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#Lori Schory
mlclpuzzles · 10 months
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PZ412 - Here We Come
300 pieces; 18 x 24 inches
Depicts dogs and cats in Christmas-themed accessories bearing presents on a toboggan. A sign in the snow reads “DANGER: tobogganing sledding not permitted,” and birds and rabbits look on.
Artist: Lori Schory Company: SunsOut #: 796780352032 | item no. 35203
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thesixties1 · 1 year
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celebrateeachnewday · 5 years
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Artist Lori Schory
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theothepuzzler · 4 years
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April 8, 2020 - “Signs of Spring”, Sun’s Out, by Lori Schory
1000 pieces, completion time: ~14 hrs
Quarantine Puzzle #1
I got this the previous Christmas from my Grandma, so we decided this should be our first puzzle this season. 
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janephillipsblog · 2 years
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1000 piece shaped puzzle “Cooling Off” by Lori Schory. Challenging and happy it had all its pieces as it was a thrifty find from @winsyyc https://www.instagram.com/p/CaIOXNvvNAo/?utm_medium=tumblr
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mrscorpio · 4 years
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Download: http://bit.ly/DL-HF217 All my previous shows: http://bit.ly/ScorpioPodcasts Name/Artist/Album What You Gonna Ask For (Theo's Mix)/Theo Parrish, Lori, SilentJay, Simon Mavin, Perrin Moss, Paul Bender/What You Gonna Ask For Theme 10/Frits Wentink/Two Bar House Music & Chord Stuff Vol. 3 Dance of the Cosmos/Ras G & The African Space Program/Dance of the Cosmos Love Is 4 U/Byron the Aquarius/Astral Traveling Burn Me Up (The System) (Extended Mix)/Low Steppa/ Amy Douglas/Burn Me Up Cupid/Seven Davis Jr./Sev Was Here/ Pt. 2 Another Dimension (Smoothless Pumping House Remix)/Rick Wade/Another Dimension Harmony (6:23 Rage Mix)/Kerri Chandler meets T.C. 1993/Harmony (Remixes) Dot Dot Dot/Ouer/F Filthboi69/Frits Wentink/Space Babe Mirada (Jansons Remix) /Oliver Schories/Mirada House Dancer/Boddhi Satva/Deeply Essential Wealth/Modeselektor & Flohio/Who Else LesAlpx (Original Mix)/Floating Points/LesAlpx Numero 15/Dego/Too Much Follow Me (Skeptical Bootleg) /Steve Spacek/Follow Me Ill Bent/FaltyDL/FaltyDL x Benny Ill Vibrations (Zed Bias Remix)/Children of Zeus/Excess Baggage Bioluminescent (EVM128 Remix)/Paper Tiger /Bioluminescent It's True (Abjo Segue) #LeeMix/Aleisha Lee/It's True Tempted/30/70/Tempted It Makes You Forget (Itgehane) [Jay Daniel Remix]/Peggy Gou/It Makes You Forget (Itgehane) (Remixes) Pick Up Your Foot/Aleisha Lee x Footsteps/The Singles Toothbrush/Dorian Concept/Toothbrush / Booth Thrust Jailbreak the Tesla (feat. Aminé)/Injury Reserve/Jailbreak the Tesla (feat. Aminé) Cyclic Sun/Africa Hitech/93 Million Miles She Wakes Up / First Dimension/Salami Rose Joe Louis/Zdenka 2080 Tell Them (feat. Metro Boomin/ Moses Sumney)/James Blake/Assume Form Abracadabra ft. DeSean Jones & Khristian Foreman (Original Mix)/Waajeed/Hocus Pocus Natural Sci-Fi/Steve Spacek/Natural Sci-Fi Send me your tracks at Soundcloud: http://soundcloud.com/mr_scorpio Check out all your tracks on my show THE HOUSE FIRE/ every other Friday @6-8 PM GMT on InvaderFM: http://invader.fm Stream the podcasts at my Mixcloud: http://tinyurl.com/3kkfgzp  Friend me up on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/mrscorpio247 Look me up on Tumblr: http://mrscorpio.tumblr.com Shoot me your videos on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/MrScorpio Peace, Scorp
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trendingnewsb · 6 years
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Firsts: 20+ Powerful Women Who Were First
There are so many women who are changing the world, testing their limits and making this planet a better, more united place. Time Magazine took it upon themselves to celebrate these strong individuals in their latest project “Firsts”.
