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Security and
International Operations (1965–1973), Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (1973–1981), and took over the post of Special Assistant for National Security Affairs in 1979. After Senator Jackson's death Dr. Fosdick posthumously edited two compilations of speeches by Senator Jackson,
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from 1955 until
Senator Jackson's death in 1983. In this capacity Dr. Fosdick served in Special Assistant and Staff Director positions on the Subcommittee on National Policy Machinery (1959–1962), Subcommittee on National Security, Staffing and Operations (1962–1965), Subcommittee on National
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a publication that pushed for what she saw as a common sense approach to international relations. Among the main points
Fosdick covered she highlighted twelve major ones:
117:, advocating for a continuum between the way in which the United States conducts domestic and world affairs. In 1955 Fosdick published
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Dr. Fosdick served as a member of the Board of
Governors of the Henry M. Jackson Foundation, as well as the Visiting Committee of the
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from 1948 to 1953, and becoming the first woman to hold a prominent policy position in the State
Department. Fosdick had also been a
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Contrary to the beliefs of her father, Harry
Emerson Fosdick, Dr. Dorothy Fosdick immediately took to the political outlook of
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The
Fosdick Family Papers, including the papers of Dorothy Fosdick are at the Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College.
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101:, Seattle, Washington. Dr. Dorothy Fosdick died at her home in Washington, D.C., on February 5, 1997.
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Dr. Fosdick served as a professional assistant and foreign and defense policy adviser to
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Safety lies in acting on the truth of the matter, rather than the imagination of it.
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Notable
American Women: A Biographical Dictionary Completing the Twentieth Century.
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in 1939, subsequently returning to Smith
College to teach for four years.
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University of
Washington Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies
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A certain democrat: Senator Henry M. Jackson; a political biography.
66:, taking a membership position on the Policy Planning Staff of the
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To believe you are more generous than you really are is hazardous.
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Henry M. Jackson and world affairs: selected speeches, 1953-1983.
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Whoever says he has the solution to our problems speaks too soon.
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Henry M. Jackson and World Affairs: Selected Speeches, 1953-1983
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Asking only for immediate and tangible rewards is shortsighted.
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Fashioning your methods in the light of your end is prudence.
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To do the good that is straight under your nose is vigilant.
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Staying the course: Henry M. Jackson and national security.
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To make a fine choice, yet decline to pay for it, is folly.
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Staying the Course: Henry M. Jackson and National Security.
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Some things can only be good if the occasion is ripe.
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To know when to be scared is the beginning of wisdom.
22:(April 17, 1913 – February 5, 1997) was an American
78:, with whom she had a brief romantic relationship.
234:Prochnau, William W. and Richard W. Larsen. 1972.
229:Scoop: the life and politics of Henry M. Jackson.
194:What is liberty? A study in political theory.
137:Sometimes to let things alone is sound sense.
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238:Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc.
155:To talk as well as you perform makes sense.
175:Ware, Susan and Stacy Lorraine Braukman.
140:Stealing a march on trouble is foresight.
224:Seattle: University of Washington Press.
217:Seattle: University of Washington Press.
210:Seattle: University of Washington Press.
179:Harvard University Press, 2004, p. 219.
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222:Henry M. Jackson: a life in politics.
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203:New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Co.
50:in 1934 and received a Ph.D. from
38:, who was the first pastor of the
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64:United States Department of State
201:Common sense and world affairs.
119:Common Sense and World Affairs,
62:In 1942 Dr. Fosdick joined the
16:American foreign policy expert
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213:Fosdick, Dorothy, ed. 1990.
206:Fosdick, Dorothy, ed. 1987.
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196:New York: Harper and Bros.
227:Ognibene, Peter J. 1975.
220:Kaufman, Robert G. 2000.
192:Fosdick, Dorothy. 1939.
231:New York: Stein and Day.
199:Fosdick, Dorothy. 1955.
34:She was the daughter of
30:Early life and education
46:. She graduated from
36:Harry Emerson Fosdick
265:Smith College alumni
113:and his concept of
68:Department of State
52:Columbia University
115:Christian realism
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111:Reinhold Niebuhr
86:Henry M. Jackson
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260:1997 deaths
255:1913 births
249:Categories
163:References
26:expert.
83:Senator
58:Career
105:Views
93:and
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42:in
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