Search:
Login
|
Register
Submit Link
Submit Article
Latest Links
Latest Articles
Popular Sites
Contact Us
Advanced Search
i
HUBPRIME Directory
Article Details
CATEGORIES
Arts
Automotive
Blogs
Business & Finance
Computers
Entertainment
Games
Health
Home
Internet
Kids & Teens
News & Media
Recreation
Reference
Regional
Science
Shopping
Social Media
Society
Sports
Travel
FEATURED LINKS
online movies
Data Entry India,...
Interim Manager
3 Mobile Deal
SUB MENU
Page
STATISTICS
Active Links:
871
Pending Links:
1589
Todays Links:
11
Total Articles:
322
Total Categories:
21
Sub Categories:
237
A change life
Date Added: May 27, 2009 08:39:47 AM
Author:
skydejia
Category:
Games
Article
In January 1955, Jill Kinmont, then 19, seemed certain to make the United States Olympic ski team. Since age twelve, she had focused on this goal for aion kina. Throughout high school in Bishop, California, she had competed at most Western ski areas, including Mammoth Mountain, Sun Valley, Aspen, Jackson, and Brighton on aion online kina. She had won both the women's and the junior national slalom championships before traveling to Alta, Utah, to compete in the pre-Olympic tryout aion gold. As Jill says, "Skiing was it — everything — my world aion online gold.” Jill's world collapsed on January 30 when she skied off the Alta run and landed helpless on the slope of aion money. Her fourth, fifth, and sixth cervical vertebrae were broken cheap aion kina. For days, Jill hovered between life and death buy aion kina. By April, it became clear that she would be paralyzed from the shoulders down. Jill underwent rehabilitation therapy with cheerful determination. She learned to write, to type, and to feed herself. Once she had mastered daily living skills, she enrolled in the University of California at Los Angeles, where she studied art, German, and-English. After overcoming yet another personal tragedy, the death of her boyfriend in a plane crash, Jill graduated in 1961. By this time, Jill had chosen a new career goal: teaching elementary school children. Officials at UCLA, however, rejected her application for admission to the graduate school of education because of her paralysis. But she persevered, working with children in the UCLA Clinic School. When her family moved to Seattle, Jill was able to fulfill her new dream. She attended the School of Education at the University of Washington and began her new life's work as a teacher.
Ratings
Rate the article:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Average rating:
(0 votes)
Comments
No Comments Yet.
You must be logged in to leave a Comment.
Sponsor Banners
ADVERTISER
Your Link Here!
Your Link Here!
Your Link Here!
Your Link Here!
Your Link Here!