Word: fulbright
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...Fulbright gave respectability to the dissent," says Senator Frank Church, a committee member. Just as Fulbright's hearings clearly helped get the U.S. out of Viet Nam, his pleas over the years for realism and compromise contributed to the foundations of detente and Nixon's visits to Moscow and Peking...
...Fulbright's preoccupation with problems abroad overshadowed his record on domestic affairs, which was generally progressive, although the liberals never forgave him for voting against civil rights legislation. He had no other choice, Fulbright would shrug. Coming from a Southern state, it was a matter of survival. In 1954, Fulbright did show real political courage by voting alone in the Senate against funding Senator Joseph McCarthy's Red-chasing sprees. Fulbright called McCarthy "an animal" for his excesses; in return, he was dubbed "Senator Halfbright...
Ironically, although his earlier stands have been vindicated, Fulbright has lost influence in the Senate during the past three or four years. He no longer has the same combative energy, and he has often failed to do his homework. On key issues ranging from arms limitation to trading with the Russians, Fulbright has been defeated on the floor by hard-liners led by Senator Henry M. ("Scoop")Jackson...
...Fulbright was a country boy who made it to Oxford as a Rhodes scholar,* and some of his colleagues regard him as an aloof and self-righteous man who never got over the experience. (President Truman once called him "that overeducated Oxford s.o.b.") As time went by, Fulbright grew to prefer the company of the rich and the powerful. He became a confidant of Henry Kissinger and the friend and counselor to Presidents and Kings. In the process, he lost touch with Arkansas, and last week the people of his state...
...Fulbright's successor as Foreign Relations Chairman will probably be Alabama's Senator John J. Sparkman, who usually follows the Administration's foreign policy. The committee's hearings will likely be much quieter in the days ahead than when Bill Fulbright was peering over his half-rimmed glasses and trying, in his own stubborn, professorial way, to tell the squirming representatives of a succession of American Presidents how the United States should conduct its foreign policy...