Search Results For Cold War
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The digital Loeb Classical Library (loebclassics.com) extends the founding mission of James Loeb with an interconnected, fully searchable, perpetually growing virtual library of all that is important in Greek and Latin literature.
The first team to get six wins the match; however, players have been complaining that the game doesn't declare them as winners even if they secure the required wins. Instead of ending the match, it actually goes on until their opponents get six wins of their own. As a result, the match results in a draw.
Use Journal Finder on the library home page, or at the bottom of the Virgo search screen, to determine our online access for a particular journal title and to search a particular journal's contents.
You can further refine search results by using the limiters on the left of the search results screen. For example, clicking on \"Special Collections\" under \"Library\" will narrow your results to materials held in Special Collections.
Declassified Documents Reference System provides access to collections of declassified documents from the CIA, FBI, presidential libraries, and other agencies, from the 1940's through the 1980's. Put a phrase in single quotes.Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) , 1932-present. Presents the official documentary historical record of major U.S. foreign policy decisions and diplomacy. Contains documents from the departments of State and Defense, the National Security Council, CIA, presidential libraries, etc. This searchable online version from the Department of State includes many volumes from the Truman through the Ford administrations. The print volumes are in the Government Information Resources Stacks, Alderman 3rd floor, call number 1.1
Frontline Diplomacy: the Foreign Affairs Oral History Collection Oral history interviews with hundreds of U.S. diplomatic personnel. Most inteviews cover the late 1940's to the 1990's, with some coverage from the 1920's through World War II. In addition to searching the collection, you can browse by a diplomat's name or by subject.
Presidential libraries of most Chief Executives since Harry Truman provide some online documents on their web sites. This National Archives site points to various presidential library web sites.The Library has a number of significant microform collections pertaining to International Relations (CIA Research Reports; Confidential US State Department Central Files; OSS/State Department Intelligence and Research Reports; Records of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) and United States History (President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Office Files; President Harry S. Truman's Office Files; Harry S. Truman Presidential Oral Histories Collection) as well as filmed collections of Personal Papers (Dean Acheson; Cordell Hull; George C. Marshall; Henry L. Stimson). Microforms are located on Alderman Library 3rd floor and staff in the Government Information Resources department can assist you.
Note: We are in the process of tagging our content for advanced search, and updates will be made regularly. During this enhancement period, selecting search criteria may result in no records being found. In that event, please reduce the number of criteria selections.
Articles published in scholarly journals which cover academic and scientific research. Scholarly journals are often referred to as \"peer-reviewed\" or \"refereed\" journals. Journals can also be scholarly or academic, but not have the extra level of quality control known as \"peer review.\"
As researchers, we should approach the evidence we find with an open mind. Research should broaden or inform our perspectives, and not confirm our own biases. If your research is just a collection of cherry-picked quotes, you may need to go back to the library catalog (LibrarySearch) or the article databases to gather more information and other perspectives to consider.
Using the Advanced Search in HOLLIS, combine a subject -- Berlin (Germany); Berlin Wall; Germany (West); or Germany (East) -- with one of the additional subjects listed here (see screenshot below). Then, if need be, limit the language to English. (For Berlin (Germany), not all your search results will cover the Cold War period.)
During the early period of the Cold War, the CIA became convinced that communists had discovered a drug or technique that would allow them to control human minds. In response, the CIA began its own secret program, called MK-ULTRA, to search for a mind control drug that could be weaponized against enemies.
MK-ULTRA, which operated from the 1950s until the early '60s, was created and run by a chemist named Sidney Gottlieb. Journalist Stephen Kinzer, who spent several years investigating the program, calls the operation the \"most sustained search in history for techniques of mind control.\"
Some of Gottlieb's experiments were covertly funded at universities and research centers, Kinzer says, while others were conducted in American prisons and in detention centers in Japan, Germany and the Philippines. Many of his unwitting subjects endured psychological torture ranging from electroshock to high doses of LSD, according to Kinzer's research.
