segunda-feira, 16 de maio de 2011

Ronald Reagan, 1911-2004: One of America's Most Popular President



Source: www.voanews.com

Welcome to PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English. Today Gwen Outen and Steve Ember tell about America's fortieth president, Ronald Reagan. Experts say Ronald Reagan re-defined the American presidency during his two terms in the nineteen eighties.  He became president when he was sixty-nine years old.  It was a far different place from that of his birth on February sixth, nineteen eleven.

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Ronald Wilson Reagan was born in Tampico, Illinois.  His mother Nelle, father Jack, and brother Neil lived above a bank in the town.  Ronald Reagan's family began calling the baby "Dutch." The nickname remained for the rest of his life.
Jack Reagan worked at a general store.  The family was poor.  Yet, in a book about his life, Ronald Reagan wrote that he never felt poor. He was good at sports, especially football. During the summers, he was a lifeguard at a local swimming pool. He reportedly rescued many people from drowning.
Ronald Reagan said there was a feeling of security throughout his childhood.  But it was not perfect. His father was dependent on alcohol.
Ronald Reagan studied at Eureka College in Illinois. After seeing a play at college, he said: "More than anything in the world, I wanted to speak the actor's words."
But Ronald Reagan did not have enough money to go to New York or Hollywood to become an actor.  So, after college he found a job as a sports broadcaster for a radio station in Iowa. Later he moved to a bigger radio station in Chicago, Illinois.  He announced the action of baseball games. This work took him on a trip to California. He took a screen test to become an actor. Warner Brothers Studios offered him a job.
Ronald Reagan moved to Hollywood and became a movie star.  He appeared in many movies. "Knute Rockne – All American," is probably his most famous.  It is where he got the nickname "The Gipper."
Mr. Reagan played George Gipp, one of the greatest college football players ever. In the movie, he speaks of the school's football team as he is dying.
RONALD REAGAN:
"...Ask them to go in there with all they got, win just one for the Gipper."
Those words, "win one for the Gipper," later became a political battle cry for Ronald Reagan. In nineteen forty, he married actress Jane Wyman. They had two children, Maureen and Michael.  But the marriage ended in nineteen forty-nine.
Ronald Reagan became president of the main labor group for movie actors in nineteen forty-eight.  He served six terms.  He met actress Nancy Davis through the union. They married in nineteen fifty-two.  They later had two children, Patti and Ron.
At this time, Ronald Reagan was a member of the Democratic Party who described himself as a liberal. But, he became increasingly conservative as his worries about communism grew.  He opposed anyone in the movie industry who supported communism.
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In the early nineteen fifties, Ronald Reagan began to appear on television.  He presented dramatic shows produced by the General Electric Company.  He became a spokesman for the company. Mr. Reagan learned a lot about public speaking. He began to campaign for Republican Party political candidates a few years later. Reagan developed the ability to reach people through his speeches. He later became known as "The Great Communicator."
Nancy Reagan supported her husband's political interests.  Political experts say she was always his most important adviser.
In nineteen sixty-six, Ronald Reagan announced his own candidacy for governor of California.  Democrats in the state did not think he was a serious candidate.  However, Mr. Reagan was elected governor by almost one million votes.
Ronald Reagan received mixed public opinion as governor of the nation's most populated state.  He was praised for lowering California's debt, yet criticized for raising taxes.  Voters re-elected him as governor in nineteen seventy.
Ronald Reagan was unsuccessful in his first two attempts to win the Republican nomination for president.  Then, in nineteen eighty, he became the Republican Party's presidential candidate.  His opponent was President Jimmy Carter.
The two men debated on national television.  Ronald Reagan spoke directly and simply to the American people and asked them some questions:
