Memorabilia and Printed Materials Series

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Memorabilia and Printed Materials Series SEATON, FRED A.: Papers Memorabilia and Print Materials Series Scope and Content Note The Memorabilia and Print Materials series consists of approximately 10,000 pages of material dating from 1934-1976. The series includes reports, publications and newspaper clippings from Seaton’s political career and years as Assistant Secretary of Defense and Secretary of the Interior; and items from the post-administration period. The material was place in folders with titles devised by a staff archivist. The folders are arranged roughly in chronological order in accordance with Seaton’s career. Oversized items are arranged out of sequence for more appropriate housing and the group of publications relating to wildlife and conservation are also housed out of sequence toward the end of the series. Additional items were transferred to the museum, book collection and audiovisual department. These transferred items are listed at the end of this series. Container List Box No. Folder 1 [General Dynamics commemorative booklet on the launch of the Nautilus] Visitors Register June 12, 1956-August 31, 1959 [office of the Secretary of the Interior] Visitors Register September 1, 1959-Jan. 6, 1961[office of the Secretary of the Interior] “The Barnum of the G.O.P” by Stewart Alsop [May 26, 1956 Saturday Evening Post] “Our Respects” by Frederick Andrew Seaton Western Farm Life, January 1, 1962 Man on Moon, special edition of the Orlando Sentinel, August 3, 1969 The Republican, July and September 1969 How You Can Outsmart Tomorrow in Pennsylvania Today, Raymond P. Shafer, Governor, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania American Revolution Bicentennial Commission 1972-June 1973 American Revolution Bicentennial Commission June 1973-1974 American Revolution Bicentennial Commission – South Dakota 1976 USA Bicentennial Discover the New Pennsylvania 2 Correspondence [1945-1974] Address Lists – Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Program, Convention Sixth District Young Republican Clubs, April 6, 1934 Labor Fights for the “Four Freedoms” – Official Yearbook 1945 Nebraska State Federation of Labor Atlas of the World Battle Fronts, August 1945 – A supplement to the Biennial Report of the Chief of Staff of the United States Army to the Secretary of War Universal Military Training and Service Act of 1951, Hearings before the Preparedness Subcommittee of the Committee on Armed Services, United States Senate Universal Military Training – Hearings before the Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives, 82nd Congress Telephone Directory – United States Department of the Interior, February 1952 3 McCarthyism: The Fight for America, by Senator Joe McCarthy, 1952 Colonial Williamsburg – Report by the President for the Year 1952 1952 Annual Report, Secretary of the Interior, Oscar Chapman Fred Seaton Brown Palace Hotel letterhead [1952] Summer White House, 1954, Lowry Air Force Base, Denver, Colorado 1954 Annual Report, Secretary of the Interior, Douglas McKay, Resources for Tomorrow Program, Riley Bowl, Fort Riley, Kansas, Nov. 27, 1954 Space Requirements of the Executive Office of the President, May 31, 1955 1955 Annual Report, Secretary of the Interior, Douglas McKay, Partnership in Resource Conservation and Development The Geneva Conference of Heads of Government, July 18-23, 1955 POW…the fight continues after the battle…, A Report by the Secretary of Defense’s Advisory Committee on Prisoners of War “Which Chinese?” Diplomatic Relations and Official Representation. By Stanley K. Hornbeck 4 Executive Branch Liaison to the White House – Quotes (1)(2) Executive Branch Liaison Office to the White House – Facts (1)-(3) Voting Information. Prepared by Office of Armed Forces Information & Education, Department of Defense Government Finance Brief Number 3. State Tax Rates and Collections, 1950 and 1955 Report on the Contribution of the All-American Canal System to the Economic Development of the Imperial-Coachella Valleys, California, and to the Nation. 