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  2. Free Being Me - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Being_Me

    Free Being Me is run through the Peer Education programme in the UK [10] (Previously known as "4"). Girls aged 16-25 attend Regional or National training where they are trained to deliver sessions on the Free Being Me topic to girls. The sessions are designed to cover Brownies (age 7-10) and Guides (age 10-16).

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  4. We Are Not Free - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_Are_Not_Free

    We Are Not Free received starred reviews from Booklist, [2] Publishers Weekly, [3] School Library Journal, [4] and Kirkus Reviews. [5] Kirkus Reviews named We Are Not Free one of the best young adult novels of 2020, [5] and TIME included it on their list of the 100 best young adult novels of all time. [1]

  5. Colour Me Free! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colour_Me_Free!

    "Free Me" was released on 22 September 2009 as the only single from Colour Me Free!. [14] Stone performed "Free Me" and a cover of Dusty Springfield's "Son of a Preacher Man" on Dancing with the Stars on 29 September 2009. [15] She also performed "Free Me" on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on 1 October 2009 and on Live! with Regis and Kelly on 9 October.

  6. Privilege (Set Me Free) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privilege_(Set_Me_Free)

    "Privilege (Set Me Free)" is a song by the Patti Smith Group and released as the second single from their 1978 album Easter. The original version of the song was titled "Free Me" and was written by Mel London and Mike Leander for the 1967 film Privilege. Patti spoke sections of Psalm 23 over the instrumental bridge among other lyrical additions ...

  7. No such thing as a free lunch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_such_thing_as_a_free_lunch

    TANSTAAFL: a plan for a new economic world order by Pierre Dos Utt (1949). The earliest known occurrence of the full phrase (except for the "a"), in the form "There ain't no such thing as free lunch", appears as the punchline of a joke related in an article in the El Paso Herald-Post of June 27, 1938 (and other Scripps-Howard newspapers about the same time), entitled "Economics in Eight Words".

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