Chapter 33
p. 266: "Not you nor anybody else": Quoted in Cohen and Taylor, 260.
Chapter 8: Election
pp. 267-68: VP candidates: Sorensen to JFK and RFK, June 29, 1960, Box 21, Theodore Sorensen Papers, JFKL. Sorensen, 184.
p. 268: Past problems with liberals: O'Donnell and Powers, 189.
p. 268: "No, absolutely not": Edward Morgan OH.
p. 268: "There was no respect": Quoted in Collier and Horowitz, 304.
p. 268: Civil rights plank: Schlesinger, A Thousand Days, A Thousand Days, 34. 34.
p. 268: King and NAACP: G. Mennen Williams to JFK, June 25, 1960, Box 536; JFK speech to NAACP, July 10, 1960, Box 1027, PPP.
p. 269: Symington: Clark Clifford OH; John Seigenthaler OH; Sorensen, 186; Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, 206-7; Cohen and Taylor, 260. Sorensen to JFK and RFK, June 29, 1960, Box 21, Sorensen Papers. 206-7; Cohen and Taylor, 260. Sorensen to JFK and RFK, June 29, 1960, Box 21, Sorensen Papers.
p. 269: RFK and LBJ: Dallek, Lone Star Rising, Lone Star Rising, 490, 559. 490, 559.
p. 269: "the Democratic party owes": Quoted in ibid., 540-41.
p. 270: "immediately agreed": Quoted in White, Making, 1964, Making, 1964, 407-9. 407-9.
p. 270: "he supposed the same": Quoted in Dallek, Lone Star Rising, Lone Star Rising, 574. 574.
p. 270: "I wouldn't want to trade" and "Stop kidding": Quoted in ibid., 574-75.
p. 271: LBJ's interest in becoming VP: ibid., 574-78.
p. 271: "LBJ now means": Quoted in Wofford, 54.
pp. 271-72: "If you are sure," "This is the worst mistake," and "so upset": Quoted in O'Donnell and Powers, 190-92.
p. 272: "was very distressed": Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, 208-9. 208-9.
pp. 272-74: Jack and Bobby and other details of Johnson's nomination: Dallek, Lone Star Rising, Lone Star Rising, 579-82. 579-82.
p. 274: "I turned on television": Earl Mazo OH, Columbia University.
p. 274: "bland, vapid": Quoted in Leuchtenburg, A Troubled Feast, A Troubled Feast, 111. 111.
p. 274: The Podh.o.r.etz and Macdonald quotes are in Alan Ehrenhalt, "Are We as Happy as We Think?" New York Times, New York Times, May 7, 2000. May 7, 2000.
p. 274: "With the supermarket": Quoted in Leuchtenburg, A Troubled Feast, A Troubled Feast, 113. 113.
pp. 274-76: JFK Acceptance Speech, July 15, 1960, Box 1027, PPP. And see Sorensen, 187-89.
p. 276: Initial polls: Political a.n.a.lysis a.s.socs., Princeton, N.J., July 16-17, 1960, Box 27, POF.
pp. 276-77: "s.h.i.+ning summer Sat.u.r.day": Schlesinger, A Thousand Days, A Thousand Days, 62. 62.
p. 277: "Had never seen": Ibid., 63.
p. 277: Meetings: Sorensen, 192-93.
p. 277: "run and fight": Quoted in Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, 211-13. 211-13.
p. 277: "Gentlemen," "absolutely strong," "Little Brother": Ibid.
p. 277: "Black Prince": Quoted in Parmet, JFK, JFK, 34. 34.
p. 277: "Little Boy Blue" and "that little s.h.i.+t": Mazo OH.
p. 277: "I'm not running": Quoted in Schlesinger, Robert Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, 213. 213.
pp. 277-78: "This was a politician": Memo, June 13, 1960, Box 17, Henry Brandon Papers, LC.
