Memoirs of an Intelligence Officer by Archie Roosevelt
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Politician Truth Will Ultimately Prevail Where There Is Pains Taken to Bring It to Light
The Politician Truth will ultimately prevail where there is pains taken to bring it to light. —George Washington Obvious pressures to smother and ignore The Politician since its official publication are unmatched in the history of the American book world. Now that this explosive volume is available to anyone who will read and judge for himself, the hundreds of periodicals which were quoting and misquoting from it regularly for two years have failed to give it a review or a mention of any nature. There have been many case histories showing the influence exerted on the seven thousand regular bookstores in the United States which has resulted in a virtual boycott of the book—even by those stores that wanted to offer it for sale. In spite of these problems, the sale of forty thousand copies in the first six months after publication and the continuing strong sale have been encouraging. The truth, so fully documented, is not easy to keep buried, even by all of the powerful influences that are so determined to hide it. BELMONT PUBLISHING COMPANY Belmont, Massachusetts 02178 Copyright 1963 by Robert Welch All rights reserved. Except in quotations for review purposes, of not more than five hundred words in any one review, and then with full credit given, no portion of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the author. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 64-8456 Manufactured in the United States of America CONTENTS Please Note vi Prologue vii Again, Please Note xvi Dear Reader 1 Introduction 3 1. -
The Inventory of the Theodore Roosevelt Collection #560
The Inventory of the Theodore Roosevelt Collection #560 Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center ROOSEVELT, THEODORE 1858-1919 Gift of Paul C. Richards, 1976-1990; 1993 Note: Items found in Richards-Roosevelt Room Case are identified as such with the notation ‘[Richards-Roosevelt Room]’. Boxes 1-12 I. Correspondence Correspondence is listed alphabetically but filed chronologically in Boxes 1-11 as noted below. Material filed in Box 12 is noted as such with the notation “(Box 12)”. Box 1 Undated materials and 1881-1893 Box 2 1894-1897 Box 3 1898-1900 Box 4 1901-1903 Box 5 1904-1905 Box 6 1906-1907 Box 7 1908-1909 Box 8 1910 Box 9 1911-1912 Box 10 1913-1915 Box 11 1916-1918 Box 12 TR’s Family’s Personal and Business Correspondence, and letters about TR post- January 6th, 1919 (TR’s death). A. From TR Abbott, Ernest H[amlin] TLS, Feb. 3, 1915 (New York), 1 p. Abbott, Lawrence F[raser] TLS, July 14, 1908 (Oyster Bay), 2 p. ALS, Dec. 2, 1909 (on safari), 4 p. TLS, May 4, 1916 (Oyster Bay), 1 p. TLS, March 15, 1917 (Oyster Bay), 1 p. Abbott, Rev. Dr. Lyman TLS, June 19, 1903 (Washington, D.C.), 1 p. TLS, Nov. 21, 1904 (Washington, D.C.), 1 p. TLS, Feb. 15, 1909 (Washington, D.C.), 2 p. Aberdeen, Lady ALS, Jan. 14, 1918 (Oyster Bay), 2 p. Ackerman, Ernest R. TLS, Nov. 1, 1907 (Washington, D.C.), 1 p. Addison, James T[hayer] TLS, Dec. 7, 1915 (Oyster Bay), 1p. Adee, Alvey A[ugustus] TLS, Oct. -
Human Rights in the Twentieth-Century
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE TWENTIETH-CENTURY: A LITERARY HISTORY A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE BY HADJI BAKARA CHICAGO, ILLINOIS DECEMBER 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures iii Introduction: A Century in Four Figures 1 Chapter One: The Legislator 29 Chapter Two: The Refugee 77 Chapter Three: The Prisoner 131 Chapter Four: The Witness 182 Bibliography 240 ii LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1 | Vladimir Nabokov, American Identification Card (1940) | 1 Figure 2 | Vladimir Nabokov, Index Card Drafts Lolita (undated) | 2 Figure 3 | Archibald MacLeish, Preamble to the United Nations Charter (undated) | 30 Figure 4 | Archibald MacLeish’s “Declaration Draft” detail (undated) | 34 Figure 5 | Archibald MacLeish’s “Declaration Draft” (undated) | 51 Figure 6 | Archibald MacLeish’s draft of the preamble to the UN Charter (1945) | 52 Figure 7 | Archibald MacLeish First Fragment of “Actfive” (1945) | 63 Figure 8 | United Nations Commission on Human Rights. Lake Success, New York (1947) | 65 Figure 9 | Peter Benenson, “The Forgotten Prisoners,” May 28th, 1961 | 133 Figure 10 | “Freedom Writers.” Amnesty Campaign (1988) | 136 Figure 11 | PEN International Campaign Poster Jen Saro Wiwa (1994) | 137 Figure 13 | Heinemann edition of Ngugi’s Detained (1981) | 143 Figure 14 | Paul Tabori, Book Cover for The Pen in Exile (1954) | 145 Figure 15 | Paul Tabori, List of imprisoned writers (1960) | 147 Figure 16 | Agostinho Neto (1968) | 148 Figure 17 | Spanish Edition of Henri Alleg’s La Question (1957) | 157 Figure 18 | Ernesto Sabato delivers first drafts of Nunca Mas (1984) | 163 Figure 19 | Gabriel Garcia Marquez at the Russell War Crimes Tribunals II (1974) | 164 Note: Actual images not included in this version of the dissertation due to copyright issues. -
Admirals Disagree Over Naval Pact Before the Senate
