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  • . Throughout my travels in the South 1 have been thinking of some words spoken by President Franklin Roosevelt. He told us, ''The only limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubt of today. Let us move forward with strong and active faith. :" I have
  • and for a while an indifferent senator, although-- " C: He became an interested senator later on. F: Well, from the days that Joseph Kennedy first kind of emerged under Franklin Roosevelt, the Kennedys were always newsworthy because, if nothing else
  • ; and it stimulated economic g rowth as well. It symbolizes, too, the par tnership between local, State and Federal governments, between private organizations and public action. This is what took Charleston out of the dark days of the depression. President Roosevelt
  • will take the advice of ~­ every man I have talked to •• ; I asked Acheson about it and he just blew up; He just said, "My God, of course not." And he's been Secretary of State during all the Korean thing and all the troubles with Roosevelt and TrUillan
  • . So the smart bosses together with the left-over Democratic Roosevelt Liberals are again about to combine to ditch Truman and draft Eisenhower. They take it tor granted that no man drafted as Presidential nominee can turn it down. Therefore Truman's
  • that politics should ent~r into this ••• American policy in Asia, and our international question. Go back and remember the old agreement that was made under Roosevelt and Vandenberg and all those fellows in which there was complete unanimity of the par 4' when
  • Street and its allies in burying forever the New Deal•s economic policies started in 1932 by Roosevelt. This bleak prospect probably means the full indignation of the average American citizen will reach its economic peak about 1950 with world affairs