05029cam a2200445 a 450000100090000000300060000900500170001500800410003202000150007302000180008803500380010604001310014404300120027505000240028708200190031110000240033024500620035425000180041626400500043426400110048430000580049533600260055333700280057933800270060750000510063450000190068550509510070452005670165552009260222252006400314852004080378860000240419665000460422065000160426665000430428265000350432565100540436065500410441477601280445529877014OCoLC20181218095318.0940203t19941994nyua 001 0aeng  a0060177586 a9780060177584 a(OCoLC)29877014z(OCoLC)731142660 aDLCbengcDLCdBAKERdNLGGCdBTCTAdYDXCPdOCLCGdOTPdOKNdOCLCQdMWDdINHARdTXBXLdOCLCQdOCLCFdOCLCOdOCLCQdOCLdUtOrBLW an-us---00aE840.8.Q28bA3 199400a973.9220bQ2S1 aQuayle, Dan,d1947-10aStanding firm :ba vice-presidential memoir /cDan Quayle aFirst edition 1aNew York :bHarperCollins Publishers,c[1994] 4c©1994 axiv, 402 pages :billustrations (some color) ;c24 cm atextbtxt2rdacontent aunmediatedbn2rdamedia avolumebnc2rdacarrier a"Appendix: Selected speeches": pages [367]-387 aIncludes index0 aWinning and losing (1988): Pushing through the plaza ; The short list ; Feeding frenzy ; The battle of Huntington ; Being "handled" ; "You're no Jack Kennedy" ; Winning and losing ; Transition -- The Quayle model (1989): Setting up shop ; President George Bush ; Face time ; Thurs., 12:00 noon, lunch with pres. ; The man who wasn't there ; Meeting the media ; Flaps, gaffes-and serious diplomacy ; Saving Aquino ; Nailing Noriega -- Beyond the Cold War (1990): Latin America : an inagural quartet ; The former Soviet Union ; Rockets and red tape ; The pre-plummet summit ; A line in the sand -- Daring and drift (1991): Desert Storm diary : part one ; Desert Storm diary : part wo ; Domestic drift ; A heartbeat away ; A high-tech lyching? ; Too many laws ; Too many lawyers -- Losing and winning (1992): Trouble on the Right ; Clinton and Perot ; Murphy and me ; Baked, mashed, and fried ; Dump Quayle ; How to lose and election ; Keeping faith aStanding Firm leaves no doubt that Dan Quayle is the most misjudged figure in modern political history. Prior to 1988, Quayle had never lost an election. Not for Congress. Not even for the Senate. Heading into that year's Republican Convention, Quayle was considered one of the party's brightest young stars - a man of unusual political instincts who, when it came to campaigning, had a reputation as a giant killer. He would become the first in his generation to hold national office, but only after a tumultuous contest that frequently put him on the defensive8 aWith gritty honesty and admirable self-deprecation, Quayle describes what it was like to weather that 1988 media storm, and the other squalls that followed. Poignantly, he also talks of the self-confidence and Christian faith that gave him the courage to stand firm and record some of the most noteworthy contributions of any Vice President ever. Among the high points: his coordination of America's response to a coup attempt in the Philippines, the details of which have never been reported; his bringing the family-values issue to the fore with the Murphy Brown speech - a call for action that, one year later, would even draw support from Democratic President Bill Clinton; his use of the White House Competitiveness Council to curtail harmful "overregulation"; his unreported diplomacy with Latin American leaders; and his championing of legal reform, which would earn him the strongest praise of his vice-presidency8 aQuayle pulls no punches when it comes to assessing himself and other players in the Bush administration - the men and women who were his allies, and sometimes his opponents, in helping George Bush spread democracy around the world. He shares entries from his diary of the Persian Gulf crisis, offers a surprising snapshot of what the typical Bush cabinet meeting was like, describes intramural battles waged by White House power brokers, and reveals his special relationship with the President. Quayle, a former journalist, interviewed several members of the press for this book, and their contributions form a vital part of its fabric8 aStanding Firm is perhaps most intriguing in its analysis of what went wrong in the 1992 election. Quayle does not hesitate to place blame where it is deserved - in fact, he reserves some of the strongest criticism for himself. Throughout, the portrait that emerges of the former Vice President is that of a man whose good humor is exceeded only by a competence for which he has never been fully credited10aQuayle, Dan,d1947- 0aVice-PresidentszUnited StatesvBiography 4aQUAYLE, DAN14aUnited StatesxPolitics and government 4aVice-PresidentszUnited States 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1989-1993 7aBiography.2fast0(OCoLC)fst0142368608iOnline version:aQuayle, Dan, 1947-tStanding firm.b1st ed.dNew York : HarperCollins Publishers, ©1994w(OCoLC)624074833