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| Â | Dwight Eisenhower |
 | | This new foreign policy became known as the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Eisenhower retired in 1948 and became presidency of Columbia University. |  | | It was Eisenhower's record as an enforcer of racial segregation in the US armed forces, that opened up the possibility of swinging the traditionally Democratic South into the Republican camp. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAeisenhower.htm
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| Â | CNN Cold War - Profile: Dwight David Eisenhower |
 | | Concerned about America's position in the Middle East, in part due to the Suez Crisis, Eisenhower proposed and Congress passed the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Two years after Eisenhower retired in 1948, President Truman asked him to be supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe. |  | | In 1957, when the governor of Arkansas defied a court order to integrate the high school, Eisenhower dispatched the 101st Airborne Division to protect black students and see that the court order was carried out. |
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http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/kbank/profiles/eisenhower
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| Â | Dwight Eisenhower |
 | | This new foreign policy became known as the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Eisenhower retired in 1948 and became presidency of Columbia University. |  | | It was Eisenhower's record as an enforcer of racial segregation in the US armed forces, that opened up the possibility of swinging the traditionally Democratic South into the Republican camp. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAeisenhower.htm
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| Â | Doctrine - TheBestLinks.com - Blitzkrieg, Brezhnev Doctrine, Common law, Education, ... |
 | | Examples include the Monroe Doctrine, the Stimson Doctrine, the Truman Doctrine, the Eisenhower Doctrine, the Brezhnev Doctrine, and the less catchy Bush administration doctrine of military preeminence, and the Kirkpatrick doctrine. |  | | Doctrine - TheBestLinks.com - Blitzkrieg, Brezhnev Doctrine, Common law, Education,... |  | | Doctrine, Blitzkrieg, Brezhnev Doctrine, Common law, Education, Fair use... |
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http://www.thebestlinks.com/Doctrine.html
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| Â | Doctrine - doctrin (truman doctrine, monroe doctrine, doctrine eisenhower, brezhnev doctrine, bush doctrine, catholic doctrine, doctrin) |
 | | Doctrine - doctrin (truman doctrine, monroe doctrine, doctrine eisenhower, brezhnev doctrine, bush doctrine, catholic doctrine, doctrin) |
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http://www.meta-spell.com/d/doctrin.html
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|  | Eisenhower, Dwight D. -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Eisenhower, Dwight D. 34th president of the United States (195361), who had been supreme commander of the Allied forces in western Europe during World War II. |  | | Brief biography of Dwight Eisenhower, the thirty-fourth President of the United States of America. |  | | Organization dedicated to the legacy of the thirty-fourth President of the United States, Dwight D. Eisenhower. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9032159
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| Â | Doctrine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Examples include the Monroe Doctrine, the Stimson Doctrine, the Truman Doctrine, the Eisenhower Doctrine, the Brezhnev Doctrine, and the less catchy Bush administration doctrine of military preemption, and the Kirkpatrick doctrine. |  | | In the US it has become something of a tradition for each President to have his own doctrine. |  | | See also the Roman Catholic Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctrine
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| Â | CNN Cold War - Profile: Dwight David Eisenhower |
 | | Concerned about America's position in the Middle East, in part due to the Suez Crisis, Eisenhower proposed and Congress passed the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Two years after Eisenhower retired in 1948, President Truman asked him to be supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe. |  | | In 1957, when the governor of Arkansas defied a court order to integrate the high school, Eisenhower dispatched the 101st Airborne Division to protect black students and see that the court order was carried out. |
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http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/kbank/profiles/eisenhower
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| Â | Brief History of DOL - Eisenhower Administration, 1953-1961 |
 | | He had fought hard for the betterment of less fortunate workers and was described by journalist Harry Hamilton as "the social conscience" of the Eisenhower Administration. |  | | Civil rights for blacks took a major step forward when the Supreme Court threw out the doctrine of "separate but equal" educational facilities and the South began a slow progress toward desegregation. |  | | Eisenhower quickly replaced Durkin with James P. Mitchell, vice-president in charge of labor relations and operations at a New York department store. |
