The Watergate

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The Watergate Page 40

by Joseph Rodota


  “a huge feast”: La Repubblica, August 30, 1995.

  “The unexpected cyclone”: SGI board minutes, March 8, 1975, SGI archives.

  “with profound bitterness and disappointment”: Ibid.

  “They have poisoned me”: New York Times, March 23, 1986.

  dissolved: acs.beniculturali.it.

  “The maelstrom was over”: Stans, 384–385.

  CHAPTER SIX: A LITTLE BLOOD

  “The wine trade is to France”: New York Times, October 26, 1974.

  a wide range of charges: New York Times, September 13, 1973.

  “little more than wrist-slapping”: New York Times, December 19, 1974.

  “I will be the Nixon of Bordeaux”: New York Times, October 26, 1974.

  “Winegate”: New York Times, December 21, 1974.

  the first post-Nixon scandal: William Safire, Safire’s New Political Dictionary (New York: Random House, 1993), 278.

  “May I talk to you?”: Salgo, 113.

  Mark Felt: watergateatlandmark.com, retrieved August 1, 2017.

  Bob Dole faced: Bob and Elizabeth Dole, 154.

  Anna Chennault’s friendship with Gerald Ford: Forslund, 96.

  “I always resent it”: Ibid., 88.

  “Anna has ‘wondered’”: Corcoran letter, August 22, 1975, Chennault archives.

  “The President requested”: Robert T. Hartmann memorandum, September 3, 1975, Ford Presidential Library.

  “unallowable”: Washington Star, September 15, 1975.

  “the taxpayer shares the cost of these parties”: Ibid.

  Gruenstein’s discovery made: Washington Post, September 16, 1975.

  “You probably read that Northrop”: Washington Star, September 22, 1975.

  “so tiny and sweet-looking”: Washington Post, October 3, 1975.

  She brought Tommy Corcoran: State Dinner guest list, October 2, 1975, Ford Presidential Library.

  Northrop had paid Chennault: Washington Post, October 6, 1975.

  “Nobody pays for my parties”: Philadelphia Inquirer, October 12, 1975.

  “There is a distinct possibility”: Washington Post news service, reprinted in the Waukesha Freeman, October 16, 1975.

  “widespread, systematic”: Milwaukee Journal, October 16, 1975.

  The Pentagon launched audits: Associated Press story, 1976, undated, Chennault archives.

  Chennault told investigators: Forslund, 110.

  “not known”: Philadelphia Inquirer, October 12, 1975.

  Chennault continued as a Northrop consultant: Monthly consultant reports, Chennault archives.

  “Unless your services are fully described and accurately recorded”: John R. Alison memorandum, August 29, 1980, Chennault archives.

  A pistachio pudding shortage: Washington Post, February 26, 1976.

  the popularity of Watergate Cake: Ibid.

  “cover-up icing”: St. Joseph News-Press, July 30, 1975.

  One version: Deseret News, May 5, 2010.

  “but we can’t substantiate”: “The History of the Watergate Salad” Kraft Foods, kraftbrands.com.

  “Perhaps to alleviate”: Washington Post, November 13, 1975.

  “We haven’t invented anything”: Washington Post, February 2, 1976.

  “rather unappealing”: Camille Stagg correspondence, February 4, 2017.

  a reader sent the recipe: Evening Independent, March 15, 1977.

  “to create something for the buffet”: Stephanie Frazier, “Watergate Salad of Jake’s Tyler,” WSMV Channel 4, November 14, 2014, www.wsmv.com.

  “which doesn’t always contain real pistachios”: Richmond Times-Dispatch, August 4, 1999.

  “We tell them we had nothing to do with it”: Anton Obernberger interview, July 11, 2017.

  The recipe: “The History of Watergate Salad,” Kraft Foods.

  “We had much in common”: Chennault, The Education of Anna, 222.

  “It all sounded very wholesome”: Ibid., 223–224.

  “I’m his piano player”: New York Times, August 16, 1977.

  Suter’s Tavern: ghostsofdc.org and Foggy Bottom News, February 1964.

  now occupied by the Watergate: Ibid.

  “The name Tongsun Park meant a good party”: People, March 6, 1978.

  “I wasn’t terribly surprised”: Chennault, The Education of Anna, 224.

  “South Korea is a friendly power”: New York Times, September 7, 1977.

  “Washington is a marvelous city”: New York Times, April 15, 2005.

  “It’s a high, hard one”: Washington Post, July 24, 1977.

