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Master list of Nixon political opponents

 

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Master list of Nixon political opponents



 
 
A master list of Nixon political opponents was compiled to supplement the original Nixon's Enemies List
Nixon's Enemies List

Nixon?s Enemies List is the informal name of what started as a list of President of the United States Richard Nixon?s major political opponents compiled by Charles Colson, written by George T....
 of 20 key people considered opponents of President
President of the United States

The President of the United States is the head of state and head of government of the United States and is the highest political official in the United States by influence and recognition....
 Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon

Richard Milhous Nixon was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States and the only president to resign the office....
. The master list was compiled by Charles Colson
Charles Colson

Charles Wendell Colson was the chief counsel for President of the United States Richard Nixon from 1969 to 1973.He was commonly named as one of the Watergate Seven, but was never charged with, or prosecuted for, any crime related to the Watergate break-in or its cover-up, although he did plead guilty to obstruction of justice in another c...
's office and sent in memorandum
Memorandum

A memorandum or memo is a document or other communication that aids the memory by recording events or observations on a topic, such as may be used in a business office....
 form to John Dean
John Dean

John Wesley Dean III was White House Counsel to United States of America President Richard Nixon from July 1970 until April 1973. As White House Counsel, he became deeply involved in events leading up to the Watergate burglaries and the subsequent Watergate scandal cover up, even referred to as "master manipulator of the cover up" by the Fed...
. Dean provided this updated "master list" of political opponents to the Senate investigating committee. The original list split out "Black Congressmen," listing "all of the Black congressmen [and women]."








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A master list of Nixon political opponents was compiled to supplement the original Nixon's Enemies List
Nixon's Enemies List

Nixon?s Enemies List is the informal name of what started as a list of President of the United States Richard Nixon?s major political opponents compiled by Charles Colson, written by George T....
 of 20 key people considered opponents of President
President of the United States

The President of the United States is the head of state and head of government of the United States and is the highest political official in the United States by influence and recognition....
 Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon

Richard Milhous Nixon was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States and the only president to resign the office....
. The master list was compiled by Charles Colson
Charles Colson

Charles Wendell Colson was the chief counsel for President of the United States Richard Nixon from 1969 to 1973.He was commonly named as one of the Watergate Seven, but was never charged with, or prosecuted for, any crime related to the Watergate break-in or its cover-up, although he did plead guilty to obstruction of justice in another c...
's office and sent in memorandum
Memorandum

A memorandum or memo is a document or other communication that aids the memory by recording events or observations on a topic, such as may be used in a business office....
 form to John Dean
John Dean

John Wesley Dean III was White House Counsel to United States of America President Richard Nixon from July 1970 until April 1973. As White House Counsel, he became deeply involved in events leading up to the Watergate burglaries and the subsequent Watergate scandal cover up, even referred to as "master manipulator of the cover up" by the Fed...
. Dean provided this updated "master list" of political opponents to the Senate investigating committee. The original list split out "Black Congressmen," listing "all of the Black congressmen [and women]."

Entries


Senators

  • Birch Bayh
    Birch Bayh

    Birch Evans Bayh II is a former United States United States Senate from Indiana . He was a candidate for the United States Democratic Party nomination for President of the United States in the U.S....
  • J. W. Fulbright
    J. William Fulbright

    James William Fulbright was a United States Senate representing Arkansas from 1945 to 1975.Fulbright was a Southern Democrat and a staunch multilateralist, supported the creation of the United Nations and opposed the House Un-American Activities Committee....
  • Fred R. Harris
    Fred R. Harris

    Fred Roy Harris was a United States Democratic Party United States Senate from the U.S. state of Oklahoma from 1964 until 1973.Harris was born in Cotton County, Oklahoma....
  • Harold Hughes
    Harold Hughes

    Harold Everett Hughes was the United States Democratic Party Governor of Iowa from 1963 until 1969; he had been a Republican Party earlier in his life....
  • Edward M. Kennedy
    Ted Kennedy

    Edward Moore "Ted" Kennedy is the Senior Senator United States Senate from Massachusetts and a member of the Democratic Party . In office since November 1962, Kennedy is the list of current United States Senators by seniority member of the Senate, after President pro tempore of the United States Senate Robert Byrd of West Virginia....
  • George McGovern
    George McGovern

    George Stanley McGovern, is a former United States United States House of Representatives, United States Senate, and Democratic Party President of the United States nominee....
  • Walter Mondale
    Walter Mondale

    Walter Frederick Mondale is an Politics of the United States and member of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. He was the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States under President of the United States Jimmy Carter, a two-term United States Senate from Minnesota, and the very unsuccessful Democ...
  • Edmund Muskie
    Edmund Muskie

    Edmund Sixtus "Ed" Muskie was an United States Democratic Party politician from Maine. He served as Governor of Maine, as United States Senate, and as United States Secretary of State....
  • Gaylord Nelson
    Gaylord Nelson

    Gaylord Anton Nelson was an United States Democratic Party politician from Wisconsin. He was the principal founder of Earth Day. In 1970, he called for Congressional hearings on the safety of combined oral contraceptive pills, which were famously called "The Nelson Pill Hearings." As a result of the hearings, side-effect disclosure was requ...
  • William Proxmire
    William Proxmire

    Edward William Proxmire was a member of the Democratic Party , who served in the United States Senate for the state of Wisconsin from 1957 to 1989....


Members of the House

  • Bella Abzug
    Bella Abzug

    Bella Savitsky Abzug was an United States Congresswoman and a leader of the women's movement. She famously said "This woman?s place is in the House—the United States House of Representatives" in her successful 1970 campaign to join that body....
  • William R. Anderson
    William Anderson (naval officer)

    William Robert Anderson was an officer in the United States Navy, and a United States House of Representatives from Tennessee from 1965 to 1973....
  • John Brademas
    John Brademas

    John Brademas, Ph.D., is an United States politician and educator originally from Indiana. He served as Party whips of the United States House of Representatives for the United States Democratic Party from 1977 to 1981 at the conclusion of a twenty-year career as a member of the United States House of Representatives....
  • Father Robert Frederick Drinan
  • Robert Kastenmeier
    Robert Kastenmeier

    Robert William Kastenmeier is a United States politician. He represented Wisconsin in the United States House of Representatives from 1959 to 1991, and is a member of the Democratic Party ....
  • Wright Patman
    Wright Patman

    John William Wright Patman was a U.S. Congressman from Texas in Texas's 1st congressional district and chair of the United States House Committee on Banking and Currency....


Black Congressmen and Congresswomen

  • Shirley Chisholm
    Shirley Chisholm

    Shirley Anita St. Hill Chisholm was a African-United States politician, educator, and author. She was a United States Congress, representing New York's 12th Congressional District for seven terms from 1969 to 1983....
  • William Clay
    Bill Clay

    William Lacy "Bill" Clay, Sr. is a politician from the U.S. state of Missouri. As Congressman from Missouri's First District, he represented portions of St....
  • George Collins
    George W. Collins

    George Washington Collins was a Democratic Party member of the United States House of Representatives from Illinois.Collins was born in Chicago, Illinois, and served with the United States Army Corps of Engineers in the South Pacific during World War II....
  • John Conyers
    John Conyers

    John Conyers, Jr. is a member of the United States House of Representatives representing Michigan's 14th congressional district, which includes most of northwestern Detroit, as well as Highland Park, Michigan, Hamtramck and part of Dearborn, Michigan....
  • Ronald Dellums
  • Charles Diggs
    Charles Diggs

    Charles Coles Diggs, Jr. was an African-American politician from the U.S. state of Michigan. He resigned from the House and served 14 months of a three-year sentence for mail fraud....
  • Augustus Hawkins
  • Ralph Metcalfe
    Ralph Metcalfe

    Ralph Harold Metcalfe was an United States Athletics and politician. Metcalfe jointly held the world record for the 100 metres Sprint . Metcalfe was known as the world?s fastest human from 1932 through 1934....
  • Robert N.C. Nix
    Robert N.C. Nix, Sr.

    Robert Nelson Cornelius Nix, Sr. was the first African Americans in the United States Congress to represent Pennsylvania in the United States House of Representatives....
  • Parren Mitchell
    Parren Mitchell

    Parren James Mitchell , a Democratic Party , was a United States House of Representatives who represented the United States House of Representatives, Maryland District 7 of Maryland from January 3, 1971 to January 3, 1987....
  • Charles Rangel
  • Louis Stokes
    Louis Stokes

    Louis Stokes is a United States Democratic Party politician from Ohio. He served in the United States House of Representatives.Born in Cleveland, Stokes and his brother Carl B....


