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John Sherman Cooper : ウィキペディア英語版
John Sherman Cooper

John Sherman Cooper (August 23, 1901 – February 21, 1991) was a politician, jurist, and diplomat from the U.S. state of Kentucky. He served three non-consecutive, partial terms in the United States Senate before being elected to two full terms in 1960 and 1966. He also served as U.S. Ambassador to India from 1955 to 1956 and U.S. Ambassador to East Germany from 1974 to 1976. He was the first Republican to be popularly elected to more than one term as a senator from Kentucky and, in both 1960 and 1966, he set records for the largest victory margin for a Kentucky senatorial candidate from either party.
Cooper's first political service was as a member of the Kentucky House of Representatives from 1927 to 1929. In 1930, he was elected county judge of Pulaski County. After a failed gubernatorial bid in 1939, he joined the U.S. Army in 1942. During World War II, he earned the Bronze Star Medal for reorganizing the Bavarian judicial system after the allied victory in Europe. While still in Germany, he was elected circuit judge for Kentucky's 28th district. He returned home to accept the judgeship, which he held for less than a year before resigning to seek election to A. B. "Happy" Chandler's vacated seat in the U.S. Senate. He won the seat by 41,823 votes, the largest victory margin by any Republican for any office in Kentucky up to that time.
During his first term in the Senate, Cooper voted with the majority of his party just 51% of the time. He was defeated in his re-election bid in 1948, after which he accepted an appointment by President Harry S. Truman as a delegate to the United Nations General Assembly and served as a special assistant to Secretary of State Dean Acheson during the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Cooper was again elected to a partial term in the Senate in 1952. The popular Cooper appeared likely to be re-elected in 1954 until the Democrats nominated former Vice-President Alben W. Barkley. Cooper lost the general election and was appointed Ambassador to India by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1955. Cooper gained the confidence of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and dramatically improved relations between the U.S. and the recently independent state of India, helping rebuff Soviet hopes of expanding communism in Asia. Barkley died in 1956, and Eisenhower requested that Cooper seek Barkley's open seat. Cooper reluctantly acquiesced and was elected to serve the rest of Barkley's term.
In 1960, Cooper was re-elected, securing his first full, six-year term in the Senate. Newly elected President John F. Kennedy – Cooper's former Senate colleague – chose Cooper to conduct a secret fact-finding mission to Moscow and New Delhi. Following Kennedy's assassination in November 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed Cooper to the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination. Cooper soon became an outspoken opponent of Johnson's decision to escalate U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam War, consistently advocating negotiation with the North Vietnamese instead. After Cooper's re-election in 1966, he worked with Idaho Democrat Frank Church on a series of amendments designed to de-fund further U.S. military operations in the region. These amendments were hailed as the first serious attempt by Congress to curb presidential authority over military operations during an ongoing war. Aging and increasingly deaf, Cooper did not seek re-election in 1972. His last acts of public service were as Ambassador to East Germany from 1974 to 1976 and as an alternate delegate to the United Nations in 1981. He died in a Washington, D.C., retirement home on February 21, 1991, and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
==Early life==
John Sherman Cooper was born August 23, 1901, in Somerset, Kentucky.〔"Cooper, John Sherman". ''Biographical Directory of the United States Congress''〕 He was the second child and first son of seven children born to John Sherman and Helen Gertrude (Tartar) Cooper.〔Schulman, p. 16〕 The Cooper family had been prominent in the Somerset area since brothers Malachi and Edward Cooper migrated from South Carolina along the Wilderness Trail and through the Cumberland Gap around 1790, shortly after Daniel Boone.〔Schulman, p. 15〕 His father's parents – staunch Baptists – were active in the anti-slavery movement in the nineteenth century, and the elder John Sherman Cooper (called "Sherman") was named after the Apostle John and William Tecumseh Sherman, a hero of the Union in the Civil War.〔Smoot, p. 134〕 The family was very active in local politics; six of Cooper's ancestors, including his father, were elected county judges in Pulaski County, and two had been circuit judges.〔"Whittledycut". ''Time''〕 Sherman Cooper engaged in numerous successful business ventures and was known as the wealthiest man in Somerset.〔Krebs, "John Sherman Cooper Dies at 89"〕〔Finch, p. 162〕 At the time of John Sherman Cooper's birth, his father was serving as collector of internal revenue in Kentucky's 8th congressional district, a position to which he had been appointed by President Theodore Roosevelt.〔Smoot, p. 135〕
During his youth, Cooper worked delivering newspapers, in railroad yards, and in his father's coal mines in Harlan County.〔Hewlett and Merrit, "John Sherman Cooper Dies at 89"〕 Despite having formerly served as county school superintendent, Cooper's father had a low opinion of the public schools, and until he was in the fifth grade, Cooper was privately tutored by a neighbor.〔〔Schulman, p. 17〕 While his father was away on business in Texas, his mother sent him to sixth grade at the public school, which he attended thereafter.〔 At Somerset High School, he played both basketball and football.〔 After the outbreak of World War I, Cooper joined an informal military training unit at the high school.〔Smoot, p. 144〕 Two of the school's instructors organized the boys into two companies, but Cooper, who was given the rank of captain, later recalled that "they taught us how to march and that's about all."〔 During his senior year, Cooper served as class president and class poet.〔 In 1918, he graduated second in his high school class and was chosen to give the commencement speech.〔〔
After graduation, Cooper matriculated at Centre College in Danville, Kentucky.〔Cooper, p. 227〕 While at Centre, Cooper was accepted into the Beta Theta Pi fraternity.〔Howard, "John Sherman Cooper"〕 He also played defensive end on the Praying Colonels' football team.〔Smoot, p. 146〕 Cooper was a letterman on the team, playing alongside football notables Bo McMillan, Red Roberts, Matty Bell, and Red Weaver.〔 Another member of the team, John Y. Brown, Sr., would later become one of Cooper's political rivals.〔 Coached by Charley Moran, the team was undefeated in four games in the 1918 season, which was shortened by an outbreak of the Spanish flu.〔
Although Centre was known as one of Kentucky's foremost colleges, Cooper's father wanted him to broaden his education and, after one year at Centre, Cooper transferred to Yale College in New Haven, Connecticut.〔Schulman, p. 19〕 At Yale, he was a classmate of his future U.S. Senate colleague, Stuart Symington.〔 Cooper was active in many extracurricular activities at Yale, including the Sophomore German Committee, the Junior Promenade Committee, the Student Council, the Class Day Committee, the Southern Club, the University Club, and Beta Theta Pi.〔Smoot, p. 151〕 A member of the Undergraduate Athletic Association, he played football and basketball, becoming the first person in Yale history to be named captain of the basketball team in his junior and senior years.〔 In his senior year, he was accepted into the elite Skull and Bones society but regretted not being accepted into Phi Beta Kappa.〔 Upon graduation, he was voted most popular and most likely to succeed in his class.〔
Cooper earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Yale in 1923 and enrolled at Harvard Law School later that year.〔 During the summer break of 1924, he returned to Kentucky, where his father, dying of Bright's disease, told him that he would soon become the head of the family, and that most of the family's resources had been lost in the economic recession of the early 1920s.〔〔Smoot, p. 154〕 Cooper returned to Harvard after his father's death, but soon discovered that he could not simultaneously pursue a law degree and manage his family's affairs.〔 He was admitted to the bar by examination in 1928 and opened a legal practice in Somerset.〔 Over the next 20 years, he sold his father's remaining assets, paid off the family debts, and financed a college education for his six siblings.〔

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