RONALD REAGAN:
"Are you better off than you were four years ago?  Is it easier for you to go and buy things in the stores than it was four years ago?  Is there more or less unemployment in the country than there was four years ago?"
Ronald Reagan won the United States presidential election by a huge majority. He and his vice-president, George Herbert Walker Bush, were sworn into office in January, nineteen eighty-one.  Many people called the change in political power "The Reagan Revolution."
President Reagan immediately began to work to honor a major campaign promise.  He called on Congress to lower taxes.  But only two months later, tragedy struck.  A mentally sick man shot the president and three other people outside a hotel in Washington. President Reagan and his press secretary, James Brady, were severely wounded.
Mr. Reagan had a bullet in his left lung, close to his heart.  But he showed his sense of humor at the hospital.  As the president was taken into the operating room he said he hoped all the doctors were Republicans.
Ronald Reagan recovered from the shooting and returned to work within two weeks.
The President now began work on his main goal to reduce the size of the federal government.  He had campaigned on the idea that the government was too costly and interfered too much in the lives of Americans.
Mr. Reagan and Congress reduced taxes and cut spending for social programs.  The administration argued that these actions would create economic growth.
Extremely high inflation rates did begin to fall.  But the United States' debt rose sharply. This was partly from big increases in military spending.
The Reagan economic policy became known as "Reaganomics."  It had, and still has, supporters and opponents.  Some people argued that the cuts in social programs greatly hurt poor people.  Others said the policy improved the economy.
President Reagan sought re-election in nineteen eighty-four. His Democratic opponent was former Vice-President Walter Mondale.  Again Mr. Reagan won the election by a large amount.
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President Reagan dealt with many serious foreign issues while in office.  He sent American Marines to Lebanon to stop the fighting among several opposing groups.  But more than two hundred Marines were killed in an extremist bomb attack.The so-called "Reagan Doctrine" was the Administration's most famous foreign policy.  That policy was to support anti-communist forces anywhere in the world.  Under the policy, American forces invaded the Caribbean island nation of Grenada.  The policy also led to secret United States support for rebels in Nicaragua.
President Reagan met with Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev several times in an effort to reduce nuclear weapons. He gave a famous speech at the Berlin Wall that divided Soviet-controlled East Germany from West Germany on June twelfth, nineteen eighty-seven.
RONALD REAGAN:
"General Secretary Gorbachev, if you seek peace, if you seek prosperity for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, if you seek liberalization: Come here to this gate!  Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate!  Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!"
Some historians say Ronald Reagan helped cause the fall of the Soviet Union.  They say his military spending forced the Soviets to spend more, too.  They say this led to the communist nation's economic failure.
President Reagan enjoyed very high public approval ratings throughout his presidency. Many Americans considered him a friendly leader, a "man of the people," filled with hope for America.
Ronald and Nancy Reagan returned to California after his second term ended in nineteen eighty-nine.  In nineteen ninety-four, Mr. Reagan wrote an open letter to the American people.  He informed them that he had the brain disease Alzheimer's.  The former president expressed his love for the country and thanked Americans for letting him serve.  And, he wrote: "I know that for America there will always be a bright dawn ahead."
Ronald Reagan died at his home in California on June fifth, two thousand four.  He was ninety-three.
(MUSIC)
This program was written by Caty Weaver.  Mario Ritter was the producer.  I'm Gwen Outen. And I'm Steve Ember. Listen again next week for another PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English.