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http://www.dol.gov/asp/programs/history/dolchp05.htm
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| Â | Doctrine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Examples include the Monroe Doctrine, the Stimson Doctrine, the Truman Doctrine, the Eisenhower Doctrine, the Brezhnev Doctrine, and the less catchy Bush administration doctrine of military preemption, and the Kirkpatrick doctrine. |  | | In the US it has become something of a tradition for each President to have his own doctrine. |  | | See also the Roman Catholic Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctrine
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| Â | Modern History Sourcebook: President Eisenhower: The Eisenhower Doctrine, A Message to Congress, January 5, 1957 |
 | | Modern History Sourcebook: President Eisenhower: The Eisenhower Doctrine, A Message to Congress, January 5, 1957 |  | | The Eisenhower Doctrine on the Middle East, A Message to Congress, January 5, 1957 |  | | In those momentous periods of the past, the President and the Congress fiave united, without partisanship, to serve the vital interests of the United States and of the free world. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1957eisenhowerdoctrine.html
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| Â | Dwight Eisenhower |
 | | This new foreign policy became known as the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Eisenhower retired in 1948 and became presidency of Columbia University. |  | | It was Eisenhower's record as an enforcer of racial segregation in the US armed forces, that opened up the possibility of swinging the traditionally Democratic South into the Republican camp. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAeisenhower.htm
(5148 words)
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| Â | Dwight Eisenhower |
 | | This new foreign policy became known as the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Eisenhower retired in 1948 and became presidency of Columbia University. |  | | It was Eisenhower's record as an enforcer of racial segregation in the US armed forces, that opened up the possibility of swinging the traditionally Democratic South into the Republican camp. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAeisenhower.htm
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| Â | CNN Cold War - Profile: Dwight David Eisenhower |
 | | Concerned about America's position in the Middle East, in part due to the Suez Crisis, Eisenhower proposed and Congress passed the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Two years after Eisenhower retired in 1948, President Truman asked him to be supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe. |  | | In 1957, when the governor of Arkansas defied a court order to integrate the high school, Eisenhower dispatched the 101st Airborne Division to protect black students and see that the court order was carried out. |
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http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/kbank/profiles/eisenhower
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| Â | Encyclopedia: United States diplomatic history |
 | | 1957- Eisenhower Doctrine- stated US would use armed force upon request of imminent or actual aggression, applied in Lebanon that year successfully. |  | | 1902- Drago Doctrine- Foreign Minister of Argentina announced policy that no European power could use force against American nation to collect debt, supplanted in 1904 by Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine. |  | | 1823- Monroe Doctrine- British Foreign Minister Canning proposed US join England in stating that European powers not be permitted further American colonization. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/United-States-diplomatic-history
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| Â | Electronic Encyclopaedia of CD and EM |
 | | During the first year of President Eisenhower’s administration, the administration’s Civil Defense doctrine reflected the lessons of the Truman administration. |  | | The Eisenhower Administration reacted with a time-tested stratagem – to demonstrate progress the Federal Civil Defense Administration and the Office of Defense Mobilization were merged to form the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization under the leadership of Governor |  | | In spite of arguments that evacuated populations would be vulnerable to this relatively unpredictable threat, the Eisenhower administration remained focused on evacuation through 1953 and 1954. |
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http://www.urich.edu/~wgreen/Ecdeisenhower.htm
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| Â | Eisenhower Presidential Chronology |
 | | Eisenhower Doctrine established to resist Communist aggression in the Middle East. |  | | California Governor Earl Warren, Eisenhower's Supreme Court appointee, takes oath as Chief Justice. |  | | Eisenhower and Lyndon Johnson push through Congress the Civil Rights Act of 1957, the first civil rights legislation in 82 years. |
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http://www.nps.gov/eise/chrono2.htm
