Word: rusk
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Foreign Affairs not only observes world events but frequently anticipates and even shapes them. U.S. Presidential Candidate Kennedy's interest in Dean Rusk was first whetted by a 1960 article, ''The President''; after reading "The Broken Dia logue with Japan'' in a later issue that same year. President Kennedy was moved to appoint its author, Edwin 0. Reischauer, U.S. Ambassador to Japan...
...wonder servants are hard to find-or that the quest for them has all but replaced children as the staple of family talk. In Boston, they are telling about the two maids discussing a high-echelon dinner party at which one had just served. "Dean Rusk was there." says the first, "and President Pusey and Walter Lippmann." "What did they talk about?" asks the second. "Why, me, of course...
...regime," said the President, "will not be allowed to export its aggressive purposes by force or the threat of force. It will be prevented by whatever means may be necessary from taking action against any part of the Western Hemisphere." Those words were echoed by Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Meeting in his office with 19 Latin American envoys, Rusk pledged that the U.S. would use "whatever means may be necessary" to prevent aggression by Cuba...
...both Kennedy and Rusk attempted to minimize the Cuba threat, harped on three points as proof that the U.S. should not and cannot intervene directly in Cuba...
...Siberian coast and reaching down to within 26 miles of Japan. Word was swiftly passed to Washington-and, with the warning in hand, it was barely 3½ hours after the inevitable Russian protest note arrived that the U.S. reply was written, approved by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and President Kennedy, and delivered to Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin...