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he size of the moon as we look at it from the earth, and you also have color. You have a blue ocean(s) and the brown landmasses the brown continents and you can see ice on the ice caps on the North Pole, and so on. It39。s just very emotional. I actually shed a couple of tears looking up at the earth and having those feelings. Part III Nelson Mandela The Father of South Africa As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom, I knew if I didn39。ve been quite easy for him to perhaps stop campaigning for the rights of black people, but he never did that. Right until the end of his time in prison, he was still campaigning. When I went to South Africa, I met somebody who was in prison with him and it was amazing to hear about how they were ... they found it so easy to forgive the government and the people who39。 and most important, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany. He rearmed the country, in violation of a treaty signed after World War I, and soon began to threaten other European nations. For six years, the war unleashed atrocities on a scale never before seen, including the annihilation of six million Jews in Nazi death camps. And the world entered the nuclear age when the United States dropped two atomic bombs on Japan in August 1945. When the war finally ended, the world39。t know who the sailor in the picture was. I was just standing there and I... grabbed and this is a stranger. But this is a man who fought for us, and who helped end the war. Miss Sheng says she39。This is my boy. This is my little boy.39。s no word yet. But they think it39。s has a TV set. Voice from the broadcast: Apparently three bullets were found. Governor Connally also appeared to have been hit. The President was rushed by secret service to Parkland Memorial hospital, four miles from Daley plaza. We39。t e forward to identify himself because he was happily married and really had no interest in the publicity. But, he says, a friend persuaded him to e forward for the 50th anniversary of the end of the Second World War and the most famous kiss in American history. Part VII Watch and enjoy Videoscript: November, 1960, senator John Fitzgerald Kennedy of Massachusetts wins one of the narrowest election victories in American history over Vice President Richard Nixon by a little more than 100 000 votes. Alongside his beautiful and elegant wife Jacqueline Bouvier, Kennedy is the symbol of the new freedom of the 1960s signifying change and upheaval to the American public. Martin Luther King: All men are created equal. Kennedy: Every degree of mind and spirit that I possess will be devoted to the cause of freedom around the world. In October, 1962, the world es to the brink of nuclear war when Kennedy quarantines Cuba after announcing the presence of offensive Soviet nuclear missiles 90 miles off American shores. Soviet ships with more missiles sail towards the island but at the last moment they turn back. The world breathes with relief. Early that fatal summer Kennedy speaks of his new vision at the American university in Washington. Kennedy: What kind of peace do I mean? And what kind of peace do we seek? Not a Pax Americana enforced on the world by American weapons of war. We must reexamine our own attitudes t