SERIDO POLE PART I


As I've been posted I was in a hurry, pretty busy that's why after the walkways' infrastructure I worked a lot guiding people on tour and also organizing the tourism in my town, well check it out how important is to develop the Sustainable Tourism in the Seridó Region, that's why the capital has more infrastructure of hotels, pousadas and restaurants. 

Almost seven years after starting the “interiorizing” of tourism in Rio Grande do Norte, the Project begins to bear fruit. Following the steps of the Program Roteiros do Brasil (Routes in Brazil by the Ministry of Tourism), the project created five poles of development, from which three have stood out: Pole Costa das Dunas, Costa Branca and Seridó. Investments of around R$ 114 million of the Tourism Development Program – Prodetur have been planned for those three niches alone.


The technical coordinator of the State Bureau of Tourism, Carmem vera Araújo, explains that this work used to be done from town to town, which ended up making more difficult to develop tourism in the towns. The creation of the poles proved to be great help to speed up the process creating managing resources in each one of niches.

“According to the Ministry, we had to have three pole which already had more or less developed touristic products and that would be more prepared to host visitors. We started with Costa das Dunas, Seridó and Costa Branca. To each one of them, local councils of tourism were created with members from all municipalities that were part of the pole. That makes decision easier”, explains the administrator.

Through a partnership between Mtur and SEBRAE, the State of government began to develop several actions in those poles, such as qualifications to business people and support to events held within the region. “We planned new touristic routes for commercialization, worked on the development of new business, preparing and qualifying them,” she lists. The work began in 2004.

The pole Costa das Dunas is the biggest among the five poles and is made up 20 municipalities. Focusing on sun-and-sea type of tourism, the region had already been developed, even before the beginning of the program Roteiros do Brazil (Routes in Brazil), Natl and Tibau do Sul are considered the destinations which triggered this pole and are amongst the 65 most desired in the country. According to Vera, the beauty of the dunes, cliffs and lakes is the best natural attraction in the region. 

BNTM and Seridó's Staff Also Emanuel member of Sanfonica Orquestra


- O Carnaubense Emanuel, faz parte da Orquestra 
Sanfônica Potiguar e em apresentação na 20ª BNTM. 
Emanuel, foi parabenizado pelo Coordenador de 
Turismo de Carnaúba dos Dantas, Civanildo Filho 
(Sec. De Cultura) e Carlinhos Tour (Guia Regional), 
ambos fizeram parte da Comissão Municipal de 
Turismo que participou da Feira internacional de 
Turismo realizada em Natal.


The Carnaubense Emanuel takes part on the 
Sanfonica's Potiguar Orquestra during the 
performance on the 20ª BNTM, he was 
congratulated by the Tourism Coordinator 
Civanildo Filho, he's also manager of 
FREE EVENTOS, both took part on the 
International Event held in Natal.




CiFilho e Emanoel
 Emanuel and Civanildo


 Civanildo Filho, João da Banda, Boboca 
(Pref. De Carnaúba dos Dantas), 
1ª Dama Sra. Rosana e Carlinhos Tur
- Foram várias outras autoridades e turistas 
se fizeram presentes, 
ao stand, entre eles a Gov. do Estado Rosalba Ciarlini.

 Alexandre, mayor of Carnaúba dos Dantas 
and the first lady Rossana Daguia, 
were there visiting the stand on the BNTM. 
Also tourists and the Governor 
of State Rosalba Ciarline

Barbosa (Emprotur), Civanildo, Rosalba (Governor) and 
Carlinhos Sec of Culture, Tourism and Entertainment 
- Patrício Júnior (ex-deputado estadual), o 
Sec. de Turismo do Piauí, Sílvio Leite,
 foram recebidos no stand seridoense por Civanildo Filho 
(Coordenador de Tur. Carnaubense).

Former deputy Patricio Júnior and Secretary of 
Piauí Silvio Leite, Also receptioned on the BTNM Stand. 



 Sec. Tur do RN e comitiva: Tourism Staff, Regia, Carlinhos Parelhas, 
João da Banda, Gilberto and Eliane and tourismologist from Lagoa Nova, 
Sergio Enilton Acari, and Civanildo, João da Banda and me Carlos 
English Tips were there
  Yves (SEBRAE-CN),  Carlinhos Tur e o Sec. João da Banda
   Yves Sebrae, Carlos English Tips and Joao da Banda.

Special thanks for Carlinhos de Parelhas, SEBRAE and 
EMPROTUR, Town hall of the municipalities Carnaúba
dos Dantas, Acari, Cerro Corá, Lagoa Nova and Parelhas.
Also many thanks for the Government of Rio Grande do Norte.

SHOUT OUT, REPORT AND STOP CHILD ABUSE, SAY NO TO PEDOPHILIA



Stop the abuse and molest against our children, report it any case of pedophilia, Sex Tourism and internet networking websites and blogs who promote porn contents. I have been worked with youth and children and I also support this case. I use this off-topic to say that English tips also struggle for the children rights. Let's join this cause promoting this picture on your blog, website or on your FB profile. Many and many cases have been shown on TV, internet and we should report, and say no to pedophilia, it's really difficult to struggle against the crimes committed with children, that's why I'm here to promote this banner on my blog. Twit for friends, please.

