Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bismarck_Myrick> ?p ?o }
- Bismarck_Myrick abstract "Bismarck Myrick (born 1940 in Portsmouth, Virginia) is a former U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Liberia (1999–2002) and Lesotho (1995–1998). He is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service and a decorated Vietnam War hero. He represented the U.S. at the swearing in of South Africa’s first democratic parliament, led by Nelson Mandela. The Kingdom of Lesotho conferred on him the Kingdom's highest honor to a non-citizen. Liberia’s major newspapers and civil society organizations named him “Diplomat of the Year” or “Man of the Year” for three consecutive years. The City Council appointed him Goodwill Ambassador for Goree Island, Senegal in 2008. He was Political Officer in Liberia during the government of Samuel Doe. He completed study projects in southern and western Africa every other year:2006-2012. He graduated from the University of Tampa with honors and earned an M.A. degree from Syracuse University. Spelman College awarded him a Doctor of Humane Letters degree. Dr. Myrick is co-author of Three Aspects of Crisis in Colonial Kenya ; author of “The United States and Liberia” in The African Experience: Past, Present, and Future and author of scores of official documents. Portsmouth, VA named two streets in his honor in 2001 and selected him as a 2006 “Portsmouth Notable” – the city’s highest honor. He is featured in the March, 2013 edition of “The Citizen of Chesapeake” Newspaper. Active in community service, he is on a number of boards, such as the World Affairs Council. The government of Lesotho awarded him the Most Meritorious Order of Mohlomi, its highest honor to a non-citizen, for his work in promoting democracy. He also served as Principal Officer in Cape Town, South Africa from 1993 to 1995, and as Principal Officer in Durban, South Africa from 1990 to 1993, where he helped manage U.S. policies during that nation's transformation from apartheid to non-racial democracy. During his military career, Myrick also served in Ethiopia from 1975 to 1979 as an Army foreign area officer.He joined the Foreign Service in 1980 and was assigned as Desk Officer for Somalia in the Office of East African Affairs. From 1982 to 1984, he served as Political Officer at Monrovia in Liberia. He returned to Washington, D.C. to serve from 1985 to 1987 as Action Officer in the Office of Strategic Nuclear Policy, Bureau of Politico-Military Affairs. He was Chairman (1986–87) of the Interagency Nuclear Testing Arms Control Working Group and served on the U.S. Delegation to the Geneva Nuclear Testing talks. Myrick served as Deputy Director for policy planning and coordination in the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs from 1987 to 1989. In 1989, he was awarded a Una Chapman Cox Fellowship and conducted research on a project entitled \"Change in the Horn of Africa and Implications for U.S. Foreign Policy in the 1990s.\" He holds the Department of State's Superior Honor Award and four Meritorious Honor Awards.While serving as the ambassador to Liberia, Myrick became the center of a potential international incident: after alleging that Myrick had interfered in domestic political issues, ruling National Patriotic Party chairman Cyril Allen urged the government to arrest Myrick. Disputes erupted among NPP partisans, as some opposed the statement of their party boss and called for an increased separation between their party and the government.Ambassador Myrick began his military career as an army private. He performed military police duties in Okinawa and Germany before his first assignment as an infantry officer in South Korea. He was an infantry company commander in Vietnam from 1968 to 1969. He earned the Silver Star, two Bronze Stars for heroism in combat, two Bronze Stars for meritorious service in a combat zone, the Purple Heart, Meritorious Service Medal, Parachutist Badge and Combat Infantryman Badge. He was inducted into the U.S. Army Hall of Fame at Fort Benning, Georgia in 1996. An Army Foreign Area Officer (Africa Specialist), he was Director of African Studies at the School of International Studies, Fort Bragg, NC. He is in the National Infantry Museum’s Hall of Fame at Fort Benning, GA. He was the ODU 2011 Veterans Day Honoree and Featured Speaker.A native of Portsmouth, Virginia, Myrick earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Tampa and a master's degree from Syracuse University. He currently teaches political science at Old Dominion University as an Ambassador-in-Residence and Lecturer.".