1956 Republican Platform: Report of the Committee on Resolutions to the Republican National Convention. August 21, 1956, San Francisco, CA Withdrawal and Utilization of the Public Lands of the United States – Hearings, Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, House of Representatives, 84th Congress 1956 WOC’s and Government Advisory Groups, Hearing Before Antitrust Subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary House of Representatives, 84th Congress, July 26, 1956 4 Charts re: Racial Situation and Civil Rights. Federal Bureau of Investigation Department of the Interior Brochures UNATOM: A Plan for the Development of a United Atomic Treaty Organization of Free World Nations, by John Jay Hopkins 5 Department of Defense Semiannual Report, January 1 to June 30 1956 The Documented Record of Senator Wayne Morse, by Republican State Central Committee, July 9, 1956 The United States as a Communist Nation…under which flag? Inaugural Engagements (1)(2) Inaugural Programs, 1957 Inaugural Schedules Eighty-Fifth Congress, Pocket Congressional Directory, January 1957 Report on the Middle East, Department of Defense, Office of Armed Forces Information and Education The Conservation of Our Natural Resources, by Fred Seaton, May 1957 Progress on the Klamath Federal Reclamation Project, May 1957 “Salaries and Years in Office of American Labor Leaders” May 1957 The Story of Old Faithful, by George D. Marler Department of Defense Semiannual Report, January 1 to June 30 1957 Welcome to Phnom Penh: The American Embassy, November, 1957 6 Guide to the Press of the World, 55th Edition 1957 Saline Water Conversion Report 1957 Communist Propaganda: A Fact Book, 1957-58 Republican National Committee Publications Program and Proceedings, Fourth Annual Conference on Indian Affairs: Employment, June 13-14 1958 Department of Defense Semiannual Report, January 1 to June 30 1958 The Electric Power Business in the Union of Soviet Specialist Republics “America’s Largest Wildlife Area” by Fred A. Seaton Official Report of the Board of State Canvassers of the State of Nebraska, Canvass Completed, June 9, 1958 The Calvin K. Kazanjian Economics Foundation, Inc. Stockpile Report to the Congress, July – December 1958, Executive Office of the President, Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization Department of the Interior – Preliminary Legislative Program, October 1959 Subversive Activities Control Board Report: Docket No. 51-101, William P. Rogers, Jr. v. the Communist Party of the United States Subversive Activities Control Board Report: Docket No. 120-57, William P. Rogers, Jr. v. Colorado Committee to Protect Civil Liberties Subversive Activities Control Board Report: Docket No. 123-57, William P. Rogers, Jr. v. California Emergency Defense Committee Virgin Islands Corporation, St. Croix, V.I., Financial Statement for Fiscal Year 1959 John Foster Dulles, 1888-1959: An Appreciation, by Arthur H. Dean Republican National Committee 1957-60 (Lists) 7 Small Business Administration, Lists of Field Advisors Our Flag, Office of Armed Forces Information & Education, Department of Defense 27th Republican National Convention, Chicago, July 1960 “Meet Fred Seaton – Secretary of the Interior” Democratic Platform: The Rights of Man, Democratic National Convention, 7/12/1960 Building A Better America – Republican Platform 1960, Republican National Convention July 27, 1960 (2 copies) Vice President Richard Nixon discusses Education The Role of Energy in a Changing World – Address by George F. Getty II before the 1960 National Convention of the Quartermaster Association Research: The New Dynamo for Economic Growth, By John T. Connor, President, MERCK & Co., 1960 Public Assistance – A Survey of Selected Aspects of State Programs August 1960 Billy Graham letter to Richard Nixon October 17, 1960 State Executive Officials and Supreme Court Judges, Elected on November 8, 1960 Statistics of the Presidential and Congressional Election of November 8, 1960 Official Report of the Board of State Canvassers of the State of Nebraska, Canvass Completed May 31, 1960 Eighty-Seventh Congress, Pocket Congressional Directory, January 1961 White House Staff Book 1953-61 Advisory Boards and Other Lists for Secretary’s Address Book “The House will be in Order” by Sam Rayburn Our Public Lands – Bureau of Land Management, January 1961, Vol. 10, No. 3 Outdoor Nebraska, February 1961 Vol. 39, No. 2 Telephone Directory, United States Department