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| Â | H-Net Review: Daniel C. Williamson on Containing Arab Nationalism: The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East |
 | | Eisenhower and Dulles hoped that the rise in American popularity, in tandem with the brutal Soviet suppression of the Hungarian revolt of 1956, would induce most Arab states to declare their willingness to participate in the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | If the deficiencies of the Eisenhower Doctrine were masked by the apparently pro-Western trend of events in the first half of 1957, Yaqub argues that Washington's failed attempt during the second half of the year to overthrow the increasingly leftist Syrian government was the first clear defeat of the doctrine. |  | | Yaqub explains that the period from the official launch of the Eisenhower Doctrine in March 1957 until the early summer of that same year saw the brief heyday of the administration's plan. |
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http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=94671095034430
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| Â | Containing Arab Nationalism: The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East, by Salim Yaqub. Introduction. |
 | | But the Eisenhower Doctrine also sought to contain the radical Arab nationalism of Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser and to discredit his policy of "positive neutrality" in the Cold War, which held that Arab nations were entitled to enjoy profitable relations with both Cold War blocs. |  | | The immediate catalyst of the Eisenhower Doctrine was the Suez war of late 1956, in which Britain, France, and Israel had spectacularly failed to reverse Egypt's nationalization of the Suez Canal Company. |  | | Officially, then, the Eisenhower Doctrine was aimed at protecting the Middle East from Soviet encroachment; in this sense it was merely a more specific application of the general containment doctrine with which the United States had waged the Cold War for a decade. |
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http://uncpress.unc.edu/chapters/yaqub_containing.html
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| Â | Doctrine: doctrine, truman doctrine, bush doctrine |
 | | Examples include the Monroe Doctrine, the stimson doctrine">stimson doctrine, the truman doctrine">truman doctrine, the eisenhower doctrine">eisenhower doctrine, the brezhnev doctrine">brezhnev doctrine, and the less catchy bush doctrine">Bush administration doctrine of military preemption, and the Kirkpatrick doctrine. |  | | Doctrine, from Latin doctrina, (compare doctor), means "a body of teachings" or "instructions", taught principles or positions, as the body of teachings in a branch of knowledge or belief system. |  | | Doctrines of this sort are almost always presented as the personal creations of one particular political leader, whom they are named after. |
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http://wikipedia.openfun.org/wiki/Doctrine
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| Â | Foreign Affairs - Book Review - Containing Arab Nationalism: The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East - Salim Yaqub |
 | | Coming just a decade after the 1947 Truman Doctrine, the Eisenhower Doctrine was the second Cold War presidential doctrine keyed to the Middle East. |  | | This is a richly documented and detailed, yet eminently readable, study -- the best available on the Eisenhower Doctrine and on those two tumultuous years, with still-relevant lessons for what works and what does not in Middle East diplomacy. |  | | Containing Arab Nationalism: The Eisenhower Doctrine and the Middle East. |
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http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20040501fabook83350/salim-yaqub/containing-arab-nationalism-the-eisenhower-doctrine-and-the-middle-east.html?mode=print
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|  | SparkNotes: The Cold War (1945–1963): Eisenhower and the Cold War: 1954–1960 |
 | | In 1957, in order to protect American oil interests in the Middle East, Eisenhower announced the Eisenhower Doctrine, which stated that the United States would provide military and economic assistance to Middle Eastern countries in resisting Communist insurgents. |  | | The doctrine of massive retaliation proved to be dangerously flawed, however, because it effectively left Eisenhower without any options other than nuclear war to combat Soviet aggression. |  | | Eisenhower condemned the attack on Egypt and exerted heavy diplomatic and economic pressure on the aggressors. |
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http://www.sparknotes.com/history/american/coldwar/section6.rhtml
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| Â | Dissertations Abstracts/Middle East & Islam |
 | | Ostensibly, the Eisenhower Doctrine aimed at protecting the Middle East from Soviet encroachment, but it also sought to contain radical Arab nationalism, which the Eisenhower administration believed to be in league with Soviet expansionism. |  | | In early 1957 U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower launched a new U.S. policy for the Middle East known informally as the Eisenhower Doctrine. |  | | Given that the foundation of the Shi`ite perspective is the early dispute over the leadership of the Islamic community, most Shi`ite studies have tended to focus on the authority issue and the development of the Shi`ite doctrine of the imamate. |
