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  • .... and India; in the past, the U.S. has "tilted to Pakistan" to support the Richard Nixon|Nixon-Henry Kissinger|Kissinger engagement with China. Terrorism is a chal
    883 bytes (133 words) - 16:46, 25 March 2024
  • ...Ronald Reagan]] administration, as deputy counsel Associate Counsel for [[Richard Nixon]]
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • ...y secret negotiations by [[Henry Kissinger]] and symbolized by President [[Richard Nixon|Richard M. Nixon]]'s state visit to China in 1972, with the issuance of the
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  • |rowspan=2| [[Richard Nixon]] | [[Richard Nixon]], [[Gerald Ford]]
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  • see also [[Vietnam War/Bibliography]] and [[Richard Nixon/Bibliography]] * Nixon, Richard. ''RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon'' (1981) [http://www.amazon.com/RN-Memoirs-Richard-Nixon/dp/0671707418/ref=
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • ...[[Solicitor General (U.S.)|Solicitor General]] under [[POTUS|President]] [[Richard Nixon]].<ref name=HistoryNixonSaturdayNightMassacre/> When Nixon thought he might be [[Efforts to impeach Richard Nixon|facing impeachment]] he called on his [[Attorney General (U.S.)|Attorney Ge
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • ...upon becoming DCI were, reportedly, "I'm here to make sure you don't screw Richard Nixon." Although his CIA service was short, barely six months, it was stormy as h
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  • ...problem of alcoholism in America. During the administration of President [[Richard Nixon]], he advocated for treatment and education to reduce [[drug]] abuse as an
    3 KB (446 words) - 08:35, 24 June 2023
  • ...e had the necessary clearances, he became Associate Counsel to President [[Richard Nixon]], and authored a domestic surveillance program targeting opponents of the
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • ...rcuit court]], Blackmun was nominated for the Supreme Court by President [[Richard Nixon]], a conservative, but Blackmun ultimately became one of the most liberal j
    1,016 bytes (154 words) - 17:19, 3 February 2024
  • ...ost very narrowly to the [[Republican Party (U.S.)|Republican]] nominee, [[Richard Nixon]]. He returned to the Senate in 1972 and served till his death six years l
    1,010 bytes (153 words) - 10:17, 4 July 2023
  • ...role under President Lyndon Johnson changed with the arrival of President Richard Nixon and Nixon's Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs|nation | title= Transcript of a recording of a meeting between President Richard Nixon and H. R. Haldeman in the oval office
    7 KB (1,116 words) - 12:30, 31 March 2024
  • ...for defying pressure from the [[United States President|Presidency]] of [[Richard Nixon]] and continuing to publish stories by [[Bob Woodward]] and [[Carl Bernstei
    1 KB (169 words) - 09:49, 29 April 2024
  • * Parmet, Herbert S. ''Richard Nixon and His America'' (1990). * Wicker, Tom. ''One of Us: Richard Nixon and the American Dream'' (1991).
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon||#}}
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  • ...t Large 1967-1968; Ambassador to Germany 1968-1969; appointed by President Richard Nixon to serve as head of the American delegation to the Vietnam peace negotiatio
    2 KB (318 words) - 00:30, 17 February 2010
  • During the infamous [[Watergate]] scandal, in which President [[Richard Nixon]] covered up his campaign committee's illegal secret break-in into the Demo
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  • ...nt back to the table with RVN proposals, the North Vietnamese walked out. Richard Nixon did not get his peace in Vietnam in time for the 1972 election.
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  • ...son; his sentence of life imprisonment was commuted in 1975 by President [[Richard Nixon]]. The case became a focus of national guilt and self-doubt, with antiwar l
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  • ...ck of [[Thomas Eagleton]]. He lost in the general election to incumbent [[Richard Nixon]] in one of the biggest [[Landslide victory|landslide]]s in American electo
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • ...ality she was on leave from NANA and she was being paid $1,000 a week by a Richard Nixon operative for regular reports about happenings on the campaign trail. She
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  • ...but he worked within a parliamentary rather than a revolutionary context. Richard Nixon believed he could become another Castro.
