Irene Ulivi is the Wife Isaac Perez Recao, she is has a son from her previous marriage, in which it seems she has full custody of the child. Juan Rivera father of the child has suit the family and ask court to impede Ulivi and Isaac Perez Recao to move and settle in Costa Rica with the minor. Perez Recao adopted the child when he married Ulivi. since the he has been the provider and the partenal figure for the child. The lawsuit presented by Rivera explained that his child is at risk and therefore he considered that Irene should not move with minor to Costa Rica . According to Irene Ulivi lawyer, this act was considered to be orchestrated by Rivera former husband of Irene, as he hi himself is looking for revenge as Irene is demanding 63,…
Henrietta Lacks is the main character in “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.” Growing up in extreme poverty, Henrietta was a tobacco farmer and married her cousin David “Day” Lacks. They had 5 children before she was diagnosed with cervical cancer. Later, she died but her cells continued to live on. These cells lead to the important scientific discovery of “immortal” cells or cancer cells that continued to multiply. HeLa could grow practically anywhere and could fuse together with other cells creating plant and animal hybrids. These cells went on to invade other cultures and even caused millions of dollars in damage. In her family's mind, taking revenge for the doctors who took her cells without her permission. In her honor, October 11…
Wilma Rudolph Wilma Glodean Rudolph was born on June 23, 1940 to Ed and Blanche Rudolph. She was born in St. Bethlehem, Tennessee and raised in Clarksville, Tennessee. Wilma was born prematurely at 4.5 pounds, the 20th of 22 other brothers and sisters. She and her mother were not permitted to be cared for at the local hospital, because of racial segregation. The hospital was for whites only and there was only one black doctor in Clarksville. The Rudolph's budget was tight, so Wilma's mother spent the next several years nursing Wilma. She was a sick child that had many childhood diseases, one illness after another: measles, mumps, scarlet fever, chicken pox and double pneumonia. Wilma is a miracle child, she wasn't expected to live a long life.…
Yvonne Addie Riley was born on March 19, 1953 to the loving parents of OdessaDouglas Riley, and Charles Moses Riley Sr.. Yvonne received Christ at an early age at Holy Angels Catholic Church. She attended Holy Angels Catholic School and after graduating she attended a Wendell Phillips high school. Yvonne pursued a career in nursing at Sheridan Shores,and Atrium to her death. Yvonne was a mother figure to everyone she encountered with, her love extended to all. She had a heart of gold and hands of Steele. She was the life of the party, she knew how to make sure everyone had a good time. She enjoyed cooking, and had a warm smile and jokes that would light up the room.…
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Distressed, out of cash and in disguise, a missing Georgia bride-to-be turned up on a seedy stretch of Route 66 and told authorities Saturday she'd been abducted, then copped to the truth - she fled the pressure of her looming wedding.…
Eleanor was born on June 13, 1937 in Washington D.C. She graduated from Yale University Law School. She was an assistant director of the American Civil Liberties Union and defended the Freedom of Speech Rights between the years 1965-1970.Eleanorwas chairman of the New York Human Rights Commission in 1970-1977.She championed women’s Rights and anti-block-busting legislation. She went to Washington to chair the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission in 1977 to 1983.In 1990 she was elected as a Democratic non-voting delegate to the house from the District of Columbia .She was a regular panelist on the PBS women’s news program “To the Contrary.”…
Through the test of time, the military has transformed and improved as new lessons have been learned and as new technology has been implemented. The Navy has been the backbone of America’s fighting capability since its founding on October 13, 1775. Throughout its history, the fleet has served as a means of offensive and defensive power for the nation. Its versatility has allowed for the protection and growth of American land, commerce, and prestige. The Battle of Vera Cruz, Hampton Roads, and Manila Bay were essential to the rise of the United States of America because the battles demonstrated the importance of Army-Navy cooperation, technological adaptation, and military preparation.…
Ruth studied at Dillard University and later at Wellesley College. She was inspired by President Margaret Clapp to view traditional gender roles in a different perspective but she never forgot what her mother said about perseverance, a precious…
Rashia Fisher, better known as Rah Digga, is continually praised as one of the greatest rap MCs of all time despite nearly a decade of inactivity, well-known for her throaty vocals and scathing lines. Born December 18, 1974 in New Jersey, Rashia earned 1340 on her SATs, attended a private school in Maryland, and studied electrical engineering at the N.J. Institute of Technology, accomplishments that undoubtedly influenced her present-day determination to inspire children to stay in school. She says that she learned to rap by listening to Rakim, KRS-One, and Kool G Rap, fellow east coast emcees whose similar experiences may have drawn Digga to their music and style.…
Louise Erdrich was born on July 6, 1954 as the eldest daughter of seven children of a Chippewa Indian mother and a German-American father in Little Falls, Minnesota but she grew in Wahpeton, North Dakota. Louis Erdrich’s cultural identity was that she was of the Chippewa Indian tribe of the Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota from her mother side. At an early age Louise was encouraged by her parents to write stories and that her father would paid her a nickel a story and her mother made covers for her first books and Louise continued her writing by keeping a journal when she was in high school. Louise Erdrich is known for her first novel Love Medicine which won her the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1984, The Plague of Doves, which was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize, and the Round House which won the National Book Award for Fiction. “Louise Erdrich”, “Poetry Foundation”, “OEDB”…
"As we left Cronsville, Deborah thanked Lurz for the information, saying, "I've been waiting for this a long, long time, Doc." When asked if she was okay, her eyes welled with tears and she said, "Like I'm always telling my brothers, if you going to go into history, you can't do it with a hate attitude. You got to remember, times was…
November 3, 2013, is the day; a humble, stubborn, driven, strong and one of the bravest women I could ever meet, passed. Her name was Dorothy F. Hinote. During her life she lost two of her children, she went to beauty school and started her own business, she was placed in a nursing home where she was diagnosed with dementia, and she also faced cancer twice. These are only a few of the obstacles she faced. Some of them are good and some are bad. She could surpass all of these except for one. Dorothy showed great strength throughout her life, she showed how you can do whatever you want as long as you put your mind to it. Her advice will live through me for as long as I live.…
Do we own our bodily tissues? This question has came about in many different situations. One example is with the Lacks family. In 1951, doctors removed some of Henrietta Lack’s cells without consent and formed a line of immortal cells, her cells. The Lacks family had no idea about Henrietta’s immortal cells and didn’t find out for years. Care must be taken to protect the patients from having their cells stolen. But how much protection? Who should own the tissue after it has been removed from the patient? Giving someone the rights to sell bodily tissue is questionable. Neither researchers nor patients should have rights to sell any human tissue.…
I am sure that by now you have found out that Anne Hutchinson is on trial due to religious charges. Anne is saying that if you believe in God that you will have salvation instead of good works, and since she is a woman they are even more outraged that she is preaching the word of god, which is only a mans job to do.…
Rachel Louise Carson was born on May 27, 1907 in Springdale, Pennsylvania. What made Rachel Carson famous was her legacy and contribution to society which was alerting the world about the environmental effect of fertilizers and pesticides through her writings and books. This discovery affected society because after one of her books, “Silent Spring” came out in 1962, it proved her thesis about the harmful effects on certain pesticides and fertilizers. Rachel Carson’s discovery ended up having the pesticide DDT banned which ultimately probably saved many lives. Also, Rachel Carson’s discovery helped shape the growing concern for environmental help.…