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Gallery

Please browse the gallery below for all photos relating to Getting the Word Out. Select an image to enlarge and read the image description. You may also click on a collage for a list and description of each resource featured.
A fourteen-cent Newfoundland postage stamp depicting the Cabot Tower on Signal Hill at St. John's, Newfoundland. The accompanying caption states, First Trans Atlantic Wireless Signal Received 1901.
A collage of Canadian Information Sharing Service newsletters.
Shown are two side by side posters, both of which show a hammer crashing down on the letters of the word Capital. The one on the left is purple on a white background, and was created in Paris in 1968. The one on the right is black on a red background. The words New Democratic Youth appear below the main image.
An old style red metal mailbox with a more modern Canada Post logo on top. On the front is a blue flap labeled Letters in English and Lettres in French. Below the flap is an ornate engraving of a Canada’s coat of arms, a black lock cover, and the lettering: Canada.
A wooden case holds flat, rectangular metal blocks of type, as well as illustrations used to print an edition of The Fisherman's Advocate newspaper, Port Union, Newfoundland.
A black and white photograph, from a bird’s eye view of a large group of female protesters gathered together, carrying letter banners that spell out, Mothers Abolish The Relief Camps.
A crowd of people at a farmworkers rally, many of them holding signs called for a boycott of U.S. grapes and lettuce.
A woman standing behind an outdoor vendor table with bottles of Palestinian olive oil, talking to another woman.
A pale yellow cover of The Barefoot Channel by Kim Goldberg, with a drawing of TVs stacked on top of each other with black text.
A dark grey Royal brand typewriter sitting in an opened brown carrying case lined in green.
An image of a newspaper page with articles written in Japanese on the top half, and an area for ads on the bottom half.
A black Gestetner machine on a wooden table. Its internal workings are visible from the outside: rollers, gears, dials and a crank. Behind it is a black case with the the word Gestetner in a script font written across it.
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