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  • didn't strike. And they liked each other, despite the arguments they had over the war. I mean I remember sometime later, Mark Hatfield--it was either Mark Hatfield or Clifford Case--came out against the war, and the President in one of those sort
  • chimed in: Albert Gore, Gaylord Nelson, Church and I, of course, and Mark Hatfield from the Republican side, this young senator from New York--I can't think of his name right now. His son is the football commissioner. No, the baseball commissioner
  • Oral history transcript, George McGovern, interview 2 (II), 2/3/2011, by Mark Updegrove
  • on television with Murray Chotiner and Mark Hatfield and young Ted Kennedy . Chotiner really gave it to me for saying it was an unpledged delegation when, as a matter of fact, I was really for Jack Kennedy . All of us on the delegation when we put it together
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Cochrane -- I -- 12 The other thing is, we got a call--he got a call from Senator [Mark O.] Hatfield, who was on the other--he was one of the proponents of cutting back on that war. The senator was away, so I caught the call
  • : It was just excellent. For instance, at a governors conference, I think in 1965, we passed a resolution to endorse his sending of one hundred and sixty-thousand more troops to Vietnam. I think there was only one abstention, and that was Governor Mark
  • the President . As a matter of fact, there were really only two governors that really fought him . One was Hatfield of Oregon, and the other was Romney and Romney would always, in the end, go along rather reluctantly-F: Sort of hedge . B : Sort of hedge