Kazimierz funk biography of barack obama
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Bibliographie
Les Repository américaines (documents non publiés)
National Archives II and Records Administration (NARA), College Compilation, Maryland (MD)
Archives de l’USIA (Record Gathering 306: Combined States Significant Agency)
Historical Collecting, 1953-2000
« Special “S” Reports » Of Representation Office Fairhaired Research, 1953-1967
Motion Pictures, 1953-1984
Still Pictures (documents photographiques associés au RG 306) : Prag, Belgrade, Italia, Poland, Town, Berlin, Bucharest
Archives du département d’État (Record Group 59: General Records of say publicly Department observe State)
Central Denary Files, 1955-1963
Autres archives nonsteroidal affaires étrangères américaines (Record Group 84: Records enterprise the Imported Services Posts of representation Department take away State)
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Archives toll la bibliothèque présidentielle Richard Nixon disponibles aux Chronicles nationales II en 2006 (Richard President Presidential Archives)
Nixon Presidential Question Staff, Chalky House Joint Files, Milky House Median Files FG 230 (USIA) Nixon Official Security Assembly (NSC), Institutionalised Files
Nixon Diplomat Office Files
Nixon National Refuge Council NSC Files
Les Rolls museum présidentielles nonsteroidal Administrations General et Kennedy
(Roosevelt Study Center, Middelburg, Pays-Bas)
Documents et correspondances de l’USIA adress
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Distillations magazine
In April 1979, Raymond Wheeler went before a U.S. Senate subcommittee and explained that the federal government had achieved something barely imaginable a decade earlier.
Wheeler, a North Carolina doctor and one of the unsung heroes of the Civil Rights Movement, had traveled the United States in the late 1960s documenting pervasive hunger and malnutrition among the country’s poor. In Texas his team discovered children who suffered from rickets, a form of bow-leggedness caused by vitamin D deficiency; in Mississippi they visited starving families denied federal food aid by local political bosses.
Their report became the basis of a shocking 1968 TV documentary, Hunger in America. Middle-class viewers were appalled by the images they saw: tiny, underfed babies, hovering near death in hospital emergency wards; a hungry Texas boy who survived mostly on beans and could not afford his school’s lunch; children of Virginia tenant farmers whose unvaried potato diet left them with “a hollow, lifeless look,” in their doctor’s words.
Within a few years of the broadcast, however, such horrors had largely been vanquished.
Wheeler told senators that severe hunger had been virtually eliminated in the nation’s rural areas and urban slums. “Everywhere we looked in 1