  Anna was trying out a new look: Honolulu Star-Bulletin, November 24, 1976.

  “In retrospect”: Martin Berkeley Hickman, David Matthew Kennedy: Banker, Statesman, Churchman (Provo, UT: Desert Book Company, 1987), 170.

  “What they really wanted”: Salgo, 117.

  Continental Illinois spokesman: Wall Street Journal, November 4, 1977.

  His new title: “Nomination of Nicolas M. Salgo to Be United States Ambassador to Hungary,” White House Press Release, September 20, 1983.

  625,000: Wall Street Journal, September 1, 1981.

  assets of $5 billion: Forbes, November 26, 1979.

  When she graduated: Forbes, October 12, 1981.

  He tracked her down: Daily Mail, January 23, 1987.

  thirty-hour day: Management Review, November 1986.

  “Mr. Luscombe’s secretary”: Forbes, October 12, 1981.

  I. M. Pei: Regine Palladin interview, August 21, 2017.

  “When can you start?” Jimmy Sneed interview, August 10, 2017.

  “I was fed up with problems”: Washington Post, December 2, 1979.

  “a good moment”: Ibid.

  “mischievous”: Palladin interview, August 21, 2017.

  Salgo also agreed to hire: Larbi Dahrouch interview, September 3, 2017.

  “a little strange”: Palladin interview, August 21, 2017.

  “an orange cave”: Washingtonian, October 2015.

  “Americans like to chew things”: Washington Post, December 2, 1979.

  “Never before”: Ibid.

  The offer came: New York Times, March 28, 1979.

  “We demand a little blood”: Washington Business Journal, June 12, 1989.

  A New York Times analysis concluded: New York Times, May 16, 1976.

  “Ronald Reagan has an unusual tax problem”: Washington Star, May 18, 1976.

  “a private matter”: Washington Post, August 1, 1980.

  The tax return showed: Ronald Reagan Presidential Campaign Papers, 1964–1980, Box 45, Reagan Presidential Library.

  “because it was good from an investment standpoint”: Washington Post, August 1, 1980.

  By far the best-performing: Reagans’ 1979 joint federal tax return, Reagan Library campaign files 1980, Reagan Presidential Library.

  “Operationally there is no change here”: Washington Post, October 16, 1979.

  CHAPTER SEVEN: THE REAGAN RENAISSANCE

  “The Watergate is to Washington”: Washingtonian, September 1983.

  “The only good thing about them”: Fred J. Maroon, Jean-Louis: Cooking with the Seasons (Charlottesville, VA: Thomasson-Grant, 1989), 17.

  Carter White House: “Raising the Stakes,” Edible DC, Summer 2012.

  “less pleased with chicken”: Washington Post, December 2, 1979.

  Palladin and his team: Larbi Dahrouch interview, September 4, 2017.

  Ober managed: Washington Post, February 11, 1975.

  ten thousand Americans: New York Times, January 16, 1975.

  Her reasoning: Deborah Davis, Katharine the Great: Katharine Graham and the Washington Post (Bethesda, MD: National Press, Inc., 1979), 276.

  “Did God send you to me?”: Maroon, 82.

  “From Exotic Peking”: Undated newspaper advertisement, Chennault archives.

  “Please write your book”: Chennault, The Education of Anna, 230–31.

  She was still upset with Nixon: Washington Star,
August 20, 1979.

  had made her bitter: Ibid.

  “Politics is a very cruel game”: Ibid.

  “If I were not an Asian,” W, April 25–May 2, 1980.

  “What Anna fails to realize”: Ibid.

  “Mitchell was quick to the point”: Chennault, The Education of Anna, 193.

  “high-handed secrecy and unnecessary haste”: Ibid., 239–242.

  Senator Barry Goldwater praised the book: Ibid.

  “a great contribution”: Goldwater correspondence, October 4, 1979, Chennault archives.

  “the strange riverfront structure”: Chennault, The Education of Anna, 217–218.

  “readable but rather shallow”: New York Times, February 3, 1980.

  “That was an enticing prospect”: Bùi Diem, In the Jaws of History (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1987), 236–245.

  “I don’t think anyone really has the knowledge”: Chennault correspondence, January 7, 1985, Chennault archives.

  and studied whether: Washingtonian, October 1, 2000.

  Who makes uniforms: Ibid.

  “We had it coming”: David Bradley correspondence, February 2, 2017.

  “He was equally comfortable”: Michael Nannes interview, February 17, 2017.

