00786nam0-2200277---450-99000837718040332120060915093723.0000837718FED01000837718(Aleph)000837718FED010008377182006091511979----km-y0itay50------baengUS--------001yyNuclear arms in the third worldU.S. Policy DilemmaErnest W. LefeverWashington, D.C.The Brookings Institution1979153 p.23 cmLefever,Ernest W.250303ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990008377180403321DI 5/6116370DECDECNuclear arms in the third world723386UNINA02147nam 22004573 450 991015758630332120250827080354.0(CKB)3710000000941894(BIP)057454484(VLeBooks)9781787202078(Perlego)3018918(MiAaPQ)EBC32201480(Au-PeEL)EBL32201480(Exl-AI)993710000000941894(OCoLC)1414645320(EXLCZ)99371000000094189420250827d2016 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierArrest and Exile The True Story of an American Woman in Poland and Siberia 1940-411st ed.Waipu :Pickle Partners Publishing,2016.©2016.1 online resource (191 p.) 1-78720-207-0 This book tells the story of Olga Kochanska, an American woman of Polish origin who resided on the eastern border of Poland in 1939, having just lost her husband, when, despite being an American citizen, she was arrested by the Soviet police. She spent the next few months in Lwów, watching the city grow daily uglier and dirtier by the day as the intruders from the east gained greater and greater control.Then in the spring of 1940, Mrs. Kochanska found herself suddenly gathered up by the Russian police and imprisoned in a railroad car, along with a band of cultured, well-to-do Jews of Lwów, for exile to Siberia, where she would suffer a harrowing experience as a prisoner for the next six months.A vivid and sensitive account of the sufferings in Poland and Siberia during the unfolding of World War II.Political prisonersSoviet UnionGenerated by AISiberia (Russia)Generated by AIPolitical prisonersMowrer Lilian T1434419Kochanska Olga1744628MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910157586303321Arrest And Exile4174744UNINA