Miscellaneous political peoples

  • John V. Lindsay, mayor, New York City;
  • Eugene McCarthy
    Eugene McCarthy

    Eugene Joseph "Gene" McCarthy was an American politician, poet, and a long-time member of the Congress of the United States from Minnesota. He served in the United States House of Representatives from 1949 to 1959 and the United States Senate from 1959 to 1971....
    , former U.S senator;
  • George Wallace
    George Wallace

    George Corley Wallace Jr. , was a Governor of Alabama of Alabama for four terms . He ran for President of the United States four times, running officially as a Democratic Party three times and in the American Independent Party once....
    , governor, Alabama.
  • Sargent Shriver, Jr., former United States Ambassador to France
    United States Ambassador to France

    There has been a United States Ambassador to France since the American Revolution. The United States sent its first envoys to France in 1776, towards the end of that country's 400-year rule under the Bourbon dynasty....
    , first director of the Peace Corps
    Peace Corps

    The Peace Corps was established by Executive order 10924 on March 1, 1961, and authorized by United States Congress on September 22, 1961, with passage of the Peace Corps Act ....
    , 1972
    United States presidential election, 1972

    The United States presidential election of 1972 was waged on the issues of radicalism and the Vietnam War. The Democratic nomination was eventually won by George McGovern, who ran an anti-war crusade against incumbent President of the United States Richard Nixon, but was handicapped by his outsider status as well as the scandal and subsequent...
     Vice Presidential
    Vice President of the United States

    The Vice President of the United States is the holder of a public office in the United States of America created by the Constitution of the United States....
     candidates, and husband of Eunice Kennedy
    Eunice Kennedy Shriver

    Eunice Mary Kennedy Shriver is a member of the Kennedy political family and helped to found the Special Olympics as a national event. Born in Brookline, Massachusetts, she was the fifth of nine children of Joseph P....
    .


Organizations

  • Black Panthers, Hughie Newton
    Huey P. Newton

    Huey Percy Newton , was co-founder and leader of the Black Panther Party, an African-American organization established to promote Black Power, civil rights and self-defense....
     [sic
    SIC

    Sic is a Latin word that means "thus" or, in writing, "it was thus in the source material".Sic may also refer to:* Sic, Cluj, a commune in Romania...
    ]
  • Brookings Institution
    Brookings Institution

    The Brookings Institution is a Non-profit organization public policy organization based in Washington, D.C. One of Washington's oldest think tanks, Brookings conducts research and education in the social sciences, primarily in economics, metropolitan policy, governance, foreign policy, and global economy and development....
    , Lesley Gelb
    Leslie Gelb

    Leslie Howard Gelb is a former correspondent for The New York Times and is currently President Emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations....
     [sic
    SIC

    Sic is a Latin word that means "thus" or, in writing, "it was thus in the source material".Sic may also refer to:* Sic, Cluj, a commune in Romania...
    ] and others
  • Business Executives Move for VN Peace
    Business Executives Move for Vietnam Peace

    Business Executives Move for Vietnam Peace was an organization opposed to the Vietnam War.In September 1967 a group of nearly one thousand businessmen formed a national committee opposing United States participation in the Vietnam War....
    . Herb Niles, national chairman, Vincent McGee. executive director
  • Committee for an Effective Congress
    National Committee for an Effective Congress

    The National Committee for an Effective Congress is a political action committee founded by Eleanor Roosevelt in 1948. It is one of the America?s most politically active independent liberal groups, pooling contributions from across the country to help elect progressive candidates to Congress....
    . Russell Hemingwav
  • Common Cause
    Common Cause

    Common Cause is a nonpartisan, non-profit organization citizens' lobby and advocacy organization. The organization was founded in 1970 by Republican former cabinet secretary John W....
    , John Gardner
    John W. Gardner

    John William Gardner, , President of the Carnegie Corporation, United States Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare under President of the United States Lyndon Johnson, was subsequently the founder of two influential national U.S....
    , Morton Halperin
    Morton Halperin

    Morton H. Halperin is an American expert on foreign policy and civil liberties. He served in the Johnson, Nixon and Clinton administrations and in a number of roles with think tanks, universities and other organizations....
    , Charles Goodell
    Charles Goodell

    Charles Ellsworth Goodell was a United States House of Representatives and a United States Senate from New York, notable for coming into both offices under special circumstances following the deaths of his predecessors....
    , Walter Hickel
  • Congressional Black Caucus
    Congressional Black Caucus

    File:CBCfoundingmembers.jpgThe Congressional Black Caucus is an organization representing the African American members of the United States Congress....
  • COPE
    AFL-CIO

    The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, commonly AFL-CIO, is a national trade union center, the largest federation of Labor unions in the United States in the United States, made up of 56 national and international unions , together representing more than 10 million workers....
    , Alexander E Barkan
    Alexander Barkan

    Alexander E. Barkan was head of the AFL-CIO's Committee on Political Education from 1963 until 1982. During the Watergate hearings, it became known that Barkan was one of the original members of Nixon's Enemies List....
  • Council for a Livable World
    Council for a Livable World

    The Council for a Livable World is a non partisan, non profit policy organization focused on political action to reduce nuclear weapons and increase national security The Council was founded in 1962 by eminent nuclear physicist Leo Szilard and other scientists who worked in the pioneer days of atomic weapons and is located in Washington, D.C...
    , Bernard T. Feld
    Bernard T. Feld

    Bernard T. Feld was a professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He helped develop the atomic bomb, and later led an international movement among scientists to banish nuclear weapons....
    , pr idem: professor of physics. MIT
  • Farmers Union, NFO
    NFO

    NFO has the following meanings:* NFO is an abbreviation for New Fund Offer, a term used in mutual fund of India used to refer to IPO of a fund....
  • Institute of Policy study
    Institute for Policy Studies

    Institute for Policy Studies is a policy studies non-profit think-tank for Progressivism or Liberalism in the United States causes based in Washington, D.C....
     Richard Barn, Marcus Raskin
    Marcus Raskin

    Marcus Raskin is a prominent American social critic, political activist, author, and philosopher, working for progressive social change in the United States....
  • National Economic Council, Inc.
    National Economic Council, Inc.

    National Economic Council, Inc. was a American conservatism United States political organization. Their work landed them on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
  • National Education Association
    National Education Association

    The National Education Association is the largest professional organization and largest trade union in the United States, representing public school teachers and other support personnel, faculty and staffers at colleges and universities, retired educators, and college students preparing to become teachers....
    , Sam M. Lambe president
  • National Student Association
    National Student Association

    The United States National Student Association, a confederation of United States college and university student governments, was founded in 1947 at a conference at the University of Wisconsin....
    , Charles Palmer
    Charles Palmer

    Charles Henry Palmer was a cricketer who played for Leicestershire County Cricket Club and Worcestershire County Cricket Club from 1938 to 1959....
     president
  • National Welfare Rights Organization
    National Welfare Rights Organization

    The National Welfare Rights Organization was an American activist organization that fought for the right of people, especially women and children, to rely upon government welfare....
    , George Wiley
    George Wiley

    George Alvin Wiley was an United States chemist and civil rights leader.Wiley earned his undergraduate degree at the University of Rhode Island in 1953; received a doctorate in organic chemistry from Cornell University in 1957; fulfilled a six-month ROTC obligation as a first lieutenant in the United States Army at Fort Lee, Virginia; and...
  • Potomac Associates
    Potomac Associates

    Potomac Associates is an United States consortium of four independent non-partisan consulting firms engaged in research and policy consulting on substantive economic and legal issues in international trade, foreign investment, and economic development....
    , William Watts
    William Watts

    William Watts was chief of the Kasimbazar factory of the British East India Company. He lived in Bengal for a long time and he was proficient in Bangla, Hindustani and Persian language languages....
  • SANE
    Peace Action

    Peace Action is a peace organization formed through the merger of The Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy and the Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign ....
    , Sanford Gottleib
  • Southern Christian Leadership
    Southern Christian Leadership Conference

    The Southern Christian Leadership Conference is an United States civil rights organization. SCLC was closely associated with its first president, Dr....
    , Ralph Abernathy
    Ralph Abernathy

    Ralph David Abernathy was an American civil rights activist and leader and a close associate of Martin Luther King, Jr. in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference....
    ;
  • Third National Convocation on the Challenge of Building Peace
    National Convocation on the Challenge of Building Peace

    The National Convocation on the Challenge of Building Peace was an American organization formed in the late 1960s in response to the Vietnam War....
    , Robert V Roosa
    Robert Roosa

    Robert Vincent Roosa was an American economist and banker. He served as Treasury Undersecretary for Monetary Affairs during the John F. Kennedy administration....
    , chairman
  • Businessmen's Educational Fund
    Businessmen's Educational Fund

    The Businessmen's Educational Fund was an United States political organization.Founded by Harold Willens, the group was mentioned on the original Nixon's Enemies List and on the master list of Nixon political opponents for bankrolling a syndicated 5-minute radio program considered negative toward the Nixon administration....
    .