of the Interior, May 1961 Report of the Committee on Big City Politics, by Ray Bliss, Republican National Committee Meeting June 1, 1961 Uncle Max’s Newsletter, Vol. 20, No. 6 & No. 9, June and November 1962 8 Barry Goldwater 9th Annual Oscar C. Schmidt Memorial Lecture Wake Up and Learn by John E. Mekota of CRETE 1962 Republican Party Candidate-Help Direct Mail Campaign The Power of Reason, by Robert M. Hutchins, Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions William Allen White Foundation Publications: “Inside a Newspaper Group” by Paul Miller, “Long-Range Respect” by Dolph Simons, and “A Lasting Love Affair” by Clyde M. Reed. CBS Reports: “Storm over the Supreme Court”, February 20, 1963 The Courts and the Broadcast Media by Dr. Frank Stanton Firmfax, April 1963 The International Passamaquoddy Tidal Power Project and Upper Saint John River Hydroelectric Power Development Summary Report Advance – A Journal of Political Thought, Fall 1963 Vol. 2, No. 5 Hastings Industrial and Development Corporation Committee for Economic Development Report to the Secretary of the Interior by the Task Force on Alaska Native Affairs Republican National Convention and Presidential Campaign,
Recommended publications
  • April 20, NOTE
    PRINCIPAL OFFICIALS in the V.XECUTIVE BRANCH Appointed January 20 - April 20, 1953 NOTE: This list is limited to appointments made after January 20, 1953. Names con- tained herein replace corre- sponding names appearing in the 1952-53 U.S. Government Organization Manual. Federal Register Division National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington 25, D. C. MEMBERS OF THE CABINET TEE PRESIDENT John Foster Dulles, of New York, Secretary of State. President of the United States.-- Dwight D. Eisenhower George M. Humphrey, of Ohio, Secre- tary of the Treasury. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Charles Erwin Wilson, of Michigan, Secretary of Defense. The White House Office Herbert Brownell, Jr., of New York, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW. Attorney General. NAtional 8-1414 Arthur E. Summerfield, of Michigan, The Assistant to the President.-- Postmaster General. Sherman Adams Assistant to The Assistant to the Douglas McKay, of Oregon, Secretary President.--Maxwell M. Rabb of the Interior. Special Assistant to The Assistant to the President.--Roger Steffan Ezra Taft Benson, of Utah, Secretary Special Assistant to The Assistant of Agriculture. to the President.--Charles F. Willis, Jr. Sinclair Weeks, of Massachusetts, Special Assistants in the White Secretary of Commerce Haase Office: L. Arthur Minnich, Jr. Martin P. Durkin, of Maryland, James M. Lambie Secretary of Labor. Special Counsel to the President (Acting Secretary).--Thomas E. Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, of Texas, Stephens Secretary of Health, Education, Secretary to the President (Press).-- and Welfare James C. Hagerty Assistant Press Secretary.--Murray Snyder Acting Special Counsel to the Presi- For sale by the dent.--Bernard M.
    [Show full text]
  • January 1955
    mE PRESID.ENm1S APPOIN TS S Y, J WARY 1, 1955 9•45 12: 20 pn De .... .,. ....... .,, the Off'ic and returned to the Rous • 2:00 part the Hou e went to the Ottiee. 4:00 pn The President d arted the Office and returned to the House, via Mr. Clift berts suite. (Ft avy rains throughout the dq) I J.w.:A.u..u.>;•n'?'' S A? 0 'lie J.5 J. AI 2, 1955 AUGUSTA, GIDRGIA ll.:00 The esid t an - senho er d , rted the Hou nroute to the Rei M orial byterian Church. 11:10 Arri.Ted at t Church. lltlS am Church en:ice began. 12:12 pm The President and l s . Eisenh er d rt4'<1 the Church and returned t o t he l:ouse. 12:19 Jiil An-iv at th Rous • 1:00 The esident t e off wit h the following: • Zig Lannan • Frank lillard r. F.d Dudley 3:50 Completed 18 hol e s. 4140 The lident nd a. s nh P and s. Dou , accompanied by the following, depart, th House enroute to Bush Airti ld. Hr. ClU't Roberts Mr. illiam Robinson • Ellis Slat r • Frank rill.ard Mr. and 11" • Free Go den 5:0; pm Arrived sh Airfi ld d boarded Columbine. 5tl3 J:lll Airborne for ~ e.ahington, D. c. 7:00 pi Arrim HATS Terminal. The Preli.dent and lro. Eisenhower and guest• deplaned. 7:10 pa The President and e. i enh er d s. Do departed the Airport and motored to the ~'hite House.
