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・ Frederick M. Trapnell
・ Frederick M. Zollo
・ Frederick Ma
・ Frederick Macartney
・ Frederick Macaulay
・ Frederick Mackenzie
・ Frederick L'Ecuyer
・ Frederick L. A. Grauer
・ Frederick L. Ackerman
・ Frederick L. Barry
・ Frederick L. Conklin
・ Frederick L. Darling House
・ Frederick L. Hovde
・ Frederick L. Jenks
・ Frederick L. Schmersahl
Frederick L. Schuman
・ Frederick L. Taft
・ Frederick L. Van Sickle
・ Frederick L. Villepigue
・ Frederick L. Warder
・ Frederick L. Whitam
・ Frederick L. Woodworth
・ Frederick Lablache
・ Frederick Lamb, 3rd Viscount Melbourne
・ Frederick Lambart, 8th Earl of Cavan
・ Frederick Lambart, 9th Earl of Cavan
・ Frederick Lambton, 4th Earl of Durham
・ Frederick Lamplough
・ Frederick Lancelot Nott
・ Frederick Landis


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Frederick L. Schuman : ウィキペディア英語版
Frederick L. Schuman
Frederick Lewis Schuman (1904–1981), was a historian, an American political scientist and international relations scholar. He was a professor of history at Williams College for thirty two years after teaching at the University of Chicago, an analyst of international relations, and social scientist, focusing on the period between World War I and World War II.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Swans Commentary: History, Patterns, Differences. . . Not Again!, by Milo Clark - mgc074 )
He was attacked by the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1943 as having a record of ''Communist affiliations,'' and was later assailed by Senator Joseph R. McCarthy. He denied the accusations and successfully withstood efforts by the committee to have him removed as a Government analyst of German radio broadcasts, a post he held for several months in 1942 and 1943 while on leave from Williams.
Although he was ultimately acquitted, many vocal critics, including several Williams alumni, objected to the professor's outspoken liberalism and suspected communism and continued to call for Schuman's dismissal throughout the rest of his career at the college. The professor undertook several very public political and social battles at Williams, including his much-publicized refusal to attend ceremonies during a visit from Ladybird Johnson, which he considered a tacit indication of support for President Johnson's foreign policies on the part of the college.
The term "geo-strategy" was first used by Frederick L. Schuman in his 1942 article "Let Us Learn Our Geopolitics." It was a translation of the German term "Wehrgeopolitik" as used by German geostrategist Karl Haushofer. Previous translations had been attempted, such as "defense-geopolitics." Robert Strausz-Hupé had coined and popularized "war geopolitics" as another alternate translation.()
==Criticism==

Schuman's book ''Soviet Politics at Home and Abroad'' was criticised by the writer Dwight Macdonald as "a neo-Stalinist
survey, that is, its author admits practically everything and justifies it in turgid surges of clotted prose as necessary and even praise-worthy".〔Dwight Macdonald, "USSR: A Layman's Reading List". ''politics'' magazine,
March 1948, (p. 116).〕 Though Marshall D. Shulman, the Columbia University professor who was the Carter Administration's leading expert on the Soviet Union, recalled using Dr. Schuman's book, ''Soviet Politics, at Home and Abroad'' for a class he taught at City College in the late 1940s.
Schuman's book ''Russia Since 1917. Four Decades of Soviet Politics'' also received a negative review from Hilde Macleod in
''International Socialist Review'', claiming the book contained a "vilification of Trotsky and the Left Opposition".〔Hilde Macleod
"(Dr. Schuman Reconsiders )". ''International Socialist Review'', Vol.20 No.1, Winter 1959, pp.29-30.〕

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