p. 278: Meeting with Stevenson: Parmet, JFK, JFK, 34-35; Schlesinger, 34-35; Schlesinger, A Thousand Days, A Thousand Days, 64. 64.
p. 278: Meeting with HST: O'Donnell and Powers, 202. Also see JFK to Clark Clifford, July 29, 1960, Box 29, POF.
p. 278: "I never liked": Abraham Ribicoff OH, Columbia University.
p. 278: JFK and Eleanor Roosevelt (ER): ER to JFK, Aug. 16, 1960, "the distinct feeling": ER to Mary Lasker, Aug. 15, 1960, Box 32, POF.
p. 279: "interest and concentration": Quoted in Parmet, JFK, JFK, 35. 35.
p. 279: "Organization has an important": Arthur Schlesinger to JFK, Aug. 26, 1960, Box 32, POF.
p. 279: "who hardly qualifies": AS to JFK, Aug. 30, 1960, ibid.
p. 279: "I don't mind": JFK to Schlesinger, Sept. 2, 1960, ibid.
p. 279: Speech to the Liberal party: JFK, Sept. 14, 1960, Box 911, PPP.
pp. 279-80: On the Republican convention, see White, Making, 1960, Making, 1960, chap. 7. The polls: Gallup, 1680-82. chap. 7. The polls: Gallup, 1680-82.
p. 280: Nixon's advantage and "'What are you doing?'": White, Making, 1960, Making, 1960, 249-51. 249-51.
p. 280: "Counterattack Sourcebook:" Milton Gwertzman to Mike Feldman and Sorensen, Aug. 10, 1960, Box 991, PPP.
p. 280: "Senator Kennedy is": "Counterattack Sourcebook."
p. 281: "religion in the rural corn belt": John K. Galbraith to JFK, Aug. 25, 1960, Box 993, PPP.
p. 281: "the Catholic
p. 281: FBI memos: DeLoach to Tolson, June 1, 1959; SAC, New Orleans, to Director, Mar. 23, 1960; and Memorandum, May 27, 1960, MF, Folder 13, Reel 1, O&C File, J. Edgar Hoover, FBI Papers.
p. 281: "to sit down with": Adlai Stevenson to Henry Van Dusen, Sept. 13, 1960, Box P 23, Arthur Schlesinger Jr. Papers, JFKL.
p. 282: "a pioneer of": Harold Evans, "Press Baron's Progress," review of The Chief: The Life of William Randolph Hearst The Chief: The Life of William Randolph Hearst by David Nasaw (Boston, 2000) in by David Nasaw (Boston, 2000) in New York Times Book Review, New York Times Book Review, July 2, 2000. July 2, 2000.
p. 282: Nixon's womanizing: Richard Bolling OH, Columbia University. Larry O'Brien unconvincingly claims that JFK had no womanizing problem; he says he was "totally unaware" of any "personal indiscretions" on JFK's part: Lawrence O'Brien OH, Columbia University.
p. 282: National Conference of Citizens for Religious Freedom: New York Times, New York Times, Sept. 8, 1960. Also see Sorensen, 212-14. Sept. 8, 1960. Also see Sorensen, 212-14.
p. 283: Community Relations division: James Wine OH; and Box 1015, PPP. Also see Sorensen, 198-99; Parmet, JFK, JFK, 40-41. 40-41.
p. 283: Opposition to speaking and the quotes "They're mostly" and "I'm getting tired": O'Donnell and Powers, 205-8.
p. 283: Cogley: John Cogley OH.
p. 283: Kennedy went before the audience: Sept. 12, 1960; Box 1061, PPP.
p. 284: The response to him and "By G.o.d": O'Donnell and Powers, 209-10.
p. 284: Agreement to debate: Ambrose, Nixon, Nixon, 558-59. 558-59.
p. 285: JFK's preparation: White, Making, 1960, Making, 1960, 283-85. 283-85.
p. 285: Transcript of the first debate: Box 912, PPP.
p. 285: "That son of a b.i.t.c.h": Quoted in Matthews, 155.
