BOOKS BY THEODORE C. SORENSEN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
111
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 29, 2005
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 17, 1961
Content Type: 
LIST
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7.pdf13.99 MB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 Decision: John Kennedy and the Cuban Missile crisis. Milwaukee? Raintree Publishers, 1976. (on order) Decision-making in the White House; the olive branch or the arrows. New York, Columbia University Press, 1963. 94p. JK516.S7 Kennedy. New York, Harper and Row, 1965. 783p. E842.S7 The Kennedy legacy. New York, Macmillan, 1969. 414p. E843.S7 HIC Watchmen in the night: Presidential accountability after Watergate. Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press, 1975. 178p. Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 BEST COPY Available THROUGHOUT FOLDER Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 SNOW, C. Ii_-Con:i'irsrd Nodded novelist; and the hard-ell technique of a successful businessman . is a iolly persisnality who takes a schooll:,o}ish delight in his plans for presetting a new pol'tiro-scientific hurndinger which is going to rattle the Establishment more than somewhat." ,Rf f rrc,ites - Authors & Writers i1h+o's Who (1960) lntematit nal %N'ho's \Vbci, 1y51 Twentieth Century Authors (First Sup- plement. 1955) tt ho's Who, 1961 SNOW. SIR CHARLES PERCY See Snow, C. P. In 1945 Ted Sorensen graduated from I_in:oln High S.hoo,, where he had bey-, active in dr. ma and debate, is the band, and in the, 1-MCA. That ial'. he entered the niversitv of ?' el'raska on a Resents scholarship, studs-ing the arts and sciences in a preiaw curr imlum, In 1419 he was. granted a B.S.L. degree with e:e:ticnt to Phi Leta Kap'a_ As an undergo iuate. S?ren- sm had served as chairman of the ca*npus eosasutvtional convention and of the mock Urtited Nations conventior_ Ht had als:-, 1*_~en president of the =-iiversit} YMCA and a meti- her of the debating team., the d: arm clul., and the band. tt-ith the help of a Donald Miller scholarship, Sorensen entered the College of Law at the University of Nebraska in 1949. He became editor in chief of the !t-ebrari?a L w Reww and was awarded the Order c,: Coif. In his spare time he served as a chief. lobbyist in the state le -nature for the groups that favored a Fair Empio}ment Practices Cosnrnittee law. In 1951 Ted Sorensen stood first in his graduating :lass when he received his LI_$- degree. His father wanted him to practise '.law in Lincoln, but feeling that his home town was too restrictive, Sorensen headed for Washington, D.C., where he would be relativeh trnilmowzi In 19:1 Sorensen became an attorney for the Federal Security Agency, later the Department of Health. Education and Welfare Through a law-ver wixim he had met at a convention of Americans for Democratic Action, Sorensen became a staff researcher for the joint Con- gre sional subcommittee on railroad retirement, which had been set up to study revision of the Railway Retirement S-.-Stern. When the sub- committee hushed its work, Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois was so impressed with Sorer-en's performance that he recoirmended him fora job as administrative assistant to the newly Flected Senator from _%Wsachusetts, John F. Kennedy. Repoitediv, John F. Kennedy gave Sorensen two five-minute interviews a ,day or two apart before he hired him. In the first session Ken- nedy interviewed Sorensen; in the second session Sorensen questioned Kennedy. 'Draw-n together by their -mutual love of tioAks and politics, the two men worked together t'1 yaeratiy and harmoniously- With his remarkable anal - tical ability, Sorensen soon showed 2 special knack for studying Trills, tL-afting "quick study" ctetnoranda, and conducting research for speeches and magazine articles. That first year, in 1953. Sorensen was mainly ccn;im a with the probletnns of New England. In 19-54 he became secretary to the New Erglarid Se-?.tors' Conference and held the post through 19=9. !While John F. Kennedy was recovering frown a back injun? in 1935. Sorensen did the research for Kennedy's Profii'rt in Coxrape (Harper, 1956), a collection of biographical sketches about American legislators who exercised inde- pendent