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Schlesinger

Page 58

by Richard Aldous


  Lincoln, Abraham, 1, 354, 356, 387

  Lincoln, Evelyn, 224, 226, 303–5

  Lindley, Ernest K., 74

  Link, Arthur S., 206

  Lions Club, 14

  Lippmann, Walter, 116, 118, 123

  Little, Brown, 48, 65, 89, 100, 134

  Lodge, George Cabot, 127

  Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., 73

  Loeb, James, 169

  Logevall, Fredrik, 270

  London, England, 32, 51, 83–90, 97–98, 195–98, 299, 341

  Long, Huey, Jr., 198–200

  Lord, Walter, 89, 90

  Lovett, Robert, 291

  Lowell, Abbott Lawrence, 14

  Lowell, Robert, 35, 361

  “Loyal Keeper of the Kennedy Flame,” 190

  “Loyalty Order,” 121, 147

  Luce, Henry, 110, 144

  Ma, Y. C., 31

  Maas, Peter, 361

  MacArthur, Douglas, 150–51

  MacDonald, Heather, 376

  Macmillan, 10

  Macmillan, Harold, 245, 262–63

  Madison, James, 387

  Madison Square Garden, 161

  Maguire, Albert, 21

  Mailer, Norman, 39, 118, 302

  Making of the President (White), 205

  Manchester, William, 352

  Manhattan Project, 82

  Manicheanism, 191

  Mao Tse Tung, 354

  Marbury, William L., 147–48

  Marcuse, Herbert, 349, 351

  Mark, Edward, 124

  Marsden, George, 120

  Marshall, Burke, 352–53

  Marshall, S. L. A., 151

  Marshall Plan, 83, 127, 131–32, 145

  Martin, John Bartlow, 157, 159, 165, 171, 175, 177–79, 212–13, 309, 335

  Marxism, 116–17, 122, 141, 142

  Massachusetts Historical Society, 61, 313

  Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 15

  Mather, Cotton, 42

  Matter of Fact column, 114

  Matthiessen, F. O., 45, 116, 118, 125

  Max (family dog), 9–10

  May, Ernest, 383

  McCarthy, Eugene, 345–47, 361

  McCarthy, Joseph, 148, 158, 207, 320, 350, 359

  McCarthy, Mary, 149

  McCarthyism, 121, 146–49, 178, 207, 215, 251

  McClellan, George, 150

  McCloy, John, 262, 265, 291, 292

  McCone, John, 248, 266–67, 288

  McGovern, George, 228–29, 274, 276, 351

  McIntyre, Alfred, 134

  McKinley, William, 354

  McLuhan, Marshall, 346–47

  McNamara, Robert, 2, 239–40, 255, 270, 283

  McPherson, Nelson, 88

  “meatballs,” 36

  melting pot, 375, 376

  Menand, Louis, 77

  Mencken, H. L., 168

  Merk, Frederick, 17, 18, 65

  Merriman, R. B., 41

  Merry, Robert, 186

  Metropolitan Club, 150

  Mexican-American War, 61

  Meyer, Cord, 149

  Meyer, Eugene, 109, 115, 171

  Meyer, Katharine, 115. See also Graham, Katharine

  Meyer, Mary Pinchot, 322

  Middlekauff, Robert, 42

  “middle way,” 165–66

  Mill, John Stuart, 375

  Miller, Edward, 147

  Miller, Henry, 39

  Miller, Perry, 42–43, 45, 46, 55, 56, 63, 96, 125, 135, 189

  Mob, the, 360

  Moley, Raymond, 168

  Molina, Rafael Trujillo, 265

  Moon, Parker, 18

  Moon, Soviet–US joint expedition to, 308–9

  Moore, G. E., 54

  Morgan, Edmund S., 3, 42, 386

  Morison, Samuel Eliot, 12, 18, 42, 55, 63, 125–26, 132

  Morris, Edmund, 388

  Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, 377

  Mr. Clemens and Mark Twain (Kaplan), 340

  Munich Agreement, 51

  Murphy, Frank, 111, 113

  Murrow, Edward R., 260, 262

  Museum of Modern Art, 144

  Nabokov, Nicolas, 143–45

  Nabokov, Vladimir, 143

  Naftali, Timothy, 236

  National Academy of Sciences, 309

  National Archives, 311

  National Book Award, 333, 361–62

  National Enquirer school of biographers, 281, 323, 324

  National Experience, The (Woodward and Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.), 384

