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in Mexico. Tompkins allowed the USIA to influence newsreel content while having no official trace to production. Since
Mexican citizens owned the rest of the
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51:. Projects with similar objectives were carried out in other Latin American countries, such as Brazil, Chile, Bolivia and Ecuador.
91:. Due to concerns about Project Pedro's high cost and efficacy, the USIA terminated funding for the program in September 1961.
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Project Pedro began production in
February 1957 and by the end of that year, its newsreels were shown in several hundred
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The project was publicly operated in part by a former film executive named
Richard K. Tompkins who had produced
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creating the newsreels, the USIA was not required to publicly disclose its involvement in the project.
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negatively, in an effort to change the
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Fein, Seth. "New Empire into Old: Making
Mexican Newsreels the Cold War Way."
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In from the Cold: Latin
America's New Encounter with the Cold War
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144:America, Russia, and the Cold War, 1945-2006.
83:the project, including the manufacturers of
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133:. Duke University Press. pp. 171–213.
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19:was a secretly funded program under the
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76:throughout Mexico. Several major
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31:. The program was a clandestine
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177:. You can help Knowledge by
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23:during the 1950s to create
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35:campaign to spread
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67:production company
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