Before the Storm (128 page)

Read Before the Storm Online

Authors: Rick Perlstein

BOOK: Before the Storm
5.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
It started with a notice on my project in
The New York Times Book Review,
and a lesson in how damned
generous
people are. I got missives from Goldwater workers who were so young at the time that they could barely remember the campaign (and from a one-time eleven-year-old who bravely preached on behalf of LBJ every Saturday in an Orange County shopping-center parking lot); and letters from Goldwater press secretaries, finance chairs, ad execs, press corps members, book agents—even the old lady who kept the books at his Phoenix department store. Scholars passed on their own exertions—one an Indian professor who had been on a Fulbright Fellowship to the University of Pennsylvania in 1964, another a master's student from the Netherlands whose research on Strom Thurmond was indispensable. There was even one guy who sent me Goldwater news clippings at random intervals over the course of three years—anonymously. Thanks, whoever you are.
My heart especially goes out to two of these correspondents. Andrew Szanton sent my way the arresting photograph that graces the cover of this book. And about Ryan Hayes—the great lay intellectual of Queens, New York—hardly enough can be said. His stunning command of political detail provided the seed for many of the researches herein. And without the generous loans from his bottomless collection of political paraphernalia—what would I have done without my directory of the Eighty-eighth Congress?—my scholarly life would have been much more difficult. I don't dedicate the book to him. But I do dedicate to him the sentence on his “Harold Stassen's Ticker Tape Parade” soapbox derby car.
Much thanks, too, to those who gave generously of their recollections, time, trust—and, sometimes, hospitality—in author interviews. Those who went beyond the call of duty include Jameson Campaigne Jr. (who gets triple recognition for opening his storehouse of papers to me, and for publishing so many of the biographies and memoirs of conservative figures that I relied upon), Leonard Nadasdy (his loaned dossier on his tenure as Young Republican chair was indispensable), Pam Walton, Ron Crawford, Bill Rusher, Wes McCune, Milton Friedman, Stan Evans, and Graham T. T. Molitor. The breakfast David Keene set up for me with a cadre of conservative movement veterans at the Capitol Hill Club was very helpful, and very cool.
Several scholars were invaluable to me as friends, advisers, sources, inspirations—
and, last but not least, as penners of the letters of recommendation that helped several benefactors see the merits of my case. These include Michael Kazin, Nick Salvatore, David Kennedy, Nelson Lichtenstein, David Farber, and Tom Sugrue. And thank you, thank you, to those benefactors who
did
see the merits of my case: the Rockefeller Archive Center, the LBJ Library, the Dick Goldensohn Fund—and, especially, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Margaret Chase Smith Library. The former's contribution kept me in food, shelter, and used books for a year; the latter gave me not just a check but a hell of a good time.
The thought of my other financial benefactors brings a tear to my eye: my sister, Linda, a lifelong pillar; Jon Cohen, who taught me a thing or two about analytical precision; Allison Miller, whose middle name is Xantha, and what else need be said?; John Palattela and Angela Dillard, who both remind me that I love to think; Lisa Bonacci, a model of courage and devotion; Amy Kossoy, a neighbor in the best sense; Eric Wunderman, who thinks, blessedly, differently; Anil Mudholkar, a friend of a lifetime; Thad Domina, not a research assistant but a mensch; and Grandma and Grandpa Perlstein, whose generosity has allowed me to follow a risky profession, not a safe one, which means everything to me.
I thank those who opened their homes to me: the Kramer family in Phoenix; and dear friends Gita Kapadia, Ben Evans, Jen Stewart, and Jefferson Decker on trips to Chicago. Two others put up with me for even longer, and I want to recognize their patience and friendship: Jon Cohen and William Duty. They are role models, both creatively and intellectually.
I also want to thank some other scholars, writers, editors, and others who gave their encouragement, solidarity, and favors large and small: David Greenberg, Matthew Dallek, Judith Broadhurst, Chris Lehmann, Jeff Shesol, Beverley Solochek, John Andrew, Gregory Schneider, Mike Leiman, Jennifer Mittelstadt, Godfrey Hodgson, Richard Ellis, Jim Sleeper, Scott Sherman, and Jim Miller (whose greatest contribution was an offhand quote in a
Lingua Franca
article about how if he had it to do over again, he might just have written about the rise of the right). And four more magnificent, unique souls: David Glenn and Scott McLemee (living rebukes to any fool who wants to talk about there not being any New York intellectuals left, even though Scott lives in Washington), and Leon Pasker and Margie Good, who have always made me feel big.
Thanks also to my friends at the New York Working Families Party, who gave me my participant-observer training in political volunteering. Knock wood, a book like this will be written about them thirty-five years from now.
Thank you to the archivists at the facilities mentioned above, and also at the Chicago Historical Society, special collections at Cornell University, and the Hoover Institution. If you love reading history, lift a glass to archivists at least once a week; they are the unsung heroes of the enterprise. And thank you, too, William F. Buckley, not only for making it possible for there to be such an interesting movement to write about in the first place, but for opening your papers at Yale to me.
I owe much to my colleagues at
Lingua Franca:
Jeffrey Kittay (for lessons in the value of
chutzpah),
Alexander Star (for lessons in the value of carefulness), and especially