Labor

  • Karl Feller
    Karl Feller

    Karl Feller is an United States trade unionist. He was president of the Cincinnati local of the International Union of United Brewery, Flour, Cereal, Soft Drink and Distillery Workers....
     president, International Union United Brewery. Flour, Cereal, Soft Drink and Distillery Workers
    International Union of United Brewery, Flour, Cereal, Soft Drink and Distillery Workers

    The International Union of United Brewery, Flour, Cereal, Soft Drink and Distillery Workers was an trade union in the United States. The union merged with the Teamsters in 1973....
    , Cincinnati
    Cincinnati, Ohio

    Cincinnati is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Hamilton County, Ohio. The municipality is located in southwestern Ohio and is situated on the Ohio River at the Ohio-Kentucky border....
  • Harold J. Gibbons
    Harold J. Gibbons

    Harold Joseph Patrick Gibbons was an United States trade unionist and labor leader.Born the youngest of 23 children in Archibald Patch, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, he nonetheless matriculated at the University of Chicago....
    , international vice president, Teamsters
    Teamsters

    The International Brotherhood of Teamsters is a trade union in the United States and Canada. Formed in 1903 by the merger of several local and regional locals of teamsters, the union now represents a diverse membership of blue-collar worker and white-collar worker workers in both the public sector and private sectors....
  • A F Grospiron
    Alvin F. Grospiron

    Alvin F. Grospiron was president of Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union from 1965 to 1979. He had been Secretary-Treasurer of the international union under the O....
    , president, Oil, Chemical Atomic Workers International Union
    Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers Union

    The Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union was a trade union in the United States. At the time of its dissolution and merger in 1999, represented 80,000 workers and was affiliated with the AFL-CIO....
    , Denver
    Denver, Colorado

    Denver is the Capital and the Colorado municipalities of the state of Colorado, in the United States. Denver is a consolidated city-county located in the South Platte River on the High Plains just east of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains....
  • Matthew Guinan
    Matthew Guinan

    Matthew "Mattie" Guinan was an United States labor organizer, second president of Transport Workers Union of America .Born in Offaly, Ireland, he immigrated in 1929....
    , president, Transport Work. Union of America
    Transport Workers Union of America

    Transport Workers Union of America is a United States trade union that was founded in 1934 by Rapid transit workers in New York City, then expanded to represent transit employees in other cities, primarily in the eastern U.S....
    , New York City
    New York City

    The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
  • Paul Jennings, president, International Union Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers
    United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America

    The United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America , is an independent democratic rank-and-file trade union representing workers in both the private and public sectors across the United States....
    , Washington D.C.
    Washington, D.C.

    Washington, D.C. , formally the District of Columbia and commonly referred to as Washington, the District, or simply D.C., is the Capital of the United States, founded on July 16, 1790....
  • Herman D. Kenin
    Herman D. Kenin

    Herman D. Kenin was an United States trade unionist.He was head of American Federation of Musicians and later was a leader at American Federation of Labor....
    , vice president, AFL-CIO
    AFL-CIO

    The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, commonly AFL-CIO, is a national trade union center, the largest federation of Labor unions in the United States in the United States, made up of 56 national and international unions , together representing more than 10 million workers....
    . D
  • Lane Kirkland
    Lane Kirkland

    Joseph Lane Kirkland was a United States trade union leader who served as President of the AFL-CIO for over sixteen years....
    , secretary-treasurer. AFL-CIO
    AFL-CIO

    The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, commonly AFL-CIO, is a national trade union center, the largest federation of Labor unions in the United States in the United States, made up of 56 national and international unions , together representing more than 10 million workers....
     (we must deal with him)
  • Frederick O'Neal
    Frederick O'Neal

    Frederick O'Neal was an United States actor, theater producer and television director. He founded the American Negro Theater and was the first African-American president of the Actors' Equity Association....
    . president. Actors and Artists America
    Associated Actors and Artistes of America

    The Associated Actors and Artistes of America , an AFL-CIO affiliate, is the primary association of trade unions for performing artists in the United States....
    , New York City
    New York City

    The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
  • William Pollock, president, Textile Workers Union of America
    Textile Workers Union of America

    The Textile Workers Union of America was an industrial unionism of textile workers established through the Congress of Industrial Organizations in 1939 and merged with the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America to become the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union in 1976....
    , New York City
    New York City

    The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
  • Jacob Potofsky
    Jacob Potofsky

    Jacob Samuel Potofsky was an United States trade unionist.He was president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America and was known for his skills as a conciliator within the union movement....
     general president, Amalgam. Clothing Workers of America
    Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America

    The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America was a United States trade union known for its support for "social unionism" and progressive political causes....
    , New York City
    New York City

    The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
  • Leonard Woodcock
    Leonard Woodcock

    Leonard Freel Woodcock was an American labor union leader and diplomat who was the president of the United Automobile Workers from 1970 to 1977....
    , president, United Auto Workers
    United Auto Workers

    The International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, better known as the United Auto Workers , is a trade union which represents workers in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico....
    , Detroit
    Detroit, Michigan

    Detroit is the largest city in the U.S. state of Michigan and the county seat of Wayne County, Michigan. Detroit is a major port city on the Detroit River, in the Midwestern United States of the United States....
  • Jerry Wurf, international president, American Federal, State, County and Municipal Employ
    American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees

    The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees is the second- or third-largest trade union in the United States and one of the fastest-growing, representing over 1.4 million employees, primarily in local and state government and in the health care industry....
     Washington D.C.
    Washington, D.C.

    Washington, D.C. , formally the District of Columbia and commonly referred to as Washington, the District, or simply D.C., is the Capital of the United States, founded on July 16, 1790....
  • Nathaniel Goldfinger
    Nathaniel Goldfinger

    Nathaniel Goldfinger was an United States economist and researcher with labor group AFL-CIO for 13 years.His work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , AFL-CIO
    AFL-CIO

    The American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, commonly AFL-CIO, is a national trade union center, the largest federation of Labor unions in the United States in the United States, made up of 56 national and international unions , together representing more than 10 million workers....
  • I. W. Abel, Steelworkers
    United Steelworkers

    The United Steel, Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied Industrial and Service Workers International Union is the largest industrial trade union in North America, with 722,000 members....


Media

  • Jack Anderson
    Jack Anderson

    Jackson Northman Anderson was an Media in the United States and is considered one of the fathers of modern investigative journalism. Anderson won the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for his investigation on secret American policy decision-making between the United States and Pakistan during the Indo-Pakistan War of 1971....
    , columnist, "Washington Merry-Go-Round"
  • Jim Bishop
    Jim Bishop

    James Alonzo "Jim" Bishop was an United States journalist and author.Born in Jersey City, New Jersey, he dropped out of school after eighth grade....
    , author, columnist, King Features Syndicate
    King Features Syndicate

    King Features Syndicate, a print syndication company owned by The Hearst Corporation, distributes about 150 comic strips, columnist, editorial cartoons, puzzles and games to nearly 5000 newspapers around the world....
  • Thomas Braden
    Thomas Braden

    Thomas Wardell Braden is an United States journalist.In 1940 he joined the British Army. He was later recruited by the US Office of Strategic Services , the predecessor to the Central Intelligence Agency ....
    , columnist, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
    Los Angeles Times Syndicate

    The Los Angeles Times Syndicate and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate International are newspaper syndicates which sold more than 140 features in more than 100 countries around the world....
  • D.J.R. Bruckner, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
    Los Angeles Times Syndicate

    The Los Angeles Times Syndicate and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate International are newspaper syndicates which sold more than 140 features in more than 100 countries around the world....
  • Marquis Childs
    Marquis Childs

    Marquis W. Childs was an United States journalist....
    , chief Washington correspondent, St. Louis Post Dispatch
    St. Louis Post-Dispatch

    The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is the major city-wide newspaper in St. Louis, Missouri. Although written to serve Greater St. Louis, the Post-Dispatch is one of the largest newspapers in the Midwest region, and is available and read as far west as Kansas City, Missouri as far south as Memphis, TN and as far north as Springfield, Illinoi...
  • James Deakin
    James Deakin

    For the similarly-named fictional character on Law & Order: Criminal Intent, see James Deakins.James Deakin was an United States journalist....
    , White House correspondent, St. Louis Post Dispatch
    St. Louis Post-Dispatch

    The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is the major city-wide newspaper in St. Louis, Missouri. Although written to serve Greater St. Louis, the Post-Dispatch is one of the largest newspapers in the Midwest region, and is available and read as far west as Kansas City, Missouri as far south as Memphis, TN and as far north as Springfield, Illinoi...
  • James Doyle
    James S. Doyle

    James S. "Jim" Doyle is an United States journalist and activist....
    , Washington Star
    Washington Star

    The Washington Star, previously known as the Washington Star-News and the Washington Evening Star, was a daily afternoon newspaper published in Washington, D.C....
  • Richard Dudman
    Richard Dudman

    Richard Dudman is an United States journalist.His work covering the Congress of Racial Equality and as chief of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch Washington bureau landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , St. Louis Post Dispatch
    St. Louis Post-Dispatch

    The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is the major city-wide newspaper in St. Louis, Missouri. Although written to serve Greater St. Louis, the Post-Dispatch is one of the largest newspapers in the Midwest region, and is available and read as far west as Kansas City, Missouri as far south as Memphis, TN and as far north as Springfield, Illinoi...
  • Jules Duscha
    Julius Duscha

    Julius "Jules" Duscha is an United States journalist.He attended University of Minnesota and began his career in 1943 at the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Dispatch....
     [sic
    SIC

    Sic is a Latin word that means "thus" or, in writing, "it was thus in the source material".Sic may also refer to:* Sic, Cluj, a commune in Romania...
    ], Washingtonian
    Washingtonian (magazine)

    Washingtonian is a monthly magazine distributed in the National Capital Region since 1965. The magazine describes itself as "the magazine Washington lives by." The magazine's core focuses are local feature journalism, guide book-style articles, and real estate advice....
  • William Eaton
    William J. Eaton

    William J. Eaton was an United States journalist.He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1970 for his Chicago Daily News coverage of the confirmation battle over Clement Haynsworth, an unsuccessful Richard Nixon nominee for the Supreme Court of the United States....
    , Chicago Daily News
    Chicago Daily News

    The Chicago Daily News was an afternoon daily newspaper published between 1876 and 1978 in Chicago, Illinois, United States. It earned thirteen Pulitzer Prizes....
  • Rowland Evans Jr., syndicated columnist, Publishers Hall
    Publishers-Hall Syndicate

