On November 17, 1973 the Associated Press Managing Editors
were holding their annual meeting. This annual conference just so happened to
be taking place at Walt Disney World, more specifically at the spectacular
Contemporary Resort. Then President Richard Nixon, embroiled in scandal from
taping recordings to personal finances, addressed the group and opened up for
questions on these and a myriad of other topics in front of the editors and on
broadcast television.
It was during these questions when Nixon uttered the now
immortal words, “I am not a crook.” As a reporter prepared to ask a question, President
Nixon felt compelled to continue his response to the previous question. The longer
version of the quote included a bit more information, but is not as easy to
remember as those five simple words, “Let me just say this,
and I want to say this to the television audience: I made my mistakes, but in
all of my years of public life, I have never profited, never profited from
public service. I have earned every cent. And in all of my years of public
life, I have never obstructed justice. And I think, too, that I could say that
in my years of public life that I welcome this kind of examination, because
people have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I am
not a crook. I have earned everything I have got.”
Of course, it would be less than a year after that fateful
night when Nixon would resign the presidency.
During the event, Walt Disney World snapped this picture of
Ted Natt from the Longview, Washing News awaiting to ask Nixon a question that
may or may not have been interrupted as Nixon continued with a response that
would go down in infamy. Either way, there is a lot of history in this one
small glimpse into that night, a night that happened to take place in the
ballroom of the Contemporary Resort.
2 comments:
Ooo...Washington Post, home of Woodward & Bernstein, gets sold...makes you think of Nixon making those fateful remarks in the Contemporary...nice. For some people, every event can be tied in some way to Pearl Harbor or Kennedy or Apollo 11 or Spetember 11. For Disney people, EVERYTHING goes back to Disney somehow. =)
Jon, the funny thing is I've been away for two weeks and had this article ready to go before the Washington Post was sold. I love the coincidence though!
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