Kennedy and Reagan

Home > Other > Kennedy and Reagan > Page 43
Kennedy and Reagan Page 43

by Scott Farris


  142should be touring the country making speeches: Morris, Dutch, p. 282.

  142along came Nancy Davis and saved my soul: Morris, Dutch, p. 280.

  143in three television dramas in 1962 before retiring: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 181.

  143Together, they are complete: D’Souza, Ronald Reagan, p. 220.

  144a combination of good and evil: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, pp. 194–95.

  144no matter how useful it may be to a leader: Wills, The Kennedy Imprisonment, p. 54.

  145“by a desire for money,” suggests historian Thomas C. Reeves: Reeves, A Question of Character, p. 111.

  145suddenly disappear with some pretty young girl: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 194.

  146with her threats to divorce him: Perret, Jack, p. 226.

  146Why not do a story on me: Clarke, Ask Not, p. 59.

  146romance of Jack and Jackie was about them, not between them: Perret, Jack, p. 348.

  Chapter 11: The Book and The Speech

  147known to work in secret with a speech coach: Clarke, Ask Not, p. 6.

  147most integrated political philosophy that I’ve seen in anyone: Morris, Dutch, p. 342.

  147who he was and what he wanted to say: Clarke, Ask Not, p. 45.

  148disparaging liberals as “honkers”: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 63.

  148I am a realist: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 177.

  148Kennedy replied simply, “I do.”: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 236.

  148clique of oil and real estate pirates: Morris, Dutch, pp. 292–93.

  148straight from “old Karl Marx”: Morris, Dutch, p. 316.

  148have to be here for twenty years: O’Brien, Rethinking Kennedy, pp. 62–63.

  149think long-term regarding his political career: O’Brien, Rethinking Kennedy, p. 65.

  150Lodge to Kennedy just a few days before the election: Nasaw, The Patriarch, p. 669.

  150on “Communism and domestic subversives”: Nasaw, The Patriarch, p. 668.

  151to stay out of the civil liberties fight: Nasaw, The Patriarch, p. 666.

  151he would not say anything negative about Kennedy: Nasaw, The Patriarch, p. 668.

  151a box of corn flakes: McKeever, Adlai Stevenson, p. 250.

  152another reason why I say it’s time for a change: Halberstam, The Fifties, p. 231.

  152how Jack should be dressed and how his hair should be: Nasaw, The Patriarch, p. 665.

  153caught the attention of Kennedy’s Justice Department: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 266.

  153since he was MCA’s client, he never explained: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 271.

  154weren’t beating a path to my door, offering me parts: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 267.

  154third-rated show in all of television during the 1956–1957 season: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 268.

  154nearly $2 million on the sale—a 3,000 percent profit: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 269.

  154and in 1970 he had paid no state taxes at all: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 270.

  156How dare you couple the name of a great American patriot with that of a traitor: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 162.

  156see what the bastard was up to: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 189.

  157without committing “hari-kiri”: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 190.

  158with the educated knowledge of its representatives”: Parmet, Jack, p. 326.

  158Sorensen, whom Kennedy had hired in 1953 as part of his Senate staff: Kennedy, Profiles in Courage, p. 17.

  158that basically it is his book: Parmet, Jack, pp. 330–31.

  159the choices, message, and tone of the volume are unmistakably Kennedy’s: Parmet, p. 324.

  159most of the nation’s first great writers and scholars: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 203.

  159(fn)like the Gettysburg Address: Noonan, What I Saw at the Revolution, pp. 86–87.

  159great for Franklin Roosevelt. But it’s no good for me: Parmet, Jack, p. 239.

  159–60which photos of himself would be released to the public: Clarke, Ask Not, p. 50.

  160so that it was clear she was black: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 64.

  160using that charm to articulate serious thoughts and ideas: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 22.

  160of credit for at least spiritual and intellectual inspiration: Parmet, Jack, p. 480.