    [Show full text]
  • Principal State and Territorial Officers
    / 2 PRINCIPAL STATE AND TERRITORIAL OFFICERS EXECUTIVE OFFICERS Atlorneys .... State Governors Lieulenanl Governors General . Secretaries of State. Alabama. James E. Foisoin J.C.Inzer .A. .A.. Carniichael Sibyl Pool Arizona Dan E. Garvey None Fred O. Wilson Wesley Boiin . Arkansas. Sid McMath Nathan Gordon Ike Marry . C. G. Hall California...... Earl Warren Goodwin J. Knight • Fred N. Howser Frank M. Jordan Colorado........ Lee Knous Walter W. Jolinson John W. Metzger George J. Baker Connecticut... Chester Bowles Wm. T. Carroll William L. Hadden Mrs. Winifred McDonald Delaware...:.. Elbert N. Carvel A. duPont Bayard .Mbert W. James Harris B. McDowell, Jr. Florida.. Fuller Warren None Richard W. Ervin R.A.Gray Georgia Herman Talmadge Marvin Griffin Eugene Cook Ben W. Fortson, Jr. * Idaho ;C. A. Robins D. S. Whitehead Robert E. Sniylie J.D.Price IlUnola. .-\dlai E. Stevenson Sher^vood Dixon Ivan.A. Elliott Edward J. Barrett Indiana Henry F. Schricker John A. Walkins J. Etnmett McManamon Charles F. Fleiiiing Iowa Wm. S.'Beardsley K.A.Evans Robert L. Larson Melvin D. Synhorst Kansas Frank Carlson Frank L. Hagainan Harold R. Fatzer (a) Larry Ryan Kentucky Earle C. Clements Lawrence Wetherby A. E. Funk • George Glenn Hatcher Louisiana Earl K. Long William J. Dodd Bolivar E. Kemp Wade O. Martin. Jr. Maine.. Frederick G. Pgynp None Ralph W. Farris Harold I. Goss Maryland...... Wm. Preston Lane, Jr. None Hall Hammond Vivian V. Simpson Massachusetts. Paul A. Dever C. F. Jeff Sullivan Francis E. Kelly Edward J. Croiiin Michigan G. Mennen Williams John W. Connolly Stephen J. Roth F. M. Alger, Jr.- Minnesota.
    [Show full text]
  • PAUL B. MILLER Notre Dame Law School University of Notre Dame 2160 Eck Hall of Law Notre Dame, in 46556
    PAUL B. MILLER Notre Dame Law School University of Notre Dame 2160 Eck Hall of Law Notre Dame, IN 46556 POSITIONS Notre Dame Law School Associate Dean for International & Graduate Programs, 2018 – present Director, Notre Dame Program on Private Law, 2018 – present Professor of Law (tenured), 2017 – present McGill University Faculty of Law Associate Professor of Law (tenured), 2015 – 2017 Assistant Professor of Law, 2013 – 2015 Queen’s University Faculty of Law Assistant Professor of Law, 2008-2013 Hon. Justice Ian Binnie, Supreme Court of Canada Law Clerk, 2007-2008 VISITING POSITIONS Peking University Law School Beijing, China Global Faculty, 2018 - Present Tel Aviv University Buchmann Faculty of Law Tel Aviv, Israel Visiting Professor of Law, 2019 (May-June) Melbourne Law School Melbourne, Australia Visiting Scholar, 2016 (April) Paul B. Miller - Notre Dame Law School 2 EDUCATION University of Toronto Ph.D. in Philosophy, 2008 University of Toronto Faculty of Law J.D., 2004 Cambridge University M.Phil. in History and Philosophy of Science, 2001 University of Toronto M.A. in Philosophy, 2000 Mount Allison University B.A.Hons. in Philosophy, 1999 INTERESTS Philosophy of Law, Private Law Theory, Equity, Fiduciary Law, Agency, Trusts, Business and Non-Profit Organizations COURSES TAUGHT Business Organizations, Corporate Law Theory, Jurisprudence, Law of Equity (with Samuel Bray), Private Law Theory, Property, Trusts and Estates SELECTED PUBLICATIONS Book Series OXFORD PRIVATE LAW THEORY (an Oxford University Press series) (Series Editor, with John Oberdiek). Books OXFORD STUDIES IN PRIVATE LAW THEORY, VOL. II (Oxford University Press, forthcoming) (ed. with John Oberdiek). Paul B. Miller - Notre Dame Law School 3 INTERSTITIAL PRIVATE LAW (Oxford University Press, forthcoming) (ed.