HOLLYWOOD...THE BUSINESS OF SHOW BUSINESS

Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Proficiency
Standard: American
Speaker: Chuck Rolando


A world of movie-lovers watched Hollywood on February 27th when the Academy Awards, or “Oscars,” took place. For the lucky winners, it may just be the highlight of their movie careers, but no matter how successful they are now, they had to start at the bottom. They all had “day-time jobs” in bars or restaurants, and they went to auditions in their spare time. And they undoubtedly signed up with a talent agency, which probably still represents them today. The Affinity Artists Agency is a typical example, it is headed by Ross Grossman, who was himself a child actor, and later a comedian, writer and therapist, before becoming an agent. As he explains, even when you become a star, there’s no guarantee that it will last.

Ross Grossman
(Standard American Accent)

Recently Adam Sandler and a bunch of other celebrities, Chris Rock, they were all sitting around, I think it was 60 Minutes, and they were being asked: “Do you feel like you’ve made it, do you feel like you’re good, you’re set?” and all of them said: “No, no way!” Because they said: “We picked up a People Magazine from five years ago and we looked at all the people who were on top and almost none of them were still on top. “ So,it is a very fickle business. I think that the public generally likes new. New is interesting to them. And, at a certain point, I think either the casting directors or the public gets tired, or wants something new. Now, there are certain people, Jackson Nicholson, you know, there are certain actors, Tom Cruise, that are able to ride the wave and stay on it, but eventually most of them seem to fade.

CHARISMA

We then asked him the classic Hollywood question: What makes a star?

Ross Grossman

Charisma is a big peace. There is an ethereal fairy dust that is on certain people. . how they got that way is a very complex…we’d have to have clones and put people in laboratories to figure out how ths person showed up with this much charisma, but there are some people who have so much charisma, or something about their character that is so unique, that you just know: they’re riveting. It’s like when you watch a lion or a tiger, you’re riveted because there’s something so spontaneous and so strong and so confident. And that doesn’t mean that each performance is playing a confident person; they could be playing a nervous wreck, but there’s a confidence about them, and a oneness of purpose and just something very magnetic. But some people try to create a false magnetism by being super-big and important and loud and intense, and it’s or like that. It doesn’t come from outside, I don’t think, but some people try to wow you with what they believe charisma is. But I think, really, what it is knowing yourself and making strong bold choices with your acting skills and with your personality. Personality does go a long way. People in Hollywood want to work with nice people. So, if you’re talented, but you’re really not a pleasant person, there will be plenty of other people who could take your place.

THAT LOOK

And what about physical appearance? Are looks everything?

Ross Grossman

You have to remember that movies and television are a visual medium: we can’t forget that. And, because of that, many films and television shows use visual shorthand. As soon as you see Paul Giamatti, or just any number of actors, as soon as you see them, there’s a whole bunch of script that doesn’t have to happen because you just get, “Oh, this is this type of person. And that’s like a visual shorthand for people. Just as when you see Charlie Chaplin as the little tramp, that speaks volumes. You know, you don’t have to hear his entire story. It’s a visual shorthand, so, yes, the look does count, but that look cold be geeky, that look could be odd, that could be unusual, or plus size, or frightening. It doesn’t have to always be gorgeous. It just has to be unique and striking.

ENERGY

But, says Ross Grossman, talent, charisma and the right looks are not enough. Aspiring actors also need a sense of initiative. Having an agent isn’t enough, they should build their portfolios, and increase their selection of footage, or “reel.” And Ross Grossman introduced us to a Hollywood neologism; the “webisode.” This is a combination of “web” and “episode.”

Ross Grossman

And then, once they have an agent, is running out there and doing stuff, getting in plays, getting into more independent films, getting better reel, meeting people, socializing. If they can’t find scripts to get in, finding people, , acting troupes, people who want to put together webisodes. That’s the new trend, is get a bunch of people together, get some writers together, start doing some webisodes, don’t wait for someone else to make you known.

There’s an expression that o love, and I…it was from a man named (Wes) “Scoop” Nisker, he was newsman in San Francisco, and he would always sign off the news with this phrase and that is: “If you don’t like the news, go out and make some of you own!”

