Once, a journalist criticized Marilyn Monroe, saying that her beauty was only due to her expensive clothes. After that, the actress arranged a photoshoot in a potato sack.
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Muhammad Ali collects his winnings, which amounted to nearly 5.5 million dollars, after the fight with Foreman in 1974.
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If you were caught by the police for jaywalking, you had to stand in the "box of shame" for 30 minutes. South Korea in the 1970s.
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The ruins of Persepolis. The photograph was taken in the early 20th century during archaeological work at the site of this ancient Persian city, the capital of the Achaemenid Empire.
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Ottoman Empire, 19th century.
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As a result, 67 people were killed and over 500 were injured, Germany, 1988.
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IBM's Deep Blue computer became the first to defeat world chess champion Garry Kasparov.
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It was designed in such a way that it would ring at 4 a.m., and there was no option to set a different time.
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This was reported by the BBC, citing relatives of the actress. Smith was 89 years old.
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A British Army infantry regiment before being sent to war and the same regiment after its conclusion, 1914 and 1918.
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A fermata symbol above the rest literally means eternal silence.
The symbols "fff" (below the rest sign) stand for "Fortissimo — the loudest," and overall, it can be interpreted as "Deafening eternal silence."
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The postman delivered a letter to the address on the envelope, but the house was no longer there. England, 1940.
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Hachiko was found dead on the street not far from the station. He had terminal cancer. Japan, 1935.
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The man in the photo was named Allen Swift. He bought himself a Rolls-Royce Phantom I in 1929. For 77 years, he drove this car and refused to replace it with anything newer.
Allen became the person who owned any Rolls-Royce for the longest period in history. For this, Rolls-Royce awarded him a crystal "Spirit of Ecstasy" honorary plaque—the figurine mounted on the hood of all Rolls-Royce cars.
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One of the most famous hackers in the world
This is Kevin Mitnick. After being introduced to PCs at the age of 16, he hacked into the Pentagon's network and the air defense system of the state of Colorado. After serving five years in prison for hacking and being released, Mitnick erased the records of his prison sentence from the government registry and withdrew all the money from the account of the judge who sentenced him.
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Clyde’s jacket after he and Bonnie were ambushed by the police. He was hit by around 50 bullets, and she by about 60.
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28-year-old Marcy Borders, a survivor and employee of Bank of America, located in the World Trade Center.
September 11, 2001.
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The horrors of Hiroshima: the thermal radiation from the explosion burned the pattern of this woman's kimono fabric onto her back, 1945.
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The most shocking breach of royal protocol: Spice Girls members kissed Prince Charles. 1997.
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The mannequin head, made by John Anglin for the 1962 escape from Alcatraz prison, was crafted from a mixture of soap, toilet paper, and real hair.
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A Spanish farmer found a 3,000-year-old Iberian lioness sculpture in his field.
At a farm in Cañablanquilla, near San Sebastián de los Ballesteros (Córdoba, Spain), farmer Gonzalo Crespo was working in the family olive grove when his tractor hit a large stone.
When he stopped to check what he had hit, he was astonished to discover a large statue of a lioness capturing her prey.
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In the photo: "The Armistice Wagon," Compiègne Forest, November 11, 1918.
In it, the First Compiègne Armistice was signed between France, other Allies, and Germany, bringing an end to the hostilities of World War I.
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The photograph captures three flying cats, a bucket of spilled water, and Dali in mid-air. The inspiration for this work came from the discovery of the planetary model of the atom. It took 28 attempts to get the perfect shot.
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Chemists of the Polaroid Company, 1963
For 15 years, they tested over 5,000 different reagents to improve the process of instant color photography printing.
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