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- <text>
- <title>
- (52 Elect) Dwight Eisenhower:Homecoming
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1952 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- June 16, 1952
- REPUBLICANS
- Homecoming
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> They saw Ike, and they liked what they saw.
- </p>
- <p> They liked him because he turned out to be an amazingly good
- campaigner: he could shake a man's hand and say the gracious word
- graciously; he could catch a delegate's name and remember it 24
- hours later: and he could shoulder gently through a harassing
- crowd and never get harassed. They liked him for his strong,
- vigorous manner of speech, for his quiet control when schedules
- collapsed or plans were drenched with rain, and for an
- overriding, innate kindliness and modesty.
- </p>
- <p> But most of all, they liked him in way they could scarcely
- explain. They liked Ike because, when they saw him and heard him
- talk, he made them proud of themselves and all the half-forgotten
- best that was in them and in the nation.
- </p>
- <p> Back Door. It was a crashing conquest for the man who flew
- westward out of Washington one afternoon last week, a known
- soldier but an unknown candidate. He landed at Kansas City,
- Kans., and spent a quiet, secluded night on the 14th floor of the
- new Town House, waking up at 4 a.m. and worrying about his first
- campaign speech. At 7:30 a.m. Ike, Mamie, newsmen and the
- campaign brass climbed aboard a Santa Fe streamliner bound for
- the little (pop. 6,000) town of Abilene, where the U.S. would
- watch Ike make his political debut.
- </p>
- <p> The first omens were discouraging. When the train stopped at
- Emporia for a crew change, Ike's green campaign managers suddenly
- realized that it was time for the candidate to make a back-
- platform appearance. Then, to their horror, they discovered that
- the duck-tailed streamliner had no back platform. Ike spent the
- first few minutes waving and grinning through the windows at the
- crowd. A porter struggled with a small door at the rear of the
- car and finally got it open. Ike stepped to the door and was just
- reaching down to shake an upstretched hand as the engineer
- started up, leaving half the reporters and photographers behind.
- a trainman flagged down the train half a block away. Said Ike,
- grinning ruefully: "I darn near fell out the door."
- </p>
- <p> First Platform. The train was still honking its way across
- the flat, green wheatland when the crowds began to drift into an
- open field beside the tracks in Abilene. At 12:30 p.m. the
- humming Diesel nosed its way past the band and the bunting,
- stopped so its last car was even with a roped-off boardwalk. The
- Kansans cheered and crowded close as the ruddy, bareheaded man in
- the grey double-breasted suit climbed down the steps, beamed,
- waved and shook hands around. Then, with Mamie on his right, Ike
- made his way through the clamor and the handshakes to his first
- political platform.
- </p>
- <p> The ceremony in the center of the field was only a
- preliminary to the big political speech scheduled for later in
- the afternoon. Ike and three of his brothers--Milton, the
- president of Penn State College, Arthur, the Kansas City banker,
- and Edgar, the Tacoma, Wash. lawyer--were there to trowel the
- cornerstone of the $100,000 Eisenhower Museum set up by the
- citizens of Kansas. The television cameras and the radio networks
- stayed away, and Ike had no prepared speech. But as he sat
- pensively, waiting for his turn to talk, his eyes drifted toward
- the small white clapboard house across the field, half hidden by
- poplars. There, on the wrong side of the tracks, David and Ida
- Eisenhower had raised their six boys. (Son Earl, a Charleroi, Pa.
- electrical engineer, was missing from the ceremony; Roy, a Kansas
- pharmacist, died in 1942. A seventh son, Paul, died in infancy.)
- When Kansas' Governor Edward F. Arn introduced him, Ike stood up
- at the rostrum with an intent and distant look across his face.
- </p>
- <p> "Inevitably, on such an occasion as this, memory is bound to
- turn backward," he began. "In fact, this day eight years ago, I
- made the most agonizing decision of my life. I had to decide to
- postpone by at least 24 hours the most formidable array of
- fighting ships and of fighting men that was ever launched across
- the sea against a hostile shore. The consequences of that
- decision at that moment could not have been foreseen by anyone.
- If there were nothing else in my life to prove the existence of
- an almighty and merciful God, the events of the next 24 hours did
- it...The greatest break in a terrible outlay of weather
- occurred the next day and allowed that great invasion to proceed,
- with losses far below those we had anticipated..."