judgeinen: in the face of pressures from their coma-ments- At firs; Drew Pears.or. attributed the Pulitzer Prize-winning book to Sorensen as its ghost-writer, but the drx-umen- tan- evidence of S,:-emen's r -arrb notes. Kennedy's drafts in his own handwrite g, and SORENSENTHEODOR CHAIR Slav - ntted States goaz unseat official; lawyer Address: b. The White House Office, '3t'ash- ington. D.C., h. 3000 Spout Run Parks a3?, Arlington, Va. Few officials in the new administration are more concerned with the policies and programs of John F. Kennedy than Theodore Sorensen, the Special Counsel to the President of the United States. The youngest official in the Kennedy administration, he is the President's chief writer of speeches, b aimtruster, silitical confidant, and, along with Lawrence F. O'Brien; one of his chief legislative aides. Although he bears a modest title, Sorensen, who has been called 'chief of staff for ideas," is one of the most important and influential men in Washt- ington. Theodore Chaikin Sorensen was born on May $. 1928 in Lincoln, Nebraska to Christian Abraham and Antis (Cbaikin) Sorensen He has three brothers : Thomas, Robert, and Philip Sorensen, and a sister, Mrs. Ruth Singer. Born of Danish parents in a prairie sod hounq his father rose to become state attorney general of Nebraska and a Republican in the traditioes: of Senator George Norris' liberalism. He went to Europe on Henry Ford's peace ship, sencd as counsel to the women's suffrage movement in Nebraska, and wrote the law that ertabledFublic- bodies to acquire private utility companies. His mother, of Russian-Jewish background, was an ardent feminist and pacifist who gave her maiden name as a middle name to all the five Sorensen children. Christian Sorensen often took his son Ted to meetings on public utilities, and he sometimes had the child address the audience with a "Jew words" from the platform- Cluttered with liberal magazines and books, the Sorensen hot-ehold was a congregating place for pro- gressive friends who debated current issues, particularly those of the --New Deal of Fratildur D. Roosevelt's administration. Another influ- ence upon the boy was the family's Unitarian- ism. Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 the help of Clark Clifford, a \Va^,hington lawvcr, later led' I'earu,n to retract the charges. A friend ha; said dic t from the l,4irining of Ilse to men's assoc:iaxivn, Sorensen had set liinilirical campaigns ever waged in the Unned states. Sorensen acid Kennedy traveled through every state, courting politicians, making esti- r":aces of We real sources of power, and lining uip delegates for the 1960 Democratic :tiati sal Cotivention in Los Angeles. Sorensen built up :c card file of about 30.000 names of people active in Democratic politics, one of the most extensive in the hands of any man. lust before the primaries, Sorensen' relin- --..tnished his organizational duties to the Sena- or's brother, Robert F. Kennedy. But through- ct the primaries, the whistle stops, and the "ievision debates, Sorensen remained as John Kennedy's chief strategist and policy maker. 'vhile the Senator was giving one speech, nrensen would be writing another. Journalists ., Bring the strenuous campaign reported that r. cnsen seemed to, thrive on the pressure. tong others, he prepared those speeches that Mended Kennedy's Roman Catholicism from tslaughts by Protestant fundamentalists. Ken- dy said: "I want to keep Ted with me ierever I go in this campaign. You need icbodv whore you can trust implicitly." Bow- that John F. Kennedy is in office, a jar preoccupation of Theodore Sorensen is ruake him remembered as one of the greatest r;ioents. V hen Kennedy was President-elect, helped to draft thel inaugural address. Since ruing Special Counsel to the President of United States, he has spent much of his in drafting and writing Presidential mes- > and speeches. He was Kennedy's major _. in writing his first State of the Union age, and he ltclped in the preparation of nedy's speech to the nation on the Berlin is or. July 25, 1961. Perhaps no one has so ly approximated the speech rhythms of u F. Kennedy as Theodore Sorensen. crsen now stands in the White House ;Lion of Colonel House, Harry Hopkins, Sherman Adams. He handles situations .cut across government departments. Re- -dly, he