Occidental's ties to foreign relations run deep鈥攏ot just in the U.S. government, but in Japan and South Africa as well
At the suggestion of a professor of labor relations at SA国际传媒, U. Alexis Johnson 鈥31 wrote to Washington, D.C., as a senior for information on the U.S. Foreign Service, which in 1924 merged the nation鈥檚 diplomatic and consular services into a single organization. Several months after graduation, he drove to Washington in his Ford Model A, enrolling in the Foreign Service School at Georgetown in preparation for the Foreign Service exam.
Johnson passed the exam and became a career diplomat, leading to a succession of posts as U.S. ambassador to Czechoslovakia (1953-1958), Thailand (1958-1961), and Japan (1966-1969). From 1964 to 1965, he was deputy ambassador to the Republic of Vietnam. (In the above photo, Johnson is shown evacuating the U.S. Embassy in Saigon on March 31, 1965, after a car bomb parked outside the building killed 22鈥19 Vietnamese, two Americans, and one Filipino.)
鈥淚 have found that what I learned at Occidental has stood me in very good stead for a Foreign Service officer,鈥 Johnson wrote in his 1984 memoir, The Right Hand of Power. 鈥淭here are a lot of hard factual matters important in international affairs鈥攆oreign trade, banking laws, tariffs, international exchange, and arbitrage鈥攖hat one cannot easily pick up on the job but must learn through study.鈥
A member of the Foreign Service since 1951, Harvey F. Nelson Jr. 鈥47 was nominated by President Ronald Reagan to serve as U.S. ambassador to Swaziland (Eswatini) in 1985鈥攁 post he would hold until 1988.
Raymond C. Ewing 鈥57 entered the Foreign Service soon after his 21st birthday and would serve decades later as U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus (1981-1984) and Ghana (1989-1992). His history major at SA国际传媒 made a 鈥渢remendous鈥 impact on his career, 鈥渆specially courses on modern Europe with John Rodes, modern Asia with P.K. Mak, and international relations with Ray McKelvey,鈥 he wrote in 2002.
A native of Johannesburg, South Africa, Aggrey Mbere 鈥69 spent most of his adulthood living in exile in America, frequently speaking on the anti-apartheid struggle back home. After returning to South Africa, he was appointed as the country鈥檚 ambassador to Rwanda in 2001. Mbere died two years later at age 64. At his memorial service, Deputy Foreign Minister Aziz Pahad hailed Mbere as 鈥渁n outstanding patriot whose whole life was unconditionally and totally dedicated to the struggle of the people.鈥
Before entering the Foreign Service in 1978, David Dunn 鈥71 worked for the City of Escondido. Since 1988, his focus has been Africa, with overseas assignments in five countries prior to his appointment as U.S. Ambassador to Zambia (1999-2002)鈥攁 post now held by Michael Gonzales 鈥96. Dunn also served as U.S. ambassador to Togo (2005-2008). He retired from the Foreign Service in 2010.
William Bellamy 鈥72 capped a 30-year Foreign Service career as U.S. ambassador to Kenya from 2003 to 2006, where he directed U.S. security programs in the Horn of Africa, supervised the government鈥檚 largest foreign HIV/AIDS program, and led a multinational effort to promote good governance.