
Laura Gomez
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
scientificamerican.com | Laura Gomez |Laura Gómez |Lorena Galliot |Samia Bouzid
After Andrea Evangelina Rodríguez Perozo died in 1947, the Trujillo regime did its best to erase her legacy—while, at the same time, it appropriated her ideas. Yet those who had known and loved Rodríguez in San Pedro de Macorís, where she spent most of her life, kept her memory alive, sharing stories of her kindness and her work. After the assassination of Rafael Leónidas Trujillo in 1961, Dominicans across the country started to recover her story.
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2 weeks ago |
scaddistrict.com | Laura Gomez |Laura Gómez |Edith Manfred Edith |Edith Manfred
Advice, Around SCAD, Local, SCAD Advice, Around SCAD, Local, SCAD Written by Edith Manfred. Graphic by Laura Garcia Gomez. There’s the famous saying that twenty seconds of insane courage can change your life, and while we may not all be Matt Damon meeting our fictional wives in the 2011 movie ‘We Bought a Zoo,’ those few seconds of courage can still get you a long way.
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4 weeks ago |
scientificamerican.com | Laura Gomez |Laura Gómez |Lorena Galliot |Samia Bouzid
Andrea Evangelina Rodríguez Perozo, the Dominican Republic’s first female doctor, got a warm welcome on her return to the country from Paris in 1925. And she went straight to work, introducing her new ideas about health care for women and children. She set up a new medical practice and managed to get farmers to provide free milk for poor infants. But her proselytizing about contraception and her work with prostitutes made even her friends uncomfortable.
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