    [Show full text]
  • JOHN FOSTER DULLES PAPERS PERSONNEL SERIES The
    JOHN FOSTER DULLES PAPERS PERSONNEL SERIES The Personnel Series, consisting of approximately 17,900 pages, is comprised of three subseries, an alphabetically arranged Chiefs of Mission Subseries, an alphabetically arranged Special Liaison Staff Subseries and a Chronological Subseries. The entire series focuses on appointments and evaluations of ambassadors and other foreign service personnel and consideration of political appointees for various posts. The series is an important source of information on the staffing of foreign service posts with African- Americans, Jews, women, and individuals representing various political constituencies. Frank assessments of the performances of many chiefs of mission are found here, especially in the Chiefs of Mission Subseries and much of the series reflects input sought and obtained by Secretary Dulles from his staff concerning the political suitability of ambassadors currently serving as well as numerous potential appointees. While the emphasis is on personalities and politics, information on U.S. relations with various foreign countries can be found in this series. The Chiefs of Mission Subseries totals approximately 1,800 pages and contains candid assessments of U.S. ambassadors to certain countries, lists of chiefs of missions and indications of which ones were to be changed, biographical data, materials re controversial individuals such as John Paton Davies, Julius Holmes, Wolf Ladejinsky, Jesse Locker, William D. Pawley, and others, memoranda regarding Leonard Hall and political patronage, procedures for selecting career and political candidates for positions, discussions of “most urgent problems” for ambassadorships in certain countries, consideration of African-American appointees, comments on certain individuals’ connections to Truman Administration, and lists of personnel in Secretary of State’s office.
    [Show full text]
  • 1969 NGA Annual Meeting
    Proceedings OF THE NATIONAL GOVERNORS' CONFERENCE 1969 SIXTY-FIRST ANNUAL MEETING BROADMOOR HOTEL • COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO AUGUST 31-SEPTEMBER 3, 1969 THE NATIONAL GOVERNORS' CONFERENCE IRON WORKS PIKE LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY 40505 THE COUNCil OF S1'ATE GOVERNMENTS IRON WORKS PIKE LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY 40511 J Published by THE NATIONAL GOVERNORS' CONFERENCE IRON WORKS PIKE LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY 40505 CONTENTS Executive Committee Rosters v Other Committees of the Conference vi Governors and Guests in Attendance viii Program of the Annual Meeting xi Monday Sessions-September 1 Welcoming Remarks-Governor John A. Love 1 Address of the Chairman-Governor Buford Ellington 2 Adoption of Rules of Procedure . 4 Remarks of Monsieur Pierre Dumont 5 "Governors and the Problems of the Cities" (including reports and policy statements of the Committee on Community Development and Urban Relations), Governor Richard J. Hughes presiding .. 6 Remarks of Secretary George Romney . .. 15 "Revenue Sharing" (including reports and policy statements of the Committee on Executive Management and Fiscal Affairs), Governor Daniel J. Evans presiding . 33 Remarks of Dr. Arthur F. Burns .. 36 Remarks of Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew 43 State Ball Remarks of Governor John A. Love 57 Remarks of Governor Buford Ellington 57 Address by the President of the United States 58 Tuesday Sessions-September 2 "Major Issues in Human Resources" (including reports and policy statements of the Committee on Human Resources), Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller presiding . 68 Remarks of Secretary George P. Shultz 87 "Transportation" (including reports and policy statements of the Committee on Transportation, Commerce, and Technology), Governor John A. Love presiding 95 Remarks of Secretary John A.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    OFFICERS OF THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OF THE GOVERNMENT [ 1 ] EXPLANATORY NOTE A Cabinet officer is not appointed for a fixed term and does not necessarily go out of office with the President who made the appointment. While it is customary to tender one’s resignation at the time a change of administration takes place, officers remain formally at the head of their department until a successor is appointed. Subordinates acting temporarily as heads of departments are not con- sidered Cabinet officers, and in the earlier period of the Nation’s history not all Cabinet officers were heads of executive departments. The names of all those exercising the duties and bearing the respon- sibilities of the executive departments, together with the period of service, are incorporated in the lists that follow. The dates immediately following the names of executive officers are those upon which commis- sions were issued, unless otherwise specifically noted. Where periods of time are indicated by dates as, for instance, March 4, 1793, to March 3, 1797, both such dates are included as portions of the time period. On occasions when there was a vacancy in the Vice Presidency, the President pro tem- pore is listed as the presiding officer of the Senate. The Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution (effective Oct. 15, 1933) changed the terms of the President and Vice President to end at noon on the 20th day of January and the terms of Senators and Representatives to end at noon on the 3d day of January when the terms of their successors shall begin. [ 2 ] EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, 1789–2005 First Administration of GEORGE WASHINGTON APRIL 30, 1789, TO MARCH 3, 1793 PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—GEORGE WASHINGTON, of Virginia.