  “equally qualified”: W, April 25–May 2, 1980.

  “No words can express my joy”: Chennault correspondence, November 7, 1980, Hoover Institution archives.

  “I am not particularly interested”: Ibid.

  “I am not sure”: Corcoran correspondence, November 7, 1980, Hoover Institution archives.

  “I want to be free and independent”: Argus Leader, November 7, 1980.

  “After four years”: Washington Post, January 14, 1981.

  CHENNAULT’S COMEBACK: Washington Star, undated, Chennault archives.

  “I am not a hostess”: People, January 26, 1981.

  “Anna is afraid that if she remarries”: Washington Post, February 15, 1981.

  “There are lots of insecure men”: Chicago Tribune, January 11, 1981.

  “I haven’t had time to think about that”: People, January 26, 1981.

  The invitations delighted Taipei: Christian Science Monitor, January 29, 1981.

  “We’ve never had so many”: Washington Post, December 4, 1980.

  Watergate sellers started raising prices: Ibid.

  $750,000—about double: Washington Post, May 28, 1981.

  “Prices don’t scare them”: Washington Post, December 4, 1980.

  Watergate Hotel prepared two budgets: Washington Post, May 28, 1981.

  “They’re our royalty”: Ibid.

  Regulars called it the “Gossip Salon”: “Watergate Beauty Salon has a Rodeo Drive Tint,” New York Times, February 27, 1982.

  “Before it was peanuts”: Washington Post, May 28, 2001.

  “What does she know about minorities?”: Washington Post, February 11, 1981.

  “I cannot understand”: Goldwater letter to Pen James, February 4, 1981, Hoover Institution archives.

  “the Pope’s nose”: Corcoran correspondence, Chennault archives.

  “You must be”: Washington Post, May 28, 1981.

  “Please step out immediately”: Palladin interview, August 21, 2017.

  Jean-Louis prepared: Washington Post, February 9, 1981.

  Salgo asked Palladin: Dahrouch interview, September 4, 2017.

  Giuseppe Cecchi recruited him: “Gabor Olah de Garab Watergate Hotel Manager, 1967–1985,” Watergate East Online, www.watergate50.com.

  “And what a great teacher”: Eulogy prepared by Anna Chennault, undated, Chennault archives.

  “I adore my job”: Associated Press, November 16, 1981.

  “We are no longer the Nixon Watergate”: Washington Post, May 28, 1981.

  CHAPTER EIGHT: A NEST FOR HIGH-FLYERS

  “You’ve got to be fucking kidding me”: FoxNews.com, March 23, 2011.

  Depending on the building: Washington Post, May 28, 1981.

  “What precipitated the separation”: David Bret, Elizabeth Taylor: The Lady, The Lover, The Legend, 1932–2011 (New York: Greystone Books, 2011), 232.

  “classic features”: Washington Post, April 27, 1991.

  “was a wartime employee”: Time, July 7, 1947.

  Mrs. Reagan did come for dinner: Jennifer Egan, “The Countess’s Private Secretary,” New Yorker, June 5 and 12, 2017.

  As part of her “espionage”: Romanones correspondence with the author, June 9, 2016.

  She wrote to White House aides: Romanones correspondence, May 19, 1981, Reagan Presidential Library.

  “The main question is timing”: James M. Rentschler memorandum, November 1981, Reagan Presidential Library.

  “might create a problem”: Romanones correspondence, November 5, 1981, Hoover Institution archives.

  “a fan of Major Bob”: Burghardt memorandum, March 22, 1985, Reagan Presidential Library.

  “had other implications”: Newsweek, March 24, 1991.

  “seedy and sophisticated”: New York Times, June 21, 1987.

  “Espionage is like a drug”: People, May 7, 1990.

  “You have to keep many things secret”: Newsweek, March 24, 1991.

  “romantic nonfiction”: Ibid.

  “Espionage is mostly boredom”: Ibid.

  auctioned off by Sotheby’s Geneva: ArtKabinet, May 24, 2011.

  “Then he just started coming on to me”: CBS News with Dan Rather, June 30, 1982.

  Representative Larry E. Craig: New York Times, July 8, 1982.

  Williams was identified by name: Associated Press, July 7, 1982.

  at the Watergate: New York Times, July 8, 1982.

  “We at first sat down”: United Press International, July 9, 1982.

  “It was something that I just accepted”: Ibid.

  “a pathological liar”: Associated Press, July 7, 1982.

