No name

Includes products on or including CD-ROM, DVD or other disc format.

The Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) performs an essential public health task by making sure that safe and effective drugs are available to improve the health of people in the United States.

As part of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), CDER regulates over-the-counter and prescription drugs, including biological therapeutics and generic drugs. This work covers more than just medicines. For example, fluoride toothpaste, antiperspirants, dandruff shampoos and sunscreens are all considered "drugs."

The Center for the Study of Intelligence (CSI) was established as an organization within CIA to “think through the functions of intelligence and bring the best intellects available to bear on intelligence problems.” The center, comprising professional historians and experienced practitioners from throughout the Intelligence Community, attempts to document lessons learned from past activities, to explore the needs and expectations of intelligence consumers, and to stimulate serious debate about current and future intelligence challenges.

To carry out this mission, CSI publishes books and monographs addressing historical, operational, doctrinal and theoretical aspects of the intelligence profession. It also administers the CIA Museum and maintains the CIA’s Historical Intelligence Collection of published literature on intelligence. The center also houses the Emerging Trends Program, which seeks to identify the impact of future trends on the work of US intelligence.

CSI's mission areas include the following activities:

  1. Intelligence Research: Publish the quarterly Studies in Intelligence, the Journal of the American Intelligence Professional; Host independent research and publish books and monographs on intelligence topics.
  2. Intelligence History: Publish key documentary collections from the Cold War; Conduct oral history projects; Produce monographs on CIA history and the history of intelligence; Support the State Department's Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series.
  3. Historical Records: Promote public understanding of intelligence; Conferences and Seminars; Provide a forum for practitioners and scholars; Make important research widely available; Commemorate major historical events in the intelligence world; Interact with academic specialists.
  4. University Programs: Encourage and improve the teaching of intelligence; Sponsor CIA Officers-in-Residence on campuses.

The Center for Tobacco Products (CTP) oversees the implementation of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act. Some of the Agency’s responsibilities under the law include setting performance standards, reviewing premarket applications for new and modified risk tobacco products, requiring new warning labels, and establishing and enforcing advertising and promotion restrictions.

The Center of Military History (CMH) provides the United States Army, from senior civilian and military leaders to individual soldiers, with an awareness of history. The purposes are to educate and inform. Other military services, policymakers, government agencies, and the public at large also benefit from the Center’s history program.

To those ends, CMH produces publications on the history of the United States Army for worldwide distribution, administers the Army’s far-ranging field history operations, and manages the Army’s museums both stateside and abroad. CMH publishes books, monographs, pamphlets, CD-ROMs, historical map posters, and the professional bulletin Army History. One of the more popular recent series is The U.S. Army Campaigns of the Civil War".

For more about the Center, go to www.history.army.mil; the home page also provides a link to CMH’s online book catalog.

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Vol 88  No 60  03/29/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 59  03/28/23; Federal Register Complete
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March/april 2023; Military Review
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March/april 2023; Military Review

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Vol 169 No 44  03/08/23; Congressional Record
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Vol 169 No 44 03/08/23; Congressional Record

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Vol 88 No 48  03/13/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 48 03/13/23; Federal Register Complete

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Vol 88 No 57 03/24/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 57 03/24/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 88 No 57 03/24/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 169 No 45  03/09/23; Congressional Record
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Vol 169 No 45 03/09/23; Congressional Record

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Vol 88 No 49 03/14/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 49 03/14/23; Federal Register Complete

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Vol 88 No 58 03/27/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 88 No 58 03/27/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 169 No 46  03/10/23; Congressional Record
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Vol 169 No 46 03/10/23; Congressional Record

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Vol 88 No 50  03/15/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 50 03/15/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 88 No 50 03/15/23; Federal Register Complete

Index Vol 88 No 1-39 Jan-feb23; Federal Register Complete
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Index Vol 88 No 1-39 Jan-feb23; Federal Register Complete

Index Vol 88 No 1-39 Jan-feb23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 169 No 48  03/15/23; Congressional Record
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Vol 169 No 48 03/15/23; Congressional Record

Vol 169 No 48 03/15/23; Congressional Record

Vol 88 No 51  03/16/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 51 03/16/23; Federal Register Complete

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Vol 169 No 49  03/16/23; Congressional Record
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Vol 169 No 49 03/16/23; Congressional Record

Vol 169 No 49 03/16/23; Congressional Record

Vol 88 No 52  03/17/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 52 03/17/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 88 No 52 03/17/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 169 No 54  03/24/23; Congressional Record
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Vol 169 No 54 03/24/23; Congressional Record

Vol 169 No 54 03/24/23; Congressional Record

Vol 88 No 53  03/20/23; Federal Register Complete
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Vol 88 No 53 03/20/23; Federal Register Complete

Vol 88 No 53 03/20/23; Federal Register Complete

Index Vol 169 No29-46 2/13 3/1; Congressional Record
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Index Vol 169 No29-46 2/13 3/1; Congressional Record

Index Vol 169 No29-46 2/13 3/1; Congressional Record

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