Poster Created for the Diversity Committee Fall 2011 Culture Corner featuring The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. Henrietta Lacks’ cell culture spawned changes in medicine, science, ethics, society and the world. This Semester’s Culture Corner features selections from UT Libraries collection that highlight the areas effected by this one human and her immortal cell
During the academic year (2012–2013) students and faculty in the Farquhar College of Arts and Scienc...
Cells from the human body can live on long after the person they came from has died providing essent...
Skloot tells the moving story of the woman who was the source of the fi rst immortal cell line (HeLa...
Poster Created for the Diversity Committee Fall 2011 Culture Corner featuring The Immortal Life of H...
In 1951, a scientist at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, created the first immortal hu...
One of the most famous examples of cell lines surviving long after a person has died comes from a tu...
This presentation will cover who Henrietta Lacks was and how her cells were obtained and Hela by Joh...
Her name was Henrietta Lacks, but scientists know her as HeLa. She was a poor black tobacco farmer w...
In 1952 doctors took cells from Henrietta Lacks without asking. These cells launched a medical revol...
SummaryA book about Henrietta Lacks, source of the eponymous cells, is top of the list for the prest...
Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer in 1951 at 31, but a cell line from her tissues is still ali...
When she died in 1951, Henrietta Lacks was a thirty-one-year-old Black descendent of slaves living w...
Henrietta Lacks achieved fame and immortality in the world of science. In 1951, Johns Hopkins Hospit...
Prva besmrtna stanična linija, poznata pod imenom HeLa, bila je jedno u nizu važnih otkrića prošlog ...
Professor Leslie Meltzer Henry recommends The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.htt...
During the academic year (2012–2013) students and faculty in the Farquhar College of Arts and Scienc...
Cells from the human body can live on long after the person they came from has died providing essent...
Skloot tells the moving story of the woman who was the source of the fi rst immortal cell line (HeLa...
Poster Created for the Diversity Committee Fall 2011 Culture Corner featuring The Immortal Life of H...
In 1951, a scientist at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, created the first immortal hu...
One of the most famous examples of cell lines surviving long after a person has died comes from a tu...
This presentation will cover who Henrietta Lacks was and how her cells were obtained and Hela by Joh...
Her name was Henrietta Lacks, but scientists know her as HeLa. She was a poor black tobacco farmer w...
In 1952 doctors took cells from Henrietta Lacks without asking. These cells launched a medical revol...
SummaryA book about Henrietta Lacks, source of the eponymous cells, is top of the list for the prest...
Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer in 1951 at 31, but a cell line from her tissues is still ali...
When she died in 1951, Henrietta Lacks was a thirty-one-year-old Black descendent of slaves living w...
Henrietta Lacks achieved fame and immortality in the world of science. In 1951, Johns Hopkins Hospit...
Prva besmrtna stanična linija, poznata pod imenom HeLa, bila je jedno u nizu važnih otkrića prošlog ...
Professor Leslie Meltzer Henry recommends The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot.htt...
During the academic year (2012–2013) students and faculty in the Farquhar College of Arts and Scienc...
Cells from the human body can live on long after the person they came from has died providing essent...
Skloot tells the moving story of the woman who was the source of the fi rst immortal cell line (HeLa...