Charles Woodruff Yost - Appearances Before The Senate Foreign Relations Committee

Appearances Before The Senate Foreign Relations Committee

  • 1958: Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (Historical Series), Vol. X, Eighty-Fifth Congress, Second Session- Statement and questioning of CWY to be Ambassador to Morocco
  • 7 February 1961: Executive Session, Tuesday- Nomination of CWY to be Deputy U.S. Representative, Security Council, United Nations
  • January 21, 1969: United States Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Nomination of CWY to be U.S. Representative to the UN
  • 26 May 1971: Senate Foreign Relations Committee-Statement on Southeast Asia
  • 18 May 1972: Committee on Foreign relations-Subcommittee on the Near East
  • 22 February 1973: Statement to Foreign Affairs Committee on the Rhodesian situation
  • 11 May 1973: Senate Foreign Relations Committee-International Court of Justice
  • 5 December 1973: Foreign Affairs Committee-United Nations Peacekeeping
  • 1979: Senate Hearings on International Human Rights Treaties

Read more about this topic:  Charles Woodruff Yost

Famous quotes containing the words appearances, senate, foreign, relations and/or committee:

    We often think ourselves inconsistent creatures, when we are the furthest from it, and all the variety of shapes and contradictory appearances we put on, are in truth but so many different attempts to gratify the same governing appetite.
    Laurence Sterne (1713–1768)

    At first I intended to become a student of the Senate rules and I did learn much about them, but I soon found that the Senate had but one fixed rule, subject to exceptions of course, which was to the effect that the Senate would do anything it wanted to do whenever it wanted to do it.
    Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933)

    The condition every art requires is, not so much freedom from restriction, as freedom from adulteration and from the intrusion of foreign matter.
    Willa Cather (1876–1947)

    When one walks, one is brought into touch first of all with the essential relations between one’s physical powers and the character of the country; one is compelled to see it as its natives do. Then every man one meets is an individual. One is no longer regarded by the whole population as an unapproachable and uninteresting animal to be cheated and robbed.
    Aleister Crowley (1875–1947)

    The small creatures chirp thinly through the dust, through the night.
    O mother
    What shall I cry?
    We demand a committee, a representative committee, a committee of investigation
    RESIGN RESIGN RESIGN
    —T.S. (Thomas Stearns)