There are many great people in the history of the United States who were working towards freedom and prosperity. There are people who did a little bit more than others and as a result they were awarded with Presidential Medal.
Harvey Milk's historic race in 1977 as one of the world's first transparently gay chose authorities and its most unmistakable one-symbolized the flexibility to live with credibility to a large number of LGBT ladies and men around the globe. Harvey served not exactly a year in broad daylight office before his merciless death yet his life significantly changed a city, state, country and a worldwide group. His strength, enthusiasm and feeling of equity shook a nation and blended the very center of a put down and pushed out group, presenting new trust and another vision of opportunity.
Harvey Milk turned into the principal straightforwardly gay chose official when he was chosen to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Milk empowered gay, lesbian, swinger, and transgender subjects to experience life straightforwardly and he considered turning out was the main way they were able to alter society and accomplish social uniformity (Bellantoni Web).
The movie "Milk" got Sean Penn an Academy Award for Best Actor and spread the extremist's story as the gay marriage fight. Harvey's moving life has been the subject and motivation for Academy grant wining movies (1984 The Times of Harvey Milk and 2009 Milk), musical dramas, books including kids' books, plays, music, recompenses, announcements and beginning in 2010, a yearly authority legislative day of acknowledgment. Harvey demonstrated to every one of us what one individual, standing up noisily and obviously, against a savage societal dread and bias can perform. “He made a rich and distinctive message of trust and a continuing dream”, showing us how to make our own particular and abandoning them for us to figure it out (Bellantoni Web).
A couple of days after his capture, Mr. Korematsu was gone to in prison by a California authority of the American Civil Liberties Union who was looking for an experiment against internment. Mr. Korematsu consented to sue.
Katharine Hepburn was another activist who received Presidential Award. Another enormous piece of her centrality is the effect she had as a good example for ladies. Her special persona caught people in general's creative ability, and the parts she played mirrored another sort of lady: certain, autonomous and ready to stand her ground with a solid male accomplice.
Kate was incline and athletic and got a kick out of the chance to do her own tricks. In any case, she was additionally smooth and agile, brilliant on camera, with a face that emanated her emotions to the group of onlookers.
Much has been composed about her carrying on with her life "like a man" — mighty, sure, straightforward and decided — yet less about her empathy, capacity to snicker at herself, and commitment to family. She was as honorable in life as in the characters she played.
Hepburn was an effective and imaginative businessperson who assumed responsibility of her own profession during an era when most performers were contractually confined by the studios. She rejected tasks she didn't care for, purchasing out her agreement to abstain from doing lesser ventures. She adapted at an early stage that owning the rights to extends picked up her the ability to settle on imaginative choices. She additionally knew the nuances of strategic maneuver, such as increasing her 5'7" stature with high heels and upswept hair so she towered over studio managers. Hepburn spurned style's tenets, wearing slacks and tennis shoes when most ladies wore supports, slips, tights, strap belts and high heels. "Leggings are a development of the Devil," she proclaimed, and declined to wear them. She needed to be agreeable. Once, when RKO metal took away her slacks (to compel her to wear a skirt), she strolled around the part in her clothing until they returned them. Kate's jeans turned into an image of autonomy for ladies, freeing them to be more dynamic and have more options.
Works Cited
Bellantoni, C. Medal of Freedon for Harvey Milk. Washington Times. 2009. Web.
Goldstein, R. Fred Korematsu, 86, Dies; Lost Key Suit on Internment. Washington Times. 2005.
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