The Pamphleteer

During colonial times in America, if you wanted to convince or inform people about some issue that you considered important, you went to the local printer and got some pamphlets printed. You then handed them out, read them to anybody that was interested, nailed them to the town bulletin board, or the nearest tree. The first amendment was specifically written to protect this type of activity and the writers or "pamphleteers".

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Monday, November 13, 2006
 
The Refdesk Sites of the Day are:


ScienceWorld

Comprehensive online encyclopedias of astronomy, math, physics, scientific biographies, and scientific books, with many equations and formulas.

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The Harvard Classics and The Shelf of Fiction

The most comprehensive and well-researched anthology of all time comprises both the
50-volume “5-foot shelf of books” and the the 20-volume Shelf of Fiction. Together they cover every major literary figure, philosopher, religion, folklore and historical subject through the twentieth century.

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Forms.gov

The Forms Catalog provides citizens and businesses with a common access point to federal agency forms.

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