Ask the Scholar
Document scope · 1 page
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory.
For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.
Source Description
This file contains:
From Rose Mary Woods to RN RE: potential book on the history of the Republican Party by Emmett Hughes. 1 pg. [Subject: Domestic Policy] [Memo], 4/14/1971
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
26145039
label
WHSF: Contested, 7-2
core
doc
dtoType
document
citationUrl
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
26145039
sourceUrl
contentType
document
title
WHSF: Contested, 7-2
description
This file contains:
From Rose Mary Woods to RN RE: potential book on the history of the Republican Party by Emmett Hughes. 1 pg. [Subject: Domestic Policy] [Memo], 4/14/1971
citationUrl
collections
Richard M. Nixon's Returned Materials Collection
Contested Materials Files
imageCount
1
hasImages
yes
source
import
hasTranscription
no
Source extras
naId
26145039
levelOfDescription
fileUnit
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
document
mediaId
efa21bcc637dcaaa
ocrText
Richard Nixon Presidential Library
Contested Materials Collection
Folder List
Box Number
Folder Number
Document Date
No Date
Subject
Document Type
Document Description
7
2
4/14/1971
Domestic Policy
Memo
From Rose Mary Woods to RN RE: potential
book on the history of the Republican Party
by Emmett Hughes. 1 pg.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Page 1 of 1
DETERMINED TO BE AN
April 14, 1971
ADMINIS IIVE MARKING
E.O. 12065, Section 6-102
By OP
NARS, Date 1-7-81
CONFIDENTIAL
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Road
FROM ROSE MARY WOODS
I had breakfast this morning with Len Hall, and he told me
that he had received a call from Emmett Hughes asking to
talk with him as he is doing a book on the history of the
Republican Party.
The great surprise in this was that Emmett Hughes has a
letter from Rogers Morton. Len agrees with me that we
could have no more vicious man writing a history of the
Republican Party than this fellow who has apparently turned
against everyone he has ever worked with.
In talking with Henry Kissinger the other day he told me that
in an article Hughes did just a week or so ago he was
constantly saying that he (Henry) made the suggestions which in
fact Emmett Hughes had made.
I think we can always expect this from Emmett Hughes, but I
can't imagine why Rogers Morton (I assume while he was
National Chairman) would ever give him any kind of a letter
authorizing him to talk with people after what he has done to
everybody he has been associated with.