  16199 percent of that was done by JFK himself: Clarke, Ask Not, p. 17.

  161and phrases destined for his inaugural address: Clarke, Ask Not, p. 18.

  162“as a movie star,” reported the New York Times: Parmet, Jack, p. 367.

  162contained the passion of a magnanimous loser: Parmet, Jack, p. 380.

  163a hundred speaking requests a week: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 229.

  163John Rousselot, a leading member of the John Birch Society: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 287.

  164He used to be a liberal: Morris, Dutch, p. 316.

  164more than 250,000 minutes giving speeches during his eight years at GE: Morris, Dutch, p. 305.

  164“physical forcefulness” that would serve him well in political speechmaking: Morris, Dutch, p. 98.

  164(fn)used to write my own speeches, you know: Noonan, What I Saw at the Revolution pp. 74, 95.

  165Reagan “would constantly be writing”: Skinner, Anderson, and Anderson, Reagan In His Own Hand, pp. xv–xvi.

  165always lively, with entertaining stories: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 283.

  1651896 Democratic Convention with his ‘Cross of Gold’ speech: Schaller, Reckoning With Reagan, p. 12.

  166We did all that could be done: Reagan and Hubler, Where’s the Rest of Me?, p. 312.

  166a vital battle that would surely end in victory: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 124.

  Chapter 12: The Mad Dash for President

  167qualification for the most powerful job in the world was wanting it: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 14.

  167was inspired by Kennedy’s meteoric rise: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 269.

  167But he made a great appearance: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 291.

  167than a major mistake in writing a speech: Nixon, Six Crises, p. 422.

  168if we were running for the presidency: Morris, Dutch, p. 342.

  170a zinger that he foolishly included in a campaign film: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 151.

  170–71a line later woven into the film The Candidate: Morris, Dutch, p. 347.

  171we were novice amateurs: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 184.

  171he had opened a national campaign office: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 310.

  171that he was very practical: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 197.

  171and lead to passage of Proposition 13 in 1978: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 194.

  171commendable record on protecting the environment and state lands: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 177.

  172a handful of welfare cheats represented all the people on welfare: Morris, Dutch, p. 376.

  172had proved himself a capable administrator: Cannon, Governor Reagan, p. 389.

  172desire to be free and independent: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 222.

  173Stevenson “made JFK possible”: Schlesinger, Journals: 1952–2000, p. 239.

  173the heir and executor of the Stevenson revolution: Schlesinger, A Thousand Days, p. 23.

  173campaign was among the most consequential in American history: Edwards, Goldwater), p. 353.

  173Reagan would never have become president: Edwards, Goldwater, p. 353.

  174Goldwater mutton, dressed up as lamb: Goldberg, Barry Goldwater, p. 252.

  174and he never says ‘I’m sorry’: Rorabaugh, The Real Making of the President, p. 66.


  174considered Stevenson “soft” and “a goddam weeper”: Rorabaugh, The Real Making of the President, p. 66.

  174a Stevenson with balls: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 259.

  175him “a black fascist bastard”: Goldberg, Barry Goldwater, p. 252.

  175Reagan was actually more conservative than Ford: Goldberg, Barry Goldwater, p. 290.

  175“ostentatious” nature of Reagan’s inaugural festivities: Goldberg, Barry Goldwater, p. 313.

  176So, there’s basically no difference: Goldberg, Barry Goldwater, p. 315.

  176hold [Reagan] in the great position that he now occupies: Goldberg, Barry Goldwater, p. 327.

  176the national mood was less contentment than somnolence: O’Neill, American High, p. 285.

  176spiritless, complacent, apathetic, confused, and poorly led: O’Neill, American High, p. 285.

  177the precious resources of tomorrow: O’Neill, American High, p. 286.

  177there were no limits to what America could achieve: O’Neill, American High, p. 287.

  177If you give me a week, I might think of one: Rorabaugh, The Real Making of the President, p. 122.