- Bismarck_Myrick birthDate "1940".
- Bismarck_Myrick birthYear "1940".
- Bismarck_Myrick thumbnail Myrick.jpg?width=300.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageExternalLink myerson-myus.html.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageExternalLink 8829.htm.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageID "9975589".
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageLength "6383".
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageOutDegree "42".
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageRevisionID "694414458".
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Bronze_Star_Medal.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Cape_Town.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:1940_births.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:African-American_diplomats.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:African-American_people.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ambassadors_of_the_United_States_to_Lesotho.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ambassadors_of_the_United_States_to_Liberia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_diplomats.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_military_personnel_of_the_Vietnam_War.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:Living_people.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Portsmouth,_Virginia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:Recipients_of_the_Bronze_Star_Medal.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:Recipients_of_the_Purple_Heart_medal.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Category:Recipients_of_the_Silver_Star.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Durban.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Ethiopia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink File:Myrick.jpg.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Foreign_area_officer.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Fort_Benning.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Lesotho.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Liberia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Monrovia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink National_Patriotic_Party.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Okinawa_Prefecture.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Old_Dominion_University.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Political_science.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Portsmouth,_Virginia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Purple_Heart.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Silver_Star.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Somalia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink South_Korea.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Syracuse_University.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink U.S._Army_Hall_of_Fame.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Ambassador_to_Liberia.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Foreign_Service.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Tampa.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Vietnam.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLink Washington,_D.C..
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bismarck Myrick".
- Bismarck_Myrick dateOfBirth "1940".
- Bismarck_Myrick education "D.H.L".
- Bismarck_Myrick name "Myrick, Bismarck".
- Bismarck_Myrick shortDescription "Recipient of the Purple Heart medal".
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Bismarck_Myrick wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Bismarck_Myrick description "Recipient of the Purple Heart medal".
- Bismarck_Myrick description "Recipient of the Purple Heart medal".
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:1940_births.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:African-American_diplomats.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:African-American_people.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:Ambassadors_of_the_United_States_to_Lesotho.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:Ambassadors_of_the_United_States_to_Liberia.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:American_diplomats.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:American_military_personnel_of_the_Vietnam_War.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:Living_people.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:People_from_Portsmouth,_Virginia.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:Recipients_of_the_Bronze_Star_Medal.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:Recipients_of_the_Purple_Heart_medal.
- Bismarck_Myrick subject Category:Recipients_of_the_Silver_Star.
- Bismarck_Myrick hypernym Ambassador.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Agent.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Ambassador.
- Bismarck_Myrick type List.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Person.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Person.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Ambassador.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Diplomat.
- Bismarck_Myrick type List.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Official.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Relation.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Diplomat.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Agent.
- Bismarck_Myrick type NaturalPerson.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Thing.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Q215627.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Q5.
- Bismarck_Myrick type Person.
- Bismarck_Myrick comment "Bismarck Myrick (born 1940 in Portsmouth, Virginia) is a former U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Liberia (1999–2002) and Lesotho (1995–1998). He is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service and a decorated Vietnam War hero. He represented the U.S. at the swearing in of South Africa’s first democratic parliament, led by Nelson Mandela. The Kingdom of Lesotho conferred on him the Kingdom's highest honor to a non-citizen.".
- Bismarck_Myrick label "Bismarck Myrick".
- Bismarck_Myrick sameAs Q4918307.
- Bismarck_Myrick sameAs m.02pymkb.
- Bismarck_Myrick sameAs Q4918307.
- Bismarck_Myrick wasDerivedFrom Bismarck_Myrick?oldid=694414458.
- Bismarck_Myrick depiction Myrick.jpg.
- Bismarck_Myrick givenName "Bismarck".
- Bismarck_Myrick isPrimaryTopicOf Bismarck_Myrick.
- Bismarck_Myrick name "Bismarck Myrick".