On February sixth, 1951 Henrietta Lacks, a black tobacco farmer from south Virginia, went to Johns Hopkins hospital to be treated for cervical cancer, she was treated by Dr. Lawrence Wharton Jr. He prepared her for her treatment and dilated her cervix, but before beginning the treatment he, without her permission, shaved two dime sized pieces of tissue one from her tumor and one from her healthy tissue then, he placed them in glass dishes. Those glass dishes were given to Dr. George Gey and his assistant, Mary Kubick, labeled them HeLa, because she combined the first two letters of Henrietta's first and last name. Dr. Gey, like many other scientist, had been trying to grow human cells outside of the body because it would help test the effects that medicine,…
Rachel Louise Carson was born on May 27 ,1907 , along the Allegheny River. Her father , Robert Warden Carson , was an insurance salesman whereas her mother , Maria Frazier , was a stay at home mother. At a young age Carson developed the hobby of reading . She particularly liked to read the “St. Nicolas Magazine”. Ironically , she later in her life publish multiple stories in that magazine. After elementary school Carson attended Parnassus High School , located in Kensington , Philadelphia. Four years later, she graduates from that school and earns a scholarship to Pennsylvania College for Women. She aims to major English and become an English teacher. In college she is inspired by her biology professor named Mary Scott Skinker and she changes…
Betty White is one of the most influential actresses of television history. Born as Betty Marion White on January 17, 1922 in Illinois, her family moved to Los Angeles, California during the Great Depression. She began her career by reading commercials for the radio in 1939 when she was seventeen years old. Betty White then started acting on television shows and movies. Since then, she has won several awards and continues to act. Betty White’s autobiography, If You Ask Me: (And of Course You Won’t), reveals an actress's life from her perspective. Betty White’s long life and lengthy career have made it possible to provide inspiration to everyone in the acting world and in the real world.…
Elizabeth Blackwell was the first woman doctor. She also created the first women’s medical school in America and the first Women’s infirmary. Elizabeth wasn’t just a doctor, but also a teacher and an author. She published Medicine as a Profession for Women in 1860, Address on the Medical Education of Women in 1864, and Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women in 1895.…
Shirley Chisholm first became active in politics in 1968 when she became the first African American to be elected in congress. She represented the New York State in the U.S. House of Representatives for seven terms. During her time, she focused on things such as education and social justice. She also helped form a black political organization known as the Black Caucus. She was also known for being the first African American woman to run for the Democratic presidency in 1972. Even though she was unsuccessful at winning the presidential election, she made history.…
Jane Addams was born into a wealthy family on September 6, 1860 in Cedarville, Illinois, and ever since then she enjoyed helping people in need she basically never left anyone behind. Although Jane Addams was mainly known for establishing the Hull House she also made a giant impact during the Women’s Rights Movement and was also a founding member of the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People. She was also the first women in United States history to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931. Not only did she accomplish that but she was also the Senator of Illinois for a while and was very close friends with Abraham Lincoln. In 1889 she and…
In the passage Silent Spring by Rachel Carson, the author uses some rhetorical strategies to get her argument across to the reader about "parathion ... [being] a universal killer." She uses ethos, logos, imagery and rhetorical questions to get the readers attention.…
Ruth was born in Brooklyn, New York, on March 15, 1933. Ruth graduated from Columbia Law School and then went on to become a staunch courtroom advocator for the fair treatment of women. In 1980 she was then appointed by President Carter to the U.S. Court of Appeals, was then in 1993 was then appointed to the supreme court by President Clinton. Ruth was the second daughter born of Nathan and Celia Bader. She grew up in a low income family who just made enough to get by. Her mother was a huge influence on her life, Celia never attended college but that never despaired…
Eleanor Roosevelt was born to Elliott Bulloch Roosevelt and Anna Hall Roosevelt in 1884. Eleanor believed she was the ugly duckling out of the three children and doubted if she would ever amount to much. However with encouragement from her Uncle Theodore Roosevelt and her Aunt Anna “Bamie” Roosevelt, she decided to attend a private finishing school. At the finishing school, she not only received a superb education but gained self-confidence from her teachers and classmates. At the age of twenty-one, she married her fifth cousin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Her husband became President of the United States in 1933, which helped Eleanor become a well-known political figure for the rest of her life. Despite her liberal views, she helped the country…
Betty Ford had great impacted on society. Betty Ford is a former first lady and the founder of the alcohol program. Although she had a good life in her childhood, when she get older she seceded to help people. Betty Ford was fighting for alcohol rehabilitation. After the Betty Ford Clinic opened, many people received help for their alcohol problems. Betty Ford was very influential in assisstancing people with alcohol problems.…
“Early one morning words were missing.” When I first read Short Talks, I had difficulty understanding why Anne Carson wrote about what she did, and thought that some words must have been missing. I was confused as to how they all fit together and it was only after further consideration that I came to see how the sections unite into one cohesive piece. Anne Carson’s Short Talks is a series of short reflections on different subjects that at first do not seem to be related, but through her use of cyclical images and consistent use of historical facts in fiction, the piece gains a cohesive quality that unifies the work.…
Anne Carson is a very intelligent and well rounded writer. When I first read Anne Carson’s “Short Talks”, I was seriously confused. At first, I thought she was an abstract writer that wrote just to write. But then I took a second look at her work and realized there was much more to it than just crazy jumbled ideas. “Short Talks” is a mixture of many elements. It has argumentation, facts, personal opinions, and an unconventional way of writing.…
Your diary made a prodigious impact on a numerous amount of people, including myself. It is ludicrous that the martinet, Adolf Hitler, would do something so truculent like that. It is a good thing that him and his followers were ostracized from society. The diary you kept when you were in hiding has affected a lot of people in different ways. First of all, it has informed many people about the life of a Jew in the depraved time of World War II. It shows how harsh it was for people if they wanted to stay alive in those times of apathy from the Nazi’s. It touches me how hard yall had to fight to stay alive in those cruel, cruel times. It is very blatant that this was a very depressing time for you, and all of the other Jews in the world during this time period. It wouldn’t be a great lifestyle to live cramped with another family in a small hideout.…
Jane Addams is known for Hull House, located in Chicago, IL. While this isn't her only contribution to society during her life, this is the one contribution that has probably made the biggest impact on society. Jane became interested in social issues when she went on a trip to England with two college friends. She was exposed to the poverty that was all around England's East End. Also, while she was in England, her and her friends came across Toynbee Hall, which was a settlement house that was used by students from Oxford and Cambridge to teach workingmen. After returning to Chicago, Jane and her friend, Ellen Gates Starr, decided to start looking into the possibilities of starting a settlement house in the run-down streets of Chicago. When they finally decided on a house, it was named the Hull House.…
I walked into the schoolroom, and I could see my children sitting in rows based on their grade. I had been asked by the teacher, Miss Ashbury, to come and talk about the remarkable journey that led me to the Narragansett, an Indian territory in the liberating colony of Rhode Island. I sat down in the creaky wooden rocking chair and began my tale:…