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Summary
This non-free media file has been set up with as small a version as possible, to comply with Wikipedia's non-free content policy and United States copyright law. The current resolution has been manually selected to achieve as small an image as possible without destroying the image content. According to Wikipedia's policy for non-free content, the amount of non-free work should be as little as possible. In particular, non-free media on Wikipedia should not be usable as substitutes for the original work.
This image is a scan of a newspaper page or article, and the copyright for it is most likely held by either the publisher of the newspaper or the individual contributors who worked on the articles or images depicted. It is believed that the use of low-resolution images of newspaper pages
to illustrate either the publication of the article or issue in question,
with the publication name either visible on the image itself or written in the image description above,
Note: If the image depicts a person or persons on the cover, it is not acceptable to use the image in the article of the person or persons depicted on the cover, unless used to directly illustrate a point about the publication of the image. Use of the image merely to depict a person or persons in the image will be removed.Fair use//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cambridge_News,_November_1964.jpg
Article in Cambridge News, November 1964, about Germaine Greer's admittance that year, with two other women, as full members of the Cambridge Footlights (founded 1883). The women in the photograph were the first three women to be admitted. The part of the article shown is from the Germaine Greer archive.
Image by Nathan Gallagher, published in this article in The Conversation, 26 May 2016, about the Germaine Greer archive at the University of Melbourne.
The headline and at least part of the article are visible (and perhaps all of it). Greer cut the article out and kept it in a notebook, a portion of which can be seen in the background.
To illustrate the section about Greer's admittance to the Footlights, an historically significant event given the club's history of declining to admit women as full members and given Greer's subsequent notability. The article demonstrates the sexism of the period, from the headline that women will make the Footlights "brighter" to the reference to them as "three girls" in the text and image caption.
== Summary == {{Non-free no reduce}} {{Non-free newspaper image|image has rationale=yes}} == Fair use rationale for usage in Germaine Greer == {{Non-free use rationale |Article=Germaine Greer |Description=Article in Cambridge News, November 1964, about Germaine Greer's admittance that year, with two other women, as full members of the Cambridge Footlights (founded 1883). The women in the photograph were the first three women to be admitted. |Source=[https://images.theconversation...