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  1. Jacob Dyneley Beam (March 24, 1908 – August 16, 1993) was an American diplomat. Life and career. Beam was born in Princeton, New Jersey. His father was a German professor at Princeton University, and the younger Beam earned a bachelor's degree in 1929 from Princeton before he joined the US Foreign Service.

  2. Aug 18, 1993 · Jacob D. Beam, a diplomat who served in the United States' most sensitive foreign post in the 1970's as Ambassador to the Soviet Union, died on Monday at a hospital in...

  3. Jacob D. Beam. During the Truman administration, Ambassador Beam was a political officer in Headquarters, U.S. Forces in Germany, 1945-47; Chief, Central European Division, State Department, 1947-49; Consul General, Jakarta, Indonesia, 1950; Counselor of Embassy, Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1951-52; and Counselor, U.S. Embassy in Moscow, USSR, 1952-53.

  4. Jun 27, 2024 · Jacob D. Beam, Multiple Exposure: An American Ambassador's Unique Perspective on East-West Issues. (New York: Norton, 1978, $12.95). Pp. 317. Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2009.

  5. Jacob D. Beam, class of 1929, was a career diplomat, serving as United States ambassador to Poland (1957-1961), Czechoslovakia (1966-1969), and the Soviet Union (1969-1973).

  6. Jacob D. Beam. AKA Jacob Dyneley Beam. Born: 24-Mar - 1908. Birthplace: Princeton, NJ. Died: 16-Aug - 1993. Location of death: Rockville, MD. Cause of death: Stroke. Gender: Male. Race or Ethnicity: White. Sexual orientation: Straight. Occupation: Diplomat. Nationality: United States. Executive summary: US Ambassador to the USSR, 1969-73.

  7. Jun 27, 2024 · Multiple Exposure: An American Ambassador's Unique Perspective On East-West Issues. By Jacob D. Beam. New York: W. W. Norton, 1978. 317 pp. $10.95. - Volume 38 Issue 2.