- Emmet John Hughes
Emmett John Hughes (
December 26 ,1920 inNewark, New Jersey -September 18 ,1982 ) was aforeign bureau chief for and article editor forTime-Life and an aide andspeechwriter forU.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower . His is most known for his 1962 memoir "The Ordeal of Power ", a scathing review that questioned Eisenhower's political smarts and depicted Eisenhower as ill-suited for theWhite House .Throughout his life, Hughes was a devout
Catholic .After serving in the
U.S. Army from 1942 to 1946, Hughes first worked as a press attaché at the United States Embassy inSpain . He thereafter was the bureau chief inRome forTime-Life International in 1947 then inBerlin in 1948. The following year he transferred toNew York where he was the editor forLife magazine (1949-1953), the special European correspondent (1953-1956), the editor ofFortune magazine (1956-1957), and the chief foreign correspondent (1957-1960).He was later a
Newsweek columnist and editorial consultant (1963-1968).During the Eisenhower administration, Hughes was an aide to and
speechwriter for the president. Hughes wrote Eisenhower's "I shall go to Korea" speech, which helped solidify the 1952 election. Hughes then accompanied the president-elect on the promised trip toKorea .After criticizing the Eisenhower administration in the late 1950s, Hughes published "The Ordeal of Power". This break with Eisenhower led Hughes to begin a new relationship as the political advisor for the
Rockefeller family , and worked as a political advisor and speechwriter for GovernorNelson Rockefeller during his unsuccessful presidential bid in 1968.In 1969, he was asked to give the first
John Courtney Murray Lecture sponsored byAmerica magazine .From 1970 until his death, Hughes served as professor of political science at the
Eagleton Institute of Politics atRutgers University .Hughes graduated
summa cum laude fromPrinceton University in 1941. He was a member ofPhi Beta Kappa . His first year of graduate studies atColumbia University was cut short byWorld War II .Hughes had a son (John) with his first wife Mariefrances Pfeiffer, two daughters (Mary Larkin and Kathleen Freeman) with Eileen Lanouette, and two more daughters (Caitlin and Johanna) with Katherine Nouri. Hughes died in his home in
Princeton, New Jersey . [Fowler, Glenn. [http://select.nytimes.com/search/restricted/article?res=FA0D11FD3B5C0C738EDDA00894DA484D81 "EMMET HUGHES, 61, JOURNALIST; SPEECHWRITER FOR EISENHOWER"] , "The New York Times ,September 20 ,1982 . AccessedDecember 18 ,2007 .]Books written by Hughes
*"
America The Vincible " (1959)
*"Report from Spain " (1947)
*"The Ordeal of Power : A Political Memoir of the Eisenhower Years" (1963)
*"The Living Presidency : The Resources and Dilemmas of American Presidential Office" (1973)Quotes
*"As an intellectual, he bestowed upon the games of golf and bridge all the enthusiasm and perseverance that he withheld from his books and ideas." - Hughes on Eisenhower
References
External links
* [http://members.aol.com/rb3/ike.html excerpt from Eisenhower's speech "The Chance for Peace] - co-written by Hughes, April 1953
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