CreativeDominant
Posts: 11032
Joined: 3/11/2006 Status: offline
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Well...there's this to start with: In other branches of the government, however, more than 300 persons were discharged for loyalty reasons alone during the period from 1947 to 1951. Most but not all of Senator McCarthy’s numbered cases were drawn from the “Lee List” or “108 list” of unresolved Department of State security cases compiled by Lee for the House Appropriations Committee in 1947. [39] The Tydings subcommittee also obtained this list. In addition to some of the person involved in espionage identified in the Venona project listed above, there are other security and loyalty risks identified correctly by Senator McCarthy included in the following list: Robert Warren Barnett & Mrs. Robert Warren Barnett, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #48 and #49 respectively and both are on Lee list as #59;[40] Esther Brunauer, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #47 and Lee list #55;[41] Stephen Brunauer, U.S. Navy, chemist in the explosive research division;[42] Gertrude Cameron, Information and Editorial Specialist in the U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #55 and Lee list #65;[43][44] Nelson Chipchin, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's list #23;[45] Oliver Edmund Clubb, U.S. State Department;[46] John Paton Davies, U.S. State Department, Policy Planning Committee;[47] Gustavo Duran, U.S. State Department, assistant to the Assistant Secretary of State in charge of Latin American Affairs, and Chief of the Cultural Activities Section of the Department of Social Affairs of the United Nations;[48] Arpad Erdos, U.S. State Department;[49] Herbert Fierst, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's case #1 and Lee list #51;[50][51][52] John Tipton Fishburn, U.S. State Department; Lee list #106;[53] Theodore Geiger, U.S. State Department;[54] Stella Gordon, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #40 and Lee list #45[55] Stanley Graze, U.S. State Department intelligence; McCarthy's Case #8 and Lee list #8, brother of Gerald Graze, confirmed in KGB Archives;[56] Ruth Marcia Harrison, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #7 and Lee list #4;[57] Myron Victor Hunt, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #65 and Lee list #79;[58] Philip Jessup, U.S. State Department, Assistant Director for the Naval School of Military Government and Administration at Columbia University in New York, Delegate to the U.N. in a number of different capacities, Ambassador-at-large, and Chairman of the Institute of Pacific Relations Research Advisory Committee; McCarthy's Case #15;[59] Dorothy Kenyon, New York City Municipal Court Judge, U.S. State Department appointee as American Delegate to the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women;[60] Leon Hirsch Keyserling, President Harry Truman's Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers;[61] Mary Dublin Keyserling, U.S. Department of Commerce;[62] Esther Less Kopelewich, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #24;[63] Owen Lattimore, Board member of the communist-dominated Institute of Pacific Relations (I.P.R) and editor the I.P.R.’s journal Pacific Affairs;[64] Paul A. Lifantieff-Lee, U.S. Naval Department; McCarthy's Case #56 and Lee list #66;[65] Val R. Lorwin, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #54 and Lee list #64;[66] Daniel F. Margolies, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #41 and Lee list #46;[67] [68] Peveril Meigs, U.S. State Department; Department of the Army; McCarthy's Case #3 and Lee list #2;[69] Ella M. Montague, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #34 and Lee list #32;[70] Philleo Nash, Presidential Advisor, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman administrations;[71][72][73] Olga V. Osnatch, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #81 and Lee list #78;[74] Edward Posniak, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case Number 77;[75] Philip Raine, U.S. State Department, Regional Specialist; McCarthy's Case #52 and Lee list #62;[76][77][78][79] Robert Ross, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #32 and Lee list #30;[80] Sylvia Schimmel, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #50 and Lee list #60;[81][82][83][84] Frederick Schumann, contracted by U.S. State Department as lecturer; Professor at Williams College; not on Lee list;[85] John S. Service, U.S. State Department;[86] Harlow Shapley, U.S. State Department appointee to UNESCO, Chairman of the National Council of Arts, Sciences, and Professions;[87] William T. Stone, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #46 and Lee list #54;[88] Frances M. Tuchser, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #6 and Lee list #6;[89] John Carter Vincent, U.S. State Department; McCarthy's Case #2 and Lee list #52;[90] David Zablodowsky, U.S. State Department & Director of the United Nations Publishing Division. McCarthy's Case #103 And this: In 1953-54, McCarthy had been investigating lax security in the top secret facility at Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey. He was attacked by liberals and Communists on the grounds that there were no security problems at Ft. Monmouth. Years later, in addressing the reason why the U.S. Army's top-secret operations at Fort Monmouth were quietly moved to Arizona, Senator Barry Goldwater, in his 1979 book With no apologies: The personal and political memoirs of United States Senator Barry M. Goldwater, Goldwater stated: "Carl Hayden, who in January 1955 became chairman of the powerful Appropriations Committee of the United States Senate, told me privately Monmouth had been moved because he and other members of the majority Democratic Party were convinced security at Monmouth had been penetrated. They didn't want to admit that McCarthy was right in his accusations. Their only alternative was to move the installation from New Jersey to a new location in Arizona."[110] Even though McCarthy's investigations proved that his suspicions were right, for many years afterwards and continue to this day, liberals have spread the falsehood that McCarthy had found nothing at Fort Monmouth. http://www.conservapedia.com/Joseph_McCarthy#Known_security.2Floyalty_risks For starters.
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