  National Humanities Medal, 190

  Nationalist Revolutionary Movement (NRM), 80–81

  National Recovery Administration, 192

  Nature and Destiny of Man (Niebuhr), 136

  Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, 290

  Nazi propaganda, 78

  Nazism, 31–32, 81

  Nehru, Jawaharlal, 272

  Nenni, Pietro, 249

  Nero, 321

  Neusner, Jacob, 56

  Neustadt, Richard, 221

  Nevins, Allan, 100–101

  New American, The (Stevenson), 179

  New Deal, 38–39, 53, 69, 73, 82, 103–4, 122–23, 166, 167, 169, 193–95, 198–202, 294

  New Directions (Laughlin, editor), 35, 39

  New England Journal of Medicine 172

  New England Quarterly, The 58, 61, 65

  New Frontier, 161, 165, 294, 334, 342

  New Historians and New History, 17, 189

  New History, The (Robinson), 11

  New Left, 200, 349–51, 357, 385

  Newman, Arnold, 144

  Newman, Phyllis, 377

  New Republic magazine, 101, 102

  Newsweek 211–12, 333

  New Viewpoints in American History (Arthur Schlesinger, Sr.), 10–13, 17, 106–7, 337

  New York City, 21, 114, 342–43, 350, 367–68

  New York Daily News 158

  New York Downtown Hospital, 381

  New York Herald Tribune 114

  New York Review of Books 104, 357, 362, 367, 375

  New York State, 164

  New York Times 14, 15, 45, 55–56, 101, 102, 123, 130, 132–33, 139, 140, 144, 145, 158, 215, 232, 266, 285, 304, 318, 329, 357, 362, 373, 384

  New York Times Book Review 100, 139, 331

  New York Times Magazine 294, 342

  New York Yankees, 20

  Nichols, John, 322

  Nichols, Louis B., 128

  Niebuhr, Reinhold, 118, 122, 134–38, 156, 171, 353, 379–80

  Niebuhr, Ursula, 135, 156

  Nieuw Amsterdam (cruise ship), 50

  9/11 attacks, 379–80

  Nineteen Eighty-Four (Orwell), 133

  Nitze, Paul, 119, 165

  Nixon, Richard

  AMS Jr.’s assessment of, 214, 215

  as AMS Jr.’s neighbor, 373–74

  in Imperial Presidency 353, 356–57

  “middle way” for, 166

  presidential campaign of 1960, 213–16

  and RFK, 363

  and Soviet containment, 119

  vice-presidential campaign of 1956, 172, 176, 178

  Nock, Arthur, 55

  non-Communist Left, 116, 120–23, 132–33, 142, 299, 350

  non-Fascist Right, 132–33

  Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary (Edward T. James, editor), 37

  “Not left, not right” (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 120

  nuclear testing, 258–66, 296–99

  Nuechterlein, James, 138

  Oates, Stephen B., 362

  objectivity, 343

  O’Brien, Lawrence “Larry,” 205, 267, 347

  O’Brien, Patrick D., 185

  O’Casey, Sean, 40

  O’Donnell, Kenny, 205, 267, 277, 299, 311, 347, 359

  Office of Facts and Figures, 74

  Office of Strategic Services (OSS), 36, 76–83, 88, 89, 91–98, 117, 135, 146

  Office of the Coordinator of Information (COI), 76

  Office of War Information (OWI), 67–70, 73–7
6, 78, 80, 83

  Ohio State University (OSU), 6, 8, 9, 11

  “Old Politics and the New, The” (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 346–47

  Onyx Club, 85

  Operation Mongoose, 289

  Oppenheimer, Robert, 82

  Ordeal of Power (Hughes), 228

  Orestes A Brownson: A Pilgrim’s Progress (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 46, 54–56, 65, 191, 386

  “Orestes Brownson: An American Marxist before Marx” (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 116–17

  Organization of American States (OAS), 81, 274–76

  Origins of Totalitarianism, The (Arendt), 133

  Orwell, George, 133, 134

  Osborn, George C., 194

  OWI Library, 98

  Oxford University, 13, 35, 52, 95–96, 197

  Page, Arthur, 190

  Pan-American Union, 81

  Panic of 1837, 47

  Paris, France, 32, 89–94

  Paris Peace Conference (1919), 269

  Parker, Carey, 372

  Parker, Richard, 284

  Parkman Prize, 188

  Parmet, Herbert, 297

  Parrot, Thomas, 277

  Partisan Review 119

  Pascal, Blaise, 136

  Path to the Present (Arthur Schlesinger, Sr.), 336

  Paulding, James Kirke, 103

  Paz, Victor, 229

  Peabody Elementary School, 21

  Pearl Harbor attack, 67, 355

  Pearson, Drew, 84

  Peel, Robert, 206

  Peñaranda, Enrique, 80–81

  Pensées (Pascal), 136

  People magazine, 371

  Perry, Lewis, 27

  “personal” brain trust, of Kennedy administration, 205

  Peterhouse, 135

  Philadelphia Inquirer 329

  Phillips Exeter Academy, 23–28, 38, 84

  Plimpton, Francis, 235

  Plumb, J. H., 364

  pluralism, 285–86

  Podhoretz, Norman, 189

  “Political Culture in the United States” (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 120