  178a man who is acting like a nice man rather than being one: Halberstam, The Fifties, p. 730.

  179my life would be dull as hell: Rorabaugh, The Real Making of the President, pp. 18–19.

  179These two . . . bore the hell out of me: Halberstam, The Fifties, pp. 732–33.

  181than when Mr. Carter became president of the United States: Schaller, Reckoning with Reagan, pp. 32–33.

  Chapter 13: Sinatra, Disney, and Casals

  184‘entertainment capital of the world,’ Hollywood or Washington, D.C.: Peretti, The Leading Man, pp. 8–9.

  184the first movie star to become president: Wills, The Kennedy Imprisonment, p. 28.

  184a clash of symbols and a collective search for meaning: Troy, Morning in America, p. 11.

  184cultural dream factory: Peretti, The Leading Man, p. 4.

  185understand the feelings and motivations of others: Cannon, President Reagan, pp. 31–32.

  185perhaps as the head of a studio: Cannon, President Reagan, p. 33.

  185of . . . national wish fulfillment: Peretti, The Leading Man, p. 4.

  186and the secrets of Hollywood to the young politician: Wills, The Kennedy Imprisonment, p. 22.

  186Do you think I could learn how to do it: Perret, Jack, p. 128.

  187totally absorbed in its performance: Reagan, My Father at 100, p. 12.

  187He’s no Robert Taylor, he’s just himself: Morris, Dutch, p 146.

  187Reagan for best friend: D’Souza, Ronald Reagan, p. 51.

  187unlike many [leaders] I have seen before and since: Hart and Strober, The Kennedy Presidency, pp. 54–55.

  189A “real man,” never “feminine.”: Jeffords, Hard Bodies, p. 35.

  189Reagan’s anti–big government philosophy: Jeffords, Hard Bodies, p. 16.

  190sales have fallen. (Jack does not wear them.): Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 478.

  191what to do the next time this happens: Jeffords, Hard Bodies, p. 28.

  191if the world’s nations cannot peacefully resolve their differences: Cannon, President Reagan, p. 41.

  192computers that controlled America’s nuclear launch codes: Cannon, President Reagan, p. 38.

  192but I communicated great things: Schaller, Reckoning With Reagan, p. 179.

  193opening of Disneyland, which drew an estimated seventy million viewers: Gabler, Walt Disney, p. 532.

  193for Reagan, who read the great adventure stories as a boy: Gabler, Walt Disney, p. xiii.

  193striving to make people feel better about themselves: Gabler, Walt Disney, p. 535.

  193happier than it was eight years ago: Reeves, President Reagan, p. 486.

  193Nothing of the present exists in Disneyland: Gabler, Walt Disney, pp. 497–98.

  193yesterday with the fantasy and dreams of tomorrow: Gabler, Walt Disney, p. 533.

  194public support for space exploration: Gabler, Walt Disney, p. xiii.

  194to film Advice and Consent on location at the White House: Peretti, The Leading Man, p. 145.

  195as a service to the public: Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy and His Times p. 450.

  195traveling to Hyannis Port for the weekend: Whitefield, The Culture of the Cold War, p. 213.

  195to make a quick buck off the new president’s popularity: Peretti, The Leading Man, p. 125.

  195See the Japs Almost Get Kennedy: Perlstein, Before the Storm, p. 228.

  195make himself the best-known person on earth: Peretti, The Leading Man, p. 9.

  196things would be done differently from now on: Perdum, “From That Day Forth.”

  196down the highway to the murmur of jazz: Peretti, The Leading Man, pp. 127, 132.

  197what the Eisenhower administration did for golf: Heymann, Bobby and Jackie, p. 22.

  197show-biz, if you please—has become the Sixth Estate: Perdum, “From That Day Forth.”

  197not excluding the clergy: Morris, Dutch, p. 307.

  198what lay ahead was already experienced: Blumenthal and Edsall, The Reagan Legacy, p. 260.