“Firsts” is a special multimedia project that features 46 women who broke a variety of barriers and have been the first in their field to accomplish a major milestone. Some of the names are well known, for example, Hillary Clinton, who is the first woman to win a major party’s nomination for president; Oprah Winfrey, who is the first woman to own and produce her own her own talk show; and Aretha Franklin, who is the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
The images were shot over the course of the year by a 22-year-old Brazilian photographer named Luisa Dörr using an iPhone.
Take a look at the portraits of women who tested and then broke boundaries that reshaped the world for decades to come below.
More info: time.com | Instagram
Geisha Williams – First Latina CEO of a Fortune 500 company
Williams took over as CEO and president of PG&E Corp. on March 1, 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Selena Gomez – First person to reach 100 million followers on Instagram
Gomez rose to fame on the Disney Channel and is an actor and singer.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mae Jemison – First woman of color in space
Jemison, who holds degrees in engineering and medicine, went to space on the Endeavour in 1992.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Eileen Collins – First woman to command a space shuttle
Collins became an astronaut in 1991 and served as a pilot or commander on four spaceflights before retiring from NASA in 2006.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Alice Waters – First woman to win the James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef
Waters opened Chez Panisse in 1971 and started the Edible Schoolyard Project in 1995.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Rachel Maddow – First openly gay anchor to host a prime-time news program
Maddow hosts the Emmy-winning Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Maya Lin – First woman to design a memorial on the National Mall
Lin won a public design competition for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial while she was an undergraduate student at Yale University.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Nikki Haley – First Indian-American woman to be elected governor
Haley served as South Carolina’s governor from 2011 to 2017. She is the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Gabby Douglas – First American gymnast to win solo and team all-around gold medals at one Olympics
Douglas won three gold medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympic Games and helped Team USA win gold at the 2011 and 2015 world championships.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Cindy Sherman – First woman to break $1 million in a photography sale
Sherman, who studied painting before turning to the camera, is known for her chameleon-like self-portraits.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Carla Hayden – First woman and first African American to be Librarian of Congress
Hayden, who ran the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore and served as deputy commissioner and chief librarian of the Chicago Public Library system, was the first African American to receive Library Journal’s Librarian of the Year Award in 1995.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ann Dunwoody – First woman to rise to four-star general in the U.S. military
Dunwoody, who served nearly four decades in the U.S. military, rose to become a four-star general in 2008 and retired in 2012 as commander of the Army Materiel Command.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Aretha Franklin – First woman to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Franklin has won 18 Grammy Awards. Watch Aretha Franklin’s performance of “Rock of Ages”.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ava DuVernay – First black woman to direct a film nominated for a Best Picture Oscar
DuVernay directed Selma, an Oscar nominee for Best Picture, and 13th, an Oscar nominee for Best Documentary Feature.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Barbara Walters – First woman to co-anchor a network evening news program
After more than 50 years in journalism, Walters retired from her talk show, The View, in 2014.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Katharine Jefferts Schori – First woman to be elected presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church
Jefferts Schori studied biology at Stanford University and has a Ph.D. in oceanography from Oregon State University.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Hillary Clinton – First woman to win a major party’s nomination for President
Clinton, who has served as First Lady, Senator and Secretary of State, was the Democratic Party nominee for President in the 2016 election.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Candis Cayne – First transgender woman with a major role on prime-time TV
Cayne, who started her career dancing in New York City, is known for her role on Dirty Sexy Money and her appearances on I Am Cait.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Danica Patrick – First woman to lead in the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500
In 2013, Patrick became the first woman to win the pole position at the Daytona 500.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Issa Rae – First black woman to create and star in a premium cable series
Rae is the author of The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl and stars on HBO’s Insecure, which she created.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Elizabeth Blackburn – First woman to become president of the Salk Institute
Blackburn, president of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies since 2016, won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her DNA breakthroughs.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ellen DeGeneres – First person to star as an openly gay character on prime-time TV
DeGeneres, an Emmy-winning TV host and comedian, has hosted her eponymous talk show since 2003.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Janet Yellen – First woman to chair the Federal Reserve
Yellen, formerly an economist at the University of California, Berkeley, is the chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Sylvia Earle – First woman to become chief scientist of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Earle is president and chair of Mission Blue, an organization that advocates for legal protection and conservation of the world’s oceans.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mazie Hirono – First Asian-American woman to be elected to the U.S. Senate
Hirono, who was born in Japan, was elected to Hawaii’s house of representatives in 1980 and later became the state’s lieutenant governor. She served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2007 to 2013 and has been a Senator since 2013.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ilhan Omar – First Somali-American Muslim person to become a legislator
Omar was elected on Nov. 8, 2016, to represent Minneapolis’ District 60B in the Minnesota house of representatives.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Jennifer Yuh Nelson – First woman to solo-direct a major Hollywood animated feature
Nelson’s Kung Fu Panda 2 (2011) is the second highest-grossing film directed by a woman, only recently surpassed by Wonder Woman (2017).