- </p>
- <p> Before Ike began talking, the people in the audience had
- drifted back & forth to shake hands with friends, to visit and
- titter while the preliminaries droned on. Now they were silent
- and attentive in the intimacy of great events.
- </p>
- <p> "But that is not really where my memory wants to land today
- as it travels back over the years. It is to the days of my
- boyhood...I want to call attention to the virtues of the
- times, to--at least as my brothers and I devoutly believe--the
- extraordinary virtues of our parents. First of all, they believed
- the admonition, `The fear of God is the beginning of all wisdom.'
- their Bibles were a live and lusty influence in their lives.
- There was nothing sad about their religion. They believed in it
- with a happiness and a contentment that all would be well if a
- man would take the cards that he had been dealt in this world and
- play them to the best of his ability..."
- </p>
- <p> "What Are You Afraid Of?" By now the audience had caught
- both Ike's mood and his memories. There were scowls when a baby
- squawled in the damp afternoon heat, and the baby was quickly
- hushed. When two photographic planes sputtered low over the
- crowd, the people glanced up at the heedless intrusion, then
- turned back to listening.
- </p>
- <p> "And they were frugal, possibly of necessity, because I have
- found out in later years we were poor, but the glory of America
- is that we didn't know it then. All that we knew was that our
- parents--of great courage--could say to us: `Opportunity is
- all about you. Reach out and take it. Do you want to go to school?
- Well, go. What are you afraid of? Do you have to stand around
- until someone comes along with a fat checkbook and takes care of
- every possible care or difficulty you can have in that school?'
- They didn't believe so. They were thrifty, they were economical,
- and they were honest...
- </p>
- <p> "They were people of great courage, and I think they never
- stooped--they never had time--to hate or despise an enemy, or
- those that used them spitefully. I don't think they ever loved the
- drought and the locusts that ruined their first business down in
- your little town of Hope, a few miles south of here--a drought
- and the locusts that really drove them to Texas and brought about
- the strange paradox in our family that I was born in Texas. (The
- Kansans rumbled a laugh.) But they accepted these trials and
- tribulations, and met them with courage and with never a thought
- of failure. They were a part and parcel of their community, of
- the philosophy that then governed our lives..."
- </p>
- <p> Days of Interdependence. "Those days were essentially simple
- ones. We did not feel intimately any relationship with Iran. We
- did not think about needing the tin and tungsten of Malaya, or
- the uranium of the Belgian Congo or the tin of Bolivia. We felt,
- rather, independent and alone...But now we realize the world
- is a great interdependent, complex entity...We have learned
- no part of us can prosper, no nation can really in the long run
- be at peace and have security unless others enjoy the same."
- </p>
- <p> Then, with great humility and clarity, Eisenhower made his
- main point:
- </p>
- <p> "And yet, in spite of the difficulties of the problems we
- have, I ask you this one question: If each of us in his own mind
- would dwell more upon those simple virtues--integrity, courage,
- self-confidence and unshakable belief in his Bible--would not
- some of these problems tend to simplify themselves? Would not we,
- after having done our very best with them, be content to leave
- the rest with the Almighty, and not to charge all our fellow men
- with the fault of bringing us where we were and are? I think it
- is possible that a contemplation, a study, a belief in those
- simple virtues would help us mightily."
- </p>
- <p> The Level. As Ike said, the creed was an old one. But the
- man, the year and the place made it new and alive. This was not
- the local-boy makes-good story. It was not the up-from-log-cabin
- story. Nor was Ike suggesting that all problems could be solved
- by the simple equations of rural Kansas. This was the story of
- fundamentals which had served Ike Eisenhower well--and through
- him, the nation. It was the creed of the man who could say "Free
- government is the political expression of a deeply felt religious
- faith."
- </p>
- <p> Ike still had ahead of him his formal plunge into partisan
- arguments and specific debates, but the 5,000 Kansans who
- clustered in the open field by the clapboard house knew the level
- and temper of his character. In simple, unmistakable words, the
- man had described his philosophical foundations. Now the
- candidate could go ahead.
- </p>
- <p> By the time the cornerstone speech was over, the skies were
- dark and threatening, and a few drops spattered down on the black
- sod. Ike perched on the top of the back seat of a green Cadillac
- convertible and was driven out through the crowds, smiling and
- waving. The car turned up toward Abilene's business district,
- past the "Welcome Home Ike" banners on every lamppost and in
- every store window. It stopped on Northwest Third Street at the
- Sunflower Hotel, a plain, eight-story square brick building which
- is Abilene's only skyline.
