Radioactive-fallout


Book Description







The Middle East and the United States


Book Description

This volume addresses the changes in the Middle East—and in the United States as well—that has significantly affected the US-Middle Eastern dynamic. It provides an objective, cross-cultural assessment of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.




Report Announcement Bulletin, Unclassified Reports for Civilian Applications


Book Description

""The U.S. Atomic Energy Commission is conducting a large-scale review of its research and development reports to make as much information as possible available through the Civilian Application Program. Report Announcement Bulletin ; Unclassified Reports For Civilian Applications is being published to announce immediately, the release of newly declassified reports. ...All reports announced in the Bulletin are available from: Office of Technical Services, Department of Commerce, Washington 25, D.C., at the price listed with each title."--P.iii.







The State Library and Archives of Texas


Book Description

The Texas State Library and Archives Commission celebrated its centennial in 2009. To honor that milestone, former State Archivist David Gracy has taken a retrospective look at the agency's colorful and sometimes contentious history as Texas's official information provider and record keeper. In this book, he chronicles more than a century of efforts by dedicated librarians and archivists to deliver the essential, nonpartisan library and archival functions of government within a political environment in which legislators and governors usually agreed that libraries and archives were good and needed—but they disagreed about whatever expenditure was being proposed at the moment. Gracy recounts the stories of persevering, sometimes controversial state librarians and archivists, and commission members, including Ernest Winkler, Elizabeth West (the first female agency head in Texas government), Fannie Wilcox, Virginia Gambrell, and Louis Kemp, who worked to provide Texans the vital services of the state library and archives—developing public library service statewide, maintaining state and federal records for use by the public and lawmakers, running summer reading programs for children, providing services for the visually impaired, and preserving the historically significant records of Texas as a colony, province, republic, and state. Gracy explains how the agency has struggled to balance its differing library and archival functions and, most of all, to be treated as a full-range information provider, and not just as a collection of disparate services.