7/10 Children of Israel, Palestine



Source:  


 Always support for Freedom, peace and love.

American History: As War in Europe Expands, US Continues Policy of Neutrality


Don't forget to listen to the entire podcast, it takes time, but surely you are gonna improve your English for more info visit http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/us-history/War-in-Europe-Expands-US-121661844.html  and explore the VOA Special English and promote it for friends. 

Source: VOA SPECIAL ENGLISH

President Franklin Roosevelt during a "Fireside Chat" broadcast  in Washington, DC
Photo: fdrlibrary.marist.edu
President Franklin Roosevelt during a "Fireside Chat" broadcast in Washington, DC

STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English. I’m Steve Ember.
(MUSIC)
Germany's attack on Poland and the start of World War Two in Europe presented a problem for Americans in September of nineteen-thirty-nine. The United States -- by law -- was neutral. And few Americans had any desire to fight in another world war. But most Americans did not like Germany's Nazi leader, Adolf Hitler. They hoped for victory for Britain, France and the other Allied powers.
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt made this clear in a radio broadcast to Americans soon after the war began.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT: “The overwhelming masses of our people seek peace. Peace at home, and the kind of peace in other lands, which will not jeopardize our peace at home. We have certain ideas, and certain ideals, of national safety, and we must act to preserve that safety today and to preserve the safety of our children in future years. That safety is, and will be, bound up with the safety of the Western Hemisphere and of the seas adjacent thereto. We seek to keep war from our own firesides by keeping war from coming to the Americas.”
German armored vehicles advancing to Poland in September 1939
AP
German armored vehicles advancing to Poland in September 1939
STEVE EMBER: He praised the British and other allies. Finally, the president called on Congress to change the neutrality laws that prevented him from sending arms to the allies to help them fight Germany. Congress agreed to change the laws so foreign nations could buy American arms.
(MUSIC)
In the months that followed, Hitler and his allies claimed one victory after another. German and Soviet troops captured Poland quickly in September of nineteen thirty-nine. Then Soviet forces invaded the small Baltic nations of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania.
In late November, they attacked Finland. Fighting between Finland and the Soviet Union continued through the winter, until Finland accepted Russia's demands.
Fighting grew even more fierce the following spring, in nineteen forty. Germany attacked Denmark and Norway, defeating them easily. In May, German forces struck like lightning through Belgium and Holland. Within one day, they were in France.
British and French forces were unable to stop the Germans from moving deep into northern France. The British finally had to flee from the European continent. They sailed back to Britain from the French town of Dunkirk.
(SOUND)
German soldiers marched through France. And Italian forces joined them by invading France from the south. Soon, Paris fell.
(SOUND)
These are German newsreel narrators describing German troops entering Paris and the fall of the French government.
A German supporter, Marshal Petain, took control of the French government. And France -- beaten and crushed -- was forced to sign a peace treaty with Hitler.
Now it was just Britain alone against Hitler and his Axis allies. Only the English Channel separated the British people from a German army that seemed unbeatable.
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain was forced to resign. The British people turned to a new leader, Winston Churchill.
WINSTON CHURCHILL: “I speak to you for the first time as Prime Minister in a solemn hour for the life of our country, of our empire, of our allies, and, above all, of the cause of freedom. A tremendous battle is raging in France and Flanders. The Germans, by a remarkable combination of air bombing and heavily armored tanks, have broken through the French defenses north of the Maginot Line, and strong columns of their armored vehicles are ravaging the open country, which for the first day or two was without defenders. They have penetrated deeply and spread alarm and confusion in their track.”
Winston Churchill in 1940
AP
Winston Churchill in 1940
STEVE EMBER: Churchill would prove to be strong and brave in the long months ahead.
(SOUND)
The British would need strong leadership.
Hitler wasted no time in launching a fierce air attack on Britain. Throughout the summer, German and British planes fought above the English Channel.
All this military action had an important effect on American popular opinion. War and neutrality were no longer just ideas to be discussed and debated. Now they were real concerns, real events. Fascist troops led by a dictator in Berlin were defeating one friendly democracy after another. And Soviet forces were on the march, too.
Most Americans still wanted neutrality. But how long could America remain at peace? And was peace worth the cost of just sitting by and watching friends like France and Britain being bombed and invaded?