  politics

  AMS Jr.’s love of, 216

  change in machinations of, 204

  new kind of, 132–33

  Politics of Hope, The (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 342

  Politics of Upheaval, The (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 182, 198–203, 210

  Polk, James K., 61, 294

  Pollock, Jackson, 144

  Poore, Charles, 139, 330

  Popular Front, 38–39, 116, 118

  Porterhouse Blue (Sharpe), 52

  Potsdam Conference (1945), 129

  Potter, David M., 385

  Pound, Ezra, 39

  Powers, Dave, 205, 267, 281, 299

  Powers, Hiram, 103

  Prescott, Orville, 100, 187, 188, 194, 201

  presentism, 327

  presidential election(s)

  of 1952, 149–62

  of 1960, 210–13

  of 1964, 327

  presidential power, 354–57

  “President Kennedy’s Adrenals” (Nichols), 322

  Pringle, Henry, 67, 69–71, 73, 74

  “Problem of Richard Hildreth, The” (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 59–60

  Profiles in Courage (Kennedy), 206–8, 314, 316

  Progressive Citizens of America (PCA), 123

  Progressive politics, 191, 318–19

  Progressive school of history, 385–86

  propaganda war, 264

  Publishers Weekly 301

  Pulitzer Prize, 102, 182, 388

  Punta del Este, 274–76

  Pusey, Nathan, 272, 273

  PW Weekly 78–79, 81, 82

  Quai President Wilson 32

  qualitative liberalism, 166–67

  Queen Elizabeth RMS, 85

  Question of Character, A (Reeves), 322

  race relations, 71–73

  Radcliffe College, 64, 367

  radicalism, 158

  Rahv, Philip, 119

  Randall, James G., 136–37

  Ranke, Leopold von, 12

  Ransom, John Crowe, 35

  Raskin, Hyman, 177

  Rauh, Joseph, 149, 151, 169, 171, 191, 210

  Reagan, Ronald, 36, 89, 118, 238, 364, 374

  Reed, Ishmael, 376

  Reed, Stanley F., 111, 113

  Reedy, George, 313

  Reeves, Richard, 387

  Reeves, Rosser, 161

  Reign of Business, 1920-1933, The (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 168

  Reinhardt, Frederick, 250

  Republican Party, 172, 211

  Research and Analysis (R&A), 77–85, 88, 90, 92, 95, 97, 98

  Resnais, Alain, 280

  Reston, James “Scotty,” 244–45, 255–56

  Reuther, Walter, 294

  revisionist historians, 202, 341

  Ribbentrop, Joachim von, 96

  Ribuffo, Leo P., 118

  Richards, I. A., 54

  Richmond Times-Dispatch 329

  Riesman, David, 219

  Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 229

  Rise of American Democracy, The (Wilentz), 104–5

  Ritchie, Albert, 186

  Road to Reunion, The, 1865-1900 (Buck), 41

  Road to Serfdom, The (Hayek), 133

  Robert Frost Library, JFK’s speech at groundbreaking of, 309–10

  Robert Kennedy and His Times (Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.), 352–53, 357–65, 371, 373, 386, 387

  Robinson, James Harvey, 11, 17, 18

  Roche, John P., 326

  Rodgers, Daniel T., 364

  Rome, Italy, 275, 278, 281

  Roosevelt, Eleanor, 72–73, 122, 158, 360

  Roosevelt, Franklin, Jr., 115, 122

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 2, 47, 323, 364; See also Age of Roosevelt, The

