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CELEBRITIES (page3)
Paula Poundstone
Comedian, Birmingham.
Born December 29, 1959 in Birmingham, Alabama,
Paula Poundstone's family migrated north to Massachusetts. After
dropping out of high school in Sudbury, MA, Poundstone began
to pursue her comedic career. Always brash and outspoken, Poundstone
quickly found herself a favorite on the comedy club circuit.
After being spotted by scouts, she began a series of appearances
on The
Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and The
Late Show with David Letterman. Her signature bar stool
stage prop appeared with her in two HBO
specials. In 1993, Poundstone was given the opportunity to have
her own television show. The Saturday night variety show only
lasted a few episodes, but Poundstone's career continued to flourish.
She traveled the country playing dates on college campuses and
local clubs.
Poundstone's career took a political turn
when she joined The Rosie
O'Donnell Show as a roving reporter. She was assigned
to cover the 1996 Republican Convention, and displayed her liberal
wit to national audiences. She continues in her roving role for
Rosie, and has parlayed her political jabs into a job with Mother Jones magazine.
The Poundstone Report is one of two monthly articles written
by Paula for the
liberal political publication. Poundstone can be contacted by
e-mail at the magazine: Paula@motherjones.com.
In June of 1997, Poundstone played her most
prestigious gig. She appeared with comedian Steven Wright in
a show at Carnegie Hall. Her latest foray into television is
with the Fox Broadcasting Company. Poundstone will star in a
sitcom to begin airing in the fall of 1998. She lives in San
Francisco where she is raising a foster child.
Heather Whitestone
Miss America 1995,
Birmingham
Born in Dothan, Alabama in April 1973, Heather
Whitestone lost her hearing at 18 months of age. A reaction to
a diphtheria-tetanus vaccine caused her to become deathly ill;
her life was saved by two antibiotics, but the medicines caused
nerve damage in her ears. Whitestone's parents struggled with
their daughter's deafness, and after much discussion settled
on an educational program for her. Acoupedics is an approach
to deaf education that teaches deaf children to use their residual
hearing to learn to speak. Whitestone's hearing was amplified
with a hearing aid, and she was taught to read lips and to speak.
The program helped Whitestone to live in the hearing world and
go to public school.
At an early age Whitestone discovered a love
of dance; dance used body language, not words, to express emotions.
Dance was Whitestone's refuge; she joined the Dothan School of
Dance to study ballet. By the age of eleven Whitestone was falling
behind in school. She convinced her parents to send her to the
Central Institute of the Deaf in St. Louis. There, Whitestone
learned sign language, and met deaf children from all over the
world. She returned to Dothan to attend Northview High. While
in high school, Whitestone endured her parent's painful divorce.
Her mother, Daphne Gray, took the children to live near the Gray
family in Birmingham. After a year at the Alabama School of Fine
Arts, Whitestone finished her education at Berry High School
(she had a 3.6 grade average).
After enrolling at Jacksonville Sate University,
where they have a special program to streamline deaf students
into regular classes, Whitestone began competing on the beauty
pageant circuit. After winning the Shelby County Junior Miss
pageant and the Miss Point Mallard contest, Whitestone competed
in the Miss Alabama Pageant. After three appearances (she was
first runner-up in 1992 and 1993), Whitestone finally took the
crown in 1994. She went on that year to win the 1994 Miss
America Pageant, dancing the ballet "Via Dolorosa"
for an admiring crowd. When Whitestone was crowned, September
14, 1994, she became the first deaf Miss America; in fact, she
was the first Miss America with a physical disability of any
kind.
Controversy has surrounded Whitestone since
her win. A debate has raged in the deaf community for years about
proper education for deaf children. While Whitestone and her
mother support acoupedics, others believe sign language is the
best way for deaf people to communicate. Whitestone has come
under fire for her beliefs, but continues to argue that speaking
provides more opportunities to deaf people than signing alone.
After her reign ended, Whitestone continued to travel promoting
her STARS program (Success Through Action And Realization of
your dreamS) and wrote her autobiography, Listening with My
Heart. A devoted Christian and political conservative, Whitestone
met her husband, John McCallum, when he was an aide to Newt Gingrich.
Whitestone and McCallum were married in June of 1996, live in
Atlanta, and continue to be politically active.
To
see more on Sign Language ... visit this web site
 
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