<i ^ t THE 'WEATH^E^- Phreeast- by D rS . ......BuptforAr NET PRESS RUN AVERAGE DABLY CIRCULATION; i^uiw uiil oontoraed cold this «fter> fo^ toe Month of A j^ » 1980 noon and ptobably tonight; Finftiyi olondy with slowly rishig tempera 5 , 5 2 7 ture. Uembcra ot the Andlt Bureau of ClrculatloBU ___ Conn. State Library—Ck>mp. SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS SOUTH MANC;HESTER, c o n n ., THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1930. (Classified ^Advertising on Page 14) VOL. XUV., NO. 193. r EX-CADET CAGLE, AND THE ^ ^ ADMIRALS DISAGREE Leads Revolt in India YALE STUDENTS REASON HE QUIT THE ARMY D R Y BROOK” SUPT. QUESTION IIP ARE SUSPENDED OVER NAVAL PACT TO THE VOTERS F O L L O m R IO T MERIDEN PROBE BEFORE THE SENATE in Statement Say He Did Not Fourteen Come Under Dean’s SOLDIER SAVES LIFE Selectmen Decide Special Merit Discharge for Call OF KING’S SMALL SON HSary P. Jones Says a Kf* Ban; Sixteen Others Lose Town Meeting Should Act Belgrade, Jugo-Slavia, May 15. (erent Setdement Woold ing Attention to Condi __(AP)—Prompt action today of Privileges as Result of a sehtinel outside toe King’s On Sanitary Sewer Dis summer palace saved the life of Have Been Possible; Was tions at the State School. his second son, Tomislav. Disturbances Last We.eh. The sentinel on duty below toe trict Purchase Proposal. nursery ■window saw toe child Naval Adviser at London; New Haven, May. 15.—(AP)— New Haven, May 14.—(AP.)— playing on the balcony, climb to Praise of the investigation precipi toe rail and faU. -
Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt
Skidmore College Creative Matter MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019 MALS 5-16-2015 Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, Or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt Angela Beauchamp Skidmore College Follow this and additional works at: https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/mals_stu_schol Part of the American Film Studies Commons, Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, and the Film and Media Studies Commons Recommended Citation Beauchamp, Angela, "Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, Or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt" (2015). MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019. 98. https://creativematter.skidmore.edu/mals_stu_schol/98 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the MALS at Creative Matter. It has been accepted for inclusion in MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019 by an authorized administrator of Creative Matter. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, Or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt By Angela Beauchamp FINAL PROJECT SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN LIBERAL STUDIES SKIDMORE COLLEGE April 2015 Advisors: Thomas Lewis and Nina Fonoroff Suffering Saint, Asexual Victorian Woman, or Queer Icon? Cinematic Representations of Eleanor Roosevelt Skidmore College MALS Thesis Angela Beauchamp 4-13-2015 2 Contents lntroduction .................................................................................................................................................. -
American Heritage Center
UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING AMERICAN HERITAGE CENTER GUIDE TO ENTERTAINMENT INDUSTRY RESOURCES Child actress Mary Jane Irving with Bessie Barriscale and Ben Alexander in the 1918 silent film Heart of Rachel. Mary Jane Irving papers, American Heritage Center. Compiled by D. Claudia Thompson and Shaun A. Hayes 2009 PREFACE When the University of Wyoming began collecting the papers of national entertainment figures in the 1970s, it was one of only a handful of repositories actively engaged in the field. Business and industry, science, family history, even print literature were all recognized as legitimate fields of study while prejudice remained against mere entertainment as a source of scholarship. There are two arguments to be made against this narrow vision. In the first place, entertainment is very much an industry. It employs thousands. It requires vast capital expenditure, and it lives or dies on profit. In the second place, popular culture is more universal than any other field. Each individual’s experience is unique, but one common thread running throughout humanity is the desire to be taken out of ourselves, to share with our neighbors some story of humor or adventure. This is the basis for entertainment. The Entertainment Industry collections at the American Heritage Center focus on the twentieth century. During the twentieth century, entertainment in the United States changed radically due to advances in communications technology. The development of radio made it possible for the first time for people on both coasts to listen to a performance simultaneously. The delivery of entertainment thus became immensely cheaper and, at the same time, the fame of individual performers grew. -
Shifting Borders: America and the Middle East /North Africa
