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McGovern, George S. : ウィキペディア英語版
George McGovern

|signature = George McGovern Signature.svg
|allegiance =
|branch = 25px United States Army Air Forces
|serviceyears = 1943–45
|rank = 10px First Lieutenant
|unit = 741st Bomb Squadron
455th Bombardment Group
15th Air Force
|battles = European Theatre of World War II
|awards = Distinguished Flying Cross
Air Medal (3)
|religion = United Methodist
}}

George Stanley McGovern (July 19, 1922 – October 21, 2012) was an American historian, author, U.S. Representative, U.S. Senator, and the Democratic Party presidential nominee in the 1972 presidential election.
McGovern grew up in Mitchell, South Dakota, where he was a renowned debater. He volunteered for the U.S. Army Air Forces upon the country's entry into World War II and as a B-24 Liberator pilot flew 35 missions over German-occupied Europe. Among the medals bestowed upon him was a Distinguished Flying Cross for making a hazardous emergency landing of his damaged plane and saving his crew. After the war he gained degrees from Dakota Wesleyan University and Northwestern University, culminating in a PhD, and was a history professor. He was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1956 and re-elected in 1958. After a failed bid for the U.S. Senate in 1960, he was a successful candidate in 1962.
As a senator, McGovern was an exemplar of modern American liberalism. He became most known for his outspoken opposition to the growing U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. He staged a brief nomination run in the 1968 presidential election as a stand-in for the assassinated Robert F. Kennedy. The subsequent McGovern–Fraser Commission fundamentally altered the presidential nominating process, by greatly increasing the number of caucuses and primaries and reducing the influence of party insiders. The McGovern–Hatfield Amendment sought to end the Vietnam War by legislative means but was defeated in 1970 and 1971. McGovern's long-shot, grassroots-based 1972 presidential campaign found triumph in gaining the Democratic nomination but left the party badly split ideologically, and the failed vice-presidential pick of Thomas Eagleton undermined McGovern's credibility. In the general election McGovern lost to incumbent Richard Nixon in one of the biggest landslides in American electoral history. Re-elected Senator in 1968 and 1974, McGovern was defeated in a bid for a fourth term in 1980.
Throughout his career, McGovern was involved in issues related to agriculture, food, nutrition, and hunger. As the first director of the Food for Peace program in 1961, McGovern oversaw the distribution of U.S. surpluses to the needy abroad and was instrumental in the creation of the United Nations-run World Food Programme. As sole chair of the Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs from 1968 to 1977, McGovern publicized the problem of hunger within the United States and issued the "McGovern Report", which led to a new set of nutritional guidelines for Americans. McGovern later served as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Agencies for Food and Agriculture from 1998 to 2001 and was appointed the first UN Global Ambassador on World Hunger by the World Food Programme in 2001. The McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program has provided school meals for millions of children in dozens of countries since 2000 and resulted in McGovern's being named World Food Prize co‑laureate in 2008.
==Early years and early education==
McGovern was born in the 600‑person farming community of Avon, South Dakota.〔''Current Year Biography 1967'', p. 265.〕〔 His father, Rev. Joseph C. McGovern, born in 1868, was pastor of the local Wesleyan Methodist Church there.〔 Joseph – the son of an alcoholic who had immigrated from Ireland〔 – had grown up in several states, working in coal mines from the age of nine and parentless from the age of thirteen.〔 He was then a professional baseball player in the minor leagues, but had given it up due to his teammates' heavy drinking, gambling and womanizing, and entered the seminary instead.〔Ambrose, ''The Wild Blue'', pp. 27, 29.〕 George's mother was the former Frances McLean, born c. 1890 and initially raised in Ontario in Canada; her family had later moved to Calgary, Alberta, and then she came to South Dakota looking for work as a secretary.〔〔 George was the second oldest of four children.〔 Joseph McGovern's salary never reached $100 per month, and he often received compensation in the form of potatoes, cabbages, or other food items.〔〔Ambrose, ''The Wild Blue'', p. 30.〕 Joseph and Frances McGovern were both firm Republicans, but were not politically active or doctrinaire.〔Miroff, ''The Liberals' Moment'', p. 28.〕〔