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • President [[Richard Nixon]] asked Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs [[Henry Ki ...President for National Security Affairs [[Henry Kissinger]] to President [[Richard Nixon]] proposed an bombing attack by [[B-52]] aircraft against what was believed
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • ...69-1974 || Resigned August 9, 1974||Republican||[[Image:Dkbdnixon.jpg|50px|Richard Nixon]]
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  • During the Presidency of [[Richard Nixon]] it was generally recognized that his National Security Advisor, [[Henry K
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  • ...y 2, 1972 to April 27, 1973. Gray was nominated as permanent director by [[Richard Nixon]] on February 15, 1973 but failed to win Senate confirmation <ref name="INW
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  • ...e a collection of organizations that originated from the efforts of former Richard Nixon aide Chuck Colson, after Colson finished his prison sentence for Watergate-
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  • | Jan. 22, 1969 || Feb. 11, 1971 || [[Richard Nixon]] | Feb. 11, 1971 || Jun. 12, 1972 || [[Richard Nixon]]
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • {{Image|Dkbdnixon.jpg|right|350px|Richard Nixon}} ...archiv/nsa/publications/DOC_readers/kissinger/nixzhou/ "Record of Historic Richard Nixon-Zhou Enlai Talks in February 1972 Now Declassified"] </ref> in effect ended
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  • ...e stayed more limited, as with [[Laos]], than did [[Lyndon B. Johnson]]. [[Richard Nixon]] and [[Henry Kissinger]] moved to the [[detente]] position, while the [[R
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  • *[[Richard Nixon]], (1913-1994), 37th president of the United States
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  • ...[[McCarthyism]]" in March 1950. Since 1948 Herblock vigorously attacked [[Richard Nixon]], consistently featuring dark jowls. When he was inaugurated president in
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  • *'''Checkers''': Spaniel owned by then-Vice President Richard Nixon. He became famous when Nixon, accused by critics of accepting lavish gifts,
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  • |[[Richard Nixon|Richard M. Nixon]]
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  • ...n initiative with another executive order in 1965. It was his successor, [[Richard Nixon]], who took the most forceful steps towards implementing affirmative action
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  • {{r|Richard Nixon}}
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  • ..., the peace that ended the [[Vietnam War]]. In close collaboration with [[Richard Nixon]], he created a détente policy that called for an end to the [[Cold War]] ...effect on US credibility and influence in the hemisphere.<ref>Hal Brands, "Richard Nixon and Economic Nationalism in Latin America: the Problem of Expropriations, 1
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  • ...velations of the abuse of privacy during the administration of President [[Richard Nixon]], as Public Law No. 93-579, 88 Stat. 1897 (Dec. 31, 1974).
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  • | publisher = U.S. Department of State}}</ref> Richard Nixon disliked Abrams. In a discussion between Nixon and Henry Kissinger, Kissing
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  • ...] bill which was passed the House and the Senate but vetoed by President [[Richard Nixon]], who called it "the Sovietization of American children".<ref> [http://www ...ate)|South Dakota]] ). McGovern lost in the general election to President Richard Nixon. Chisholm herself later reflected that her presidential bid was mainly fo
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  • ...he United States of America]] created by an executive order of President [[Richard Nixon]] in 1970 and is part of the executive branch of the government.<ref> It wa President [[Richard Nixon]], on July 9, 1970, told Congress of his plan to create the EPA by combinin
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  • ...he United States of America]] created by an executive order of President [[Richard Nixon]] in 1970 and is part of the executive branch of the government.<ref> It wa President [[Richard Nixon]], on July 9, 1970, told Congress of his plan to create the EPA by combinin
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  • ...lished as a national priority with an executive order in 1972 by President Richard Nixon that all federal agencies promote and develop IPM as the standard means of
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  • ...use of the Fourteenth Amendment (1868). Justice [[Harry A. Blackmun]], a [[Richard Nixon]] apointee, was the author of the majority opinion, with multiple concurren
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  • ...Party (United States), history |Republican opponent]] was Vice President [[Richard Nixon]]. The first debates ever held between presidential candidates excited a n
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  • ...l. The bill passed the House and the Senate, but was vetoed by President [[Richard Nixon]], who called it "the Sovietization of American children".<ref> [http://www ...outh Dakota]] , who went to lose in the general election to then-President Richard Nixon. Even herself admitted that her presidential bid was only for symbolic reas
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  • ...ictures (a Hungarian director persuaded him to portray Thomas Jefferson as Richard Nixon might have played him).... Suspense survives for a time amid the farce, the
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  • Educated as a journalist, he became Richard Nixon's first full-time assistant in the 1966 campaign. He served in the Nixon Wh
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  • ..., and was President of Fox News. Ailes became prominent when he counseled Richard Nixon how to turn television into an asset rather than a liability, and continued
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  • '''Vietnamization''' was a policy of the Richard Nixon|Richard M. Nixon administration, to "expand, equip, and train South Vietnam
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  • * Nixon, Richard M. ''Six Crises'' (1962); ''RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon'' (1978), [http://www.amazon.com/RN-Memoirs-Richard-Nixon/dp/0671707418/ref
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  • ...ed [[Ambassador]] to [[Turkey]], but left the post after the election of [[Richard Nixon]]. He then worked for the RAND Corporation, served as undersecretary of de
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  • * Mason, Robert. ''Richard Nixon and the Quest for a New Majority'' (2004). 289 pp * Parmet, Herbert S. ''Richard Nixon and His America'' (1990).
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  • ...orld environment, and politics. It was passed over the veto of President [[Richard Nixon]].<ref name=CRS-RL32267>{{citation
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  • Given the intense effort that the CIA, following direct orders of Richard Nixon, regarded Marxist [[Salvador Allende]], regardless of intelligence analysis ...ities in Chile in the 1960s and 1970s; memoirs of key figures, including [[Richard Nixon]] and [[Henry Kissinge]]r; CIA’s oral history collection at the Center fo
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  • Richard Nixon was only loosely considered conservative, although he had strong anticommun
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  • ...ildren. According to ''[[People magazine]]'', the marriage of President [[Richard Nixon]]'s daughter [[Tricia Nixon]] was the last previous White House marriage.