  198he had been scrubbed clean by it: Wills, Reagan’s America, p. 205.

  199bandleaders who had frequently performed for Eisenhower: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 153.

  199as an integral part of a free society: Reeves, President Kennedy, pp. 475–76.

  199and a few sentimental Irish ballads: Kirk, Musical Highlights from the White House, p. 136.

  199meat-and-potatoes guy, a middlebrow: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 476.

  199–200not necessarily what was popular at the time: Kirk, Musical Highlights from the White House, p. 135.

  200it’s the song of the exile: Kirk, Musical Highlights from the White House, p. 137.

  201referencing the comedians’ zany rendition in A Night at the Opera: Kirk, Musical Highlights from the White House, p. 163.

  Chapter 14: A City on a Hill and a Man on the Moon

  202and a unique contribution to make to it: Nye, This Almost Chosen People, p. 164.

  202(though those surveyed were not asked about Kennedy): www.gallup.com/poll/145358/americans-exceptional-doubt-obama.aspx.

  202in the development of an American ideology: Nye, This Almost Chosen People, p. 164.

  203set aside as a promised land: Pemberton, Exit with Honor, p. 49.

  203and that God intended America to be free: Pemberton, Exit with Honor, p. 62.

  204for at least a century after Winthrop’s sermon: Hodgson, The Myth of American Exceptionalism, p. 2.

  204an American solution to every world problem: Nye, The Almost Chosen People, p. 202.

  204the name of John F. Kennedy will be remembered: Hart, The 100, p. 419.

  205so many other pressing needs on Earth: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p. 228.

  205series of setbacks rare in the history of the Republic: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 106.

  206the better they like you: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 106.

  206and entitled to claiming such an extraordinary feat: Logdson, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, pp. 225–26.

  206the use of federal power for public good: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p. 233.

  206use of extensive national resources to achieve success: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p. 225.

  207That’s all there is to it: Wolfe, The Right Stuff, pp. 216–17.

  207He thought it was good for the country: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, pp. 225–27.

  208will be more impressive to mankind: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 138.

  208put it
in foreign aid. But I cannot: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 139.

  208the great human adventures of modern history: Dallek, An Unfinished Life, p. 393.

  209sufficiently explained or sufficiently debated: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p. 198.

  209and one which we intend to win: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p 1.

  209Why does Rice play Texas: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p 1.

  209space achievement had lost some of its urgency: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p. 197.

  210methods passed from the military to the civilian realm: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p. 234.

  211some agreement on nuclear disarmament first: Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon, p. 167.

  211would reverse three decades of official U.S. nuclear policy: Fitzgerald, Way Out There in the Blue, p. 19.

  211technologies, some of which were nowhere near reality yet: Fitzgerald, Way Out There in the Blue, p. 245.

  212up to two-thirds of Americans supported development of SDI—if it was foolproof: Fitzgerald, Way Out There in the Blue, p. 258.

  212as atonement for being the nation that developed them: Fitzgerald, Way Out There in the Blue, p. 23.

  213at once isolationist and internationalist: Fitzgerald, Way Out There in the Blue, p. 24.

  214Hitler’s celebration of Arian youth at the Berlin Games in 1936: Troy, Morning in America, pp. 152–53.

  214into war in World War I, World War II, and Korea: Meisler, When the World Calls, p. 4.

  214hit the winning number: Hoffman, All You Need Is Love, p. 12.

  215role in history be that of peacemongers: Meisler, When the World Calls, p. 8.

  215and customs they will need to know: Meisler, When the World Calls, pp. 8–9.

  215join the Peace Corps upon graduation in the spring of 1961: Meisler, When the World Calls, p. 9.

  216and it could be an important experience for them: Meisler, When the World Calls, p. 24.

  216Kennedy did not find amusing and which Nehru did not mean as a joke: Reeves, President Kennedy, p. 69.

  216more or less the same as it was before they came: Meisler, When the World Calls, pp. 24–25.

 

‹ Prev