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Kathryn Smith – First woman to become a full-time coach in the NFL
Smith, who began her NFL career as a game-day intern with the New York Jets, left the Buffalo Bills in January 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Kellyanne Conway – First woman to run a winning presidential campaign
Conway founded her consulting firm, the Polling Company, in 1995 and became Trump’s final campaign manager in 2016. She is counselor to the President.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Loretta Lynch – First black woman to become U.S. Attorney General
Lynch served as U.S. Attorney General from 2015 to 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Lori Robinson ��� First woman to lead a top-tier U.S. Combat Command
In 2016, Robinson became the highest-ranking woman in U.S. military history as leader of U.S. Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Madeleine Albright – First woman to become U.S. Secretary of State
Albright served as U.S. ambassador to the U.N. from 1993 to 1997 and U.S. Secretary of State from 1997 to 2001.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mary Barra – First woman to become CEO of a major car company
Barra joined General Motors when she was 18 and has been its CEO since 2014.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Melinda Gates – First woman to give away more than $40 billion
Gates, who has degrees in computer science and economics as well as business administration, worked at Microsoft from 1987 to 1996. She is a co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mo’ne Davis – First girl to pitch a shutout and win a game in a Little League World Series
The Monarchs finished the Little League World Series in 2014 with two wins. Davis, now 16, has turned her attention to basketball.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Rita Moreno – First Latina to win an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony
Moreno is one of 12 people to have won an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony, known as an EGOT. She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2004.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Kathryn Sullivan – First American woman to walk in space
After 15 years at NASA, Sullivan became chief scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and later administrator of the NOAA from 2014 to 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Oprah Winfrey – First woman to own and produce her own talk show
The Oprah Winfrey Show, the highest-rated talk show in TV history, ran for 25 years.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Patricia Bath – First person to invent and demonstrate laserphaco cataract surgery
Bath was the first female African-American doctor to patent a medical device, the Laserphaco Probe, in 1988.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Nancy Pelosi – First woman to become Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
Pelosi, who represents California’s 12th Congressional District, has served in the U.S. House of Representatives since 1987. She was the Speaker from 2007 to 2011 and is now the minority leader.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Michelle Phan – First woman to build a $500 million company from a web series
Phan launched the beauty subscription company Ipsy and the beauty brand EM Cosmetics.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Rita Dove – First black U.S. poet laureate
Dove, who won the Pulitzer Prize for her poetry in 1987, served as U.S. poet laureate from 1993 to 1995.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Sheryl Sandberg – First woman to become a social-media billionaire
Sandberg is the chief operating officer of Facebook and was the first woman named to the company’s board of directors. She founded the nonprofits Lean In and Option B.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Serena Williams – First tennis player to win 23 Grand Slam singles titles in the open era
Williams, who has been playing professional tennis since 1995, has won 72 singles titles, 23 doubles titles and four Olympic gold medals.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Shonda Rhimes – First woman to create three hit shows with more than 100 episodes each
Rhimes created Grey’s Anatomy, Private Practice and Scandal, and is an executive producer of How to Get Away With Murder.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ursula Burns – First black woman to run a Fortune 500 company
Burns retired in 2017 as chair of Xerox, where she served as CEO from 2009 to 2016.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
from Viral News HQ http://ift.tt/2iJq6a1 via Viral News HQ
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mlclpuzzles · 6 years
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PZ076 - Bird Village
1008 pieces; 27 x 20 inches
Depicts an illustration of a tree with several elaborate birdhouses designed to look like village buildings.
