Moscow Olympics 1980

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  • Moscow Olympics 1980

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Title

Moscow Olympics 1980

Subject

[no text]

Description

On July 14, 1978, the Soviet government imprisoned Anatoly Shcharansky, a dissident accused of supplying secret material to a reporter for the Los Angeles Times. The trial began on July 10, just two days before the start of U.S.-Soviet strategic arms limitation talks in Geneva. The trial captured public attention because Shcharansky had been promoting the cause of Jewish emigration from the Soviet Union. In addition, Shcharansky's countryman Alexander Ginzburg, manager of a fund for political prisoners, received a sentence of hard labor on July 13. President Jimmy Carter spoke out against the trials but said that American athletes would not boycott the Moscow Olympics. He reversed this decision in 1980 after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan.

Creator

Herbert "Herblock" Block

Source

Collection of the Library of Congress, Herblock Papers, LC-USZ62-126929

Publisher

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Date

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Contributor

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Rights

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Relation

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Format

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Language

eng

Type

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Identifier

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Coverage

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Original Format

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Physical Dimensions

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Files

Citation

Herbert "Herblock" Block, "Moscow Olympics 1980," in Politics and Sport: The 1980 Olympic Games by Herblock, Item #2, http://www.objectofhistory.org/demo/items/show/2 (accessed May 17, 2012).