  “Leroy Williams maintains”: ABC News transcript, July 9, 1982.

  he did not have sex: United Press International, July 9, 1982.

  CBS News tracked down “Roger”: Washington Post, July 10, 1982.

  Peacock Lounge: Ibid.

  “If you can stick him”: Ibid.

  “I have lied”: Associated Press, August 27, 1982.

  Richard Kind, the owner of Friendly Models: Miami Herald, July 16, 1982.

  “I am positive he named Larry Craig”: Idaho Statesman, December 2, 2007.

  According to a postmortem: Associated Press, September 19, 1982.

  “undisclosed locations”: Ibid.

  “like Howard Carter”: Mark Slater interview, August 8, 2017.

  “real estate fees”: Washington Post, July 23, 1984.

  “This appealed to me”: New York Times, July 24, 1984.

  He changed his story: Washington Post, August 8, 1984.

  the matter became further confused: Ibid.

  he and his wife revised: New York Times, August 16, 1984.

  “performed literally no work”: Oregonian, June 2, 2012.

  That triggered a vote: District of Columbia Court of Appeals, Watergate West Inc. v. Barclays Bank, S.A., September 14, 2000.

  WATERGATE: A WASHINGTON NEST FOR HIGH-FLYERS: Dossier, February 1982.

  With a Republican in the White House: Salgo, 163.

  “gave a discount”: “A Conversation with Ambassador Keith C. Smith,” Library of Congress, 2004.

  Salgo placed all of his assets in a blind trust: Salgo, 119.

  “My whole fortune comes from there”: Ibid., 121.

  Her Majesty’s High Court of Justice: Estates Times, September 21, 1984.

  including an almond orchard: Management Review, November 1986.

  Luscombe ordered their air-conditioning turned off: Wendy Luscombe interview, June 8, 2016.

  Luscombe solicited proposals: Washington Post, March 18, 1986.

  “Europeans would put the charm back into it”: Ibid.

  the Watergate Hotel was losing money: Christian Science Monitor, March 7, 1984.r />
  “Fear is drifting through the corridors”: Washington Post, March 18, 1986.

  If he were to remain: Ibid.

  “only looked at the numbers”: Dahrouch interview, September 4, 2017.

  “but he didn’t know how”: Sneed interview, August 10, 2017.

  “With Salgo, everything was easy”: Palladin interview, August 21, 2017.

  “But basil with raspberries?”: Washington Post, August 29, 1982.

  “do something in my way”: New York Times, March 22, 1987.

  Cunard Line: Washington Post, April 17, 1986.

  Cunard’s first venture: The Times, March 16, 1986, Trafalgar House press clippings copy.

  “the acknowledged empress of hotel interior designers”: Washington Post, July 31, 1988.

  Lee’s design amounted to a British conquest: The Guardian, August 2, 1988.

  “the staff had to scramble”: Lynda Clugston Webster interview, July 21, 2017.

  “Almost”: New York Times, April 24, 1986.

  Watergate South, across the hall: People, July 25, 1977.

  MRS. LUCE IS BACK, PEPPERY AS EVER: New York Times, November 13, 1981.

  “I’ve been coming to Washington since the days of Harding”: Ibid.

  “stenographic or clerical staff”: Green correspondence, July 28, 1982, Clare Boothe Luce papers, Library of Congress.

  That night: Washington Post, May 26, 1984.

  “President’s Lunch Bar”: Watergate Hotel news release, January 11, 1985.

  “Graffiti is all over the world”: Washington Post, February 14, 1985.

  “It’s a disgrace”: Washington Post, July 24, 1985.

  For the next five years: Washington Post, May 14, 1983.

  “That’s for people who have no money”: Washington Post, July 24, 1985.

  “we would be leery”: Ibid.

  “It was really exciting”: Roxie Herbekian interview, February 24, 2017.

  “They want to get liquid”: Australian Financial Review, March 10, 1989.

  “not been burned”: Washington Post, August 6, 1989.

  received no new funding: Financial Times, March 9, 1989.

  “I think it needs some work”: Washington Post, July 6, 1989.

  “The Cunard people were running the place”: Webster interview, July 21, 2017.

  Complicating a potential sale: Washington Post, December 22, 1989.

  Cunard Hotels and Resorts agreed: Washington Post, March 26, 1990.

  National Coal Board announced: Washington Post, March 27, 1990.

  Trusthouse Forte brought in a new general manager: Cathy Arevian interview, May 2, 2016.

 

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