Shahbanou Farah Pahlavi visits Hollywood Star Anthony Quinn off Set of the Movie Caravans Shot in 1978
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من از وقتي هم چون يك دانشآموز در درس ادبيات فرانسه با اين پرسش آشنا شدم اغلب آن را مثل يك نشانهي استفهام پيش نظر داشتهام و بارها دربارهي آن انديشه كردهام
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"Never say never," Romeo Void, 1982.
The extended version.
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Dr. Abbassi speaking about how America's "Chicken Strategy" is not effective in dealing with Iran.
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TRAVELERS
Photo essay: Old Jerusalem and beyond
by
Mahin Bahrami >>>
TRAVELERS
It was difficult to ignore the deafening silence of an eerie quiet civil war
When I first entered through one of the city gates into Old Jerusalem I found myself squeezed amongst hundreds of people each holding an unlit candle, politely pushing and shoving each other to get to a particular spot in The City. With great difficulty I managed to squeeze my way through the narrow walkways and escaped through an opening where I encountered hundreds more waiting eagerly for something spectacular to happen. With a big question mark dangling over my head I surveyed the crowd looking for clues. After a few queries my ignorance of the reason for the public congregation was quickly abolished. The upcoming event was related to the day of the week
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(I promised you I would, Alvarez, our Mexican Jumping Bean, and I a woman of my word).
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If you ever wanted to read "Kalileh o Demneh" but you find the simple English version more accessible you can read it online:-
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007
How the James Bond exhibition in London fails to highlight 007’s less charming side
James Bond is arguably the mother of all on-screen celebrations of white, European masculinity. More than two billion people – two fifths of the world's population – have watched a 007 film. Only Tarzan or Indiana Jones might rival his stature. For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming And James Bond – the exhibition currently running at London's Imperial War Museum – sets out to outline the relationship between the fictional secret agent and the man who created him, Ian Fleming. Fleming (pictured) was born to a wealthy Scottish banking family. He went to the elite school Eton and then the military training academy Sandhurst. His father Valentine Fleming, an aristocratic MP, was killed in 1917, serving in the same unit as Winston Churchill in World War I. Peter, Ian's older brother, was handed the mantle of family patriarch
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