Other issues melted away as Americans began to consider what to do about the darkening world situation.
Some Americans, led by newspaper publisher William Allen White, called for the United States to help Britain immediately. But other groups, like the America First Committee, demanded that the United States stay out of another bloody European conflict.
The struggle between those who wanted to help Britain and those who wanted to remain neutral did not follow traditional party lines. Some of the strongest supporters of Roosevelt's foreign policies were Republicans. Some members of his own Democratic Party opposed his policies.
Even so, foreign policy was one of the main issues in the presidential election campaign of nineteen forty. The Democrats once again nominated Franklin Roosevelt for president.
The Republicans had several popular candidates who were interested in campaigning against Roosevelt. At first, it seemed that these candidates would fight it out in a bitter nominating convention in Philadelphia. But to everyone's surprise, a little-known candidate named Wendell Willkie suddenly gained a great deal of support and won the nomination.
WENDELL WILKIE: “…building of an adequate defense, so that no dictator, however strong, may seek the strife or the unity of our people. We’re calling America again to its great tradition of progress.  I pledge myself to you, and I ask each of you to join with me in this great crusade.”
STEVE EMBER: Willkie was a tough candidate.
He was friendly, a good businessman, and a strong speaker. He seemed honest. And he seemed to understand foreign policy. Most importantly, Willkie had a progressive record on many social issues. He was not the kind of traditional conservative Republican that Roosevelt had defeated so easily in his first two campaigns.
Instead, Willkie could claim to represent the average American just as well as Roosevelt. And he offered the excitement of a change in leadership.
(SOUND)
STEVE EMBER: While Roosevelt and Willkie began their campaign battles with words, German and British planes were fighting real battles with bullets over the English Channel. Winston Churchill sent a desperate message to Roosevelt. The British prime minister said Britain could not fight alone much longer. It needed help immediately.
Roosevelt did not want to take steps toward war just before an election. But neither could he refuse such an urgent appeal from the British leader.
Roosevelt and Willkie discussed the situation. Willkie agreed not to criticize Roosevelt when the president sent fifty ships to the British navy. He also supported Roosevelt's order for American young men to give their names to army officials so they could be called up if fighting began.
In this way, Roosevelt and Willkie tried to keep America's growing involvement in the war from becoming a major political issue in the election.
President Roosevelt won the election of nineteen forty. He won twenty-seven million votes to twenty-two million for Willkie. This made Roosevelt the first and only president in American history to win a third term in the White House. The Constitution was later changed to limit presidents to two terms.
(MUSIC)
Soon after the election, President Roosevelt received a letter from Winston Churchill. The British prime minister wrote that Britain urgently needed more arms and planes to fight Germany.
Roosevelt agreed. He went to the Congress to plead for more aid to Britain. He said the United States should change its neutral policy, because Britain was fighting a common enemy of democracy. Roosevelt also said the United States could avoid war if Britain was strong enough to defeat Germany by itrself.
Congress agreed, after a fierce debate, to increase aid to Britain. And in the weeks and months that followed, the United States moved closer and closer to open war with Germany.
In March of nineteen forty-one, Roosevelt allowed British ships to come to American ports to be repaired. In June, the United States seized ships under German control. It also took over German and Italian funds in American banks.
(MUSIC)
Open fighting could not be prevented with this increase in tension between Germany and the United States. In September nineteen forty-one, a German submarine fired at an American ship. The ship was not damaged. But a number of American troops were killed in other naval incidents that followed.
By the end of nineteen forty-one, the United States and Germany were almost at war. Even so, most Americans continued to hope for peace. In fact, few Americans could guess that war was just days away. The first blow would come -- not from Germany, however, but from Japan.
RADIO ANNOUNCER: “We interrupt this program to bring you a special news bulletin: The Japanese have attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii by air, President Roosevelt has just announced.”
STEVE EMBER: That will be our story next week.
(MUSIC)
Our program was written by David Jarmul. You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and pictures at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. I’m Steve Ember inviting you to join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English.
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This was program number 18
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