(for lessons in the value of volubility) Daniel Zalewski. I also owe a debt to the American Culture program at the University of Michigan.
There are four people without whom the transition from full-time magazine editor to full-time book author could not possibly have been as smooth as it was. The first is Rebecca Lowen, who commissioned the original book proposal. That our relationship ended there is owing only to the smarts, style, savvy, and friendship of my editor, Paul Elie, who saw something in a book review I wrote and decided I had what it took (ably assisted by Brian Blanchfield and Susan Goldfarb, whose work was tireless).
That review was written for Sue and John Leonard at
The Nation.
It was their mission of encouraging young writers in developing their talents in that magazine's culture section that started—to borrow an antique metaphor that an old
National Review
hand and New Lefty like John would appreciate—the domino effect.
Now I have two families, the Perlsteins (my parents Jerry and Sandi, sister Linda, and brothers Ben and Steve); and the Geiers (Hank, Patty, Frank, Kelly, Buddy, and Sean). I love them both, and thank them for their support. I have two families now because I now have my own family: Kathy Geier, my wife, a partner in every way, to whom I dedicate this book. And last but not least, our little dogs Buster and Checkers. You know, we love those dogs, and I just want to say this right now, that regardless of what they say about it, we're going to keep them.
INDEX
ABC Reports
Abington Township
v.
Schempp
Abstine, James
Acheson, Dean
Acme Bomb and Fallout Shelter Company
Acme Steel
Adenauer, Konrad
Ad Hoc Committee Against Discrimination
Advance magazine
Affluent Society, The
(Galbraith)
AFL-CIO,
; Committee on Political
Education (COPE),
African-Americans,
; in Arizona,
; burning of churches of;
in California; conservative claims
of Communist influence on;
and Democratic Party,
; in Goldwater campaign,
; impact of automation on,
Johnson and;
March on Washington of; in
New York; and 1960 election,
Northern, discrimination
against,
; in
post-Civil War South; random
violence against; and Republican
Party,
; rioting by,
; Rockefeller
funding of colleges for; Southern
White resistance to integration of,
; voter
registration drive for, see Mississippi
Freedom Summer; Welch's views on
Agriculture, U.S. Department of; Bureau of Plant Industry
Aid to Dependent Children
AiResearch
Air Force, U.S. ; Reserve
Air National Guard
Air War College
Alabama; civil rights legislation
opposed by; Republican Party in,
; violence against civil
rights activists in
Alabama, University of
Albee, Edward
Alcoa
Alcorn, Meade
Aldrich, Nelson
Alger, Bruce
Ali, Muhammad
Allen, Steve
Allen-Bradley Company
Allot, Gordon
All the King's Men
(Warren)
Alpaca
(Hunt)
Alsop, Joseph
Alsop, Stewart
America First Committee
American Aggregates
American Airlines
American Bar Association
American Bar Association Journal
American Broadcasting Company
(ABC)
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
American Enterprise Institute (AEI) ; Academic
Advisory Board of
American Ethnology, Bureau of
American Federation of Labor; see also AFL-CIO
American Jewish Congress
American Legion
American Medical Association (AMA) ; Political Action
Committee of
American Motors Corporation
American Opinion
magazine
American Political Science Association
American Psychoanalytic Association
American Security Council Report of the Air
(radio show)
Americans for Constitutional Action (ACA)
Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)
Americans for Goldwater
American Society of Newspaper Editors
American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T)
American University
American Veterans Committee
America, Wake Up!
(radio show)
American Youth for Democracy
Anderson, Admiral George W.
Anderson, John
Anderson, Robert
Anderson, Tom
Andrews, T. Coleman
Angleton, James Jesus
Annenberg, Walter
Appalachian Spring
(Copland)
Appling, Howell
Appropriations Act (1942)
Arendt, Hannah
Aristotle
Arizona: Democratic Party of,
Republican Party of,
; State
Legislature
Arizona, University of
Arizona Federation of Labor
Arizona Republic
Arkansas Supreme Court
Arms Control Agency, U.S.
Army, U.S.,
Air Corps; Special
Warfare Center; War College,
War Plans Division
Ashbrook, John
Associated Press (AP)
Atlanta Constitution
Atlantic Monthly
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
Atomic Energy Commission Proving Grounds (later Nevada Test Site)
Avondale Mills
Babbitt
(Lewis)
“Baby Tooth Survey”
Baker, Bobby
Baldwin, James
Baptists; Southern
Barnes, Mrs. A. Dabney
Bamett, H. Ross
Baroody, William J., Jr.
Barr, Charlie
Barron's
Barry Goldwater: Extremist of the Right
(Cook)
Bauman, Bob
Bauman, Carol Dawson
Baylor University
Bay of Pigs invasion
Bean, Louis
Beatles
Beck, Dave
Bell, Daniel
Bell & Howell
Benson, Ezra Taft
Berlin crisis
Bernbach, Bill
Bible, Revised Standard Edition of
Birch, John;
see also
John Birch Society
Birmingham News
Birth of a Nation, The
(film)
Bishop, Joey
Black Muslims,
see
Nation of Islam
Blackwell, Mort
Bliss, Raymond
Blue Book, The
Boeing Aircraft Company
Boggs, Hale
Bolshoi Ballet
Bookbinder, Hyman
Borg-Warner Corporation
Bork, Robert
Boston public schools
Boston Strangler
Boulware, Lemuel
Boutwell, Albert
Bowles, Chester
Boy Scouts of America
Boysen, Rudolph
Bozell, L. Brent
Bozell, Patricia Buckley
Braden, Spruille
Bradlee, Ben
Bradley, Harry Lynd
Bradley Foundation
Brandt, Willy
Braque, Georges
Brave New World
(Huxley)
Brennan, Walter
Bretton Woods Conference
Brewster, Daniel B.
Brewster, Owen
Bricker, John
Bricker Amendment
Bridge at Andau
(Michener)
Bridges, Delores
Bridges, Harry
Bridges, Styles
Brinkley, David

Other books

The Darcys of Pemberley by Shannon Winslow
Thursday's Child by Teri White
Impulse Control by Amanda Usen
The Hilltop by Assaf Gavron
The Long Day of Revenge by D. P. Adamov
The Curfew by Jesse Ball
Guano by Louis Carmain