- </p>
- <p> Ike and Mamie pressed through the sidewalk throng, through
- the crowded lobby, and into a waiting elevator. On the sixth
- floor they found comparative quiet; newly redecorated, this floor
- was reserved for the Eisenhower party and guarded by two burly
- cops from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. For lunch, the
- Eisenhowers went down one floor to the apartment of Hotel Manager
- Mike Biggs and his wife Eulalia. They hurried through fruit
- salad, stewed chicken peas, mashed potatoes and a dish of
- pineapple sherbert. Then Ike and Mamie climbed out on the top of
- the hotel marquee to join the political brass in a review of the
- Ike homecoming parade.
- </p>
- <p> Pink Clouds. Ike took the salute like a candidate who was in
- love with his job. He nudged Mamie when the first float rolled
- by; it was a replica of the white frame house where he was born
- in Denison, Texas, and bore a sign which read: "Birth Date Oct.
- 14, 1890." He did a little caper on the marquee when the
- highschool band played Alexander's Ragtime Band. And he grabbed
- Mamie and hugged her when he saw the "marriage float," bearing
- two Abilene youngsters on pink clouds in front of a heart-shaped
- lattice. The last float--Ike at the White House--had just
- passed when the dark clouds opened up and the rains spilled.
- </p>
- <p> It rained in torrents while every eye in town watched the
- clock hands turn toward 5 o'clock, the time for Ike's big,
- nationwide TV and radio speech from Eisenhower Park. Ike's old
- high-school friend, Howard Keel, ran down to his clothing store,
- snatched 26 raincoats off a rack and hustled them up to the sixth
- floor of the sunflower for the official party. He knew Ike's
- size--42--without asking. And to keep the rain off Ike's
- glasses, Howard lent his own broad-brimmed hat to the candidate.
- </p>
- <p> By the time Ike got to the park, the grandstand was half
- empty, and the highschool bands--drawn from all over Kickinson
- County--were huddling in cars and under eaves, sodden and
- miserable. The television men urged Ike to talk from a dry room
- under the stands, but when he heard that half of his audience had
- stuck through the rain, he turned on his heel and splashed
- through the thick, black mud to the outdoor platform. A
- solicitous aide tried to shield him with a big umbrella, but Ike
- brushed it aside. Then he tossed away his broad-brimmed hat, and,
- with rain splattering on his bald head, began his maiden
- political speech to the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Four Threats. First he established that he was a Republican
- and gave his reasons why. "Evils which can ultimately throttle
- free government are present in today's situation," he said. He
- listed "four of these threats, which seem to me to be dangerous
- lapses from the American way of life...disunity, inflation,
- excessive taxation, bureaucracy."
- </p>
- <p> He scrupulously mentioned no names, but touched a responsive
- chord when he said: "One party has been in power too long in this
- country." On foreign affairs, where he could have hit hard, he
- seemed to pull his punches. "The mystery must be removed from
- foreign relations--our essential requirements and objectives
- must be clearly set forth," he said. "Americans instinctively and
- properly dread the kind of secrecy that surrounded Yalta...China was lost to the free world in one of the greatest
- international disasters of our times--a type of tragedy that
- must not be repeated."
- </p>
- <p> Cut away from the drama of Abilene, Ike's formal address
- sounded like too many political speeches ("Five-star
- generalities," snorted the pro-Taft Chicago Tribune). Ike's
- speaking ability was not of high enough order to sustain the
- thread of meaning through some crudely tailored sentences.
- Overelaborate West Point English, completely absent from his
- morning talk in the field, sat stodgily on the afternoon address.
- (Ike wrote the speech in Paris, and it was pawed over by a
- committee of his strategists in the U.S.). Radio listeners liked
- it least. For those at Abilene and for the estimated ten million
- who saw Ike deliver it on television, the speech was redeemed by
- the speaker. In his face were force, sincerity and spontaneity;
- it was a very fine performance by a man who understood, and cared
- about, what he was saying.
