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  • 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
  • /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
  • 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