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1.
Sherry 8 month s ago
#1 following in the footsteps of #19 ?
       
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2.
Herbert 8 month s ago
Sherry,
No, Bobbi Gibb ran first. She was not registered, just jumped into the race at the start. The following year, Kathrine Switzer registered as "K. Switzer", so the race officials did not know her gender. Not until she started running did they figure out what was happening and the race director tried to tear her race number from her shirt. There is a better photo of a larger friend of hers blocking Jock Semple from reaching her
       
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3.
Andrew 8 month s ago
Herbert, It says Gibbs ran "exactly 50 years ago" which would have been 1973. Switzer ran in 1967 it says.
       
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4.
Herbert 8 month s ago
Andrew,
That's an old caption. Bobbi Gibb first ran in 1966
       
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5.
Ode 8 month s ago
#20 - I remember when that happened but I'd forgotten the details - that's amazing
       
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6.
Kaye 8 month s ago
#11 That doesn’t look like the queen to me.
       
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7.
Jessica 8 month s ago
Quote: Kaye
Stephen Hawking

Not that much resemblance with Queen Elisabeth.
       
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8.
Kaye 8 month s ago
Jessica,

Stephen Hawking is #10
       
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9.
Johannah 7 month s ago
Kaye,

That's Queen Anne, Queen Elizabeth's sister
       
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10.
Eudora 8 month s ago
#10 Jimmy Martin?
       
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11.
Eudora 8 month s ago
Eudora,
....#18, I mean.
       
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12.
Francine 8 month s ago
#1 Great for her and the telling of her struggles to be recognized are inspirational still. Yet nowadays there are those who would enter women'c competition as biological men, just so they can call themselves winners. Sad commentary.

#7 The thing is each generation in their age of teens to thirty do not believe that the previous generation understands anything or know what true troubles are. I know I did not until I was older. I am still not convinced that those who live in the first world really understand what a hard life is compared to many of the things I experience during my deployments. Being overweight and on welfare is not hard life in America. Being in a refugee camp where UN supplied food is taken by gangs and having groups trying to ethnically cleanse you is.

#9 I still remember watching outside my window at the smoke rising from the first tower when the plane hit the second one.

#14 I can only imagine the stories they would have told in life if they had a copy of that original picture back then

#20 Wow. You could not make something like that up because people would call that fake. Truly amazing.
       
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Middie 8 month s ago
#4 best Part is this forrest is activly altering the Rain pattern in the area and help sustain even more plants.

#7 funny idea BUT nobody can sustain themself AND Kids with a normal salary today like it was normal in1938.
So, shut up.
Roosevelt helped the middle Class and every President since 1982 Stole from them
About "solidarity" There is None Left over
I HATE this Shitty fake comparison that simplify Everything
       
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14.
Shel 8 month s ago
#11 British rock band Queen posing with actress and Queen Elizabeth II look-alike, Jeannette Charles, September 1974
       
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Fidelia 7 month s ago
Quote: Shel
Jeannette Charles
One band member of Queen is knighted , Sir.
       
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“When she applied to run in the Boston Marathon in 1966 they rejected her saying: “Women are not physiologically able to run a marathon, and we can’t take the liability.” Then exactly 50 years ago today, on the day of the marathon, Bobbi Gibb hid in the bushes and waited for the race to begin. When about half of the runners had gone past she jumped in. She wore her brother’s Bermuda shorts, a pair of boy’s sneakers, a bathing suit, and a sweatshirt. As she took off into the swarm of runners, Gibb started to feel overheated, but she didn’t remove her hoodie. “I knew if they saw me, they were going to try to stop me,” she said. “I even thought I might be arrested.” It didn’t take long for male runners in Gibb’s vicinity to realize that she was not another man. Gibb expected them to shoulder her off the road, or call out to the police. Instead, the other runners told her that if anyone tried to interfere with her race, they would put a stop to it. Finally feeling secure and assured, Gibb took off her sweatshirt. As soon as it became clear that there was a woman running in the marathon, the crowd erupted—not with anger or righteousness, but with pure joy, she recalled. Men cheered. Women cried. By the time she reached Wellesley College, the news of her run had spread, and the female students were waiting for her, jumping and screaming. The governor of Massachusetts met her at the finish line and shook her hand. The first woman to ever run the marathon had finished in the top third.”

 

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