    Publishers-Hall Syndicate was a newspaper syndicate.Founded by Robert M. Hall, who was sole owner of Hall Syndicate, they sold comics , columns, and serialized books to newspapers across he world....
  • Saul Friedmann
    Saul Friedman

    Saul Friedman is an United States journalist.He is a political writer for Knight Ridder and Newsday. He won a 1963 Nieman Fellowship. His work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , Knight Newspapers, syndicated columnist
  • Clayton Fritchey
    Clayton Fritchey

    Clayton Fritchey was an United States journalist who spent many years in public service.Clayton Fritchey was born in 1904 in Bellefontaine, Ohio....
    , syndicated columnist Washington correspondent. Harpers
    Harper's Magazine

    Harper's Magazine is a monthly, general-interest magazine of literature, politics, culture, finance, and the arts. It is the second-oldest, continuously-published monthly magazine in the U.S.; current circulation is more than 220,000 issues....
  • George Frazier
    George Frazier

    George Francis Frazier, Jr. was an United States journalist.Frazier graduated from Harvard College in 1932. He was a writer for the Boston Globe....
    , Boston Globe
    The Boston Globe

    The Boston Globe is the most widely circulated daily newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts and in New England, United States. Owned by The New York Times Company, the broadsheet Globes local print rival is the Boston Herald....
  • Katharine Graham
    Katharine Graham

    Katharine Meyer Graham was an American publisher. She led her family's newspaper, The Washington Post, for more than two decades, overseeing its most famous period, the Watergate scandal coverage that eventually led to the resignation of President of the United States Richard Nixon....
    , editor, The Washington Post
    The Washington Post

    The Washington Post is the newspaper with the largest circulation in Washington, D.C., United States and is the city's oldest paper, founded in 1877....
  • Pete Hamill
    Pete Hamill

    Pete Hamill is a prominent United States journalist, columnist, novelist, and short story writer....
    , New York Post
    New York Post

    The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and generally acknowledged as the oldest to have been published continually as a daily, although -- like most other papers -- its publication has been interrupted by labor actions....
  • Michael Harrington
    Michael Harrington

    Edward Michael "Mike" Harrington was an United States democratic socialism, writer, political activist, professor of political science, and radio commentator....
    , author and journal member, executive committee Socialist party
    Socialist Party of America

    The Socialist Party of America was a Democratic socialism political party in the United States, formed in 1901 by a merger between the three-year-old Social Democratic Party and disaffected elements of the Socialist Labor Party of America which had split from the main organization in 1899....
  • Sydney J. Harris, columnist, drama critic and writer of 'Strictly Personal,' syndicated Publishers Hall
    Publishers-Hall Syndicate

    Publishers-Hall Syndicate was a newspaper syndicate.Founded by Robert M. Hall, who was sole owner of Hall Syndicate, they sold comics , columns, and serialized books to newspapers across he world....
  • Robert Healy
    Robert Healy (journalist)

    Robert Healy is an United States journalist.He is former Executive Editor and Washington Bureau Chief, The Boston Globe. Healy is a World War II veteran and covered the Vietnam War....
    , Boston Globe
    The Boston Globe

    The Boston Globe is the most widely circulated daily newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts and in New England, United States. Owned by The New York Times Company, the broadsheet Globes local print rival is the Boston Herald....
  • William Hines, Jr.
    William Hines

    William M. Hines was an united states journalist. According to his Washington Post obituary, he was considered "the godfather of NASA space reporting."...
    , journalist. science education, Chicago Sun Times
    Chicago Sun-Times

    The Chicago Sun-Times is an United States daily newspaper published in Chicago, Illinois....
  • Stanley Karnow
    Stanley Karnow

    Stanley Karnow is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author who covered Asia from 1959 as chief correspondent for Time and Life magazines. Until 1974 he was in southeast Asia reporting for the Saturday Evening Post, the London Observer, the Washington Post, and NBC News....
    , foreign correspondent, Washington Post
    The Washington Post

    The Washington Post is the newspaper with the largest circulation in Washington, D.C., United States and is the city's oldest paper, founded in 1877....
  • Ted Knap
    Ted Knap

    Ted Knap is an United States journalist.He moved from Indianapolis to Washington, DC in the early 1960s.He was a syndicated columnist for the New York Daily News....
    , syndicated columnist, New York Daily News
    New York Daily News

    The Daily News of New York City is the fifth most-widely circulated daily newspaper in the United States with a daily circulation of 703,137, as of March 30, 2008....
  • Edwin Knoll
    Edwin Knoll

    Erwin Knoll was an United States journalist who was editor of The Progressive from 1973 to 1994.He was born in Austria. His work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , Progressive
    The Progressive

    The Progressive is an United States monthly magazine of politics and culture with a pronounced left-wing politics perspective. Known for its pacifism, it has strongly opposed military interventions, such as the US-led 2003 invasion of Iraq in 2003....
  • Morton Kondracke, Chicago Sun Times
    Chicago Sun-Times

    The Chicago Sun-Times is an United States daily newspaper published in Chicago, Illinois....
  • Joseph Kraft
    Joseph Kraft

    Joseph Kraft was an United States journalist.After working at the Washington Post and the New York Times in the 1950s, he became a speechwriter for 1960 Presidential candidate John F....
    , syndicated columnist, Publishers Hall
    Publishers-Hall Syndicate

    Publishers-Hall Syndicate was a newspaper syndicate.Founded by Robert M. Hall, who was sole owner of Hall Syndicate, they sold comics , columns, and serialized books to newspapers across he world....
  • James Laird
    James Laird (journalist)

    James Laird is an United States journalist.Laird was with the The Philadelphia Inquirer when he was named to the master list of Nixon political opponents...
    , Philadelphia Inquirer
    The Philadelphia Inquirer

    The Philadelphia Inquirer is a morning daily newspaper that serves the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Delaware Valley of the United States. The newspaper was founded by John R....
  • Max Lerner
    Max Lerner

    Maxwell "Max" Alan Lerner was an United States journalist and educator known for his controversial syndicated column.After immigrating from Russia with his parents in 1907, Lerner earned a B.A....
    , syndicated columnist, New York Post
    New York Post

    The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and generally acknowledged as the oldest to have been published continually as a daily, although -- like most other papers -- its publication has been interrupted by labor actions....
    : author, lecturer, professor (Brandeis University
    Brandeis University

    Brandeis University is a Private university research university with a liberal arts focus, located in Waltham, Massachusetts, United States. It is located in the southwestern corner of Waltham, nine miles west of Boston, Massachusetts....
    )
  • Stanley Levey
    Stanley Levey

    Stanley Levey was an United States journalist.He covered labor and business news for the New York Times, CBS News and Scripps-Howard Newspapers....
    , Scripps Howard
  • Flora Lewis
    Flora Lewis

    Flora Lewis was an United States journalist.Lewis was born in Los Angeles and was a 1941 summa cum laude graduate of the University of California at Los Angeles, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa....
     syndicated columnist on economics
  • Shauna Burke political activist, author
  • Stuart Loory
    Stuart Loory

    Stuart Hugh Loory is an United States journalist and educator....
    , Los Angeles Times
    Los Angeles Times

    The Los Angeles Times is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California and distributed throughout the Western United States. It is the second-largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States and the fourth-most widely distributed newspaper in the United States....
  • Mary McGrory
    Mary McGrory

    Mary McGrory was a liberal United States journalist and columnist. She was a fierce opponent of the Vietnam War and was on Richard Nixon's Nixon's Enemies List for writing "daily hate Nixon articles."...
    , syndicated columnist on New Left
    New Left

    The New Left were the left-wing movements in different countries in the 1960s and 1970s that, unlike the earlier leftist focus on labour movement activism, instead adopted a broader definition of political activism commonly called social activism....
  • Frank Mankiewicz
    Frank Mankiewicz

    Frank Fabian Mankiewicz II is an United States journalist....
    , syndicated columnist Los Angeles Times
    Los Angeles Times

    The Los Angeles Times is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California and distributed throughout the Western United States. It is the second-largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States and the fourth-most widely distributed newspaper in the United States....
  • James Millstone
    James Millstone

    James Millstone is an united States journalist.As an assistant managing editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, his work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , St. Louis Post Dispatch
    St. Louis Post-Dispatch

    The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is the major city-wide newspaper in St. Louis, Missouri. Although written to serve Greater St. Louis, the Post-Dispatch is one of the largest newspapers in the Midwest region, and is available and read as far west as Kansas City, Missouri as far south as Memphis, TN and as far north as Springfield, Illinoi...
  • Martin Nolan
    Martin Nolan

    Martin F. Nolan is an United States journalist....
    , Boston Globe
    The Boston Globe

    The Boston Globe is the most widely circulated daily newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts and in New England, United States. Owned by The New York Times Company, the broadsheet Globes local print rival is the Boston Herald....
  • Ed Guthman
    Ed Guthman

    Edwin O. Guthman was a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and university professor....
    , Los Angeles Times
    Los Angeles Times

    The Los Angeles Times is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California and distributed throughout the Western United States. It is the second-largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States and the fourth-most widely distributed newspaper in the United States....
  • Thomas O'Neill
    Thomas O'Neill (journalist)

    Thomas M. O'Neill was an United States journalist. His work while at the Baltimore Sun landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents compiled by the staff of President Richard Nixon....
    , Baltimore Sun
    The Baltimore Sun

    The Baltimore Sun is the U.S. state of Maryland?s largest general circulation daily newspaper and provides comprehensive coverage of local and regional news, events, issues, people, and industries....
  • John Pierson
    John Pierson (journalist)

