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Anthony Gismondi: A wine festival for cohorts

Anthony Gismondi: A wine festival for cohorts
clintonnewsrecord.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from clintonnewsrecord.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

All about Lent — the 40 days before Easter | Explore | Awesome Activities & Fun Facts

All about Lent — the 40 days before Easter | Explore | Awesome Activities & Fun Facts
cbc.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbc.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

What It Was Really Like To Be A Cold War Spy

What It Was Really Like To Be A Cold War Spy By Sarah Crocker/Feb. 5, 2021 4:51 pm EDT Saying that the Cold War was a tense period of time is surely understating the matter. From the end of World War II, the allies of the United States and the Soviet Union quickly turned against one another in a battle for worldwide domination. The simmering conflict lasted until 1991, History reports, though the collapse had been preceded by years of de-escalating tensions between the two superpowers. Stakes were high during the height of the Cold War, however. For many, the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962, where it appeared most likely that the Cold War was going to turn dangerously hot, was a clear example of the danger posed by the opposite side. All of this tension meant, at least to officials, that every single advantage, no matter how small or how long it took to gain it, could mean the difference between maintaining the peace and dealing with World War III. This, then, is where the

Американцы сняли сериал о покушениях российских спецслужб на украинцев

Американцы сняли сериал о покушениях российских спецслужб на украинцев
gazeta.ua - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gazeta.ua Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Gordon Parks work is more important than ever

Gordon Parks was working as a porter for the Northern Pacific Railroad when he bought his first camera, a used Voigtlander Brilliant, at a pawnshop in 1937. Teaching himself to use the device, Parks quickly established his talent and range, shooting everything from fashion photographs to images of people living in poverty in Chicago’s South Side – images that, in his words, ‘convinced me that even the cheap camera I had bought was capable of making a serious comment on the human condition’. They convinced others, too, landing him a fellowship as a photographer documenting the work of the Farm Security Administration in 1942. Six years later, Parks made history as the first African American staff photographer and writer at

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