8 edition of The Cuban crisis as reflected in the New York press (1895-1898) found in the catalog.
The Cuban crisis as reflected in the New York press (1895-1898)
Joseph Ezra Wisan
Published
1934
by Columbia University Press, P. S. King & son, ltd. in New York, London
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | by Joseph E. Wisan. |
Series | Studies in history, economics and public law,, no. 403 |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | H31 .C7 no. 403 |
The Physical Object | |
Pagination | 477 p. |
Number of Pages | 477 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL6316021M |
LC Control Number | 35000835 |
OCLC/WorldCa | 1591054 |
THE FINANCIAL CRISIS IN CUBA. Dec. 13, Credit The New York Times Archives. See the article in its original context from Decem , Page 4 Buy Reprints. From the Cuban. May clearly forecast his treatment of the Cuban crisis in his review of McKinley's prepresidential career. It was, May contended, characterized by expediency and deviousness: “In McKinley's political career before one finds no sign of any ambition except to climb the greasy pole. There are traces of virtue but few of character.”Cited by: 8.
"A portrait of the JFK White House after the Cuban Missile Crisis as it really was human and revealing." —Evan Thomas. Popular history marks Octo , as the end of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Yet as JFK’s secretly recorded White House tapes reveal, the aftermath of the crisis was a political and diplomatic : Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc. Fall , Vol. 44, No. 2. The Executive Committee of the National Security Council (ExComm), meeting in the White House Cabinet Room, sorted through intelligence and advised the President during the Cuban Missile Crisis. (Kennedy Library, ST-A) The Cuban Missile War was the most devastating war in world history.
Cuban Missile Crisis and Aftermath by U.S. Department of State Call Number: General Non-Circ JXA3 V FOREIGN RELATIONS OF . My father’s first of many New York stories took place exactly eighty years ago, on July 2, He had arrived in the city the day before from Havana aboard the ill-fated Morro Castle with his father, his oldest sister Rosa Marina (22 years old and known as Mara), and one of his younger brothers, Rubén.
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Cuban Crisis As Reflected in the New York Press, 1. by Joseph E. Wisan (Author) ISBN ISBN Why is ISBN important. ISBN. This bar-code number lets you verify that you're getting exactly the right version or edition of a book.
Author: Joseph E. Wisan. The Cuban crisis as reflected in the New York press,(Studies in history, economics, and public law) Unknown Binding – January 1, by Joseph Ezra Wisan (Author)Author: Joseph Ezra Wisan. The Cuban Crisis as Reflected in the New York Press, Issue of Columbia studies in the social sciences Issue of Studies in history, economics and public law: Author: Joseph Ezra Wisan: Edition: reprint: Publisher: Octagon Books, Original from: University of Texas: Digitized: Length: pages: Export Citation: BiBTeX EndNote RefMan.
The Cuban crisis as reflected in the New York press, The Cuban crisis as reflected in the New York press, by Wisan, Joseph Ezra Published in New York.
More on The Cuban Missile Crisis. From the Archives of The New York Times. In late October and early November ofevents surrounding the Cuban Missile Crisis dominated the headlines of The New York Times. What follows are. The Cuban War of Independence (Spanish: Guerra de Independencia cubana, –98) was the last of three liberation wars that Cuba fought against Spain, the other two being the Ten Years' War (–) and the Little War (–).
The final three months of the conflict escalated to become Location: Cuba. Cuban missile crisis, major confrontation at the height of the Cold War that brought the United States and the Soviet Union to the brink of a shooting war in October over the presence of Soviet nuclear-armed missiles in Cuba.
The crisis was a defining moment in the presidency of John F. Kennedy. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, leaders of the U.S. and the Soviet Union engaged in a tense, day political and military standoff in October over the.
J Robert Frost's Last Adventure By STEWART L. UDALL t is now 10 years since the curtains began to open on a nuclear showdown and the two great powers of the East and West confronted each other in the Cuban missile crisis.
If you want a more tactical-level perspective on the Cuban Missile Crisis, check out Blue Moon over Cuba: Aerial Reconnaissance during the Cuban Missile Crisis by Capt.
William Ecker (USN Ret.) and Kenneth V. Jack. With the Air Force's U2s unable. Cuban crisis as reflected in the New York press (). New York, Columbia University Press; London, P.S.
King & Son, (OCoLC) Document Type: Book: All Authors / Contributors: Joseph E Wisan. Joseph Wisan, The Cuban Crisis As Reflected in the New York Press (New York, ), ; see also Marcus M.
Wilkerson, Public Opinion and the Spanish-American War (Baton Rouge, La., ), 62–Author: Kevin J. O’Keefe. The Cuban Missile Crisis newspaper articles from the Post-Standard out of Syracuse, New York, on Octobegan with the main headline "JFK Agrees to Talks But Blockade Stays." This Cuban Missile Crisis newspaper article was also referring to the American quarantine declared on October • Joseph E.
Wisan, author of The Cuban Crisis as Reflected in the New York Press (–), who asserted: “In the opinion of this writer, the Spanish-American War would not have occurred had not the appearance of Hearst in New York journalism precipitated a bitter battle [with Pulitzer] for newspaper circulation.” Additional Physical Format: Online version: Wisan, Joseph Ezra, Cuban crisis as reflected in the New York press, New York, Octagon Books, [©].
With support from Carnegie Corporation of New York, the documents are being published for the first time in English in the book by Sergo Mikoyan, edited by Svetlana Savranskaya, The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis: Castro, Mikoyan, Kennedy, Khrushchev and the Missiles of November (Stanford University Press/Woodrow Wilson Center Press, ).
The. of a book: THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS: International Crises and the Role of Law, by Abram Chayes.
Oxford University Press: New York, "The Cuban Missile Crisis and International Law" The Cuban Missile Crisis: International Crises and the Role of Law. By Abram Chayes. Published under the auspices of the American Society of International Law.
In The Cuban Missile Crisis: A Concise History, Second Edition, Don Munton and David A. Welch distill the best current scholarship on the Cuban missile crisis into a brief and accessible narrative history.
The authors draw on newly available documents to provide a comprehensive treatment of its causes, events, consequences, and significance. The Cuban missile crisis has become something of a misleading “model” of the foreign policy process.
There are seven central tenets of this model, each of which was considered “confirmed” by the “lessons” of the Cuban crisis: (1) Crises are typical of international relations; (2) Crises are assumed to be manageable; (3) The domestic sector is not especially critical in “crisis Cited by: Alice L.
George, The Cuban Missile Crisis: The Threshold of Nuclear York: Routledge, pp. (Paper US $). Although the Cuban Missile Crisis is one of the most debated historical problems of the past century, it still captures the attention of scholars in search of new : Sandra Pujals.
See, for example, Joseph E. Wisan, The Cuban Crisis as Reflected in the New York Press () (New York: Octagon Books, ),and Douglas Allen, Frederic Remington and the Spanish-American War (New York: Crown Publishers, ), See also Philip S.
Foner, who referred in a footnote to "the famous telegram Frederick [sic] Remington.Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis.
2nd edn. New York: Longman, 2. May, Ernest R. and Philip Zelikow, eds. The Kennedy Tapes: Inside the White House During the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Cambridge & London: Belknap Press of the Harvard University Press, 3. Fursenko, Aleksandr and Timothy Naftali.This was the third surfacing of a Soviet submarine during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
After a day of persistent tracking by the U.S. destroyer, the Charles P. Cecil, commanded by Captain Charles Rozier, Soviet submarine B, commanded by Captain Aleksei Dubivko, exhausted its batteries forcing it to come to the surface.