    John Pierson is an United States journalist.His work while at The Wall Street Journal earned him a place on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , Wall Street Journal
    The Wall Street Journal

    The Wall Street Journal is an English language international daily newspaper published by Dow Jones & Company in New York, New York with Asian and European editions....
  • William Prochnau
    William Prochnau

    William Walter Prochnau is an United States journalist.His work on the Vietnam War while at the Seattle Times landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , Seattle Times
    The Seattle Times

    The Seattle Times, one of two daily newspapers serving Seattle, Washington, Washington, United States, is the largest daily newspaper in the state of Washington....
  • James Reston
    James Reston

    James Barrett Reston was an United States journalist whose career spanned the mid 1930s to the early 1990s. Associated for many years with The New York Times, he became perhaps the most powerful, influential, and widely-read journalist of his era....
    , New York Times
    The New York Times

    The New York Times is an American daily newspaper published in New York City. The largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States, "The Gray Lady"?named for its staid appearance and style?is regarded as a national newspaper of record....
  • Carl Rowan
    Carl Rowan

    Carl Thomas Rowan , was an United States public servant, journalist and author. Rowan was a nationally-syndicated op-ed columnist for the Washington Post and the Chicago Sun-Times. He was one of the most prominent black journalists of the 20th century....
    , syndicated columnist, Publishers Hall
    Publishers-Hall Syndicate

    Publishers-Hall Syndicate was a newspaper syndicate.Founded by Robert M. Hall, who was sole owner of Hall Syndicate, they sold comics , columns, and serialized books to newspapers across he world....
  • Warren Unna
    Warren Unna

    Warren Unna is an United States journalist.His work as a reporter for the Washington Post landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , Washington Post
    The Washington Post

    The Washington Post is the newspaper with the largest circulation in Washington, D.C., United States and is the city's oldest paper, founded in 1877....
    , NET
  • Harriet Van Home
    Harriet Van Home

    Harriet Van Home is an United States journalist.She is a syndicated columnist appearing in the New York Post and other newspapers around the country....
    , columnist, New York Post
    New York Post

    The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and generally acknowledged as the oldest to have been published continually as a daily, although -- like most other papers -- its publication has been interrupted by labor actions....
  • Milton Viorst
    Milton Viorst

    Milton Viorst is an United States journalist.He studied history at Rutgers University. In 1951, he was a Fulbright scholar in France. He returned and attended Harvard University and Columbia University, where he graduated in 1956 in journalism....
    , reporter, author, writer
  • James Wechsler
    James Wechsler

    James Wechsler was an United States journalist.He was a columnist and former editor of The New York Post and a prominent voice of American liberalism for 40 years....
    , New York Post
    New York Post

    The New York Post is the 13th-oldest newspaper published in the United States and generally acknowledged as the oldest to have been published continually as a daily, although -- like most other papers -- its publication has been interrupted by labor actions....
  • Tom Wicker
    Tom Wicker

    Thomas Grey Wicker is an United States journalist. He is best-known as a former political reporter and columnist for The New York Times....
    , New York Times
    The New York Times

    The New York Times is an American daily newspaper published in New York City. The largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States, "The Gray Lady"?named for its staid appearance and style?is regarded as a national newspaper of record....
  • Garry Wills
    Garry Wills

    Garry Wills is an author, journalist, and historian specializing in politics, ideology, and Roman Catholicism. Between 1961 and 2008 inclusive, he has written nearly 40 books....
    . syndicated columnist, author of Nixon Agonistes
  • New York Times
    The New York Times

    The New York Times is an American daily newspaper published in New York City. The largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States, "The Gray Lady"?named for its staid appearance and style?is regarded as a national newspaper of record....
  • Washington Post
    The Washington Post

    The Washington Post is the newspaper with the largest circulation in Washington, D.C., United States and is the city's oldest paper, founded in 1877....
  • St Louis Post Dispatch
    St. Louis Post-Dispatch

    The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is the major city-wide newspaper in St. Louis, Missouri. Although written to serve Greater St. Louis, the Post-Dispatch is one of the largest newspapers in the Midwest region, and is available and read as far west as Kansas City, Missouri as far south as Memphis, TN and as far north as Springfield, Illinoi...
  • Robert Manning
    Robert Manning (journalist)

    Robert Manning is an United States journalist.His work at The Atlantic Monthly landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , editor, Atlantic
    The Atlantic Monthly

    The Atlantic is an United States magazine founded in Boston in 1857. Originally created as a literature and culture commentary magazine, its current format is of a general editorial magazine....
  • John Osborne
    John F. Osborne

    John F. Osborne was an United States journalist.He was born in Corinth, Mississippi. Known for his courtly manners, he had a slow drawl and a quiet demeanor, which belied his sharp political sense....
    , New Republic
    The New Republic

    The New Republic is an United States magazine of politics and the arts. It is published semimonthly and has a circulation of approximately 60,000....
  • Richard Rovere
    Richard Rovere

    Richard H. Rovere was an United States journalist.Rovere graduated from Columbia University and worked as an editor at The Nation before becoming a columnist....
    , New Yorker
    The New Yorker

    The New Yorker is an United States magazine that publishes reportage, commentary, criticism, essays, fiction, satire, cartoons, and poetry. Starting as a weekly in the mid-1920s, the magazine is now published 47 times per year, with five of these issues covering two-week spans....
  • Robert Sherrill
    Robert Sherrill

    Robert Sherrill is an United States investigative journalist and longtime contributor to The Nation, Texas Observer, and many other magazines over the years including Playboy, the New Republic and the New York Times Magazine....
    , Nation
    The Nation

    The Nation is a weekly United States periodical devoted to politics and culture, self-described as "the flagship of the left-wing politics." Founded on July 6, 1865 at the start of Reconstruction era of the United States as a supporter of the victorious North in the American Civil War, it is the oldest continuously published weekly magaz...
  • Paul Samuelson
    Paul Samuelson

    Paul Anthony Samuelson is an United States neoclassical economist economist known for his contributions to many fields of economics, beginning with his general statement of the comparative statics method in his 1947 book Foundations of Economic Analysis....
    , Newsweek
    Newsweek

    Newsweek is an United States weekly newsmagazine published in New York City. It is distributed throughout the United States and internationally....
  • Julian Goodman
    Julian Goodman

    Julian Goodman is a former chairman of the board and chief executive officer for the National Broadcasting Company . His hometown was Glasgow, Kentucky....
    , chief executive officer, NBC
  • John Macy, Jr
    John Macy

    John Williams Macy, Jr. was a United States Government administrator and civil servant.Born in Chicago, he received a B.A. from Wesleyan University in 1938....
    ,, president, Public Broadcasting Corp
    Corporation for Public Broadcasting

    The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is a private non-profit corporation created by an act of the United States Congress and largely funded by the Federal government of the United States to promote public broadcasting....
    , former Civil Service Commission
    Civil Service Commission

    Chairmen*John Houghton Member of the House of Keys, 2004-date*George Waft MLC, 1996-2004*Clare Christian MLC, 1981-1982*Noel Cringle MLC, 1992-1996...
  • Marvin Kalb
    Marvin Kalb

    Marvin L. Kalb is an United States journalist, a Senior Fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy and Faculty Chair for the John F....
    , CBS
    CBS

    CBS Broadcasting Inc. is an American radio network and television network. The name is derived from the initials of Columbia Broadcasting System, its former legal name....
  • Daniel Schorr
    Daniel Schorr

    Daniel Louis Schorr is an American journalist who has covered the world for more than 60 years. He is now a Senior News Analyst for National Public Radio ....
    , CBS
    CBS

    CBS Broadcasting Inc. is an American radio network and television network. The name is derived from the initials of Columbia Broadcasting System, its former legal name....
  • Lem Tucker
    Lem Tucker

    Lemuel Tucker was an United States journalist.Born in Saginaw, Michigan, Tucker graduated Central Michigan University in 1960.Tucker was one of the first African Americans to work as a television network reporter....
    , NBC
  • Sander Vanocur
    Sander Vanocur

    Sander Vanocur, born January 8 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio, is an United States journalist.In 1950, he earned a bachelor's degree in political science from the Northwestern University School of Speech....
    , NBC


Celebrities

  • Carol Channing
    Carol Channing

    Carol Elaine Channing is an United States singer and actor. The recipient of three Tony Awards , a Golden Globe and an Academy Award nomination, Channing is best remembered for her role Lorelei Lee in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes , and as Dolly Gallagher Levi in Hello, Dolly! ....
    , actress
  • Bill Cosby
    Bill Cosby

    William Henry "Bill" Cosby Jr. is an American comedian, actor, author, television producer and activist. A veteran stand-up performer, he got his start at various clubs, then landed a vanguard role in the 1960s action show I Spy....
    , actor
  • Jane Fonda
    Jane Fonda

    Jane Fonda is an United States actress, writer, political activism, former fashion model and Physical fitness guru. She rose to fame in the 1960s with films such as Barbarella and Cat Ballou and, with interruptions, has appeared in films ever since....
    , actress and political activist
  • John Lennon
    John Lennon

    John Winston Ono Lennon, Order of the British Empire was an English Rock music musician, singer, songwriter, artist, and peace activist who gained worldwide fame as one of the founding members of The Beatles....
    , Musician and political activist
  • Joe Namath
    Joe Namath

