340 Alder Street (next to 7-ii) • 2588 Willamette St. Recycle » Recycle ♦ Recycle • Rec ycle University leader dies at 50 ■ Hill will be remembered as a community-builder dedicated to getting kids to attend college By Maggie Young Oregon Daily Emerald Former University Upward Bound program coordinator Pearl M. Hill died of heart failure Wednesday at the age of 50. From 1972 until 1992, when funding was cut, Hill served as the director of the University Up ward Bound program, a federally funded program that encourages college enrollment to at-risk stu dents. “Pearl M. Hill will be remem bered as an indomitable spirit, a fierce, strong, proud and deter mined black woman,” Carla Gary, former Upward Bound counselor at the University and sister-in-law said. “She was a force to be reckoned with.” Bom on April 7,1949, Hill was raised in Portland, by her parents Vincent and Jessie Hill. As a high school student she took part in Upward Bound and had been involved ever since. She began a career in the Up ward Bound program as a coun selor in 1968 and continued working for the organization at various levels until 1992. She received her Bachelor of Science in Sociology from the University in 1971 and her Mas ter of Science in Counseling Psy chology in 1973. Hill was actively involved in the United Way Board, the Mar tin Luther King Jr. Planning Committee and the National As sociation for the Advancement of Colored People. On campus, Hill was a very important con nection for students, said Jan Oliver, associate vice president for institutional affairs and close friend. “Pearl was a natural communi ty-builder,” Oliver said. “She had a way of bringing people to gether.” The community doesn’t have another person who would be there for the kids, close friend Anita Johnson said. “She worked tirelessly for kids because she wanted to make sure that kids had the op portunity to get an education,” Johnson said. “She was a col lege-bound minded person. She wanted to make sure that every child could go to college and. succeed.” In 1979 Carla Gary, director of the office of multicultural affairs, worked under Hill as an Upward Bound counselor. She will re member Pearl for her sheer com mitment to the power of educa tion to change lives. “Her effect was so profound, it was like a ripple on a pond,” Gary said. “Her life’s work is an inspiration for all of us to make a difference in the lives of people we come into contact with, espe cially those who have less oppor tunity than the rest.” The funeral service will be held on Tuesday at 1 p.m. at United First Methodist Church, at 1376 Olive St. She is survived by daughter Marla Hill of Seattle, Wash., her brother Samuel G. Hill of Eu gene, foster sisters Renae Allen, and Michelle Allen of Portland and Denise Allen of Seattle, Wash. Students silent but not voiceless ■ Deaf and hearing impaired students face challenges in hearing oriented classrooms By Simone Ripke Oregon Daily Emerald Imagine sitting in a classroom in silence — silence, not because nobody is talking, but because you are deaf. Andrea Roberts, a junior ma joring in English, is one of only about five identified deaf stu dents on campus. A hearing aid that utilizes the little hearing Roberts has and reading lips closely enable her to get an edu cation designed for people who can hear. “Sometimes it can be embar rassing since I often times mis take what is said by people around me,” Roberts said. Her sense of humor, however, helps her laugh rather than get frus trated in those situations, she said. “Sometimes it doesn’t make sense at all and we produce some hilarious results,” Roberts said. Molly Sirois, assistant coun selor for students with disabili ties, said Roberts is the only deaf student at the University who currently takes advantage of in terpreting services provided by academic advising. Sirois said interpreting services is just one of the options deaf or hearing im paired students can use to access University programs. The size of the deaf communi ty on campus has declined over past years or students are choos ing not to identify themselves as deaf, which can be considered an entire culture of people, she said. Jo Larsen-Muhr, sign lan guage instructor at the College of Education, was born to deaf parents and knows that the word deaf encompasses an en tire culture rather than just lack of hearing. Larsen-Muhr learned how to speak English after learning how to communicate using sign lan guage. She wants to raise aware ness of sign language, deafness and the deaf culture because of the experiences she had as a child. She frequently tries to invite guest speakers, including Roberts, to her classes to re verse sides and have the hear ing students be the outsiders when she and the guest speaker communicate fluently in sign language. For Roberts, visiting Larsen Muhr’s classes provides an op portunity to communicate with students who have some sign language skills and are aware of the problems and isolation deaf students often face. Larsen-Muhr said that the hearing population usually ex pects deaf people to make efforts to communicate. Roberts learned to use sign lan guage after she experienced a lack of acceptance by other deaf people. Her parents raised her as a speaking deaf person with the help of cued speech, which in volves utilizing all the hearing and speaking abilities a deaf per son might have. “She [Roberts] has an idea of how it feels to learn sign lan guage as a second language,” Larsen-Muhr said. Sirois said that although acad emic advising makes every effort to accommodate deaf students, they have a harder time getting their higher education. She said that the education system targets hearing students, and it is there fore harder for deaf students to be accommodated in learning conditions not designed to meet their needs. “I don’t think that accommo dations are enough to make it an equal kind of opportunity,” Sirois said. However, many in structors do take extra measures to make learning for deaf stu dents easier by using visual pre sentations in their lectures, Sirois said. Sirois and Larsen-Muhr said that developing the deaf com munity on campus is like a “catch-22.” Deaf students look for a group of deaf people on a campus and in the community when choosing a university. However, the existence of deaf students on a campus is a pre requisite to draw more stu dents. Larsen-Muhr hopes that deaf people will have a broader choice of options on this campus in the future when it comes to services, the interpretation of speeches and events and tele phones. “Deaf people should not have to make a special request,” she said. RO. 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