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Offering visas for sale to the highest bidder is a controversial approach to managing immigration in the United States. Economist Julian Lincoln Simon favored the idea in a 1985 paper on the subject.
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Stella Hanau was called before the federal government’s Loyalty Board in 1948. She faced charges of holding subversive meetings and associating with communists. Ultimately, she was cleared of all charges, but the experience led her to resign from her position as an editor in the U.S. Department of Commerce.
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Emigrants moving West in the mid 19th century found entrepreneurs manning ferry crossings along their route. Charges for transporting a wagon varied widely, depending on demand.
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Beginning in 1915, the Canadian branch of the British Expeditionary Force in France published its own twenty-four-page newspaper. It provided a unique perspective on military life during World War I.
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The Wyoming Territorial Penitentiary housed convicts beginning in 1873. Prisoners were required to adhere to a code of silence.
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Dr. Lillian Heath was Wyoming’s first female physician. Although esteemed by her male colleagues, at times her female patients were less respectful. She posed as a male for late night emergency calls in and around Rawlins.
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Young Japanese American mothers in Heart Mountain faced unique challenges as they raised their families in an internment camp.
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The American Committee for Defense of British Homes organized in 1940 to collect donations of arms, ammunition, binoculars and more to supply the British Home Guard as they defended British shores against German invasion.
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The Air Force’s SR-71 aircraft was designed to fly fast and high, while performing reconnaissance missions abroad.
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The comic book creator had a long-standing relationship with the American Heritage Center