    Joseph William Namath , also known as Broadway Joe or Joe Willie, is a former United States American football quarterback. He played for the University of Alabama under legendary coach Paul "Bear" Bryant and his assistant, Howard Schnellenberger, from 1962?1964, and in the American Football League and National Football League duri...
    , professional athlete
  • Paul Newman
    Paul Newman

    Paul Leonard Newman was an United States actor, film director, entrepreneur, Humanitarianism, and auto racing enthusiast. He won numerous awards, including an Academy Award for his performance in the 1986 Martin Scorsese film The Color of Money and eight other nominations three Golden Globe, a BAFTA Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, a...
    , actor
  • Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck

    Gregory Peck was an American film actor. He was one of 20th Century Fox's most popular film stars, from the 1940s to the 1960s, and played important roles well into the 1990s....
    , actor
  • Tony Randall
    Tony Randall

    Tony Randall was an American comic and actor....
    , actor
  • Barbra Streisand
    Barbra Streisand

    Barbra Streisand is an United states singer and film and theatre actress. She has also achieved note as a composer, political activist, film producer and film director....
    , actress
  • Dick Gregory
    Dick Gregory

    Dick Gregory is an United States comedian, social activist, writer and entrepreneur.Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Dick Gregory is an influential United States comic who has used his performance skills to convey to both white and black audiences his political message on civil rights....
    , comedian


Businesspeople

  • Charles B. Beneson, president, Beneson Realty Co.
  • Nelson Bengston
    Nelson Bengston

    Nelson Bengston was an United States businessman whose political views and actions in the civil rights movement landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , president, Bengston & Co.
  • Holmes Brown, vice president, public relations, Continental Can Co.
    Continental Can Company

    'Continental Can Company' is an United States producer of metal containers.In 1956, it acquired the Hazel-Atlas Glass Company, the third largest producer of glass containers, which led to the United States v....
  • Benjamin Buttenweiser
    Benjamin Buttenweiser

    Benjamin Joseph Buttenwieser was an United States banker, philanthropist and civic leader in New York.Buttenwieser entered Columbia College of Columbia University at age 15 and graduated in 1919....
    , limited partner, Kuhn, Loeb & Co.
    Kuhn, Loeb & Co.

    Kuhn, Loeb & Co. was an investment bank founded in 1867 by Abraham Kuhn and Solomon Loeb. Under the leadership of Jacob H. Schiff, it grew to be one of the most influential investment banks in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, financing America's expanding railways and growth companies, including Western Union and Westinghouse Electric...
  • Lawrence G. Chait
    Lawrence G. Chait

    Lawrence G. "Larry" Chait was an United States advertising executive who was a pioneer in mail order and direct marketing.He was chairman of Lawrence G....
    , chairman Lawrence G. Chait & Co., Inc.
  • Ernest R. Chanes, president, Consolidated Water Conditioning Co.
  • Maxwell Dane
    Maxwell Dane

    Maxwell "Mac" Dane was an United States advertising executive and co-founder of the Doyle Dane Bernbach agency. For advertising against President of the United States candidate Barry Goldwater in 1964, he became one of the original 20 people mentioned on Nixon's Enemies List....
    , chairman, executive committee, Doyle, Dane & Bernbach, Inc.
    DDB Worldwide

    DDB Worldwide Communications Group Inc, a part of Omnicom Group Inc., is the advertising agency company with highest revenue in the world at US$12.69 billion, according to Advertising Age's agency rankings ....
  • Charles H. Dyson
    Charles Dyson

    Charlie G. Dyson was an United States businessman and philanthropist. He was founder of the Dyson Corporation....
    , chairman, the Dyson-Kissner Corp.
  • Norman Eisner, president, Lincoln Graphic Arts.
  • Charles B. Finch
    Charles B. Finch

    Charles Baker Finch was an United States businessman. The descendant of early English and Dutch pilgrims, Charles Finch was the second son of Henry L....
    , vice president, Alleghany Power System, Inc.
  • Katharine Graham
    Katharine Graham

    Katharine Meyer Graham was an American publisher. She led her family's newspaper, The Washington Post, for more than two decades, overseeing its most famous period, the Watergate scandal coverage that eventually led to the resignation of President of the United States Richard Nixon....
    , editor and publisher, The Washington Post
    The Washington Post

    The Washington Post is the newspaper with the largest circulation in Washington, D.C., United States and is the city's oldest paper, founded in 1877....
  • Frank Heineman
    Frank Heineman

    Frank Heineman was an United States businessman.He was president of Men's Wear International. His political views landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , president, Men's Wear International.
  • George Hillman, president, Ellery Products Manufacturing Co.
  • Bertram Lichtenstein
    Bertram Lichtenstein

    Bertram Lichtenstein was an United States clothing manufacturer.Lichtenstein acquired the men's wear manufacturer Delton Ltd. in the early 1960's, and under his leadership the company's collections enjoyed wide acceptance among the nation's quality retailers....
    , president, Delton Ltd.
  • William Manealoff
    William Manealoff

    William Manealoff was an United States businessman.He was president of Concord Steel Corporation. His political work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , president, Concord Steel Corp.
  • Gerald McKee
    Gerald McKee

    Gerald McKee is an United States construction management executive who was president of McKee-Berger-Mansueto . His activism landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , president, McKee, Berger, Mansueto.
  • Paul Milstein
    Paul Milstein

    Paul Milstein is an United States real estate developer and philanthropist. He was on the master list of Nixon political opponents.Born in New York City he attended DeWitt Clinton High School and the New York University School of Architecture....
    , president, Circle Industries Corp.
  • Stewart R. Mott, Stewart R. Mott, Associates.
  • Lawrence S. Phillips
    Lawrence S. Phillips

    Lawrence S. Phillips is an United States businessman who was chairman of Phillips-Van Heusen until 1995.Phillips graduated from Princeton University....
    , president, Phillips-Van Heusen Corp.
  • David Rose
    David Rose

    David Rose was a British-born United States songwriter, composer, arranger, and orchestra leader. His most famous compositions were "The Stripper", "Holiday for Strings", and "Calypso Melody"....
     chairman, Rose Associates.
  • Julian Roth
    Julian Roth

    Julian Roth was an United States architect. Following the death of his father, founder Emery Roth, he and his brother Richard took over at Emery Roth & Sons, one of the oldest and most prolific firms in New York City....
     senior partner, Emery Roth & Sons.
  • William Ruder
    William Ruder

    William "Bill" Ruder is an United States public relations executive and co-founder of Ruder Finn with David Finn.They started the firm in 1948 when both were 27....
    , president, Ruder & Finn, Inc.
    Ruder Finn

    Ruder Finn is an United States public relations firm founded in 1948 by David Finn and William Ruder.Ruder Finn is a privately held, family-owned company that employs more than 600 people....
  • Si Scharer, president, Scharer Associates, Inc.
  • Alfred P. Slaner
    Alfred P. Slaner

    Alfred P. Slaner was an American businessman and one-time president of Kayser-Roth, Inc.He developed Supp-Hose uplifting hosiery. Slaner later made money in electronics and became a major benefactor of the United Jewish Appeal....
    , president, Kayser-Roth Corp.
  • Roger Sonnabend
    Roger Sonnabend

    Roger P. Sonnabend was an United States hotelier and businessman. He was the head of Sonesta International Hotels Corporation.Roger, the eldest of three brothers, graduated from MIT and took the helm at the Nautilus Hotel and Beach Club, in Atlantic Beach, New York, when he was 21....
    , chairman, Sonesta International Hotels.
  • Mathew B. Zindroski, president, ZindrosCo Industrial Systems, Inc.


Business Additions

  • Business Executives Move for Vietnam Peace and New National Priorities
    Business Executives Move for Vietnam Peace

    Business Executives Move for Vietnam Peace was an organization opposed to the Vietnam War.In September 1967 a group of nearly one thousand businessmen formed a national committee opposing United States participation in the Vietnam War....
  • Morton Sweig
    Morton Sweig

    Morton Sweig is an United States businessman and industry leader in janitorial and maintenance services.He headed National Cleaning Contractors, which later merged with ABM Industries Incorporated....
    , president. National Cleaning Contractors
  • Alan V. Tishman
    Alan V. Tishman

    Alan Valentine Tishman was an United States real estate developer. He was the head of Tishman Management and Leasing Corporation.He helped bring coop apartment ownership to New York City and was one of the first brokers to bring office tenants to Park Avenue ....
    , executive vice president, Tishman Realty & Construction Co., Inc.
  • Ira D. Wallach
    Ira D. Wallach

    Ira David Wallach was an United States businessman and philanthropist. He was head of Central National-Gottesman, the largest privately held marketer of paper and pulp products....
    , president, Gottesman & Co., Inc.
    Central National-Gottesman

    Central National-Gottesman, Inc. is one of the world's largest distributors of pulp, paper, paperboard, and newsprint. The firm's products are sold in over 75 countries, through a network of 43 offices located in the United States and abroad....
  • George Weissman
    George Weissman

    George Weissman is an United States businessman and a former president of Philip Morris .After graduating from Townsend Harris High School, he attended the City College of New York in 1939 and worked as the editor of a small weekly newspaper in New Jersey, then as a reporter for the Newark Star Ledger....
    ,, president, Philip Morris Corp.
  • Ralph Weller
    Ralph Weller

    Ralph A. Weller was president of Otis Elevator Company. His political views and activism landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents....
    , president, Otis Elevator Company
    Otis Elevator Company

    The Otis Elevator Company is the world's largest manufacturer of vertical transportation systems today, principally elevators and escalators. Founded in Yonkers, New York, New York, USA in 1853 by Elisha Otis, the company pioneered the development of the safety elevator, invented by Otis, which used a special mechanism to lock the elevator ca...


