Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q8014928> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 44 of
44
with 100 triples per page.
- Q8014928 subject Q15292308.
- Q8014928 subject Q6489704.
- Q8014928 subject Q6647168.
- Q8014928 subject Q6938845.
- Q8014928 subject Q7341641.
- Q8014928 subject Q8242302.
- Q8014928 subject Q8242426.
- Q8014928 subject Q8242431.
- Q8014928 subject Q8341380.
- Q8014928 subject Q8734398.
- Q8014928 abstract "William Manning Rountree, Jr. (1917–1995) was an American diplomat.He was born in Swainsboro, Georgia to William Manning Rountree, Sr. and Clyde Brannan Rountree on March 28, 1917. William Sr. died when his son, the youngest in a family of seven children, was eighteen months old. The family moved to Atlanta when William Jr. was six, where he attended high school. After graduating from high school in 1935, Rountree got a job with the United States Department of the Treasury where he held various clerical and accounting positions. He later became involved with the lend-lease program.In 1942 he transferred to the United States Department of State and was assigned to Cairo, Egypt where he helped organize World War II aid programs. This led to a long diplomatic career in which Rountree specialized in the Middle East and South Asia. During 1948 and 1949 he was assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Athens, Greece, where he helped administer U.S. aid programs to the Greek army which was fighting Communist insurgents. He later held positions in Turkey and Iran. In 1956 he became Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern, South Asian and African Affairs. In this position he helped develop U.S. policy involving the Suez crisis in November 1956 and the U.S. intervention in Lebanon in 1958. Rountree served as Ambassador to Pakistan (1959–62), Sudan (1962–65), South Africa (1965–70), and Brazil (1970–73). He retired in May 1973 and settled in Gainesville, Florida, where he died of cancer on November 3, 1995.".
- Q8014928 wikiPageExternalLink R.html.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q1049.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q1524.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q15292308.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q155.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q207637.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q2114103.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q258.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q43.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q4809010.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q487999.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q49101.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q5512331.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q5545409.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q648666.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q6489704.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q6647168.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q6938845.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q7204.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q7341641.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q771405.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q789915.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q794.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q822.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q8242302.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q8242426.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q8242431.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q8341380.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q843.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q85.
- Q8014928 wikiPageWikiLink Q8734398.
- Q8014928 comment "William Manning Rountree, Jr. (1917–1995) was an American diplomat.He was born in Swainsboro, Georgia to William Manning Rountree, Sr. and Clyde Brannan Rountree on March 28, 1917. William Sr. died when his son, the youngest in a family of seven children, was eighteen months old. The family moved to Atlanta when William Jr. was six, where he attended high school.".
- Q8014928 label "William M. Rountree".