Face the Nation
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Anton Drexler was German political leader of the 1920s, known for being Adolf Hitler’s mentor during his early days in politics
Noble Prize winner Alexander Fleming was a great Scottish biologist and pharmacologist who made way for antibiotic medicines with his discovery of penicillin from the mould "Penicillium notatum"
Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich of Russia, 1890s
Yuri Gagarin and Fidel Castro in Havana, 1961
Grigory Rasputin was the infamous "holy man" whose ability to heal the Tsar and Tsarina's son Alexis led to his being adopted as a supreme mystic at court, 1900
Henry Ford with his first car in 1896. After more than two years of experimentation, Ford, at the age of 32, had completed his first experimental automobile
Marina Raskova, a record-breaking aviatrix, organized the 588th night bomber squadron – composed entirely of women, summer of 1941
Mae Jemison Became first black woman to fly in to Space in 1992
Albert Ball, decorated British flying ace during World War I. Died at the age of 20 while pursuing the brother of the infamous Red Baron through a cloudbank
Ron and Nancy Reagan on the campaign trail, 1976
Scientist Rosalind Franklin made the first clear X-ray images of DNA’s structure in 1951
Civil War Veteran Jacob Miller of the 9th Indiana Infantry was shot in the forehead, 19 Sep 1863. He survived the shot, later writing that he had a constant reminder of the Chickamauga Battlefield
Orli Wald was a member of the German Resistance in Nazi Germany. She was arrested in 1936. Because of her helpfulness to Jewish and other prisoners, was called the "Angel of Auschwitz"
Audie Leon Murphy became one the most famous soldiers of World War II and widely regarded as the most decorated American soldier of the war
Jacques Derrida was a French philosopher, born in Algeria. Derrida is best known for developing a form of semiotic analysis known as deconstruction, which he discussed in numerous texts
Francis Ford Coppola and his daughter Sophia on the set of "The Godfather: Part II", 1974
Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, 1928
Bobby Kennedy taking a break from brother John's 1960 presidential campaign
They were first cousins. Their mothers were sisters. They could almost pass as twins. Tsar Nicholas II of Russia and King George V of England
Irena Sendler was a Polish Catholic social worker. She helped save 2 500 Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto by providing them with false documents and sheltering them in children’s homes