Pulitzer prize-winning columnist, Nixon speechwriter Safire dies at 79
Safire, who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1978 for his Times articles, joined Nixon's inner circle after steering the then-vice president into a heated exchange with Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev that became known as the "kitchen debate."
The impromptu argument between the leaders about the merits of their countries' economic systems, took place in a model kitchen in 1959 Moscow.
Safire, a public relations man at the time, even took an iconic photograph of the encounter.
Nixon, who in August 1974 resigned the US presidency over the Watergate scandal, hired Safire to work as a speech writer during a first, losing bid for the White House in 1960, and again in 1968, upon winning the US presidency.
Safire also was a celebrated lexicographer who tracked the usage of the written and spoken American language.
Perhaps most famously in his beloved cannon of alliterative phrases, the conservative Safire lobbed biting wit at adversaries, such as the timeless "nattering nabobs of negativism," and "hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history."
Born in New York in December 1929, Safire worked at the Times from 1973 to 2005.