Business

  • Clifford Alexander, Jr.
    Clifford Alexander, Jr.

    Clifford Leopold Alexander, Jr. is an United States lawyer, businessman and public servant. He was the first African-American United States Secretary of the Army....
    , member, Equal Opportunity Commission; LBJ
    Lyndon B. Johnson

    Lyndon Baines Johnson , often referred to as LBJ, was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States and List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States ....
    's special assistant
  • Hugh Calkins
    Hugh Calkins

    Hugh Calkins was a member of the Harvard Corporation from 1969 to 1984.He was born in Newton, Ohio in 1924, and he went to Exeter before coming to Harvard....
    , Cleveland lawyer, member, Harvard Corp
    President and Fellows of Harvard College

    The President and Fellows of Harvard College is the more fundamental of Harvard University's two governing boards. On 9 June 1650, at the request of President of Harvard University Henry Dunster, the Great and General Court of Massachusetts issued the body's charter, making it the oldest corporation in the The Americas....
  • Ramsey Clark
    Ramsey Clark

    William Ramsey Clark is a lawyer and former United States Attorney General. He worked for the United States Department of Justice, which included service as the 66th United States Attorney General under President Lyndon B....
    , partner, Weiss, Goldberg, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; former attorney general
  • Lloyd Cutler
    Lloyd Cutler

    Lloyd Norton Cutler was an Law of the United States who served as White House Counsel during the United States Democratic Party administrations of Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton....
    , lawyer, Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, Washington, D.C.
  • Henry L. Kimelman
    Henry L. Kimelman

    Henry L. Kimelman was the United States Ambassador to Haiti from 1980-1981.He was President of the Virgin Isle Hotel, the largest resort in Saint Thomas, U.S....
    , chief fund raiser for McGovern
    George McGovern

    George Stanley McGovern, is a former United States United States House of Representatives, United States Senate, and Democratic Party President of the United States nominee....
    . president, Overview Group
  • Raymond Lapin
    Raymond Lapin

    Raymond H. Lapin was president of the Federal National Mortgage Association . President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed him.He was also creator of, and again president and chairman of the board of, the Government National Mortgage Association ....
    , former president, FNMA
    Federal National Mortgage Association

    The Federal National Mortgage Association , commonly known as Fannie Mae, is a stockholder-owned corporation chartered by Congress in 1968 as a government sponsored enterprise , but founded in 1938 during the Great Depression....
    ; corporation executive
  • Hans F. Loeser
    Hans F. Loeser

    Hans F. Loeser is an United States lawyer whose activism during the Vietnam War earned him the enmity of Richard Nixon.Born in Germany, Loeser served in the United States Army, 1942-1947....
    , chairman, Boston Lawyers' Vietnam Committee
  • Robert McNamara
    Robert McNamara

    Robert Strange McNamara is an United States business executive and the 8th United States Secretary of Defense. McNamara served as Defense Secretary during the Vietnam War from 1961 to 1968....
    , president, World Bank
    World Bank

    The World Bank is a bank that provides financial and technical assistance to developing countries for development programs with the stated goal of reducing poverty....
    ; former Secretary of Defense
  • Hans Morgenthau
    Hans Morgenthau

    Hans Joachim Morgenthau was a pioneer in the field of international relations theory. He was born in Coburg, Germany, and educated at the universities of Berlin, Frankfurt and Munich....
    , former US. attorney in New York City (Robert Morgenthau).
  • Victor Palmieri
    Victor Palmieri

    Victor Henry Palmieri is an American lawyer, real estate financier and corporate turnaround specialist. He was also Ambassador at Large and U.S....
    , lawyer, business consultant, real estate executive, Los Angeles.
  • Arnold Picker
    Arnold Picker

    Arnold M. Picker was a United States film industry executive, mayor of Golden Beach, Florida and the number one enemy on Nixon's list of targets....
    , Muskie
    Edmund Muskie

    Edmund Sixtus "Ed" Muskie was an United States Democratic Party politician from Maine. He served as Governor of Maine, as United States Senate, and as United States Secretary of State....
    's chief fund raiser; chairman executive committee, United Artists
  • Robert S. Pirie
    Robert S. Pirie

    Robert S. Pirie is an United States lawyer.Pirie graduated from Harvard College and Harvard Law School. As an undergraduate he was attracted to bibliographical work in Elizabethan authors and began to collect actively while on service with the United States Army in the late 1950s....
    , Harold Hughes
    Harold Hughes

    Harold Everett Hughes was the United States Democratic Party Governor of Iowa from 1963 until 1969; he had been a Republican Party earlier in his life....
    ' chief fund raiser: Boston lawyer.
  • Joseph Rosenfield
    Joseph Rosenfield

    Joseph Frankel Rosenfield was an United States lawyer, businessman and philanthropist.Rosenfield graduated from Grinnell College in 1925 and earned a J.D....
    , Harold Hughes
    Harold Hughes

    Harold Everett Hughes was the United States Democratic Party Governor of Iowa from 1963 until 1969; he had been a Republican Party earlier in his life....
    ' money man; retired Des Moines lawyer.
  • Henry Rowen
    Henry Rowen

    Henry S. Rowen is an United States politician, economist, and academician....
    , president, Rand Corp.
    Rand

    Rand may refer to a number of places, people, organizations, and acronyms:...
    , former assistant director of budget (LBJ
    Lyndon B. Johnson

    Lyndon Baines Johnson , often referred to as LBJ, was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States and List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States ....
    )
  • R Sargent Shriver, Jr.
    Sargent Shriver

    Robert Sargent Shriver, Jr. is an United States of America Democratic Party politician and activist. Known as "Sargent," Shriver is best-known as part of the Kennedy political family, the driving force behind the creation of the Peace Corps, and the Democratic Party's United States presidential election, 1972 vice President of the United St...
    , former US. ambassador to France; lawyer, Strasser, Spiefelberg, Fried, Frank & Kempelman, Washington, D.C. [1972 Democratic vice presidential candidate]
  • Theodore Sorensen, lawyer, Weiss, Goldberg, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, New York.
  • Ray Stark
    Ray Stark

    Ray Stark was an Academy Award-nominated American film producer and powerbroker known for his Machiavellian ways. Stark was one of the most influential producers in film history and, along with Lew Wasserman, was considered one of the last great moguls....
    , Broadway producer.
  • Howard Stein
    Howard Stein

    Howard Stein is an United States financier who is widely considered one of the fathers of the mutual fund industry.Stein was Chairman and CEO of Dreyfus Corporation for more than 30 years....
    , president and director, Dreyfus Corporation
    Dreyfus Corporation

    Dreyfus Corporation is a leading mutual fund financial firm founded in 1951. It is an industry leader having been the first to advertise to consumers, and create a high yield fund. It is a subsidiary of the Bank of New York Mellon....
    .
  • Milton Semer
    Milton Semer

    Milton Phillip Semer is an United States lawyer. He was General Counsel for the Housing and Home Finance Agency from 1961 to 1966.Semer oversaw the campaign of Edmund S....
    , chairman, Muskie
    Edmund Muskie

    Edmund Sixtus "Ed" Muskie was an United States Democratic Party politician from Maine. He served as Governor of Maine, as United States Senate, and as United States Secretary of State....
     Election Committee; lawyer, Semer and Jacobsen
  • George H. Talbot
    George H. Talbot

    George H. Talbot was an United States businessman.He was president of now-defunct Charlotte Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. in North Carolina....
    , president, Charlotte Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. ; headed anti-Vietnam ad
  • Arthur Taylor
    Arthur Taylor

    Arthur R. Taylor is an United States businessman.Taylor was a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Brown University. He began his corporate career with the First Boston Corporation....
    , vice president, International Paper Company [presently CBS president]
  • Jack Valenti
    Jack Valenti

    Jack Joseph Valenti was a long-time president of the Motion Picture Association of America. During his 38-year tenure in the MPAA, he created the MPAA film rating system, and he was generally regarded as one of the most influential pro-copyright lobbyists in the world....
    , president, Motion Picture Association
    Motion Picture Association of America

    The Motion Picture Association of America was since 1922, originally the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America , is a non-profit business and trade association based in the United States, which was formed to advance the business interests of movie studios....
    .
  • Paul Warnke
    Paul Warnke

    Paul Culliton Warnke was a United States diplomat.He was born in Webster, Massachusetts but spent most of his childhood in Marlborough, Massachusetts, where his father managed a shoe factory....
    , Muskie financial supporter, former assistant secretary of defense
  • Thomas I. Watson, Jr.
    Thomas J. Watson, Jr.

    Thomas John Watson, Jr. was the president of IBM from 1952 to 1971 and the eldest son of Thomas J. Watson, IBM's first president. He was listed as one of TIME Magazine's 100 most influential people of the 20th century....
    [sic
    SIC

    Sic is a Latin word that means "thus" or, in writing, "it was thus in the source material".Sic may also refer to:* Sic, Cluj, a commune in Romania...
    ], Muskie financial supporter; chairman, IBM
    IBM

    International Business Machines Corporation, abbreviated IBM and nicknamed "Big Blue" , is a multinational corporation computer technology and consulting corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York, New York, United States....


