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  • it?" I said, "Not anything." He said, "Well, let's get started tomorrow," which we did. And it was a very important evening in I ~y life. After we had discussed my future, I inquired as to his. He said, "I'm going to stay in public life." I said
  • waited out there was probably around four-thirty, and as the plane took off I was astonished to see smoke rising from the city of Washington. I inquired of the stewardess what it was. She spoke to the pilot, and the pilot was informed through
  • with an inquiring mind--one of the main burdens of Khanh's argument was the reason, the justification, the apo7ogia pro vita sua for having the coup was because the four generals were about to betray everything to the French. Lodge approached that, I think
  • judgments, because not everybody is necessarily commanding the best platoon, and people of a more inquiring mind might even admit logically of the possibility of luck of the draw. You get good troops, good replacements out of the repple-depple or bad
  • the country and he didn't want them dressed up looking like good, prosperous Americans. G: Here these military personnel in civilian clothes? W: I don't know, I don't know if they were military or civilian. never inquired into his business that much. I