will be given more responsibilities field of foreign relations; previously, he oncentrated on domestic affairs. Like other .tors of this tradition, In has already be- embroiled in controversy. Wide wond THEODORE SORE\SEN In the autumn of 1961 Senator Barrv Gold- water, the conservative Republican Senator from Arizona, read into the Congressional Rec- ord a story by Walter Trohan, chief of the Washington bureau of the Chicago Tribune. Trohan asserted that "the man behind President Kennedy's rocking chair in a world with war tensions, escaped military service as a conscien- tious objector and Korean War service as a father." According to Sorensen's draft board in Lin- coln, Nebraska, at the end of 1948 Sorensen was classified 1-AO. He had, in other words, agreed to serve in the armed forces as a non- combatant (as in the medical department). Reclassified to 3-A in August 1950 because he had married, Sorenson was reclassified to 1-AO in January 1952 because he had no children. After an operation for a tumor be- hind the ear, he was classified 4-F. In April 1934 he was reclassified 3-A, since he had be- come a father. Theodore Sorensen married Camilla Palmer on September 8, 1949, just before he entered law school. They live in Arlington, Virginia with their three boys : Eric Kristen, Stephen Edgar, and Philip- Jon. Sorensen once won a silver dollar from his parents for having reached maturity without having smoked or taken a drink. Although he indulges in an occasional sherry before dinner or in a daiquiri (to which he was introduced by John F. Ken- nedy), he still avoids tobacco and never drinks coif ee. Sorensen's frugality, abstemiousness, and Puritanism result from his rearing, not from financial necessity. This asceticism extends to his appearance. He is a sparely built man, six feet and one-half inch in height and 175 pounds in weight, with brown hair and brown eyes and a square and determined face that usually wears a sol-wr expression. Strangers Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 CURRENT BIOGRAPHY 1961 SORENSEN? THEODORE-CL-,r:r;uc2. r:ten mistake his glaaa; re:.erve fo:- co'.:mss i _ cad 6 reco_niz,n: the i.n,;eriyin r.zv be its cause V'.-11(l] not under pressure, hF casbe charming To reia.x, he plas softball ` el>~ tsl a 3, ith his sons- He is a mrnrber of the* Isar Association and a Un.tarian. Max Freedman, the \\?ashirzion corr. ?xid- en of the ?t`.a.,-t,ster G,t% r., gas x ten that "?tifr. Sorenser., in dolor aforlec's I,'rrase. has the glom- of words But he is much more titan, a i;.e.ar cra-i ~sran; he if also a raster of p ohiical philosophy and political strategy. It is not the language of euio but a r:crron- strs'.le truth to say tl;at he combines the pYoliti- cai. sagacity of dames Farley with the literary graces of Judge Samuel Rosenman" Referrnccs Democratic Digest p3i 1a-1 '61 per :e N Y Pos: Mag p1 0 3 'i0 pod Time 76:16 N 21 '60 pod SPORBORG, MRS. WILLIAM, DICK July 11, 1879-dal. 2. 1961 Civic leave: and ciu'`,~iorian; headed New York City and State Fn erations of \\ ome i s Clubs, National Co ,_m- 6! of Jewish Women, and \\-omen's Voluntary Participation Defense Council ; consultant with United State-,; delegation to the United Nations at San Francisco in 1945. See Current Biog- raphy (November) 1947. Obituary A Y Times p29 Ja 3 '61 STACE, W(ALTER) T(FRENCE) Nov. 17, 1,x86- Philosopher; author Address: 996 East Ave-, Mantoloking, N.J. One of the leading philosophers of the Eng- lish-s,king Korld is \\-. T. Stace, a naturalist -A-ho nevertheless admits the talidit} of religious experience. A British subject, State served is the British colonial ranks in Ceylon for twenty-two years, same of them. as mayor of Colombo and as chairman of the Colombo municipal council In 1932 Stave accepted a teaching position at Princeton University, wl.ere he taught until his retirement in 1935. - Stace has written ten books on philosophical questions. His Destiny of Western Man," an attempt to defend the "rightness" of dclnocracy against totalitarian svsterr.s, won the Reynal Hitchcock Prize in 1441 as the lest nonnctioo lyxnk for the general reader ?s ritten by a mero- ler of an American college or university stag. In 1959 he was one of ten scholars who re- ce-is-ed $10.000 prizes for distinguished scholar- ship in the humanities