When George was about three years old, the family moved to Calgary for a while to be near Frances' ailing mother, and he formed memories of events such as the Calgary Stampede.〔Anson, ''McGovern'', p. 17.〕 While the McGoverns were living there, Charles Lindbergh's solo transatlantic flight in 1927 made a great impression upon George, as it did upon many members of his generation.〔 When George was six, the family returned to the United States and moved to Mitchell, South Dakota, a community of 12,000.〔 McGovern attended public schools there〔 and was an average student.〔 He was painfully shy as a child and was afraid to speak in class during first grade.〔 His only reproachable behavior was going to see movies, which were among the worldly amusements forbidden to good Wesleyan Methodists.〔 Otherwise he had a normal childhood marked by visits to the renowned Mitchell Corn Palace〔 and what he later termed "a sense of belonging to a particular place and knowing your part in it".〔 He would, however, long remember the Dust Bowl storms and grasshopper plagues that swept the prairie states during the Great Depression.〔McGovern, ''The Third Freedom'', pp. 19–20.〕 The McGovern family lived on the edge of the poverty line for much of the 1920s and 1930s.〔Anson, ''McGovern'', pp. 24–25.〕 Growing up amid that lack of affluence gave young George a lifelong sympathy for underpaid workers and struggling farmers. He was influenced by the currents of populism and agrarian unrest and by the "practical divinity" teachings of cleric John Wesley that sought to fight poverty, injustice, and ignorance.〔Mann, ''A Grand Delusion'', pp. 292–293.〕
McGovern attended Mitchell High School,〔 where he was a solid but unspectacular member of the track team.〔 A turning point came when his tenth-grade English teacher recommended him to the debate team, where he became quite active.〔 His high-school debate coach, a history teacher who capitalized on McGovern's interest in that subject, proved to be a great influence in his life, and McGovern spent many hours honing his meticulous, if colorless, forensic style.〔Anson, ''McGovern'', pp. 27–31.〕〔Knock, "Come Home America", p. 86.〕 McGovern and his debating partner won events in his area and gained renown in a state where debating was passionately followed by the general public.〔〔E. McGovern, ''Uphill'', p. 52.〕 Debate changed McGovern's life, giving him a chance to explore ideas to their logical end, broadening his perspective, and instilling a sense of personal and social confidence.〔〔 He graduated in 1940 in the top ten percent of his class.〔〔
McGovern enrolled at Dakota Wesleyan University in Mitchell〔 and became a star student there.〔Ambrose, ''The Wild Blue'', p. 46.〕 He supplemented a forensic scholarship by working a variety of odd jobs.〔Anson, ''McGovern'', pp. 32–33.〕 With World War II underway overseas and feeling insecure about his own courage, McGovern took flying lessons in an Aeronca aircraft and received a pilot's license through the government's Civilian Pilot Training Program.〔〔 McGovern recalled: "Frankly, I was scared to death on that first solo flight. But when I walked away from it, I had an enormous feeling of satisfaction that I had taken the thing off the ground and landed it without tearing the wings off." In late 1940 or early 1941, McGovern had a brief affair with an acquaintance that resulted in her giving birth to a daughter during 1941, although this did not become public knowledge during his lifetime. In April 1941, McGovern began dating fellow student Eleanor Stegeberg, who had grown up in Woonsocket, South Dakota.〔Ambrose, ''The Wild Blue'', p. 45.〕〔E. McGovern, ''Uphill'', pp. 57–58.〕 They had first encountered each other during a high school debate in which Eleanor and her twin sister Ila defeated McGovern and his partner.〔
McGovern was listening to a radio broadcast of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra for a sophomore-year music appreciation class when he heard the news of the December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor.〔Ambrose, ''The Wild Blue'', pp. 42–43.〕 He subsequently drove to Omaha, Nebraska, with some other students and volunteered to join the United States Army Air Forces.〔〔 The military accepted him, but they did not yet have enough airfields, aircraft, or instructors to start training all the volunteers, so McGovern stayed at Dakota Wesleyan.〔 George and Eleanor became engaged, but initially decided not to marry until the war was over.〔 During his sophomore year, McGovern won the statewide intercollegiate South Dakota Peace Oratory Contest with a speech called "My Brother's Keeper", which was later selected by the National Council of Churches as one of the nation's twelve best orations of 1942.〔〔Anson, ''McGovern'', pp. 34–35.〕 Smart, handsome, and well-liked, McGovern was elected president of his sophomore class and voted "Glamour Boy" during his junior year.〔 In February 1943, during his junior year, he and a partner won a regional debate tournament at North Dakota State University that featured competitors from thirty-two schools across a dozen states; upon his return to campus, he discovered that the Army had finally called him up.〔〔Knock, "Come Home America", p. 87.〕

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