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  2. Frost indicates the pauses characteristic of Nixon’s speaking style by means of ellipses. Hence, in this document excerpt, we indicate omitted text by means of footnotes. 2. Nixon paraphrases a sentence from Lincoln’s Special Message to Congress on July 4, 1861 (Document 16). 3.

  3. Mar 24, 2023 · The statement is technically incorrect. Frost doesn't clearly specify "it", only that "it" is something illegal which the President judges to be in the best interests of the nation. Nixon's blanket claim that actions by the President cannot be illegal has no basis in law.

  4. [David Frost] The wave of dissent in America, occasionally violent, which followed the incursion into Cambodia by US and Vietnamese forces in 1970, prompted President Nixon to demand better ...

  5. Oct 30, 2007 · The one where he responds, after you've interviewed Nixon on foreign policy matters. David Frost. Well, what happened was that the -- one of the most humorous parts of the Nixon interviews was undoubtedly whenever Richard Nixon talked about Henry Kissinger.

  6. Apr 7, 2014 · In 1977, Frost approached Nixon’s staff about a series of interviews. They seemed to think that Frost would be a soft interviewer, someone who could be easily outwitted.

  7. Dec 21, 2013 · His transparent attempts to ingratiate himself to Frost at certain moments only served to magnify the gap between Nixon’s shrewd political mind and his miserable personal skills.

  8. May 5, 1977 · WASHINGTON, May 4‐The following is a transcript prepared by David Frost of the televised portions of his interview of former President Richard M. Nixon about the Watergate scandal, with some...