from the American Council of Learned Societies. Walter Terence Stace was burn on November 17, ISS6 in London, England to Edward Vincent State and Aniv Mary (Watson) State- He is the great-grandson of General William Stam whc, fought at the Battle of Waterloo. His father was a lieutenant colonel in t2he British Army; and one of hit brra},ers, Rs; E ,r' Stace, is a -r t.1 ' lira ant of L 't Royal F~:ciae.rs It is t :s ami'y b _ k rc:::(d of Army air; cvi service that ina-red Stave to en'er t;.e I ' tis coin:a a ra- tiyt ranks in Ceylon. Szee's other br ,t , c- Iienry \\ anon, is !er_e ed. lit aisu, hat a sister, Hilda (M's _Ma,:ri.e S:x'a ey). Stare x-as ed,r:atei at Lath Co' e .mnd Ed;nl: : a unnd tot to of Fette: Collei:e in tht century. Ile t,'een at'ender_' 7ri .i:,. ( . cr at Dutar. l .i.ersac u:-sere he in p ila Q~hy a fr? s+_tich he re- ci.r i F _A. dr.:-nee in 19`8 Tyco 'e~-.rs later, it he j,,,fined the Eritisl; Civi'. Service in Cey;on. lie rerriairted there for ttxi t y.two }ears, serving at i.-ariotts times as district judge, private sec- retary to the Go erno.-, land settle:nen' o'hcer, rirsnber of the }ezs:a ye council of CeviQ., r _criber of We cov(:nc= s executive co:r,r', and, finally, as mayor of col-Y n')Q and cr;ariran of the Coiombu municipal council, In 191 f_, while Stace was serving as police rnapStrate of Kandy, serious riots look place 't e:wren the Buddhists and Moharnrnedaris in Cevi:'n. On one Occasion, Stave, who s-as res;.ponsib'e for suppressing the disturbances, refused 10 le: the police fire into an unarmed crowd, an action unusual enough to cause much controversy at the time In 1932, as a result of government changes in Ceylon, many civil servants were c?nerec retirement, and Stave decided to leave the cour- try-. He sent a resume of his published writings to several British and American universities and accepted the best offer-a three-year lec- tureship at Princeton University. He was Stuart Professor of Philosophy from 1935 until his retirement in 1955. Stace had never done any formal graduate work but in 1929 he received a Litt.D. degree from Duh1'rn university is recognition of the scholarly contribution he made in his book The Phi,osophy of Heoel (Macmillan., 1921; r)Qver, 1935). "The primary obiect of this L.ak' Stare zeroed in his preface, "is to place in the hands of the p`_ilo-- ;, ,cal student a com?-lete exw'sttinn of the system of Hegel in a single volume. Xci book with a similar pure, , so far as I taros, exists in our language.... The difficulty of Hegel's writings is no'onous. - Therefore, I have aimed especially at lucidity. The student . will find: here. I hope, all Hegel's essential thoughts stated as easily and simply as is possible." This effort to contey philosophical essentials in tin:ierstaniable terms marks the bull. of Sta e's work Since the publication of his first book A Critical History of Greek Philosophy (Mac- milian, 1920), Stave has written on seven] major areas of philosophical thought. In The Afeaning of Beauty (Richards & Toulmin, 1929), he advances a theory of aesthetics. The Nature of the World (Oxford, 1940) its an essay in phenomenalist metaphysics: (philo- sophical phenomenalism holds that phenomena are the only objects of knowledge). The Theory of Kna.s;cdpt cud Existence (Oxford, 1933) was praised by New Stet:sma.. chat A'a- tion reviewers for showing "car exposition Approved For Release 2006/11/09: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 Approved For Release 2006/11/09.: QIA-RDP90-01089R000100040001-7 - ~. K ?x .? ~. Z- .,. mac -- .>> F. - T. 4.. r^9=C~~J:~a --- ZL('? .rC ~'OC g`~ r.~ D?- n; X-r==^-"_ r.R/??ck _r? _ss ?%_ -; C-~n = N' 7.'^ __~:Y=_ a -+~,_v =gLn r~~ PZr - r Ga an- --- -- ~.?' - _ _y: w ?Z'. ~r..Ca L$ ?' .-- _Y Z+,ac L' ?,_ n ~ -D A __ ~ v s.v{s ~ CF ~ Llr c~ - C T~ - W ~ :r.- _ X, _ `- ~ >. _._ c LCZL -= -_=. Vic' - r v%~`,~,r - v n ?== ?_ -. .c ~v_~? =.a.a co?,n C...-.~5^~iO`~..m a_?D?~_'-s_-crVp __ 'a__,/.,; .~i=Zcn_ - - .--- :'.c':'o nn?-_ G n k='M n 5-;i; ) - _g - z ~E.?O -?: sec- Ir-Y.ZZ~ _ .u 1 xn"m~Y uF-A_, -G '~{x %??`L z--2 ?'?'?7?'2s Z~.. u,r ?~-. rc .. p r- Cs-C / -'n?c- G M _ c cu =7 t ~c'^~' - .? ^Le ?r,a w._,'~' --5 ~K __=__n~ c< aC .C>. KC'C =T .yn~G> rim St.. L _ ~D _=r V-=`u .a '=X., - Z:_F_ ^~ ,~ a~ r.,L ?` s/. ~AA~C^'~~;e :.-~c~