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Equal Rights Not Special Rights
   
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Added by Leo Sanyo, last edited by Leo Sanyo on Aug 05, 2007
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From Equal Suffrage to Equal Rights: Alice Paul and the National Woman's Party, 1910-1928 (American Social Experience)
Christine A. Lunardini

$15.95(USD)


The woman's movements and work in American history during the second two decades, was dramatic. It dealt with the past, with pageants and politics; with different organizations and with conflict from within. It took on the Democrats, founded a National Woman's Party; it waged a home front war. It dealt with prison, and resolution. It went from equal suffrage to equal rights.
Classic Bill Of Rights Films DVD: (2) 1940s - 1950s U.S. Constitution Bill Of Rights & Equal Rights Amendments Films Including Discussion About The 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th & 10th Amendments

$19.99(USD)


Classic films about the Bill Of Rights and their impact on American society. Table Of Contents: (1) Our Bill Of Rights (1940) - Film shows former statesmen Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, and others debating the additional of the 10th Amendment to the US Bill Of Rights - 22 Minutes (2) Its' Everybody's Business (1950s) - Animated classic that uses the Bill Of Rights to promote the ideals of capitalism - 20 minutes
Women's Movements in the United States: Woman Suffrage, Equal Rights, and Beyond
Steven M., Buechler

$18.71(USD)


Steven Buechler has written a comparative sociological analysis of the woman suffrage movement (1840-1920)and the contemporary women's movement (1960s to the present). His identification of similarities and differences between these movements reveals persistent feminist issues over time as well as the distinctive concerns of each movement in its sociohistorical context. Buechler compares these two movements in terms of their origins, organizations, ideologies, class and racial diversities, countermovements, and outcomes. He uses resource mobilization theory to understand and compare these movements, but also uses these movements to call for a critical reformulation of resource mobilization theory. Steven M. Buechler is an associate professor of sociology at Mankato State University in Minnesota and the author of The Transformation of the Woman Suffrage Movement: The Case of Illinois, 1850-1920.
Our Name is Mud Equal Rights for Snow Woman Coffee Mug, 18 Ounces


Product Description
This large, humorous coffee mug from Our Name is Mud features a snow woman on one side, and the exclamation "Equal rights for snow women!" on the other. The mug also features textured snowflakes and unglazed feet to prevent slipping on smooth surfaces. All Mud products are safe for use in microwave and dishwasher.

Industry leader Our Name is Mud is known for their high quality and quirky giftware across the US. Their products are all hand painted and made from lead-free, high density dolomite ceramic, the most chip-resistant and highest quality earthenware on the market. Each piece is a perfect marriage of art and functionality and are all made to be enjoyed on a daily basis.

Product Features
  • By Our Name is Mud
  • White, black, and shades of blue
  • Made from lead-free, high density dolomite ceramic, the most chip resistant and highest quality earthenware on the market.
  • Dishwasher and Microwave safe
  • Stuff this great mug with Candy and top with a bow for a great hostess gift

Measurements
  • Cup measures 4.5" x 5.5" with an 18 ounce capacity

Origin
China

See our other "Our Name is Mud" products


Equal Rights
Peter Tosh

$11.98(USD)


Even though Captured Live might be Peter Tosh's greatest recorded gift, this 1977 studio album was his best--by far--away from the stage. Equal Rights opens with two great salvos, "Get Up, Stand Up" and "Downpressor Man," both of them politically unequivocal in their support, aptly, of human rights and political equity. In his post-Wailers days, Tosh seemed ever in dialogue with his conscience and his obsession with Bob Marley's fame. Tosh sought a place for himself somewhere between reggae and pop (check out the Mick Jagger and Tosh duet, "(You Gotta Walk and) Don't Look Back" on the hits pack Scrolls of the Prophet). In itself, such a desire isn't at all surprising, but it did impact Tosh's music even on his best studio album. But even with any wrinkles, Equal Rights holds a spot firmly as one of the best reggae albums of the 1970s. In this reissue, it comes with a pair of live bonus tracks, "Pick Myself Up" and "African," both recorded live and charged with the best Tosh energy. --Andrew Bartlett
Equal Rights
William Asher



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