    [Show full text]
  • DRS in the News 1 July 2011 the Dally Ardmorel!E : August 9, 2011 -Page 10A Ardmore
    Oklahoma Department of Rehabilitation Services In the News August 1 through 31, 2011 Produced by Shirley Burton, Brett Freeman and Dana Tallon for Oklahoma Department of Rehabilitation Services, Public Information Office. If you have any questions please call 405.951.3478. This publication is only available in the electronic format on the DRS website, www.okdrs.gov. The Tecumseh Countywide News: August 4, 2011 -Page 6a Tecumseh, OK. Circulation: Weekly: 1818 Circulation Source: COlC At Lions Shawnee Lions Paul Milburn, left, and Mike Moriarity, right, welcome Elizabeth Stewart to a recent club meeting. Stewart, Director of In­ stitutional Services Di­ vision of the Office of Juvenile Affairs, and Moriarity, SLlperinten­ dent of the Central Okla­ homa Juvenile Center in Tecumseh, presented a program outlining the security and treatment programs at the center. A new program in co­ operation with the Okla­ homa Depart ment of Rehabilitative Services will provide services to juveniles with disabilities to help them find em­ ployment upon release, DRS In the News 1 July 2011 The Dally Ardmorel!e : August 9, 2011 -Page 10a Ardmore . OK. Circulat ion: Dally: 9721 Circulallon Source: PREP FOOTBALL -- Above, AII-Artlmorelte Super Team linebacker Zac Maynard (7) is one of several returning starters from Davis' Class 2A state runner-up team. Below, renovations like new lockers at Dickson have Comet fans excited after a d own year in 2010. PHOTO/ROSS TUCKE R/OAVIS HIGH SCHOOL AN D DON AlQUISTITH[ARDMOREITE Preseason starts today. Here's what to look for in Hit the field south-central Oklahoma By Erik K.
    [Show full text]
  • Ike Insight Aug 2016 for Website
    P.O.IKE Box 295 200 SE 4th St. Abilene, KS 67410INSIGHT 785-263-6771 www.EisenhowerFoundation.net INSIDE You Did It! Meredith’s Memo Dedication and Service Thanks to your support, over $29,000 has been long career with the National Archives System. Special Recognition raised in honor of Karl Weissenbach. This special Karl began his work for the National Archives in fund will be used for programs, activities, and Celebrating our Heroes 1979. After serving as the supervisory archivist of events at the Eisenhower Presidential Library, the research rooms in Washington, Karl moved to IKEducation Museum, and Boyhood Home in Abilene, Kansas. the Office of Presidential Libraries. There he Spotlight Event After 40 years of working in the National Archives worked on the Nixon Presidential Materials project System, Karl Weissenbach retired from Director of from 1991 to 2005, where his main duty was Our Partners the Eisenhower Presidential Library. processing the controversial Nixon White House tapes for public release. Upcoming Events Just like Dwight D. Eisenhower, Did You Know? Karl rose from humble beginnings. “I am the product of the During that time, Karl traveled to He was born in Germany, and American Dream.” Abilene for a meeting and Featured Artifact never knew his biological father. developed a fondness for the His mother and three siblings area. In 2006, he accepted the In the Mailbox immigrated to the United States position of Deputy Director at the with an American soldier step- Eisenhower Presidential Library. father when Karl was eight. They Two years later, he was promoted settled in Georgia, but his mother to the office of the Director of the died of cancer and his stepfather Eisenhower Presidential Library.
