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Wyoming Senator Al Simpson met with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in April 1991. Tensions were high between Iraq and the U.S. as Iraq had recently threatened Israel, gassed the Kurds, and killed a British journalist.
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Foreign correspondent Robert C. Miller risked life and limb to report on stories from the battlefields of World War II.
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Author Gregor Ziemer’s book Education for Death: The Making of the Nazi was based on his experiences in Nazi Germany in the 1930s. The book became the basis for two anti-Nazi propaganda films that were widely distributed in the U.S. in 1943.
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The 1985 hit movie Back to the Future bundled comedy, adventure, and science-fiction together. The film garnered multiple awards and was a critical and commercial success.
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The feminist newspaper Majority Report covered topics of interest to women in the 1970s and provides insight into the Women’s Liberation Movement of the same period.
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Madame Chiang Kai-shek, the First Lady of the Republic of China, spent six weeks in 1943 touring the U.S. During her visit she made a plea for American support of China in their war with the Japanese.
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Using color television cameras to broadcast surgical procedures from hospital operating rooms revolutionized medical education in the 1950s.
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The University of Wyoming hosted a visit from Former Soviet Union President Mikhail Gorbachev in October 2011. Gorbachev was one of the most transformational world leaders in the 20th century.
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Anthropologist Zdenek Salzmann spent years recording the language and music of the Northern Arapaho. The Morning Sunrise Song would have been sung just as the dancers were preparing to rest. It was typically the last song of the night.
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In 1923, David Delap and two friends managed to reach the top of the Grand Teton without using any ropes. At one point in the climb, they had to improvise, using a pair of pants to haul each other up over the tricky terrain.