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http://www.library.cornell.edu/colldev/mideast/diss.htm
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| Â | Commentary Magazine - Epistles from the Eisenhower Age |
 | | ...A DHERENCE to the Eisenhower doctrine A further served to refine the believer's assurance of his motives to that state where he can no longer understand them... |  | | ...This conviction of America's divine election was the rock from which all public pronouncements of the Eisenhower doctrine were issued... |  | | The Eisenhower administration on the whole was not a bad administration so far as its policies and achievements were concerned: very little that was undertaken by the government of the United States might have been better had we in 1952 placed our destinies in anyone else's hands. |
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http://www.commentarymagazine.com/Summaries/V35I3P54-1.htm
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| Â | Doctrine - Free Encyclopedia |
 | | The reader will judge the coherence of various 'doctrines' of policy: the Stimson Doctrine, the Truman Doctrine, the Eisenhower Doctrine, the Brezhnev Doctrine, the Nixon Doctrine, the Carter Doctrine, the Bush doctrine, and the less catchy Bush administration doctrine of military preeminence, the Kirkpatrick doctrine etc. (see list of US Presidential Doctrines. |  | | Doctrine, from Latin doctrina, (compare doctor), means "a body of teachings" or "instructions", taught principles or positions, as the body of teachings in a branch of knowledge or belief system. |  | | The typical example is tactical doctrine in which a standard set of maneuvers, kinds of troops and weapons are employed as a default approach to a kind of attack. |
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http://www.wacklepedia.com/d/do/doctrine.html
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| Â | Kennedy Doctrine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Truman Doctrine focused on the containment of communism by providing assistance to countries resisting communism in Europe while the Eisenhower Doctrine was focused upon providing both military and economic assistance to nations resisting communism in the Middle East and by increasing the flow of trade from the United States into Latin America. |  | | The Kennedy Doctrine was essentially an expansion of the foreign policy prerogatives of the previous administrations of Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry S. Truman. |  | | The Kennedy Doctrine was based on these same objectives but was more concerned with the spread of communism and Soviet influence in Latin America following the Cuban revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power under Eisenhower during the 1950s. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennedy_Doctrine
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| Â | Truman Doctrine, Eisenhower Doctrine, Rosenberg Case |
 | | The Eisenhower Doctrine represented no radical change in U.S. policy; the Truman Doctrine had pledged similar support to Greece and Turkey 10 years earlier. |  | | The doctrine was intended to check increased Soviet influence in the Middle East, which had resulted from the supply of arms to Egypt by communist countries as well as from strong communist support of Arab states against an Israeli, French, and British attack on Egypt in October 1956. |  | | The doctrine was subsequently invoked to assist governments in Jordan and in Lebanon, where two battalions of U.S. Marines were landed near Beirut (Bayrût) on July 15 and 16, 1958, to prevent Communist intervention in a rebellion then in progress in that country. |
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http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~mwfriedm/terms/corin_26.html
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| Â | The Essential America Electronic Reserves - Chapter 32 |
 | | Modern History Sourcebook: President Eisenhower: The Eisenhower Doctrine on the Middle East, A Message to Congress, January 5, 1957 |  | | Modern History Sourcebook: TASS: Statement on the Eisenhower Doctrine, January 14 1957 |  | | Resources at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library for Class Assignments and National History Day Projects |
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http://www.wwnorton.com/college/history/essusa/ereserves/ch32.htm
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| Â | Doctrine - Open Encyclopedia |
 | | Examples include the Monroe Doctrine, the Stimson Doctrine, the Truman Doctrine, the Eisenhower Doctrine, the Brezhnev Doctrine, and the less catchy Bush administration doctrine of military preeminence, and the Kirkpatrick doctrine. |  | | Doctrine, from Latin doctrina, (compare doctor), means "a body of teachings" or "instructions", taught principles or positions, as the body of teachings in a branch of knowledge or belief system. |  | | In matters of foreign policy, a doctrine is a body of axioms fundamental to the exercise a nation's foreign policy. |
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http://open-encyclopedia.com/Doctrine
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