1998: Lilly Ledbetter gets a memo from a unknown man that showed her salary, about $44,000 a year and it also showed the salary of her men colleagues' that were in a equal or less ranking in the job that were earning between $53,000 and $62,000. She knew that she was not being paid equally.…
Cooper was born in Shelbyville, Tennessee, on January 9, 1902, and raised in Nashville.[1] She moved to Atlanta, Georgia, in her early twenties with her husband, Albert Berry Cooper, a dentist,[1] and they had four children together.[2] During that time, she served more than fifty years in public work on the board of Gate City Nursery Association and also helped found the Girls Club for African American Youth.[3] Because there were no integrated Boy Scout troops in 1930's Atlanta, she wrote to the Boy Scouts in New York for help in starting Troop 95, Atlanta's first Boy Scout troop for African Americans.[4] When her husband died, Martin Luther King, Jr. sent Cooper a telegram; she also met with Coretta Scott King and saved photographs of the occasion.[5] Cooper first registered to vote on September 1, 1941. Though she was friends with elite black Atlantans like W. E. B. Du Bois, John Hope Franklin and Benjamin Mays, she didn't exercise her right to vote for years, because of her status as a black woman in a segregated and sexist society.[6]…
Lucy Stone was born on August 13, 1818, in Massachusetts. She defied her parents to pursue her studies in college and became the first woman from Massachusetts to earn a bachelor's degree. In 1848, Stone was a lecturer of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, an abnormal profession for a woman at that time. Throughout the 1850s, she had campaigned for women’s suffrage with Susan B. Anthony who was supposed her close friend. She also supported the Women’s National Loyal League, helped found the American Equal Rights Association and was elected president of the Stat Woman’s Suffrage Association of New Jersey. Stone didn’t want to get marry because she believed that laws at that time made her depend on her husbands. However, in 1885, Henry Browne…
The author of the book Autobiography of a Face was written by Lucy Grealy which also was the main character in the story. Lucy Grealy is a girl who was diagnosed with cancer at age nine. She had Ewing’s Sarcoma which is cancer in the jaw. Her jaw was deformed from all the surgeries. She always distanced herself from people because she thought she was ugly and ashamed of her face. She had to go through school with people looking at her, and jobs where she had to deal with kids who always would ask their mothers what’s wrong with her face. Lucy’s characteristics are shown by her words she says in the story; she was a very self-conscious person, always thinking about what people thought of her. Lucy was a strong going through chemo because of how tough it was, she was also a very lonely person because she had no friends and got picked on.…
Cited: Biography. (2013, n.d n.d). Lucretia Mott. Retrieved March 25, 2013, from Biography : http://www.biography.com/people/lucretia-mott-9416590…
For my project I chose to research Olivia Peguero. She was born in the Dominican Republic. She is an oil painter and sculptor.…
The sovereignty and goodness of GOD, together with the faithfulness of his promises displayed, being a narrative of the captivity and restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson, commended by her, to all that desires to know the Lord's doings to, and dealings with her. Especially to her dear children and relations. The second Addition [sic] Corrected and amended. Written by her own hand for her private use, and now made public at the earnest desire of some friends, and for the benefit of the afflicted. Deut. 32.39. See now that I, even I am he, and there is no god with me, I kill and I make alive, I wound and I heal, neither is there any can deliver out of my hand.…
Chance and coincidence played a large part in the play and in the deaths of Romeo and Juliet. At the beginning of the play, just before the Capulet party, Romeo finds out from a servant that his love, Rosaline, will be attending the party. If Romeo had not found out about the party then he would not have gone and he would not have met Juliet.…
chance played a major role in the outcome of each character. It impacts the paths of each…
Unit 306 - (HSC037) Promote and Implement Health and Safety in Health and Social Care…
Michelle Obama once said “you can't make decisions based on fear and the possibility of what might happen.” A similar choice was made by a young boy, in the short story The Bass, The River, And Sheila Mant by WD Wetherell. A tug-of-war occurring within the narrator between, the bass that represents who the narrator really is and what he enjoys doing, while Sheila Mant represents love and concealment of what he really is.…
Shakespeare writes many examples of chance throughout the play, and those instances influences the choice that both Romeo and Juliet made to end their lives. For example, it was chance that Balthazar told Romeo that Juliet’s body “sleeps in Capels' monument, and her immortal part with angels lives.” (5.1.18-19) Juliet was not actually dead, it was just coincidental that Balthazar was present for her “funeral”. Because of his belief that Juliet was dead, he goes to her in the tomb and makes the choice to kill himself. His sudden choice to end his life is an example of his youthful foolishness because he should have had some belief that Friar Lawrence had a plan, and that Juliet would not end her life so quickly, because she so desperately wanted to be with him just as much as he did. It was complete chance that Juliet wakes up to find out her “husband in thy bosom there lies dead.” (5.3.167) Because she could not imagine a life without her true love, and did not want to be placed in a sisterhood of holy nuns, she makes the choice to kill herself to be with Romeo in heaven. Both Romeo and Juliet make the conscious decision to kill themselves, but choice greatly influences their decision to do…
Lila Mae Watson faces drastically different challenges of modernity than those James Axton recognizes. Where Axton is an upper middle class caucasian man with the means and ability to move about the globe and hold a somewhat prestigious job, Lila Mae is the most talented Elevator Inspector in the city and can glean little to no respect from her peers and society due to Whitehead’s pre-civil rights setting. Lila Mae’s central test stems from her gender and race. The other African American or mixed characters in the novel, Fulton and Pompey, are also inspectors but both of them are male and “pass” as white ensuring them a degree of respect not granted to Lila Mae. Watson, however does not hide her lineage or race but yields to societal rules…
Compare the way the central characters are presented in ‘checking out me history’ by John Agard and ‘Ozymandias’ by Percy Bysshe Shelley.…
“All men are born equally free” (Salmon P. Chase). Nowadays, this simple statement is a part of our everyday thought. Back in the 1800’s, it was the complete opposite. African American’s were not treated equally; they were forced as slaves with no rights or opinions. Women also were not treated equally; they were deprived of rights that men had such as the ability to vote. Many people were outraged and fought out in a violent way, such as the civil war. Yet others had a different approach and fought out in a nonviolent way, otherwise known as civil disobedience. Lucretia Mott was a Quaker born in Nantucket, Massachusetts, who acted out in civil disobedience against the inequality of slaves and women. She set the foundation for the generations to come by raising awareness on anti-slavery and women’s rights. Her acts of civil disobedience eventually led to the women’s right to vote, and the freedom of slaves.…