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Firing Line 1966-1986: World Leaders
Collection StructureFiring Line broadcast records > Episode guide > Firing Line 1966-1986: World Leaders
Item Title Firing Line 1966-1986: World Leaders
Guest Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous) (1913-1994)
Guest McCarthy, Eugene J. (1916-2005)
Guest Reagan, Ronald
Guest Thatcher, Margaret
Guest Marcos, Ferdinand E. (Ferdinand Edralin) (1917-1989)
Guest Hawke, Robert J. L. (Robert James Lee) (1929-)
Guest Macmillan, Harold (1894-1986)
Guest Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio) (1911-1978)
Guest Ford, Gerald R. (1913- 2006)
Host Buckley, William F., Jr. (1925-2008)
Date CreatedJanuary 14, 1986
Description

Firing Line is 20 years old, and this is the first of three celebratory anthologies of

clips from past shows--and what a celebration it is! Harold Macmillan alone would be worth the price of admission: "I've always thought that the peoples of the old Europe, having twice in my lifetime destroyed themselves by a kind of internecine war, like the Greeks did in the Peloponnesian War, must now get together." And then there's Eugene McCarthy, bringing a poet's eye and an offbeat sensibility: "The only thing [Nixon] did [on going into Cambodia] that sort of saved it was to call it an 'incursion.' We'd never had an incursion in the history of the country. It was our first incursion." But Mr. Nixon gives as good as he gets: "We have to recognize that politics is a great drama. And I will give credit to our Democratic friends. Generally speaking, the Democratic politicians, the so-called liberal politicians, have been more exciting and more interesting. Now part

of the reason for that is that they can be less responsible." And so on, delightfully.

Language(s)
Country of Origin
Place RecordedNew York City, New York, United States
DimensionsDuration: 60 minutes
FormatMoving Image
Medium television programs
Aspect Ratio
4:3
Color
color
Soundtrack
sound
Hoover IDProgram S0676
Record Number80040.921
NotesVideo available through Amazon.
RightsCopyright held by Stanford University. This copy is provided for educational and research purposes only. No publication, further reproduction, or reuse of copies, beyond fair use, may be made without the express written permission of the Hoover Institution Library & Archives on behalf of Stanford University.
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