By Cassidy Ward, SyFy In the 2007 horror film House of Fears (now streaming on Peacock!), a group of teenagers enters the titular haunted house the night before it is set to open. Once inside, they encounter a grisly set of horrors leaving some of them dead and others terrified.
Author: DIVERSEability Community
By techyparas, Times Grid Rising up within the south German metropolis of Tuttlingen, Patrick Schilling could not use his native library.
By Gautham Nagesh, New York Times This article is part of Upstart, a series on young companies harnessing new science and technology.
By Zoe Weiner, Well + Good When Chelsie Hill was in a car accident at age 17, her “whole world was flipped upside down,” she says. A spinal cord injury left her paralyzed from the waist down, but as a lifelong dancer, she refused to let the fact that she was in a wheelchair get in the way of her passion. So two years later, in 2012, she started a wheelchair dance team called “The Rollettes.”
By Thomas Floyd, The Washington Post James Caverly was working as a carpenter in Olney Theatre Center’s scene shop some seven years ago when he laid the foundation for an unconventional undertaking: a production of “The Music Man” featuring a blend of deaf and hearing actors.
By TMZ Pro soccer player Carson Pickett made history on Tuesday … becoming the first player with a limb difference to hit the pitch for the United States women’s national team.
By Gaurav Sood, Yanko Design Everyone deserves a pair of sneakers that amplifies the craving for everyday success. That said, the power of comfortable and accessible footwear should not be exclusive. Thankfully Reebok really wants to help the physically challenged community with a gimmick-free collection of lifestyle and performance-oriented sneakers.
By YAHOO! Entertainment Dr. Hassan Akinbiyi, a leader in physiatry and rehabilitative medicine from Scottsdale, Ariz., is pleased to announce his partnership with Hanger Clinic, to provide Virtual Prosthetic Clinics.
By Mike Moen, Public News Service Graduation season is in full swing, and for those with disabilities transitioning to adulthood, traditional barriers still exist in securing employment.
By Jonathan Lehrfeld and Ariel Gans, USA Today Brendan O’Donnell, 43, grinned ear to ear as he took an eager customer’s chai latte order.