  advisors to, 245–46

  affirmative government of, 181

  in Age of Jackson 103, 104, 182

  character of, 187, 191–92

  and Communists, 82

  and William “Wild Bill” Donovan, 77

  and Eleanor, 360

  election of, 216

  foreign policy of, 197

  at Harvard, 38

  inauguration of, 183–84

  as intellectual, 214

  JFK as admirer of, 204–5

  Office of War Information established by, 68

  political engagement of, 164

  popularity of, 178

  power of, 355, 387

  presidential campaign of 1940, 151

  and race relations, 72

  as “the President,” 167

  in Victory magazine, 73

  wartime pamphlets as propaganda for, 69

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 38, 45, 183, 294, 354

  Roper, Hugh Trevor, 109, 142

  Rosen, Philip, 185

  Rosenberg, Ethel, 120

  Rosenberg, Julius, 120

  Rosenman, Samuel, 168, 372

  Rositzke, Harry, 97

  Ross, Irwin, 139

  Rostow, Walt, 250, 270–71, 298

  Rousmaniere, Jimmy, 205

  Rovere, Richard, 150–51, 222

  Rowe, James, 177

  Rusk, Dean, 233–34, 236–37, 239–40, 250–51, 255–56, 262, 270, 275, 276, 291, 293, 299, 300, 328, 329

  Russell, Richard, Jr., 153

  Ruth, Babe, 20

  Rutledge, Wiley B., 111

  St. Louis, Missouri, 161

  St. Simeon Stylites (Sladen-Smith), 53

  Salinger, Pierre, 222, 223, 265, 302, 312

  Salt Lake Tribune 329

  Samuelson, Paul, 15

  Sanders, Bernard, 361

  Sartre, Jean-Paul, 142

  Saturday Review 335

  Saunders, Frances Stonor, 144, 146

  Savoy Grill, 87

  Scarface (film), 27

  Schlesinger, Alexandra Emmet (second wife), 367–70, 373

  Schlesinger, Andrew (son), 131, 339, 341, 367

  Schlesinger, Arthur Bancroft, See Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.r />
  Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.; See also specific works, e.g.: Age of Jackson, The

  abrasive behavior of, 125–26

  as action-intellectual, 388–89

  advisors to, 135, 174–75

  “alcoholic duty” tour of, 70–71

  alliances of, 269

  ambivalence toward Harvard, 66–67

  anti-Communism of, 98, 134

  and Bay of Pigs, 230–41

  birth of, 5

  at Cambridge High and Latin School, 21–23

  at Cambridge University, 49, 51–54, 96

  and Marian Cannon, 6, 21–22, 28, 29, 43–46, 49–50, 53–54, 62–64, 66, 68, 71, 85–91, 93–95, 97–100, 109, 110, 115, 124–26, 131, 197, 210–11, 216, 267, 275, 278–79, 281, 337–41, 343, 366–68

  as child in Cambridge, 14, 18–21

  as child in Midwest, 9–10, 13–14

  and CIA, 145–46

  and Communism, 116–20, 123

  Congress for Cultural Freedom, 141–46

  “Cook’s tour” of, 29–34

  on cooperation with Soviet Union, 131–32

  courted by Democratic hopefuls, 209

  criticism of, 190–91

  in Cuban missile crisis, 289–90

  death of, 380–81

  declassification of documents written by, 363–64

  departure from Harvard, 272–74

  diary of, 21, 29, 32–34, 42, 50, 52, 62, 150, 167, 244, 265, 267, 290, 293, 294, 298, 303, 311, 317, 339, 346, 348, 361, 372

  on draft of Profiles in Courage 207

  drinking habits, 1, 10, 63, 70, 87, 92, 96, 196, 268, 303, 371

  and election of 1952, 149–62

  and family, 335–40, 366–70

  and father, 6–29, 31, 37, 42, 48, 49, 55, 56, 64–66, 75, 85

  and FDR, 103, 104

  as film buff, 27, 39, 64, 280

  in Finletter Group, 164–67

  and the “Georgetown set,” 114–16

  in Germany, 96–97

  and Averell Harriman, 127–30, 153–54

  as Harvard egghead, 5

  Harvard professorship of, 108–9, 124–27

  as Harvard undergraduate, 36–50

  and Alger Hiss, 147–48

  as historian-participant, 384–89

  historical scholarship of, 386–87

  on his wartime experience, 100

  impact of Niebuhr on, 134–38

  infancy and early childhood, 8–9

  Jackson project of, 61–66, 89, 92

  on Jewish heritage, 16

  and JFK’s civil rights address, 305–6

  as JFK’s liaison with intellectuals, 287–88

  as JFK’s liaison with Stevenson, 265–66, 288, 291, 300–301, 308

  as JFK’s speechwriter, 212–13, 284–88, 296–310, 371, 372

  during JFK’s visit to Cambridge, 219–20

  in Johnson administration, 312–14

  journal of, 50, 57

  on judgments of history, 294–95

  Kennedys’ support for, 316–17

  Victor Lasky’s attack on, 215–16

  legacy of JFK as responsibility of, 311–32

  love of political battles, 216

  and McCarthyism, 146–49

 

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