- </p>
- <p> Tactful Command. The next day brought the toughest ordeal in
- the candidate's initiation--the press conference. Just before 9
- o'clock, he walked on the stage of Abilene's little Plaza Theater
- to face the popping flashbulbs of the still photographers, the
- batteries of photofloods from the newsreels and television
- cameras, and 300 reporters. He had not counted on television, and
- took his stand at the seven microphones with his head ducked and
- a frown on his face. But when he looked out into the glare and
- promised to answer "as many questions as I can in a period of 45
- minutes," he took tactical and tactful command over the situation
- and he never once lost it, either at Abilene or at his subsequent
- press conference in New York.
- </p>
- <p> On the Record. It was clear at the outset that Ike wanted to
- get on the record just what brand of domestic Republican he was.
- Without waiting for a question, he identified as the basis of his
- "political philosophy" a joint declaration by the Republicans in
- Congress and by the Republican National Committee on Feb. 6,
- 1950. Few reporters could remember it. But later they recalled
- that the "liberty v. socialism" theme of the statement was more
- conservative than the 1948 Republican platform, that it was
- drafted by Bob Taft and opposed at the time by Ike's prime
- campaign worker, Massachusetts' Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.
- </p>
- <p> Ike had one other major point to clear up: he shares no
- blame for the policy-making of the two Democratic Administrations
- he has served with military rank. "I never heard President
- Roosevelt directly state a single political concept of his in my
- life, except over the radio...I have never been a part of any
- administration. Therefore I have not been a part of...the
- total foreign policy of the U.S., nor, indeed, have I been
- cognizant of many of the factors."
- </p>
- <p> End Runs. Ike stuck to his promise that he would not engage
- in personalities during the campaign, but he did manage two
- notable end runs around it. When he was asked about General
- MacArthur, who has been pointedly anti-Eisenhower and pro-Taft in
- public speeches, Ike blended charity and wisdom in an effective
- reply: "I could not have served any man...as I did General
- MacArthur, without gaining a tremendous respect for his
- intellectual and professional capacity. If I had to have any
- position of great responsibility in this country...I should
- certainly want to know what he thought (about the Far East)."
- </p>
- <p> End run No. 2 took care of Joe McCarthy. Said Ike: "Any kind
- of Communistic, subversive or pinkish influence (must) be
- uprooted from responsible places in our government. Make no
- mistake about that. On the other hand, I believe that can be done
- under competent leadership...without besmirching the
- reputation of any innocent man or condemning by loose association
- or anything else."
- </p>
- <p> Very Unpleasant. The only question that rocked Ike
- momentarily was one popped in Manhattan two days later by a
- crank. The questioner tried to pin down his charge that
- Eisenhower was associated with Alger Hiss. The question was only
- half out when Ike reddened, scowled and snapped: "What did you
- say? What did you say?" Then he quieted the uproar from the
- legitimate correspondents and said:
- </p>
- <p> "Ladies and gentlemen, I want to say one thing. I do not
- believe that it is necessary for me to defend myself against (the
- taint of) Communism or Fascism in any form...The man whose
- name was just mentioned I saw once in my life. I joined the
- Carnegie Foundation for International Peace, and when I went up I
- found that Mr. Hiss was its president...I never saw him before
- or since...To my mind, that is a very unpleasant question."
- </p>
- <p> Ike's natural warmth could not be caught by headlines. He
- delighted reporters in Abilene by coming up with the word
- "skyhootin'" (what prices do during inflation.) He misused a
- favorite word of Fourth-of-July orators--"shibboleth"--by
- adding that it meant something that's "just false; not true."
- (Real meaning: criterion or watchword, because the Gileadites
- recognized the Ephraimites as their enemies when the Ephraimites
- mispronounced the Hebrew word "shibboleth" as "shiboleth."
- (Judges 12:6). Ike's own troops used a similar shibboleth during
- the Battle of the Bulge when they tried to trap English-speaking
- German spies by asking them who won the World Series.) He did not
- once say "no comment," and pleased many with a frank substitute:
- "I don't know."
- </p>
- <p> He retired from the Plaza Theater leaving the conference in
- a glow, thanks to a curtain question shouted across the
- auditorium by a newsreel cameraman. The question: "Mr.
- Eisenhower, did you ever dream some day when you left Abilene
- that you would come back and run for the presidency of the U.S.?"
