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Hitchhiking through Europe and the Middle East. Surviving an encounter with the East German authorities just days after Kennedy's assassination. Getting lost in the Bermuda Triangle.As she camps along the Nile, works in an Israeli kibbutz and later adjusts to living in Bombay, join the author, a former Peace Corps volunteer and enthusiastic wanderer, for a different view of our world.After two years in the Peace Corps, learning to love her new country and then meeting the king and queen of Sikkim, Keekee Minor continued her explorations in China, arriving in the midst of a three day parade to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Hitchhiking through Europe and the Middle East. Surviving an encounter with the East German authorities just days after Kennedy's assassination. Getting lost in the Bermuda Triangle.As she camps along the Nile, works in an Israeli kibbutz and later adjusts to living in Bombay, join the author, a former Peace Corps volunteer and enthusiastic wanderer, for a different view of our world.After two years in the Peace Corps, learning to love her new country and then meeting the king and queen of Sikkim, Keekee Minor continued her explorations in China, arriving in the midst of a three day parade to celebrate the end of the Cultural Revolution. Not finished with adventures she went on to become the Peace Corps Country Director in the Marshall Islands.A unique historical perspective from someone who lived it, this is one woman's odyssey through the second half of the twentieth century.
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Autorenporträt
Keekee Minor was raised in Steubenville, Ohio. She is a graduate of the Laurel School in Cleveland and Colorado College in Colorado Springs. After graduating college, she hitchhiked through Europe and the Middle East before serving as a Peace Corps volunteer in Bombay, India, and later as country director for the Peace Corps in the Marshall Islands. Her career was focused on population and family planning. She served as chief of field operations for the Office of Family Planning in the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity, and assumed a similar position when the program was transferred to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (now the Department of Health and Human Services). She moved from Washington, DC, to New York City to become director of field operations for Planned Parenthood's International Program-Family Planning International Assistance (FPIA)-and traveled extensively in the regions where their five program offices were located. Other positions plus various consultancies brought the number of countries visited to more than eighty. She is now writing about her travels and enjoying summers in Chautauqua, New York, where her family has owned a cottage since 1945.