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  • ...bility to advocate several science policy issues. In 1973 U.S. President [[Richard Nixon]] created an agency with the specific goal of curing [[cancer]]. Axelrod, a
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  • * Nixon, Richard. ''RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon'' (1981) [http://www.amazon.com/RN-Memoirs-Richard-Nixon/dp/0671707418/ref= * Nixon, Richard . ''RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon'' (1981) [http://www.amazon.com/RN-Memoirs-Richard-Nixon/dp/0671707418/ref=
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  • ...Lyndon Johnson]], but his position changed with the arrival of President [[Richard Nixon]] and Nixon's Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs [[He ...upon becoming DCI were, reportedly, "I'm here to make sure you don't screw Richard Nixon." Although his CIA service was short, barely six months, it was stormy as h
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  • ...icy adviser to Presidents [[John F. Kennedy]], [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] and [[Richard Nixon]].
    7 KB (1,024 words) - 10:42, 8 July 2023
  • ...1948 and 1968, in the latter election allowing the Republican candidate [[Richard Nixon]] to take the White House. Democrats kept control of the House until the 1
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  • ...omplained that spending on the Vietnam War choked off the Great Society. [[Richard Nixon]] continued many of the spending programs. While [[Ronald Reagan]] reduced ...es each advised by a governing body, was the version approved by Congress. Richard Nixon later dramatically expanded funding for NEH and NEA.<ref>See [http://www.ne
    31 KB (4,591 words) - 08:59, 1 September 2013
  • ...omplained that spending on the Vietnam War choked off the Great Society. [[Richard Nixon]] continued many of the spending programs. While [[Ronald Reagan]] reduced ...es each advised by a governing body, was the version approved by Congress. Richard Nixon later dramatically expanded funding for NEH and NEA.<ref>See [http://www.ne
    31 KB (4,591 words) - 09:01, 1 September 2013
  • ...th it): [[William Rehnquist]], who was appointed an associate justice by [[Richard Nixon|President Nixon]] in 1972 (and became chief justice later), and [[Sandra Da
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  • - [[Richard Nixon]] -
    9 KB (1,506 words) - 12:35, 7 May 2024
  • ...Reagan tested the presidential waters in 1968, but drew back when he saw [[Richard Nixon]]'s strength. Reagan challenged incumbent Republican president [[Gerald For
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  • ...ia, and regained strength in the 1966 elections. Conservatives voted for [[Richard Nixon]] in 1968, who narrowly defeated the [[Great Society]] champion [[Hubert Hu
    18 KB (2,700 words) - 14:30, 31 March 2024
  • ...nkrah's letter; president [[John Kufuor]]'s second inaugural comments on [[Richard Nixon]]'s question to his British counterpart; continuing attempts to vilify Nkru
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  • ...ons generally called the Paris Peace Talks. On January 25, 1972, President Richard Nixon|Richard M. Nixon disclosed the details of the secret agreement, which inclu | date=April 30, 1970 | author = Richard Nixon
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  • ...effect on US credibility and influence in the hemisphere.<ref>Hal Brands, "Richard Nixon and Economic Nationalism in Latin America: the Problem of Expropriations, 1
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  • ...istory and the Legacy of Scandal: the Tangled Memory of Warren G. Harding, Richard Nixon, and William Jefferson Clinton." ''Prospects'' 2003 28: 597-625. Issn: 0361
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  • .... Senator from North Carolina who helped to bring down Joseph McCarthy and Richard Nixon, and who defended civil liberties in many cases but also opposed the Civil
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  • ...headquarters of the Democratic Party by ex-CIA personnel, and President [[Richard Nixon]]'s subsequent use of the CIA to impede the FBI's investigation of the burg | title= Transcript of a recording of a meeting between President Richard Nixon and H. R. Haldeman in the oval office
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  • ...ncluding a period of forced busing, popular during the administration of [[Richard Nixon]].
    12 KB (1,854 words) - 08:52, 30 June 2023
  • ...ates of America|Presidents of the United States]] [[Herbert Hoover]] and [[Richard Nixon]] and [[Quakers/Notable Quakers|others]].
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  • ...te to win the [[U.S. presidential election, 1960|1960 election]] against [[Richard Nixon]] and [[Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.]], and needed Johnson on the ticket to help ...e Texan and prevented him from assuming the vital role that Vice President Richard Nixon had played in energizing the state parties. Kennedy appointed him to nomina
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  • The Republican administrations of President [[Richard Nixon]] in the [[1970s]] were characterized more by their emphasis on ''[[realpol
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  • ...builders, sent a shock through the West, and played ,a part in the rise of Richard Nixon to prominence (1948) and the election of Eisenhower to the presidency (1952 ...ohn F. Kennedy's campaign for president in 1959 and 1960, when he undercut Richard Nixon by charging the U.S. was falling behind. The fear ended in October 1961 whe
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  • ...11 electors individually; all 11 Democrat electors came ahead of all of [[Richard Nixon|Nixon]]'s electors. The 6 unpledged electors voted for Senator [[Harry Byrd
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