- Ike smiled rubbed his head, and squinted into the lights. "I
- don't know what dreams crowd the head of a young boy," he said,
- "but I think that before I left, my real problem was whether to
- try to be a Hans Wagner or a railroad conductor. (Abilene High's
- Centerfielder Eisenhower was aiming high: Pittsburgh Pirates
- Shortstop Hans Wagner, an alltime great, led National League
- batting for eight years, batted .300 or better for 17 consecutive
- years, went to bat 10,427 times (in league games), scored 1,740
- runs.) I remember that both of them were very important."
- </p>
- <p> The fact was that the politicians began to dream about Ike
- as a candidate long before he himself ever dreamed of the
- presidency. In 1948 he turned down substantial support for first
- the Republican and then the Democratic nominations. After Dewey's
- defeat, Ike was approached by a group of badly shaken Republican
- brasshats, who were beginning to fear that the G.O.P. might go
- out of existence unless it got a winner--and that with it would
- go the two-party system and all chances of ending centralized,
- New Deal government. Said the G.O.P. men: "We might have to use
- you." And they asked Ike to keep his availability open and his
- mouth shut.
- </p>
- <p> Ike heeded only half the request, but he decided that if a
- political movement was building under him, it was his duty to
- speak out and make his position clear. As president of Columbia,
- he expounded his philosophy of free enterprise in series of
- speeches ranging from New York to Texas. He stopped talking
- abruptly when Harry Truman called him back into uniform to set up
- SHAPE in January 1952. But the political movement bubbled and
- boiled at home until, at the end of 1952 Ike told his U.S.
- backers that he would be willing to try for the nomination.
- </p>
- <p> He flew home into the arms of a campaign organization that
- is half enthusiastically amateur and half coolly professional
- Massachusetts' Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. is its No. 1 man and
- coordinator. He is no great shakes as a political organizer or
- strategist, but he has skillfully managed to keep the diverse
- elements of the Ike drive in one camp (e.g., the New York
- Deweyites and the Westerners like Lodge slightly better than they
- like each other). The others on Ike's strategy board are Paul
- Hoffman, General Lucius Clay, Kansas' Senator Frank Carlson, Tom
- Dewey and Pennsylvania's Senator Jim Daly. The tough essential
- job of collaring delegates is left to the calloused hands Dewey's
- 1948 campaign manager, Herbert Brownell.
- </p>
- <p> "I Don't Suppose It Matters." Ike Eisenhower must win more
- delegates to win the nomination, and Ike knows it. On the way from
- Kansas City to Abilene Ike doggedly went through the train to
- shake hands with his boosters and some 50 Midwestern delegates who
- were about. For the most part, these were already technically his
- delegates, but the open-handed, hearty, Eisenhower charm turned
- many into glowing enthusiasts. When Ike came to Mr. and Mrs. John
- Hayes of Hutchinson, Kans., he said, to their delight: "I don't
- suppose it matters to you, but it matters to me. I played
- baseball in Hutchinson on May 15, 1909."
- </p>
- <p> He was even better when he stood in the corner of the living
- room in Charlie Case's house in Abilene and shook hands down the
- long, long line. To an Abilene man who had been in the homecoming
- parade Ike said: "Say, you did a swell job!" To a young man
- introduced as a veteran Ike gave the big grip and shouted above
- the din: "You look like a damn soldier." To an Iowan delegate who
- wanted to know if he was a me-too candidate, Ike was blunt: "If
- they say I'm me-tooing just because I want to keep the good
- things that have been done in the last 20 years while I'm
- throwing out the bad things--if that's me-too, why they can go
- to hell."
- </p>
- <p> Mamie, with a cool eye for business, was a great help. When
- Ike was getting ready to start out on one of his hand-shaking
- tours Mamie told him: "Tell the girls--I mean the ladies--to
- come on back here and I'll talk to them." A man from Missouri rode
- up to the sixth floor of the Sunflower to report proudly that
- Missouri probably would go 22 for Ike and four for Taft. Said
- Mamie: "What's the matter with those four? Let's work on them."
- </p>
- <p> Ike and Mamie both felt like seasoned campaigners when they
- flew into New York for their second major political welcome. Tom
- Dewey greeted them at the airport and drove them across Manhattan
- in his limousine to Ike's New York residence, the president's
- house at Columbia University.