    [Show full text]
  • Allenneuharth1wpd ( .Pdf )
    1 AL NEUHARTH Al Neuharth was born in Eureka, South Dakota, on March 22, 1924. He grew up in a rural area in a poor family and lost his father in a farm accident at age two. At age eleven, he took his first job as a newspaper carrier and in high school, began writing for the school paper. He eventually became editor of the school paper and worked in the composing room of the weekly Alpena (South Dakota) Journal . After graduating from Alpena High School, he enlisted in the Army. He was assigned to the 86 th Infantry Division and was shipped to Europe to join General Patton’s Third Army racing toward Germany. He earned a Bronze Star and the Combat Infantryman’s Badge. After the war, Neuharth returned to South Dakota, married his sweetheart and enrolled at the University of South Dakota. He majored in journalism, graduated in 1950 and took a position with the Associated Press in Sioux Falls, S. D. as a reporter. In 1952, he and a friend launched a statewide weekly tabloid devoted to high school athletics in South Dakota, called So Dak Sports. After raising $50,000 to start the paper, Neuharth and his partner went bankrupt in two years due to lack of advertising and poor management. Neuharth learned from his failure and, in 1953, looking forward to a new start in a different part of the country, accepted a job as a reporter for the Miami Herald. In the next seven years, Neuharth worked his way up from reporter to Assistant Managing Editor.
    [Show full text]
  • Critical Planning Assumptions
    CRITICAL ASSUMPTIONS AND AMERICAN GRAND STRATEGY HAL BRANDS, PETER FEAVER, WILLIAM INBODEN, AND PAUL D. MILLER CRITICAL ASSUMPTIONS AND AMERICAN GRAND STRATEGY HAL BRANDS PETER FEAVER WILLIAM INBODEN PAUL D. MILLER 2017 ABOUT THE CENTER FOR STRATEGIC AND BUDGETARY ASSESSMENTS (CSBA) The Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments is an independent, nonpartisan policy research institute established to promote innovative thinking and debate about national security strategy and investment options. CSBA’s analysis focuses on key questions related to existing and emerging threats to U.S. national security, and its goal is to enable policymakers to make informed decisions on matters of strategy, security policy, and resource allocation. ©2017 Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. All rights reserved. ABOUT THE AUTHORS Hal Brands is a Senior Fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments and is also Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of Global Affairs at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS). In 2015–2016, he was a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow. In that capacity, he served as a special assistant to the Secretary of Defense, working on a range of strategic planning and policy issues. He has also consulted with a range of government offices and agencies in the intelligence and national security communities, as well as the RAND Corporation, and provided research and analysis for the Office of Net Assessment in the Department of Defense. He received his BA from Stanford University (2005) and his Ph.D. from Yale University (2009). He previously worked as an Assistant and Associate Professor at Duke University’s Sanford School of Public Policy and as a researcher at the Institute for Defense Analyses.
    [Show full text]
  • Paul Miller-Melamed +1 410-857-2441 (Office) [email protected] Mcdaniel COLLEGE (USA)
    2 College Hill Westminster, MD 21157 +1 443-534-5646 (mobile) Paul Miller-Melamed +1 410-857-2441 (office) [email protected] McDANIEL COLLEGE (USA) https://pagesbypablo.com EDUCATION Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., History (May 1990/1992/1995) Oral Exam Fields: France (1815–Present), Germany (1848–Present), the American West Dissertation: “From Revolutionaries to Citizens: Antimilitarism in France, 1870–1914” Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA B.S., B.A. summa cum laude, Zoology, History (May 1987, 1989) Honors College (courses and scholarship); College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Achievement Award; History Dept Outstanding Undergraduate Award; Kertzer Memorial Scholarship; Phi Beta Kappa LANGUAGES Speaking/Reading proficiency Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian (BCS), Latin & Cyrillic alphabets (good) German (good); French (good); Spanish (fair) ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT — TEACHING (syllabi available upon request) Associate Professor of History, McDaniel College, Westminster, MD, USA (1998–) History & Memory (interdisciplinary faculty seminar) The First World War in History and Memory (seminar) Fathoming Evil: Genocide in the Modern World (lecture/discussion; global citizenship) Women in Modern Europe: Sex, Society, and Stereotypes (seminar) Cataclysm: Europe on the Eve of World War I (seminar) France: Ordinary People in the Modern World, 1871–Present (lecture/discussion) Modern Germany, 1848–Present (lecture/discussion) The Third Reich (interdisciplinary faculty seminar) The Holocaust (lecture/discussion);
    [Show full text]