p. 285: "calm and nerveless": White, Making, 1960, Making, 1960, 288-90. 288-90.
p. 286: "My G.o.d!": quoted in Summers, 208.
p. 286: Bored or amused: O'Donnell and Powers, 212-13.
p. 286: "put a stern expression": Ibid., 213.
p. 286: Polls: Gallup, 1685-87.
p. 286: Enthusiasm for JFK: Sorensen, 227-28; O'Donnell and Powers, 213-14.
p. 286 n.: Attempts to steal records: Dr. Janet Travell OH; Parmet, JFK, JFK, 120-21, which expands on the information in Travell's OH. According to Safire: William Safire, "Kennedy Agonistes," 120-21, which expands on the information in Travell's OH. According to Safire: William Safire, "Kennedy Agonistes," New York Times, New York Times, Nov. 18, 2002. Refutations of the allegation: John Gizzi, "Historian Dallek Maligned Nixon's 1960 Campaign," Nov. 18, 2002. Refutations of the allegation: John Gizzi, "Historian Dallek Maligned Nixon's 1960 Campaign," Human Events, Human Events, Jan. 6, 2003; John Taylor, "Dallek: Historian or Gumshoe?" Jan. 7, 2003, History News Network. "Dirty tricks": Ehrlichman, 30. Jan. 6, 2003; John Taylor, "Dallek: Historian or Gumshoe?" Jan. 7, 2003, History News Network. "Dirty tricks": Ehrlichman, 30.
p. 287: "No matter how many": JBM, "Memo on Nixon," Sept. 30, 1960, John Bartlow Martin Papers, LC.
p. 287: "the large body": "Campaign Reflections," n.d., Box 535, PPP.
p. 287: "a nearly exhaustive": Nixon quotes and inconsistencies, n.d., Box 1024, PPP.
p. 287: "d.i.c.k Nixon stands": Quoted in O'Donnell and Powers, 217.
p. 287: "reigned rather than ruled," and "If you give me a week": Stephen Ambrose, "How Clinton Is Like Ike," New York Times, New York Times, June 19, 2000. Ambrose believes Ike's remarks may have cost Nixon the election. June 19, 2000. Ambrose believes Ike's remarks may have cost Nixon the election.
p. 287: "acting like": Quoted in Ambrose, Nixon, Nixon, 564. 564.
p. 287: no well-developed economic program: Walter W. h.e.l.ler, Memo, Oct. 4, 1960, Box 4, Walter W. h.e.l.ler Papers, JFKL; Walter h.e.l.ler and Paul Samuelson, Council of Economic Advisers OH. "The Issues in 1960," Oct. 31, 1960, Box 992, PPP; and memos on the economy in Box 75, John B. Martin Papers.
p. 288: "I... think it would become": Quoted in Sorensen, 209.
p. 288: "Foreign policy for the first time": JFK to Dean Acheson, Aug. 1, 1960, Box 27, POF.
p. 288: 1958 Foreign Affairs Foreign Affairs article: article: Foreign Affairs, Foreign Affairs, Oct. 1958. Oct. 1958.
p. 288: "the overwhelming majority": Gallup, 1676.
p. 288: U.S. prestige: Ibid., 1691. To bolster morale at home and prestige abroad and to discourage a possible Soviet first strike, the U.S. government in 1958-59 considered detonating a nuclear weapon on the moon "as a show of military and technical strength." The physicist in charge of the project said later that it was "a way to bolster national confidence." There was no clear scientific or military gain expected from the explosion. "It was a PR device, without question, in the minds of the people from the Air Force," the physicist said. Believing that "there were other ways to impress the public that we were not about to be overwhelmed by the Russians" than by "ruining the pristine environment of the moon," the planners sc.r.a.pped the idea. See "U.S. Planned Nuclear Blast on the Moon, Physicist Says," New York Times, New York Times, May 16, 2000. May 16, 2000.