- </p>
- <p> On Sunday the Eisenhowers slipped off to the 11 a.m. service
- at the interdenominational Riverside Church, stopped after the
- sermon to chat with the minister, Dr. Robert J. McCracken. Ten
- minutes after they got back home, Pennsylvania's Governor John
- Fine arrived for lunch and a political conference which lasted
- nearly four hours. After that the delegate parade was on: by the
- end of the week, when he makes his Detroit speech, Ike will have
- shaken the hands of some 500 delegates from 18 states.
- </p>
- <p> The Real Measure. Some of Ike's managers wildly claimed that
- their candidate had picked up 50 Taft delegates in Abilene alone.
- Such claims were wishful thinking, of which there is a lot in
- the Eisenhower camp. But in his short first week, Ike had
- certainly struck a spark in his own followers. Ikemen, who had
- hoped--before Abilene--that they might win, now fanned across
- the U.S., convinced that they must.
- </p>
- <p> But the real measure of Ike's first days in politics
- stretched beyond handshakes, delegate counts and party workers.
- By laying down the values and convictions of his own faith, Ike
- Eisenhower had already done much to lift the 1952 political
- campaign toward his own high level of character. For that, win or
- lose, the U.S. could be grateful.
- </p>
- <p>
- IKE GIVES SOME ANSWERS
- </p>
- <p> "The press conference," wrote Columnist Walter Lippmann this
- week, "has become an institution...for overcoming that
- growing threat to honest journalism, the ghost-written speech and
- the public-relations facade...In its fullest modern
- development (it) is an ordeal which searches a man's personality
- far more deeply than it does his principles and his policies."
- The words were especially true in the case of Ike Eisenhower, and
- it was Ike's character that won the week with newsmen. But Ike's
- press conferences also produced answers on policies & principles.
- Samples:
- </p>
- <p>-- Foreign Policy: He would "go any place in this world" to
- talk to Stalin if he thought it would do any good, but nothing is
- negotiable as long as the Soviet Union uses "subversion, bribery,
- corruption (and) threat of force...to try to destroy our form
- of government." He believes the loss of Western Europe would put
- the U.S. "in mortal danger," and favors a more dynamic U.S.
- foreign policy.
- </p>
- <p>-- Korea: "I do not have any prescription for bringing the
- thing to a decisive end...I believe we have got to stand firm
- and take every possible step we can to reduce our losses, and
- try to get a decent armistice out of it...There has been
- built up behind the Yalu River a very definite air strength that
- would make very dangerous any attempt to end the war at this
- moment, until we have a bigger buildup of our own." But he
- implies that he would favor counterattacks on China "if I am
- attacked in a broad way by anything that you can call a
- nationalistic attack."
- </p>
- <p>-- China: "I do not know who is to blame for the loss of
- China. I do know that the diplomatic triumphs of that period, if
- any, were claimed by the party in power. The party in power,
- therefore, has to take some responsibility for any losses we have
- suffered...When we see 400 million people falling under the
- domination of this communistic dictatorship...it is a
- diplomatic, or let us say, an international disaster of the first
- magnitude."
- </p>
- <p>-- FEPC: He would not endorse the current FEPC program
- because he objects to its "federal, compulsory" nature. But he
- gives small comfort to the advocates of segregation, promises "my
- unalterable support of fairness and equality among all types of
- American citizens. I believe that insofar as the Federal
- Government has any influence or any constitutional authority in
- this field, all of its means, all of its expenditures, all of its
- policies should adhere firmly and without any kind of
- equivocation to that principle..."
- </p>
- <p>-- Federal Aid to Education: He opposes a law which puts
- "Washington bureaucracy" into education, because "education is
- one of those local functions that we should guard jealously...(But) I think that there is a certain level of education that is
- absolutely necessary...When we can show when any particular
- section does not have the proper, adequate means to educate its
- children to that level, I would certainly be in favor of help to
- that specific area."
- </p>
- <p>-- Socialized Medicine: "I do believe that every American
- has a right to decent medical care, (but) I am against
- socialization...and submitting our lives toward a control
- that would lead inevitably to socialism."
- </p>
- <p>-- The President's Powers: As he sees it, Congress is the
- agency which should first decide when the nation is in a national
- emergency. It should also empower the President in advance to act
- in an emergency. Thus empowered, the Chief Executive should have
- the right "to act decisively when single action and quick action
- is demanded." This does not mean that Ike agrees with Harry
- Truman's seizure of steel, because there is a "vast difference"
- between a real emergency "and what we were discussing in the
- steel difficulty."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-