Academics

  • Michael Ellis DeBakey
    Michael E. DeBakey

    Michael Ellis DeBakey, M.D. was a world-renowned American cardiac surgery , innovator, medical educator, and international medical statesman. DeBakey was the chancellor emeritus of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas and director of The Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Center and senior attending surgeon of The Methodist Hospital...
    , chairman, department of surgery, Baylor College of Medicine
    Baylor College of Medicine

    Baylor College of Medicine, located in Houston, Texas, Texas, United States, is one of the world's leading centers for biomedical research and clinical care....
    ; surgeon-in-chief, Ben Taub General Hospital
    Ben Taub General Hospital

    Ben Taub General Hospital is a hospital in Houston, Texas.Ben Taub was opened in May 1963 and is located in the Texas Medical Center. It is owned and operated by the Harris County Hospital District and is staffed by the faculty and students from Baylor College of Medicine....
    . Texas
  • Derek Curtis Bok
    Derek Bok

    Derek Curtis Bok is an United States lawyer and educator, and the former president of Harvard University.Bok was born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, and graduated from Stanford University , Harvard Law School , and George Washington University ....
    , dean, Harvard Law School
    Harvard Law School

    Harvard Law School is one of the professional graduate schools of Harvard University. Located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, it is the United States' oldest law school in continuous operation....
  • Kingman Brewster, Jr.
    Kingman Brewster, Jr.

    Kingman Brewster, Jr., was an educator, president of Yale University, and United States diplomat.Brewster was born in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, the son of Florence Foster and Kingman Brewster Sr., a lawyer....
    , president, Yale University
    Yale University

    Yale University is a private university in New Haven, Connecticut. Founded in 1701 as the Collegiate School, Yale is the Colonial Colleges institution of higher education in the United States and is a member of the Ivy League....
    .
  • McGeorge Bundy
    McGeorge Bundy

    McGeorge "Mac" Bundy was United States National Security Advisor to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson from 1961 through 1966, and president of the Ford Foundation from 1966 through 1979....
    , president, Ford Foundation
    Ford Foundation

    The Ford Foundation is a private foundation incorporated in Michigan and based in New York City created to fund programs that were chartered in 1936 by Edsel Ford and Henry Ford....
    .
  • Avram Noam Chomsky
    Noam Chomsky

    Avram Noam Chomsky is an United States linguistics, philosopher, cognitive science, political activist, author, and lecturer. He is an Institute Professor emeritus and professor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....
    , professor of linguistics, MIT
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private university research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States....
  • Carl Djerassi
    Carl Djerassi

    Carl Djerassi , is a chemistry, novelist, and playwright best known for his contribution to the development of the combined oral contraceptive pill ....
    , professor of chemistry, Stanford University
    Stanford University

    Leland Stanford Junior University, commonly referred to as Stanford University or Stanford, is a private university research university located in Stanford, California, California, United States....
  • Daniel Ellsberg
    Daniel Ellsberg

    Daniel Ellsberg is a former American military analyst employed by the RAND Corporation who precipitated a national political controversy in 1971 when he released the Pentagon Papers, a Classified information The Pentagon study of government decision-making about the Vietnam War, to The New York Times and other newspapers....
    , professor, MIT
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private university research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States....
    .
  • George Drennen Fischer
    George Drennen Fischer

    George Drennen Fischer was an United States activist and spokesman for the National Education Association.He presented the Statement on Comprehensive Preschool Education and Child Day Care Act of 1969 before the Select Subcommittee on Education, February 27, 1970....
    , member, executive committee. National Education Association
    National Education Association

    The National Education Association is the largest professional organization and largest trade union in the United States, representing public school teachers and other support personnel, faculty and staffers at colleges and universities, retired educators, and college students preparing to become teachers....
  • J. Kenneth Galbraith
    John Kenneth Galbraith

    John Kenneth "Ken" Galbraith, Order of Canada was a Canadian-American economics. He was a Keynesian economics and an institutional economics, a leading proponent of 20th-century American liberalism and Progressivism in the United States....
    , professor of economics, Harvard
    Harvard University

    Harvard University is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States, and a member of the Ivy League. Founded in 1636 by the colonial Massachusetts legislature, Harvard is the Colonial Colleges institution of higher learning in the United States....
  • Patricia Harris
    Patricia Roberts Harris

    Patricia Roberts Harris served as United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, the last United States Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and the first United States Secretary of Health and Human Services in the administration of President of the United States Jimmy Carter....
    , educator, lawyer, former US. ambassador; chairman welfare committee Urban League
  • Walter Heller
    Walter Heller

    Walter Wolfgang Heller was born to German immigrant parents in Buffalo, NY.Heller was a leading United States economist of the 1960s, and an influential advisor to John F....
    , regents professor of economics, University of Minnesota
    University of Minnesota

    The University of Minnesota, Twin Cities is a public university research university located in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota, Minnesota, United States....
  • Edwin Land, professor of physics, MIT
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private university research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States....
    .
  • Herbert Ley, Jr.
    Herbert Ley, Jr.

    Herbert L. Ley Jr., M.D. was an United States physician and government official.He attended Harvard College from 1941-1943, and returned there after World War II, where he received his M.D....
    , former FDA commissioner; professor of epidemiology, Harvard
    Harvard University

    Harvard University is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States, and a member of the Ivy League. Founded in 1636 by the colonial Massachusetts legislature, Harvard is the Colonial Colleges institution of higher learning in the United States....
    .
  • Matthew Stanley Meselson
    Matthew Meselson

    Matthew Stanley Meselson is an American geneticist and molecular biologist whose research was important in showing how DNA replication, recombination and is DNA repair in cells....
    , professor of biology, Harvard
    Harvard University

    Harvard University is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States, and a member of the Ivy League. Founded in 1636 by the colonial Massachusetts legislature, Harvard is the Colonial Colleges institution of higher learning in the United States....
  • Lloyd N. Morrisett
    Lloyd N. Morrisett

    Lloyd N. Morrisett was an United States educator.Born in Barrettsville, Tennessee, he graduated high school in Edmond, Oklahoma, Oklahoma, and he received his A.B....
    , professor and associate director, education program, University of California
    University of California

    The University of California is a public university system in the U.S. state of California. Under the California Master Plan for Higher Education, the University of California is a part of the state's three-tier public higher education system, which also includes the California State University system and the California Community Colleges s...
  • Joseph Rhodes, Jr.
    Joseph Rhodes, Jr.

    Joseph Rhodes, Jr. is an United States politician and activist.Rhodes attended Pittsburgh public schools and received a B.S. in history from the California Institute of Technology in 1969....
    , fellow, Harvard
    Harvard University

    Harvard University is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States, and a member of the Ivy League. Founded in 1636 by the colonial Massachusetts legislature, Harvard is the Colonial Colleges institution of higher learning in the United States....
    ; member, Scranton commission on Campus Unrest
  • Bayard Rustin
    Bayard Rustin

    Bayard Rustin was an United States civil rights activist, important largely behind the scenes in the American Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and American Civil Rights Movement , and one of the organizers of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom....
    , civil rights activist; director, A. Philip Randolph Institute
    A. Philip Randolph Institute

    The A. Philip Randolph Institute is an organization for African American trade unionists....
    , New York.
  • David Selden
    David Selden

    David Selden was an United States activist who led the American Federation of Teachers from 1968 through 1974.As Director of Organization of the Teachers Guild from 1953, he was a main strategist in the creation of the United Federation of Teachers in 1960 and the winning of collective bargaining in 1961....
    , president, American Federation of Teachers
    American Federation of Teachers

    The American Federation of Teachers or AFT is an American trade union founded in 1916 which represents teachers; paraprofessionals and school-related personnel; local, state and federal employees; higher education faculty and staff; and nurses and other healthcare professionals....
    .
  • Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., professor of humanities, City University of New York
    City University of New York

    Not to be confused with New York University formerly known as the University of the City of New York.For similar uses see University of New York...
  • Jeremy Stone
    Jeremy Stone

    Jeremy J. Stone was president of the Federation of American Scientists from 1970 to 2000, where he led that organization's advocacy initiatives in arms control, human rights, and foreign policy....
    , director, Federation of American Scientists
    Federation of American Scientists

    The Federation of American Scientists is a non-profit organization formed in 1945 by scientists from the Manhattan Project who felt that scientists, engineers and other innovators had an ethical obligation to bring their knowledge and experience to bear on critical national decisions....
  • Jerome Wiesner
    Jerome Wiesner

    Jerome Wiesner was an educator, a Science Advisor to U.S. Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, an advocate for arms control, and a critic of anti-ballistic-missile defense systems....
    , president, MIT
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private university research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States....
    .
  • Samuel M. Lambert
    Samuel M. Lambert

    Samuel M. Lambert was president of the National Education Association during the administration of Richard M. Nixon. Because of the political power wielded by the group, and because of their opposition of federal funding for parochial schools, Lambert was placed on Nixon's Enemies List....
    , president, National Education Association
    National Education Association

    The National Education Association is the largest professional organization and largest trade union in the United States, representing public school teachers and other support personnel, faculty and staffers at colleges and universities, retired educators, and college students preparing to become teachers....


External links

via National Archives and Records Administration
National Archives and Records Administration

The United States National Archives and Records Administration is an Independent agencies of the United States government charged with preserving and documenting government and historical records and with increasing public access to those documents....