1. Albert J. Meyers, "South of the Zambezi: ‘White Man's Africa’?"U.S. News and World Report, 19 December 1966, 43; Albert J. Meyers, "U.S. and South Africa: The Ties, the Differences,"U.S. News and World Report, 22 April 1968, 96. By the late 1960s, an estimated 250,000 tourists visited the country annually, increasingly from Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. Peter Hawthorne, "South Africa Is Mining Tourist Gold,"New York Times, 17 March 1968, XX25.
2. Meyers, "U.S. and South Africa," 97; "South Africa Raises Ante on Autos,"Business Week, 18 November 1967, 98.
3. William Beinart,Twentieth-Century South Africa, 2d ed. (New York and Oxford, 2001), 173.
4. Allen Drury,"A Very Strange Society": A Journey to the Heart of South Africa(New York, 1967). Drury had already achieved notoriety with his novel on politics in Washington,Advise and Consent(Garden City, NY, 1959).
5. American Philanthropy, the Carnegie Corporation and Poverty in South Africa