Shifting Borders: America and the Middle East /North Africa Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference Sponsored by The Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud Center for American Studies and Research at the American University of Beirut Shifting Borders: Alex Lubin America and the Middle East /North Africa East and the Middle America Editor Nancy Batakji Sanyoura Associate Editor Lisa Arnold, Emily Tess Wolterstorff Editorial Assistants American University of Beirut The American University of Beirut (AUB) is a private, independent, non-sectarian institution of higher learning, founded in 1866. It functions under a charter from the State of New York and is governed by an autonomous Board of Trustees. The University currently has over 7,500 students in six faculties. AUB currently offers more than 100 programs leading to the bachelor’s, master’s, MD, and PhD degrees. The University is co-educational. The language of instruction is English (except for courses in the Arabic Department). The University is led by Professor Peter Dorman, President, and Professor Ahmad Dallal, Provost. The Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud Center for American Studies and Research (CASAR) CASAR is dedicated to increasing international understanding primarily by increasing knowledge of the United States in the Middle East. The center pursues its goals through interdisciplinary teaching and research in American Studies and through outreach efforts such as conferences and public lectures. CASAR’s efforts are continuously evolving. It currently offers a Minor in American Studies. Its research agenda focuses on Arab/American encounters. CASAR was established in 2003 as a result of a generous endowment from His Royal Highness Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud. -
Cold War and Post Cold War US Civil War Novels
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2005 "To the latest generation": Cold War and Post Cold War U.S. Civil War novels in their social contexts Jeffrey Neal Smithpeters Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Smithpeters, Jeffrey Neal, ""To the latest generation": Cold War and Post Cold War U.S. Civil War novels in their social contexts" (2005). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 2933. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/2933 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. “TO THE LATEST GENERATION”: COLD WAR AND POST COLD WAR U.S. CIVIL WAR NOVELS IN THEIR SOCIAL CONTEXTS A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and A&M College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of English by Jeffrey Neal Smithpeters B.A. Ouachita Baptist University, 1994 M.A. University of Arkansas, 1996 May 2005 © 2005 Jeff Smithpeters All Rights Reserved ii “Fellow citizens, we cannot escape history. We of this Congress and this administration will be remembered in spite of ourselves. No personal significance or insignificance can spare one or another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass will light us down in honor or dishonor, to the latest generation. -
Imagining Tr: Commemorations and Representations Of
IMAGINING TR: COMMEMORATIONS AND REPRESENTATIONS OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICA A Dissertation by JENNIFER DAWN HETH Submitted to the Office of Graduate and Professional Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Chair of Committee, Terry H. Anderson Committee Members, David Vaught Adam R. Seipp Stephen Caffey Head of Department, David Vaught December 2014 Major Subject: History Copyright 2014 Jennifer Dawn Heth ABSTRACT By examining monuments and memorials dedicated to Theodore Roosevelt in the twentieth century, this dissertation exposes the commemorators’ conscious and unconscious perceptions of masculinity and American identity visible in commemorative statuary. The monuments’ patrons and artists adapted the nation’s collective memory of Roosevelt to suit spatial and temporal variables, including their proposed messages, the monuments’ geographic and situational locations, along with their intended audiences. This dissertation illustrates how commemorators employed specific incarnations of Roosevelt’s multifaceted personality, from Rough Rider to hunter-explorer to statesman, to produce permanent, prominent, and didactic symbols through which to broadcast their values and ideals to both their contemporaries and future generations of Americans. These monuments are not mere reflections of the eras that produced them, however; they serve as portals into contemporary Americans’ sense of self and their understanding of national themes and politics. These visual elements produce evidence not found in textual representations. Over five chapters, this dissertation explores examples of commemorators’ efforts to select a representation of Roosevelt and reveals their use of his image as an example of rugged, vigorous masculinity as well as the embodiment of Americanism. -
BY JOHN N. JACOB Marshall During Trip to Fort Bragg As President of the American Red Cross, 1950 U.S
