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  • conservative stance in his votes on domestic issues. He was always an internationalist and he strongly supported the foreign policy of Harry Truman. But I observed after the war his changing position on domestic issues. This was in keeping with his
  • on the train and rode through North Dakota with Harry Truman and openly endorsed him. Yes, he was a maverick. He was a maverick, of the old--what's that league?--Non-Partisan League out there, really a farm bloc. That's what it amounted to. He was another
  • and the Medicare bill; Kerr's involvement in hiring an assistant for Jim Webb of NASA; the Bricker Amendment; Harry Byrd's work on the Finance Committee; Kerr's meeting with the head of DuPont, Crawford Greenewalt; Kerr's opinions on Social Security and Medicare
  • ? Why? C: Well, because I have found something, and I think this was true of Lyndon just as it was true of Mr. Roosevelt, as it was true of Mr. Truman, with whom I also had my problems. I think, in a certain sense, a president gets into his mind