Diary of President Eisenhower
This document relates to the Minnesota primary, de-segregation, and Billy Graham.
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Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2SECRET
DJH 6/25/75
DIARY, March 21, 1956.
Additional notes made by acw during telephone conversation of the
President with Mrs. Hobby. Her side of conversation could not
be recorded.
Discussion about Minnesota primary. President said he agreed we
ought to know what happened. Said that the Democratic candidates
between them got about 400, 000 votes -- but he thinks that some
Republicans voted in the Democratic primary. He also said that
the Republican vote in the primary does not mean a thing. He said
he was shocked that the vote went the way it did in view of the fact
that Kefauver without any responsibility, promised everything that
anybody wanted. Such irresponsibility means more and more trouble
and finally "the United States will rebel and throw all those laws over-
board."
the
wishto
Suggestion of television talk by President. President said
had, in fact, made same suggestion to Legislative leaders yesterday.
Sending Brad Mintener and others to Minnesota.
De-segregation. President said one thing worries him and that is that
frequently in the South is heard the expression (about de-segregation)
that it was a "Republican" decision in the Supreme Court. He pointed
out that Justice Warren actually did not affect the decision a bit.
Billy Graham. President told Mrs. Hobby of his conversation with
Billy Graham yesterday. Said Reverend Graham was convinced that
the storm raised by the decision had set back the cause of integration,
but he thinks it is bound to come eventually. He said that the political
and morale values are plain for all to see -- but that the social values
were different. The South has a fixed tradition -- that is compounded
with fear and resentment. Reverend Graham is having four meetings
throughout the South, and he is going to take the subject of integration
and deal with it in about the same basis as the President has dealt with
it at the press conference. "If there was ever a time for moderation
and decency, it is now." Reverend Graham is going to try to do the
same thing from the pulpit and get other preachers to do it.
Graduate schools. The President said he thought the South was wrong
in one place. He believes that the graduate schools of the recognized
universities should establish disinterested boards to decide by examina-
tion of the eligibility for entry of all students, and that the graduate
schools should abide by such decisions.
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