As part of the search for drugs that would allow people to control the human mind, CIA scientists became aware of the existence of LSD, and this became an obsession for the early directors of MK-ULTRA. Actually, the MK-ULTRA director, Sidney Gottlieb, can now be seen as the man who brought LSD to America. He was the unwitting godfather of the entire LSD counterculture.
In the early 1950s, he arranged for the CIA to pay $240,000 to buy the world's entire supply of LSD. He brought this to the United States, and he began spreading it around to hospitals, clinics, prisons and other institutions, asking them, through bogus foundations, to carry out research projects and find out what LSD was, how people reacted to it and how it might be able to be used as a tool for mind control.
The CIA mind control project, MK-ULTRA, was essentially a continuation of work that began in Japanese and Nazi concentration camps. Not only was it roughly based on those experiments, but the CIA actually hired the vivisectionists and the torturers who had worked in Japan and in Nazi concentration camps to come and explain what they had found out so that we could build on their research.
JSTOR works somewhat differently from other databases we have. It is a database of full text articles. The big difference between JSTOR and other \"full text\" databases is that JSTOR tries to digitize complete runs of journals from their initial publication. So, if you are looking for articles that give you a perspective of opinion over time it is an excellent source. If you are looking for the most recent research it is not your bet bet. What you see below is the result of a search on the terms \"Afghanistan\" and \"cold war\" with journals limited to those in Slavic Studies. Initially, I did not limit to any particular category of journals and the search returned over 3,000 matches.
The discovery of Soviet missiles on Cuba plunged the two superpowers into the largest Cold War conflict to date. For two weeks after the discovery, the American public lived in fear of an impending nuclear war. Meanwhile, President John F. Kennedy and his administration searched for the least incendiary course of action. On October 22, Kennedy ordered the U.S. Navy to blockade the island and prevent Soviet delivery of additional missiles or military aid. In addition, Kennedy issued an ultimatum to the Soviets that the existing missiles be promptly removed.
While most of our holdings are not online, a variety of military records, from photos to documents to searchable databases are available. Listed below are online collections of specific interest to veterans, their families and researchers. Additional online records may be found by searching the National Archives Catalog and Access to Archival Databases (AAD) systems.
NOTE: when searching for primary sources in news databases, ALWAYS limit your search to the date range relevant to your topic. Look at other limiters on the advanced search page that might improve your results, such as article, commentary, editorial, essay, feature, front page / cover story, letter to the editor.
NOTE: If a link on one of these sites is dead, try searching the link name using Google or another search engine. If you need assistance, just email Mr. Padgett or Ms. Taylor and we'll get on it!
Modern History Sourcebook: A Bipolar World A large collection of document links from the Internet History Sourcebooks project by Paul Halsall, Fordham University. If a link to a document is broken, try searching the link name on Google. Can't find it Email Mr. Padgett or Ms. Taylor.
This article is an attempt to deal with the historical inaccuracies that surround the May 4 shootings at Kent State University by providing high school social studies teachers with a resource to which they can turn if they wish to teach about the subject or to involve students in research on the issue. Our approach is to raise and provide answers to twelve of the most frequently asked questions about May 4 at Kent State. We will also offer a list of the most important questions involving the shootings which have not yet been answered satisfactorily. Finally, we will conclude with a brief annotated bibliography for those wishing to explore the subject further.
Second, the University faculty was called upon to conduct research about May 4 communicating the results of this research through teaching and traditional writing about the tragedy. Many responded and created a solid body of scholarship as well as an extremely useful archive contributing to a wide range of activities in Summer of 1970 including press interviews and the Scranton Commission.
Although we have attempted in this article to answer many of the most important and frequently asked questions about the May 4 shootings, our responses have sometimes been tentative because many important questions remain unanswered. It thus seems important to ask what are the most significant questions which yet remain unanswered about the May 4 events. These questions could serve as the basis for research projects by students who are interested in studying the shootings in greater detail. 59ce067264
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