Illustrator: Lori Schory Company: Ravensburger, ©2017 #: 4005556196913 / no. 19 691 3
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celebrateeachnewday · 3 years
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Artist Lori Schory
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trendingnewsb · 6 years
Text
Firsts: 20+ Powerful Women Who Were First
There are so many women who are changing the world, testing their limits and making this planet a better, more united place. Time Magazine took it upon themselves to celebrate these strong individuals in their latest project “Firsts”.
“Firsts” is a special multimedia project that features 46 women who broke a variety of barriers and have been the first in their field to accomplish a major milestone. Some of the names are well known, for example, Hillary Clinton, who is the first woman to win a major party’s nomination for president; Oprah Winfrey, who is the first woman to own and produce her own her own talk show; and Aretha Franklin, who is the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
The images were shot over the course of the year by a 22-year-old Brazilian photographer named Luisa Dörr using an iPhone.
Take a look at the portraits of women who tested and then broke boundaries that reshaped the world for decades to come below.
More info: time.com | Instagram
Geisha Williams – First Latina CEO of a Fortune 500 company
Williams took over as CEO and president of PG&E Corp. on March 1, 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Selena Gomez – First person to reach 100 million followers on Instagram
Gomez rose to fame on the Disney Channel and is an actor and singer.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mae Jemison – First woman of color in space
Jemison, who holds degrees in engineering and medicine, went to space on the Endeavour in 1992.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Eileen Collins – First woman to command a space shuttle
Collins became an astronaut in 1991 and served as a pilot or commander on four spaceflights before retiring from NASA in 2006.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Alice Waters – First woman to win the James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef
Waters opened Chez Panisse in 1971 and started the Edible Schoolyard Project in 1995.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Rachel Maddow – First openly gay anchor to host a prime-time news program
Maddow hosts the Emmy-winning Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Maya Lin – First woman to design a memorial on the National Mall
Lin won a public design competition for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial while she was an undergraduate student at Yale University.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Nikki Haley – First Indian-American woman to be elected governor
Haley served as South Carolina’s governor from 2011 to 2017. She is the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Gabby Douglas – First American gymnast to win solo and team all-around gold medals at one Olympics
Douglas won three gold medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympic Games and helped Team USA win gold at the 2011 and 2015 world championships.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Cindy Sherman – First woman to break $1 million in a photography sale
Sherman, who studied painting before turning to the camera, is known for her chameleon-like self-portraits.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Carla Hayden – First woman and first African American to be Librarian of Congress
Hayden, who ran the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore and served as deputy commissioner and chief librarian of the Chicago Public Library system, was the first African American to receive Library Journal’s Librarian of the Year Award in 1995.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ann Dunwoody – First woman to rise to four-star general in the U.S. military
Dunwoody, who served nearly four decades in the U.S. military, rose to become a four-star general in 2008 and retired in 2012 as commander of the Army Materiel Command.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Aretha Franklin – First woman to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Franklin has won 18 Grammy Awards. Watch Aretha Franklin’s performance of “Rock of Ages”.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ava DuVernay – First black woman to direct a film nominated for a Best Picture Oscar
DuVernay directed Selma, an Oscar nominee for Best Picture, and 13th, an Oscar nominee for Best Documentary Feature.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Barbara Walters – First woman to co-anchor a network evening news program
After more than 50 years in journalism, Walters retired from her talk show, The View, in 2014.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Katharine Jefferts Schori – First woman to be elected presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church
Jefferts Schori studied biology at Stanford University and has a Ph.D. in oceanography from Oregon State University.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Hillary Clinton – First woman to win a major party’s nomination for President
Clinton, who has served as First Lady, Senator and Secretary of State, was the Democratic Party nominee for President in the 2016 election.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Candis Cayne – First transgender woman with a major role on prime-time TV
Cayne, who started her career dancing in New York City, is known for her role on Dirty Sexy Money and her appearances on I Am Cait.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Danica Patrick – First woman to lead in the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500
In 2013, Patrick became the first woman to win the pole position at the Daytona 500.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Issa Rae – First black woman to create and star in a premium cable series
Rae is the author of The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl and stars on HBO’s Insecure, which she created.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Elizabeth Blackburn – First woman to become president of the Salk Institute
Blackburn, president of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies since 2016, won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her DNA breakthroughs.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ellen DeGeneres – First person to star as an openly gay character on prime-time TV
DeGeneres, an Emmy-winning TV host and comedian, has hosted her eponymous talk show since 2003.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Janet Yellen – First woman to chair the Federal Reserve
Yellen, formerly an economist at the University of California, Berkeley, is the chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Sylvia Earle – First woman to become chief scientist of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Earle is president and chair of Mission Blue, an organization that advocates for legal protection and conservation of the world’s oceans.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mazie Hirono – First Asian-American woman to be elected to the U.S. Senate
Hirono, who was born in Japan, was elected to Hawaii’s house of representatives in 1980 and later became the state’s lieutenant governor. She served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2007 to 2013 and has been a Senator since 2013.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ilhan Omar – First Somali-American Muslim person to become a legislator
Omar was elected on Nov. 8, 2016, to represent Minneapolis’ District 60B in the Minnesota house of representatives.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Jennifer Yuh Nelson – First woman to solo-direct a major Hollywood animated feature
Nelson’s Kung Fu Panda 2 (2011) is the second highest-grossing film directed by a woman, only recently surpassed by Wonder Woman (2017).