p. 288: "our own offensive and defensive": JFK, "U.S. Military and Diplomatic Policies-Preparing for the Gap," Aug. 14, 1958, CR, CR, 85th Congress, 2nd Session. 85th Congress, 2nd Session.
p. 289: Statements and speeches over the next two years: "Can Democracy Meet the s.p.a.ce Age Challenge?" CBS TV Symposium, Mar. 22, 1959, Box 568, PPP; "A Time for Decision," June 14, 1960, JFK, Compilation of Speeches, JFKL; JFK at Women's Democratic Luncheon, Sept. 14, 1960; and "Eight Years of Defense Programs and Budgets," Sept. 1960, Box 1028, PPP.
p. 289: "J.F.K. has made the point": J. K. Galbraith to Louis Harris, Sept. 27, 1960, Box 74, John K. Galbraith Papers, JFKL.
p. 289: Higher marks: Gallup, 1683.
p. 289: The Gaither report: Ambrose, Eisenhower, Eisenhower, 434-35. 434-35.
p. 289: DDE knowledge and briefings: Beschloss, Crisis Years, Crisis Years, 25-26; DDE to JFK, Aug. 19, 1960, Box 29, POF, and Earle G. Wheeler OH. Also see James P. Warburg to JFK, Sept. 21, 1960; JFK to Warburg, Oct. 18, 1960, James P. Warburg Papers, JFKL; and Solis Horwitz OH, which emphasizes that DDE never refuted the missile gap and that "there was no question in anybody's mind that there was a missile gap." For the argument that JFK knew there was no missible gap: Beschloss, 25-26; DDE to JFK, Aug. 19, 1960, Box 29, POF, and Earle G. Wheeler OH. Also see James P. Warburg to JFK, Sept. 21, 1960; JFK to Warburg, Oct. 18, 1960, James P. Warburg Papers, JFKL; and Solis Horwitz OH, which emphasizes that DDE never refuted the missile gap and that "there was no question in anybody's mind that there was a missile gap." For the argument that JFK knew there was no missible gap: Beschloss, Crisis Years, Crisis Years, 25-27, and Richard Reeves, 58-59, 671-72. 25-27, and Richard Reeves, 58-59, 671-72.
p. 289: Kennedy was in possession: "The Gap," "Notes," and "Weapons Evaluation," n.d., Box 771; Stuart Symington to JFK, Sept. 2, 1960, Box 733, PPP. "National Defense," n.d., Box 75, John B. Martin Papers. Also see Deirdre Henderson to Sorensen, n.d., 1960, Box 1, Deirdre Henderson Papers, JFKL.
pp. 289-90: JFK-Dulles conversation: Beschloss, Crisis Years, Crisis Years, 26. 26.
p. 290: Democrats warned Kennedy: Walt W. Rostow OH; "Who Is Responsible for the Defense Lag?" n.d., Box 771, PPP. Also Eleanor Roosevelt to JFK, Oct. 24, 1960, Box 32, POF.
p. 290: "would be a very dangerous": Quoted in Beschloss, Crisis Years, Crisis Years, 24-25. 24-25.
p. 290: JFK on Cuba: Press Conference, Sept. 2, 1960, Box 1027, PPP; and "Kennedy a.s.sails Nixon Over Cuba," New York Times, New York Times, Oct. 7, 1960. Oct. 7, 1960.
p. 290: "What are the Soviets'": Memo headed "Khrushchev" and subt.i.tled "Cuba," n.d., Box 540, PPP.
p. 290: "stop talking about Cuba": Dean Acheson OH. The best discussion of the flap over Cuba is in Parmet, JFK, JFK, 45-49. 45-49.
p. 291: "endorse and support": A. Willis Robertson to JFK, July 19, 1960, Box 535, PPP.
p. 291: "I understand": JFK to Robertson, July 27, 1960, ibid.
p. 291: "Now in five minutes": Wofford, 58; and see 58-65 for the campaign's civil rights activities.