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Many of the Suffragettes of the 18th Century were imprisoned for going against the law to achieve women's rights. The imprisoned suffragettes went on hunger strikes; to avoid death liability the women were force-fed just like the illustration shown…

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This brief news blurb published in 1872 by The Englishwoman's Review announces the establishment of a woman's library in the French capital Paris, and further requests that any reader interested in furthering the cause of women's education is…

Forrest Gump, released in 1994, is the story of a simple man named Forrest. In the movie, Forrest enlists in the U.S. army during the Vietnam War, and is deployed overseas. It also follows his and other soldiers' experience of being a veteran in the…

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This is the frame left behind from the 1990 heist. The whereabouts of "Chez Tortoni" are still unknown.

The documentary Carries the viewer through the life and mind of Frederick Law Olmsted, the man hailed as an architecture of natural landscape and creator of national parks in America. Through the documentary we see into the mind of one of the…

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Published in the June 26, 1935 edition of the newspaper The Listener, George Bernard Shaw's essay "Freedom" is surrounded by additional text. It is preceded by blurbs ranging from vacation advertisements to charity requests. A plea for donations to…

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The Brothers travel from Louisville to Kentucky's second oldest city, Bardstown, which was also also the first center of Roman Catholicism west of the Appalachian Mountains in the original western frontier territories of the United States as noted…