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Kathryn Smith – First woman to become a full-time coach in the NFL
Smith, who began her NFL career as a game-day intern with the New York Jets, left the Buffalo Bills in January 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Kellyanne Conway – First woman to run a winning presidential campaign
Conway founded her consulting firm, the Polling Company, in 1995 and became Trump’s final campaign manager in 2016. She is counselor to the President.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Loretta Lynch – First black woman to become U.S. Attorney General
Lynch served as U.S. Attorney General from 2015 to 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Lori Robinson – First woman to lead a top-tier U.S. Combat Command
In 2016, Robinson became the highest-ranking woman in U.S. military history as leader of U.S. Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Madeleine Albright – First woman to become U.S. Secretary of State
Albright served as U.S. ambassador to the U.N. from 1993 to 1997 and U.S. Secretary of State from 1997 to 2001.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mary Barra – First woman to become CEO of a major car company
Barra joined General Motors when she was 18 and has been its CEO since 2014.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Melinda Gates – First woman to give away more than $40 billion
Gates, who has degrees in computer science and economics as well as business administration, worked at Microsoft from 1987 to 1996. She is a co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Mo’ne Davis – First girl to pitch a shutout and win a game in a Little League World Series
The Monarchs finished the Little League World Series in 2014 with two wins. Davis, now 16, has turned her attention to basketball.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Rita Moreno – First Latina to win an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony
Moreno is one of 12 people to have won an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony, known as an EGOT. She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2004.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Kathryn Sullivan – First American woman to walk in space
After 15 years at NASA, Sullivan became chief scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and later administrator of the NOAA from 2014 to 2017.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Oprah Winfrey – First woman to own and produce her own talk show
The Oprah Winfrey Show, the highest-rated talk show in TV history, ran for 25 years.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Patricia Bath – First person to invent and demonstrate laserphaco cataract surgery
Bath was the first female African-American doctor to patent a medical device, the Laserphaco Probe, in 1988.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Nancy Pelosi – First woman to become Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
Pelosi, who represents California’s 12th Congressional District, has served in the U.S. House of Representatives since 1987. She was the Speaker from 2007 to 2011 and is now the minority leader.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Michelle Phan – First woman to build a $500 million company from a web series
Phan launched the beauty subscription company Ipsy and the beauty brand EM Cosmetics.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Rita Dove – First black U.S. poet laureate
Dove, who won the Pulitzer Prize for her poetry in 1987, served as U.S. poet laureate from 1993 to 1995.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Sheryl Sandberg – First woman to become a social-media billionaire
Sandberg is the chief operating officer of Facebook and was the first woman named to the company’s board of directors. She founded the nonprofits Lean In and Option B.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Serena Williams – First tennis player to win 23 Grand Slam singles titles in the open era
Williams, who has been playing professional tennis since 1995, has won 72 singles titles, 23 doubles titles and four Olympic gold medals.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Shonda Rhimes – First woman to create three hit shows with more than 100 episodes each
Rhimes created Grey’s Anatomy, Private Practice and Scandal, and is an executive producer of How to Get Away With Murder.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
Ursula Burns – First black woman to run a Fortune 500 company
Burns retired in 2017 as chair of Xerox, where she served as CEO from 2009 to 2016.
Image credits: Luisa Dörr
from Viral News HQ http://ift.tt/2iJq6a1 via Viral News HQ
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