Difference between revisions of "Dorothy Fosdick"

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Dr [[Dorothy Fosdick]] was aide to Senator [[Henry M. Jackson]].<ref name"Kaufman36">Robert G. Kaufman, ''Henry M. Jackson, A Life in Politics'', University of Washington Press, 2000, p.83.</ref>
 
Dr [[Dorothy Fosdick]] was aide to Senator [[Henry M. Jackson]].<ref name"Kaufman36">Robert G. Kaufman, ''Henry M. Jackson, A Life in Politics'', University of Washington Press, 2000, p.83.</ref>
  
She was the daughter of [[Harry Emerson Fosdick]], a pacificist preacher for whom [[John D. Rockefeller]] had built the Riverside Church in New York. However, she rejected her fathers views in favour of the liberal realism of his rival, [[Reinhold Niebuhr]]<ref name"Kaufman83">Robert G. Kaufman, ''Henry M. Jackson, A Life in Politics'', University of Washington Press, 2000, p.83.</ref>
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She was the daughter of [[Harry Emerson Fosdick]], a pacificist preacher for whom [[John D. Rockefeller]] had built the Riverside Church in New York. However, she rejected her father's views in favour of the liberal realism of his rival, [[Reinhold Niebuhr]].<ref name"Kaufman83">Robert G. Kaufman, ''Henry M. Jackson, A Life in Politics'', University of Washington Press, 2000, p.83.</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==

Latest revision as of 12:25, 7 February 2012

Dr Dorothy Fosdick was aide to Senator Henry M. Jackson.[1]

She was the daughter of Harry Emerson Fosdick, a pacificist preacher for whom John D. Rockefeller had built the Riverside Church in New York. However, she rejected her father's views in favour of the liberal realism of his rival, Reinhold Niebuhr.[2]

Notes

  1. Robert G. Kaufman, Henry M. Jackson, A Life in Politics, University of Washington Press, 2000, p.83.
  2. Robert G. Kaufman, Henry M. Jackson, A Life in Politics, University of Washington Press, 2000, p.83.