In Forgotten Founder: The Life and Times of Charles Pinckney, Marty Matthews begins with an introduction describing the process of finding the lost grave of Charles Pinckney over 100 years after his death. Pinckney's resting place is eventually tracked to an unmarked plot in St. Phillip Cathedral's graveyard in Charleston, but there is still some doubt about whether or not this grave is actually his. How can the life of one of the signers of the Constitution and a governor of South Carolina from an extremely powerful family end in an unmarked grave in unknown location? Charles Pinckney spent the majority of his life in public service to his state and country. During his 68 years, he served in the South Carolina Senate, the South Carolina House
In memory of Darry Curtis. Darry Curtis had passed away last wednesday from a disease called tuberculosis. Dally was the protective one in the “family”. He died on sunday October 1st, 1967. The gang used to rely on him for protection and cooking, until he got a deadly disease called Tuberculosis which was spread through saliva.
Connelly “laid his chest across my arms and used his body to put force on my arms and push” (App. at 124.) Carey claimed the therapist only stopped when he “broke out in tears and screamed out in pain.”
Anton Karazai, a notable pianist, committed "suicide" on May 16, 2006. He made a fortune performing his piano works over the course of his 90-year life. Mr.Karazai was discovered hanging from his chandelier two feet above the stool. Piano wires were tangled, draperies were tied over his neck, and there was general mayhem. After examining the police report and site images, I concluded that this case had a more nuanced story than one might think.
This isn’t just your typical surgery that usually takes a few hours to complete. It takes a few days before the dead is ready to be placed in the casket. The embalmer has many equipment to take on the challenge, “consisting of scalpels, scissors, augers, forceps, clamps, needles, pumps, tubes, bowls, and basins…” and “fluids, spray, pastes, oils, powders, creams.” Throughout the procedures Mitford named the dead body Mr. Jones. First Mr. Jones is laid on the undertaker’s morgue.
Nonfiction Critique: Phineas Gage: A Gruesome but True Story About Brain Science John Fleischman’s book, Phineas Gage: A Gruesome but True Story About Brain Science published by the Houghton Mifflin Company in Boston in 2002, is an intriguing retelling of the almost unbelievable event that literally changed the man named Phineas Gage. The author reconstructions for the reader the events that transpire before and after an iron spear-like object is rocketed through the head of Phineas Gage and how the man recovers, but also does not. Fleischman expertly walks along the line of scientific fact and interest and gruesome detail. He uses the fascinating story of Phineas Gage to analyze and deconstruct a very detailed and complex science surrounding the human brain, and makes the material readable and accessible to a younger age bracket. The use of scientific terms paired with simplistic explanations and occasional parenthetical definitions aid in the understanding of the difficult content at hand.
Section 1: Identification and Evaluation of Sources This investigation will explore the question: To what extent did surgical practices change from The Middle Ages to the Renaissance? Medical Theology and Anatomical practices from the 1400s to the 1600s are the two main subject areas for this investigation. History texts and online archives will be used to research details of the practices, especially the beginnings of human dissection, and psychological performances such as lobotomy. Source A is a secondary source chosen due to the detailed accounts of the transformation of science during the time period.
on the floor inside of the car. The police officer woke up the others and had them get out of the car first. According to Rhodes testimony, Tafero shot the police officer. Tafero said that Rhodes shot the officer and handed the gun to him so that he was able to drive. They stole the police car and fled the scene.
It completely amazes me. “ He is supplied by an advanced chemical industry with a bewildering array of fluids, sprays, pastes, oils, powders, creams, to fix or soften tissue, shrink or distend it as needed, dry it here, restore the moisture there. There are cosmetics, waxes and paints to fill and cover features, even plaster of Paris to replace entire limbs.” (2) The cadaver goes through many positions to get these procedures done which also amazes me because these surgeons take full control of a dead corpse and rearrange the body according to what needs to be done and how they do it with such precision (well, most surgeons do have “full” control of the person’s body, but still this is awesome).
These accusations are effortlessly believed by the court. “and without word nor warning’ she falls to the floor. Like a struck beast, he says and screamed a scream that a bull would weep to hear. And he goes to save her, and, stuck two inches in the flesh of her belly, he draws a needle out. “(Miller 74).
During the Renaissance health and medicine changed considerably . There were many important changes to the understanding of anatomy and surgery. Important doctors and surgeons discovered different ways of understanding to body and different ways of operating. For example how Vesalius in the 15th century dissected the human body to learn more about anatomy. During this essay I will investigate how far health and medicine improved during the Renaissance by focusing on anatomy and surgery.
achondroplasia (ACH) Achondroplasia (ACH) is a very rare (fewer than 20,000 US cases per year) yet the most common (occurring at one in every 15,000 to one in 40,000 live births) hereditary form of short-limbed dwarfism. Achondroplasia can be inherited from a parent with the disease, however most cases of ACH are because of new mutations in the FGFR3 gene. (Over 80% of people with ACH have parents who are unaffected).
They would shriek, as they were cut open alive, without anesthetic. They were stabbed onto a hook before being killed. They were frightened. They were chained up and yanked from their feet. They were moved by machinery and carts.
“They struck others in the shoulders, and their arms were torn from their bodies. They wounded some in the thigh and some in the calf. They slashed others in the abdomen, and their entrails all spilled to the ground. Some attempted to run away, but their intestines dragged as they ran; they seemed to tangled their feet on their own entrails (pg 76).”
"Prometheus Bound” is an oil painting done on canvas by a Baroque artist, Peter Paul Reubens. The painting which was completed in 1618 though started in 1611 is based on a character, the Titan Prometheus, in one of the Greek myths. Reubens sought the help of Frans Snyders, a famous animal painter who painted the eagle in the painting. The painting which measures 242.6 cm by 209.6 cm is currently available for public viewing in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. With its sensuous richness, color and movement, "Prometheus Bound” is typical of baroque painting that evokes strong emotions in the viewer.