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  • . That never came through. He was not quite Tom Dewey on the wedding cake, but he was the elocution student, really, on camera; he didn't sound natural. And I've seen him take a group of businessmen and others and charm them right out of the trees
  • ntl p11611•htr,111011 iau~ frltnd of Publlaha- Walker for many Junction and the Crand ,·allty. )'ttn, 1ut1 • , ..ii,.,. thla ls llr. nrle1'• flM ,·11 l to Grand James A.Farley Sees Truman, Dewey Asl TopMen;VisitsWalterWalkerHere I• 0,.,.d
  • voter has ever experienced. The surprise won't be in the outconie of the balloting, as it was when liarry Truman, beat Gov. Dewey in '48. The surprise may be that 2i hours, possibly a week after the Presidential polls have closed, possibly months later
  • or whatever--negotiations; from the Federal Reserve Board it was either [William McChesney] Bill Martin or Dewey Dane; and two or three other people--Ed Fried, myself, and Fred [Frederick L.] Deming [Under Secretary of Treasury for Monetary Affairs] and Winn
  • on Johnson City boyhood home; astronauts and wives to Paris Air Show; to State Department reception; astronaut wives borrow clothing from Lady Bird and Lynda Johnson; dinner with Governor Tom Dewey
  • for Monetary Affairs; [J.] Dewey Daane, one of the Governors of the Federal Reserve System; myself; and the White House staff man on these matters, who was originally Francis Bator, now teaching at Harvard, and then he was replaced by one of my deputies, Ed
  • for Eisenhower in 1952 and had previously worked for Dewey on three of his campaigns, and also as research assistant for John Foster Dulles. pretty solidly Republican background. many years. So it was a However, it did go back a good I've retained my
  • behind or ahead he was either. D: Exactly. None of us did. I remember coming home to vote, and being at my desk at the office and getting a story from the AP about the cabinet that Dewey had already picked. and about four we're in." 0' And I stayed
  • than Dewey to support an independent State of Israel, they voted for Truman in 1948. They preferred Stevenson to Eisenhower, though by a smaller margin. - 3 - 2. 1968 As Compared With The Previous Two Elections Goldwater, regardless of any elements
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh Knott -- I :..- 4 those days, we had a Republican Congress about 1952 or so. So he was out of the chair, and his ranking Republican friend from Missouri, Mr. [Dewey] Short, was chairman for a while. And you never really saw much
  • use. M: At least he couldn't accuse you of surprising him. H: Well, Dewey Short [R. Mo.] I remember was one fellow that we always kept around so that--he was always in opposition, but the trouble was he pulled his fangs Some in opposition; and I'm
  • , Dewey Daane of the Fed;-Tony Solomon .of State, and I were the other four members . It was a group of five . We met regularly, a primarily principals-only kind of session in Deming's office, not the big staff meeting type arrangement . It got
  • remember very well; he was the head of the Urban League at that time. He stayed with me in my house. And there were senators; I think one of them was [Dewey] Bartlett from Oklahoma, and I think [Edmund] Muskie from Maine; about twenty of the most
  • in the earl7 ballots to deadlock the Convention, Dewey's chances will naturall7 improve. 'L -2- Jt"s for the Court, what 7011 88¥, of course, is true. It is all the more Unfortunate that it ehould be true at a time when Dou,;las, Black and htledge
  • was from Weatherford L: You know Jo Harris then. F: Yes. L: Dr. Harris' daughter. F: Oh, yes. L: The one in Fort Worth, I can't think of her name. F: Frances. L: Frances and Jo. F: Yes. L: Married Dewey Bradford here. F: Right. L: I
  • is the development of the concept of militancy itself which is extant among w h i t e , middle-class college kids and upper-class kids, which is probably a function of our affluence, result of the educational theories of Dewey and the psychological ones of Freud