Well, I'll be glad--you and I share--I would be glad to check into it and find out if there is anything that is improper about it.
I want to express my great appreciation to the members of the Cabinet who worked on this matter--Mr. Wirtz, Mr. Freeman, Mr. Kennedy, and Mr...
Well, we are looking at-we looked at it, of course, when we proposed our budget for this year.
Well, I would think a discussion of that kind of a question, if the question is as you put it, is really not very useful to the exiles, or t...
It suggests a national challenge to us which will not be met unless we take action on a national scale.
No, I think it would be a mistake to attempt to make that assessment on this occasion.
Well, I don't know--I am familiar with the general thesis of Professor Rock.
Well, I don't want to say anything that will prejudice Secretary Harriman's trip.
No, we supported the arrangement of the Revolutionary Council in order to give the exiles a voice which we hoped would be speaking for the e...
Well, that, I think, is a matter which I think time will tell us.
I am delighted to welcome you here today.
Mrs. Roosevelt, who in the largest sense needs no memorial, but will also be contributing directly to those causes for which she marked her ...
Mrs. Roosevelt lived in the White House longer than any other woman.
I just want you to know that you are most welcome to the White House.
I hope that all of you will visit the White House and perhaps you will arrange that.
We hope the American people will join in giving not only large gifts but also very small ones as a mark of the universal appreciation for he...
I hope that from this meeting and from our work during the month of May that legislative results will come.
It is my hope when they do so vote that they will vote aye.