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    Use "butterfield’s" in a sentence

    butterfield’s example sentences

    butterfield’s


    1. Butterfield’s report noted that Hersh was a former press secretary to Eugene McCarthy, the antiwar senator, and that Hersh had “received a $1,000 grant to pursue development of the My Lai story


    2. Butterfield’s focus was now exclusively on the president, though Haldeman clearly remained the top Nixon aide


    3. In late 1970, Butterfield’s wife, Charlotte, and their daughter, Susan, were in a serious automobile accident


    4. They should bring their designated guest or couple to the Green Room (the smaller of the reception rooms where Nixon regularly stationed himself) and catch Butterfield’s eye while keeping the conversation going with the guest and smoothly maneuvering to within 10 feet of the president


    5. According to Butterfield’s notes on yellow legal paper, the president said:


    6. At the bottom of Butterfield’s memo with his blue felt pen, Haldeman said he wanted “immediate notification in the future—even if unconfirmed—and no notice to others until we decide on a procedure


    7.  I did not find a copy of this two-page memo in Butterfield’s files, but it was declassified in 2007


    8. For example, there is a picture of an elegant, intimate, black-tie eight-person dinner party hanging on a wall in Butterfield’s La Jolla penthouse condo


    9. “Bob tells me you really want to leave,” the president said to Butterfield a short time later after coming into Butterfield’s office and taking a seat near his desk


    10. Because of Butterfield’s Air Force and vast piloting experience, Ehrlichman suggested that Butterfield become the head of the Federal Aviation Administration

    11. In January 1973 I drove to Butterfield’s house in Virginia with no appointment hoping he would be there and I could interview him


    12. I had for a long time thought that one of Butterfield’s motives was payback to Nixon, though he downplayed it


    13. ” The look on Butterfield’s face was both consternation and relief


    14. As Moore veered further and further from any question, Butterfield’s mind drifted and his eyelids drooped as Pitts snipped and chatted away


    15. What about Howard Baker? What about Butterfield’s schedule? He told Hamilton he would not appear


    16. As he took the plane through 16,000 feet, his copilot took over, apparently aware of and sympathetic to Butterfield’s distraction and momentary inattention


    17. Al Haig, who had taken over as Nixon’s chief of staff just two months earlier, said in his overlooked 1992 memoir, Inner Circles, that he knew some tapes were made in the Nixon White House but Butterfield’s testimony came as an unimaginable surprise


    18. “I had no foreknowledge of Butterfield’s appearance, let alone the nature of his testimony


    19. Butterfield’s essential point in his testimony was that though he had no personal knowledge of the Watergate cover-up and other abuses and crimes, he did know how the White House worked


    20. Claude Brinegar, the secretary of transportation and Butterfield’s nominal boss, was not pleased when Butterfield had been selected to run his department’s largest organization

    21. Throughout Butterfield’s tenure the two had been at each other’s throat


    22. I have quoted throughout the book from Butterfield’s book proposal and his unpublished book draft, bearing the working title “Fellow Countrymen


    23. According to Butterfield’s notes: Handwritten notes of Alexander Butterfield, undated


    24. Butterfield sat erect, looking hesitant: Video of the first minute and 48 seconds of Butterfield’s July 16, 1973, testimony can be viewed on YouTube courtesy of the Newseum at https://www


    25. During his testimony he was asked: The full text of Butterfield’s testimony is available at The Internet Archive, “Presidential Campaign Activities of 1972, Senate Resolution 60, Watergate and Related Activities,” http://www


    26. A year after he disclosed: The full text of Butterfield’s July 2, 1974, testimony before the Judiciary Committee is available at http://Watergate


    27. 3: Butterfield’s handwritten notes from November 27, 1969, Nixon’s instruction on how to counter the public fallout from the My Lai incident


    28. 7: Butterfield’s January 16, 1970, memo to Nixon advising him of the “Sanitization of the EOB”—the removal of photographs of President John F


    29. 13: Butterfield’s undated handwritten notes on his yellow legal pad regarding Nixon’s concerns about Kissinger’s behavior


    30. 21: Butterfield’s May 16, 1972, memo of when and how he notified Haldeman that George Wallace had been shot, marked with Haldeman’s comments

    31. 31: Butterfield’s November 10, 1972, response to Haldeman, detailing his fears of being “typed” and desire to leave the White House in favor of becoming secretary of the Air Force or the Navy


    32. [At the bottom in Butterfield’s handwriting] “Being taken care of”


    33. clearing out of Butterfield’s office and, 143


    34. White House on Butterfield’s testimony regarding, 162–63, 166, 173–74


    35. White House on Butterfield’s testimony, 162–63, 166, 173–74


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