"They are considering it. We discussed the matter at the meeting Monday, to study the advisability of bringing it up again."
"That question will be answered in my Economic Message which will go down to the Congress about the first of the week."
"Well, since April 12, 1945, I have been making a crusade--a continuing crusade--for peace..."
"I think it is a perfectly absurd opinion."
"He is trying to make arrangements to accept it now."
"Well, I had no such plan. That is the first I had heard about it."
"There is no move that we can make."
"I certainly am. Missouri is my home State, and I shall express my opinion freely in the Missouri campaign."
"That was a difficulty between a foreign nation and the United States, and we met it."
"Oh yes, it is moving gradually--slowly and gradually toward world peace, and we will eventually get it."
"The matter is being discussed in Paris and London now. I can make no statement on it at the present time."
"I haven't seen it. I don't know what it contains, and I can't give you the answer on that."
"I expect to keep it up just on the same line that I have spoken of it all the time ever since April 12, 1945."
"The Housing Administrator was with me the other day, and that was the substance of the conversation."
"I have been invited on several occasions. I hope sometime I will be able to make a visit there."
"As rapidly as possible we are going to move forward on the housing bill."
"This order supersedes all prior Executive orders to the extent that they are in conflict with this order and shall be effective as of July 1, 1949."
"NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue of the authority vested in me by section 24 of the act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 1103, and the act of June 4, 1897, 30 Stat. 34, 36 (16 U.S.C. 471, 473), and as President of..."