Em 1970 Celso Lungaretti, codinome Júlio, foi preso pela repressão militar. Além das bárbaras torturas que lhe deixaram surdo de um ouvido. Ainda teve que sobreviver durante anos sendo chamado de traidor pelos companheiros de Esquerda porque aceitou participar da encenação de um falso arrependimento na TV, armada pela ditadura militar como forma de propaganda contra a "subversão". Depois de 40 anos ele conseguiu provar sua inocência. Abaixo o relato do dia em que ele foi preso. O dia que mudou sua vida para sempre.
Travel back in time and around the world with The Travel Film Archive. The Travel Film Archive is a collection of travelogues and educational and industrial films that show the world the way it was between 1900 and 1970. Among our holdings are archives of the renowned travel filmmakers Burton Holmes, Andre de la Varre, and James A. FitzPatrick, as well as footage shot by many other intinerant cameramen.
Footage from The Travel Film Archive is available for licensing from Getty Images and the TFA Network of agents, either directly or through this site. At this time we do not provide footage for personal use.
Sometimes the most prosaic historical evidence can be the most informative. Teachers can have students skim through these diaries to get a sense of what a president's day looked like in the early 1970s. Many of the names may surface in a Watergate lesson, do any of the events listed correspond to other events teachers talk about?
A collection of images, documents, posters, articles, etc based around the experience of South-East Asian immigrants into the USA during and after the Vietnam War. Has thousands of images and documents.
I've found this to be a great source of information on the Cold War, and they have an email newsletter (which makes it easy to keep up with news, etc).
There isn't a whole lot of valuable source material at this site that I could find, but it has a large amount of links to other sites which would be useful for research or activities in the Cold War.
Census of Population and Housing data present here ranges from our most recent census to the historical decennial census conducted throughout the decades.
Wonder if any of those no-doubt steamy phone conversations between Marilyn and JFK made it in there? I'm guessing the 'steamy' section of the JFK recordings might be kinda large...
Between 1940 and 1973, six American presidents from both political parties secretly recorded just under 5,000 hours of their meetings and telephone conversations. Through a combination of historical research and annotated transcripts the Miller Center's Presidential Recordings Program aims to make these remarkable historical sources more accessible to scholars, teachers, students, and the public.