BY JOHN N. JACOB Marshall during trip to Fort Bragg as president of the American Red Cross, 1950 U.S. ARMY SIGNAL CORPS PHOTO Felix Larkin administers the oath of office to Assistant Secretary of Defense Anna H. Rosenberg, while Secretary of Defense Marshall and Deputy Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett look on, November 15, 1950 U.S. ARMY SIGNAL CORPS PHOTO MarshaN working in his garden in Leesburg, Virginia, c. 1952 PHOTO SOURCE UNKNOWN During his trip as Chairman of the American Battle Monuments Commission, Marshall visits Cambridge, England, cemetery, 1952 PHOTO SOURCE UNKNOWN GEORGE C. MARSHALL PAPERS 1932- 1960 - A GUIDE - BY JOHN N. JACOB GEORGE C. MARSHALL FOUNDATION LEXINGTON, VIRGINIA 1987 The organization of the Marshall Papers and the preparation of this guide was supported by a grant from the Research Resources Program of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data George C. Marshall Research Foundation. The papers of George C. Marshall, 1932-1960. 1. Marshall, George C. (George Catlett), 188C-1959-Archives-Catalogs. 2. United States-History, Military-20th century-Sources-Bibliography-Catalogs 3. United States-Foreign relations-1945-1953-SourcesBibliograpby-Catalogs. 4. George C. Marshall Research Foundation-Catalogs. I. Jacob, John N., 1949- 11. Title. 26616.M346G45 1979 [E745.M37] 973.918'092'4 79-24736 ISBN 0-935524-08-8 Copyright 1987 by the George C. Marshall Foundation, Lexington, Virginia. All rights reserved. ii FOREWORD Few Americans have so influenced the history of this cen- tury as George C. Marshall, who served as United States Army Chief of Staff during World War 11, and later as Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense. -
The Autobiography of Theodore Roosevelt by Theodore Roosevelt Get 10% Off Your First Library of America Purchase
Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Autobiography of Theodore Roosevelt by Theodore Roosevelt Get 10% off your first Library of America purchase. Sign up for our monthly e-newsletter and receive a coupon for 10% off your first LOA purchase. Discount offer available for first-time customers only. A champion of America’s great writers and timeless works, Library of America guides readers in finding and exploring the exceptional writing that reflects the nation’s history and culture. From poetry, novels, and memoirs to journalism, crime writing, and science fiction, the more than 300 volumes published by Library of America are widely recognized as America’s literary canon. With contributions from donors, Library of America preserves and celebrates a vital part of our cultural heritage for generations to come. The Best Biographies of Theodore Roosevelt. After reading 121 biographies of the first 26 presidents, Theodore Roosevelt easily stands out as one of the most fascinating and robustly-spirited chief executives in our nation’s history. He almost makes Andrew Jackson look tame. Roosevelt was a prolific author, part-time science nerd, rancher, conservationist, legislator, reform-minded police commissioner and government bureaucrat, soldier, governor, naval enthusiast, thrill-seeking adventurer, Nobel Peace Prize winner…and the youngest president in American history. Theodore Roosevelt is easy to caricature, but extremely difficult to study, unravel and adequately interpret. At once he could be both brilliant and insane, logical and yet completely delusional. He was remarkably self-confident, a quick study in the art of politics, a gifted communicator, extremely sociable and enormously devoted to his family and his country. -
The Captain America Conundrum: Issues of Patriotism, Race, and Gender in Captain America Comic Books, 1941-2001
The Captain America Conundrum: Issues of Patriotism, Race, and Gender in Captain America Comic Books, 1941-2001 by Richard A. Hall A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Auburn University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Auburn, Alabama August 6, 2011 Keywords: Captain America, comic books, patriotism, popular culture Copyright 2011 by Richard A. Hall Approved by Larry Gerber, Chair, Professor Emeritus of History Ruth Crocker, Professor of History David Carter, Associate Professor of History Abstract “The Captain America Conundrum: Issues of Patriotism, Race, and Gender in Captain America Comic Books, 1941-2001” represents a comprehensive examination of Captain America comic books as a primary source for the study of United States history from just prior to World War II to the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Just as Time magazine or the New York Times newspaper could be used as primary sources to examine American society, mores, and culture, it is the argument of this study that comic books – heretofore considered primarily children’s literature – can also be used in this regard. Through the pages of this essentially monthly publication, accepted norms of contemporary American society can be seen, as well as (post-1960) attempts on the part of the writers and artists to influence those norms. Within the zeitgeist of American culture, the character of Captain America has been considered a representation of strong government and ardent conservatism. The reality, however, is that the character has become increasingly just left-of-center politically, promoting strong nationalism and American leadership alongside ideas of racial and gender equality.