At the college she managed to find an equation that was able to foresee the growth of cancer in the body. With this amazing discovery she made at only the age of sixteen was one of the youngest people at the time to awarded with a Merit Award from Mademoiselle Magazine in…
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.…
Marie Curie, originally Maria Sklodowska, is a renowned scientific figure in our world today. Born on November 7, 1867 in the city of Warsaw which was at the time under Russian control, Marie was bound to become something special from the start. Even though hardships were thrown her way at a young age, such as the death of her mother and one of her sisters, Marie pushed onward and overcame her grief. Although her family was poor, she was determined to persevere through the difficulty and make something of herself. She began work at a young age and her “flame-like” persistence to her work finally paid off at the age of 24, when she made enough money to go off and study in Paris. This proved to be a monumental step in her career. Although…
Under Franklin Roosevelt, she served as the U.S. secretary of labor, making her the first woman to serve as a U.S. cabinet member in 1933. She was also responsible for establishing the Social Security and Fair Labor Standards Acts. She made possible many demanding and pressing initiatives through Roosevelt, such as unemployment, child labor, insurance for old age workers and unemployment, as well as several efforts for public works. She made tons of progress happen in the way of social reform and without her the Great Depression surely wouldn’t have dissipated as…
His daughter continued her father’s legacy by majoring in chemistry. Many years later, she started a Queens College scholarship fund in his honor to assist minority students majoring in chemistry or physics. She studied at Columbia university she majored in Chemistry, after that she earned her Ph.D., When Marie graduated she did nothing but studied the human body. I was proud of her because she was the first woman to go to college most women weren’t allowed at a lot of colleges. What got her in science was influenced by her father, who had attended Cornell University with intentions of becoming a chemist, but had been unable to complete his education due to a lack of funds. His daughter continued her father’s legacy by majoring in chemistry. Many years later, she started a Queens College scholarship fund in his honor to assist minority students majoring in chemistry or physics. But she had some problems trying to get in school but she solved that problem by keep trying to accomplish her dream. She started teaching at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, she continued research on arteries and the effects of cigarette smoke on the lungs in April, 1947. That was good because she affected the world because she inspires other women to get their degrees. It also inspired me…
Eleanor Roosevelt once said, "In the long run, we shape our lives, and we shape ourselves. The process never ends until we die. And the choices we make are ultimately our own responsibility." Roosevelt lived this phrase vividly in her own life, as she actively worked for major causes until the day she died. Working constantly to further the women's movement and foreign relations, along with sharing information via the media to the public, Eleanor campaigned throughout her whole life to impact the modern world. She helped to create the world she wanted to live in, something she firmly believed in. Eleanor Roosevelt was an inspiring figure who benefitted society by aiding the women's rights…
“ There never will be complete equality until women themselves help make laws and elect lawmakers”.Susan B. Anthony known as Susan Brownell Anthony, was raised in a Quaker home,her family believed in the equality of the sexes and that women should receive an education. Elizabeth Cady Stanton,a friend of Susan, was a married women,who had children,she opted for marriage and family. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton together fought for the rights of women,abolition of slavery and for co-education to be established.…
Gloria Steinem was born on March 25, 1934 in Toledo, Ohio. She is known as a freelance journalist, an editor, a lecturer, and a social activist. As an early life, Steinem did not start school on a regular basis until she turned 11 due to many travelings. Her parents were divorced at this time, leaving the care for her…
Flipping through the pages of your history book, you see millions of words, hundreds of pictures, and overall the context on the world around you. In almost everyone book you will see many of the same “important” people and figures occur. For example, George Washington was America’s first President, commander in chief of the Continental army, and was known as the Father of His Country. Sacajawea is known as a Shoshone Indian, who acted as a geographic guide, diplomat, and interpreter for the Lewis and Clark expedition, and was issued by the U.S. mint, a circulating dollar coin with her resemblance. The image of Uncle Sam, with his white hair and top hat, became famous during World War I, recruiting posters, and is still a well known figure in today’s society. People like George Washington, Sacajawea, and figures such as Uncle Sam and hundreds of others are known for very different things, but are all taught and reviewed all over America. However, I am not writing to summarize your knowledge on what you were already taught, but to show you what history books forgot to teach you. Why are there a limited amount of people chosen to be in history books, and hundreds of others are left a mystery to the world? Other than the people that people already know about, what about the other hundreds of people that also contributes to America’s history? I am writing to open the minds of people, and to show them how they should begin to acknowledge and perceive people, even if they aren’t in history books; in hope that more people would consider a new edition of different people to be taught in American history. I am starting the first steps to this movement with explaining the story of Elie Wiesel.…
Eleanor Roosevelt was born October 11 1884 in New York City, NY. She was the first born child in her family then came three boys. As a kid growing up she was always sad and lonely. Her own mother called her a granny and other kids use to call her an ugly duckling. Her father was the only one who really cared about her until he became an alcoholic and left when she was four. Then two years later her mother passed away. Then another two years passed when…
Famous thinkers can come from all walks of life and can be from our generation and others. Reaching goals can be done in many ways. The similarity famous thinkers is that they are all share creative minds and are all creative thinkers. Creative ideas are the foundation of creative process (Goodman & Fritchie, 2011). Famous thinkers base their ideas on searching for solutions to problem, need, or the way others think or view specific issues. When I think of famous thinkers a vast number of people come to mind. Two thinkers that genuinely stand out to me are Steven Spielberg & Grace Hopper. My article will provide more details on the influence and accomplishments of these great thinkers.…
“You can chain me, you can torture me, you can even destroy this body, but you will never imprison my mind” (Gandhi). Gandhi talks about how when one is faced with incredible pain and suffering, their mind will also have freedom. In the memoir, Night, written by Elie Wiesel, the author and many millions of other victims, were presented with this very dilemma of trying to retain their individual thoughts despite everything they were facing. Throughout his memoir, Elie Wiesel uses memories of when he was faced with the pressures of extreme hunger and his experience with witnessing death to convey his struggle to maintain his humanity.…
Zora Neale Hurston was an American folklorist and author during the time of the Harlem Renaissance, best known for the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God.…
Zora Neale Hurston was an astounding Afro-American author who was recognized not for being the first Afro-American writer, but rather for her ability to bring forth her cultural language and imagery. If not for Zora's pioneering effort as a female black writer, the world of modern literature would have never seen the cultural insights of the African American culture in such a candid way.…
George Bernard seems to be in distress over his mother’s cremation. He seems to feel that this chosen path for her to stay at rest does not do her justice. She holds no tie to this world being a useless pile of ashes. At least having a body gives your loved ones something to come and visit at a plot in the ground. You have your unique mark, your resting place, the point you can stay at forevermore to decay. Whereas in a cremation the body is foreve3r gone, ashes are all that’s left, there is no distinction of which you are or what you were like as a person. In the text of the letter, George uses a chilling question, where he hears the voice of his mother ask him “Which of the two is heaps do you suppose is me?” This is in reference to after her cremation Shaw is looking at a pile of dust and another pile of dust that looks like an exact replicate, one of the piles however not the cremation of his mother is yet it is a pile of just that dust. The unsettling thought is that his mother asks him which one is her even he cannot point out the distinction between he two.…