Johnny Cash performing for prisoners at Folsom Prison, January 13, 1968.

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My dad and his VW 🐞 about to go explore the world circa 1994 March ish

What were you doing in March of 1994

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Richard "Dick" Harding Davis, circa 1907

"1900s Ideal Man" Richard Harding Davis embodied derring-do and masculinity. A novelist, journalist, and dapper man-about-town, he was a leading war correspondent, covering the Spanish–American War, Second Boer War, and World War I. His dramatic reports paired with his striking appearance: square-jawed, stylish, and always clean-shaven, setting a trend at the turn of the 20th century. Many leading writers admired him, and he inspired illustrator Charles Dana Gibson's "Gibson man." People of all genders would exclaim, "What a Dick!" His personality blended vanity with self-deprecation. "What I like most in men," he said, "is the ability to sit opposite a mirror at dinner and not look in it" — a trait he admitted to lacking. Davis died from a sudden heart attack on April 11, 1916, while on a telephone call a week before his 52nd birthday. Read more [here.](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Harding_Davis)

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70-year-old Ektachrome shots of the U.S. WWII effort

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Shaquille O’Neal inconspicuously disrupts an ongoing interview, 1990s

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Child playing Atari in his home 1982

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Elvis Presley and his parents 1937

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From a Ladies' Self-Defense Manual - Circa early 1900s

Lifting her umbrella swiftly, she strikes the ruffian's jaw. Alternatively, with a precise kick to the kneecap, she takes him down.

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American soldiers on their way home from World War II, 1945.

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The Exorcist turns 50 this year, released in theaters on December 26, 1973. Directed by William Friedkin, with a budget of just $12 million, it would gross $428 million and be nominated for nine Academy Awards

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Charles Dana Gibson, an American illustrator, working at his desk, around the early 1900s.

Charles Dana Gibson was a renowned American illustrator active during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He gained fame for synthesizing the "Gibson Girl," a symbolic depiction of the idealized Euro-American woman of that era. This figure embodied both beauty and independence, reflecting the evolving societal views of women at the dawn of the 20th century. To complement his Gibson Girl, Gibson introduced the Gibson Man as her counterpart. Distinguished, gallant, and full of admiration, the Gibson Man clearly revered the Gibson Girl. Gibson's illustrations subtly highlighted his admiration for women's superiority, but he managed to convey this without making men overtly conscious of this bias. The inspiration for Gibson's Man was [Richard Harding Davis,](https://reddit.com/r/OldSchoolCool/s/oYCRh8qjz the turn-of-the-century "Ideal Man," who also likely didn't recognize his perceived inferiority in Gibson's view. Read more about Gibson [here.](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Dana_Gibson) Read more about the ["Gibson Girl."](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibson_Girl)

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