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good material thanks http://lamalinks.fun/ lama nudes   The exhibition’s real triumph is that it manages to show the Queen both as a historic figure (her personal copy of the Form and Order of the Service is included in the exhibition. ‘I used this Book at my Coronation,’ she wrote inside and then signed it ‘Elizabeth R, June 2nd 1953’) and a human being (we see the book of prayers and private devotions given to the Queen by the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Geoffrey Fisher for her to study, one for each day, in the month leading up to the Coronation). It also reveals the Queen as an agent of change. Winston Churchill is said to have considered it inappropriate for people to watch a solemn occasion while drinking tea in the front room. Church and political leaders felt live coverage was an intrusion on a sacred event. The Queen intervened and television cameras were allowed into the Abbey for the first time. An estimated 27 million – more than half the population – viewed the service on television. A further 11 million listened to the radio broadcast in the UK alone – it was broadcast around the world in 41 languages. On display is a Marconi Mk II television camera used on the day.
Johnnie 2019-06-07 12:33:10

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