LRB-2523/3
PJD:jld:rs
2005 - 2006 LEGISLATURE
March 30, 2005 - Introduced by Representatives Richards, Cullen, Lehman,
Sheridan, Montgomery, Jeskewitz, Hahn, Seidel, Turner, Albers, Ott,
Gunderson, Hines, Shilling
and Staskunas, cosponsored by Senators Plale,
Taylor, Miller, Cowles, Wirch
and Coggs. Referred to Committee on Rules.
AJR25,1,1 1Relating to: the life and public service of George F. Kennan.
AJR25,1,42 Whereas, George Frost Kennan was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on
3February 16, 1904, and grew up on the east side and died on March 17, 2005, at his
4home in Princeton, New Jersey, at the age of 101; and
AJR25,1,65 Whereas, Mr. Kennan attended St. John's Military Academy in Delafield and
6Princeton University, where he received a degree in history in 1925; and
AJR25,1,87 Whereas, he joined the foreign service in 1926 at age 22 and after State
8Department study in Washington, became U.S. consul in Berlin in 1931; and
AJR25,1,109 Whereas, Mr. Kennan was picked in 1947 by Secretary of State John Marshall
10to direct the State Department's new policy planning staff; and
AJR25,1,1311 Whereas, he achieved fame that same year when an article appeared in the
12quarterly Foreign Affairs magazine outlining the State Department's policy to keep
13the Soviet Union from spreading its influence; and
AJR25,2,214 Whereas, not long after that, Mr. Kennan became America's chief global
15planner when Secretary Marshall gave him 2 weeks to draft the $17 billion U.S. aid

1program, which became known as the Marshall Plan, that rebuilt Europe after World
2War II; and
AJR25,2,63 Whereas, as the author of the Containment Policy on United States-Soviet
4relations, he fashioned the American response to Soviet expansion that avoided war
5and safely saw the nation through 4 decades of competition with the Soviet Union
6fraught with nuclear danger; and
AJR25,2,87 Whereas, in 1951, Mr. Kennan was picked by President Harry Truman as
8ambassador to Moscow; and
AJR25,2,119 Whereas, although he left the United States Foreign Service more than 50
10years ago, he continued to be a leading thinker in international affairs until his
11death; and
AJR25,2,1412 Whereas, he spent most of the 2nd half of the century at the Institute for
13Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, where he wrote many of his 22 books on
14diplomacy and history; and
AJR25,2,1615 Whereas, he left his academic pursuits at the request of President John
16Kennedy to serve as ambassador to Yugoslavia from 1961 to 1963; and
AJR25,2,1817 Whereas, in 1989, President George H.W. Bush awarded him the Medal of
18Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor; and
AJR25,2,2119 Whereas, he spoke at the Pabst Theater at the first Kennan Forum on
20International Affairs established in his honor in 1990 and received a doctorate of
21humane letters from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee the same year; and
AJR25,2,2422 Whereas, he committed his whole adult life to the advancement of reason and
23human decency and saw many of his ideas prevail as the foreign policy of the United
24States; and
AJR25,3,2
1Whereas, Mr. Kennan was well known as a diplomat, philosopher, and
2historian with 2 Pulitzer Prizes to his credit; now, therefore, be it
AJR25,3,6 3Resolved by the assembly, the senate concurring, That the members of the
4Wisconsin legislature commend the life of George F. Kennan, and his highly
5acclaimed body of work that earned him the title as the seer who made Milwaukee
6famous; and, be it further
AJR25,3,10 7Resolved, That the assembly chief clerk shall provide a copy of this joint
8resolution to Mr. Kennan's wife, Annelise, and their 4 children, Grace Kennan
9Warneke, of New York City, Christopher Kennan, of Pine Plains, New York, Joan
10Kennan, of Washington, D.C., and Wendy Kennan, of Cornwall, England.
AJR25,3,1111 (End)
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