Arthur Ashe Research Paper

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Pages: 4

Arthur Ashe and His Struggle with AIDS AIDS is one of the most difficult diseases to fight; however, many people do not know anything about it. They know it is bad to have it, but they do not understand the seriousness of it. Arthur Ashe, one of the greatest tennis players, had AIDS himself.
To begin with there many details of the disability the details of the disability. AIDS stands for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, and what it does is it weakens the immune system leaving the body open to deadly disease (McDougall 86). The main cause of AIDS in the United States, is semen, or other bodily fluids (NIH). However, there are many other causes, one of them being sharing of drug needles (Lemer). The other causes are body piercing needles (WebMD), breast feeding (NIH), tattoo needles (WebMD), and blood transfusion (Gale). The symptoms are another important topic ,and one of them is being more open to opportunistic disease. Opportunistic diseases are diseases that people without AIDS are unlikely to get because of their immune system (NIH). There are not many symptoms of AIDS, but the main one is weakness of the
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Arthur lived with AIDS for five years of his life (St.James). He first discovered he had AIDS in 1988 ,and he had it until 1993. Ashe had died in 1993 of pneumonia (A&E). However, the pneumonia was not like normal, and the doctor stated that it was AIDS related (A&E). There are many ways why Arthur Ashe is famous. He was a great tennis player and was the first African-American to win the Wimbledon tennis tournament (Mcdougall 1). He had a stunning career and was the first African-American on the Davis Cup team (A&E). After seeing his records, Ashe was then asked to be a coach for the Davis Cup team ( McDougall 76). However, his career was not the only thing that made him famous. He was the author of A Hard Road to Glory; a book on the history of African-American athletes