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  • imagine he did. You know, I can't remember the occasion, but I remember at one of our staff meetings he was late and Walter was presiding, and then he came in and whatever we were talking about, he announced that John Foster Dulles had returned
  • as to Senator George's position at the time. If he took a position, he would not have lobbied anybody, because at this particular time he was chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and most of his time was spent on trying to keep Secretary John
  • , even after Today the press writings to take over various John F. Kennedy was the greatest Oswald was a .Marxist who took great iey the communist conspiracy from within. the cause of freedom. There has been no doubt in that where
  • and these Texas congressmen? W: I remember the one about [John Nance] Garner very well. When Garner was trying to move in on the Texas congressional delegation's patronage, Johnson gave me a story about it and I wrote it. Garner's plot. for a while. It sort
  • , as everyone knows, has reached into the Senate for its Vice-Presidential nominees in the two most recent elections-picking Truman in 1944 and Alben W. Barkley in 1948-and the Republicans nominated Senator John W. Bricker of Ohio in 1944 to run with Gov­ ernor
  • they're tired of sitting there. So several state banners joined when he was placed in nomination; they danced up and down and hurrahed and what have you, a respectable one. G: How was the decision made to have John Connally give the nominating speech
  • policies were fairly well followed. Eisenhower's main lightning rod I always thought was John Foster Dulles. That was one of the master strokes of the whole Eisenhower Administration. always walking up to the brink. You know, Dulles was I think
  • studies that the President commissioned on this to look at it at various times through 1965-1966, came primarily with the so-called Pastore resolution. M: Senator [John O.] Pastore [D-R.I.]? F: Yes, which was a Senate resolution that was passed eighty
  • . Davidson, at Large, Secretary 2. Colonel General 3. Miss Nanc;y Clark, 4. Miss Elizabet~ S. Warrant Special Assistant to the Delegation Andrew B. Anderson, Goodpaster Officer Secretary Ghisu, James 6.. John D. Negroponte, 7 .' Daniel A. O
  • , especially now, requires the most careful deliberation. We are taking the liberty of sending and the Vice-President elect. copies of this letter to the President The Honorable Dean Rusk 2 Sincerely yours, Joseph P. Addabbo John B. Anderson Thomas
  • ? was. I think it He got George to make a speech, and George was highly respected by both Democrats and Republ icans. It was a fake issue of course, really, but feelings ran high and it didn't seem a fake at the time. That was true also of the Bricker
  • and saying, "Support the Bricker Amendment," and "Impeach Earl Warren," day after day. You did get to work on more important things, national-level things~ G: rather than constituent mail and that sort of stuff. The first time around when you were