Kentucky Fried Politics: A Colonel Sanders Timeline

Post 1
Post 1: Prologue-to-Chapter 1



Hi! This is my first TL, and I hope you all like it. I'm starting it today since today is the Colonel's birthday, and I'm planning on posting a chapter every Thursday or so starting next week. Questions and comments welcomed. Enjoy!

Kentucky Fried Politics: A Colonel Sanders TL

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(Originally titled “President Sanders (Relax! This Isn’t Current Politics!): A KFC TL”)

By gap80
(With a giant credit of thanks to Gentleman Biaggi)



Prologue: A Brief Flash-Forward

"It always seems impossible until it is done"

– Nelson Mandela



“Consarn it! How many did we lose?”

“A lot.”

“Yes, but how many?”

“Dozens on our sides, over a thousand on their side at the least.”

"Oh, Dang-blast it,” Father’s face as turning red with rage.

“It’s a tactical victory, sir,” William commented.

Father was quick to reply, “Over a thousand, Bill! Have you forgotten what I said already?” Father groaned in frustration and returned to his spot on the couch, the situation weighing down on him like a flour sack on a runt mule. He folded his hands atop his cane as he mulled over his thoughts, venting the anger out through his nostrils until his breathing was calmer. Then he sighed to himself “Lord forgive me” before asking, “Any word on where Henry is?”

“Still waiting for a reply from his office, sir.”

Father sunk a bit in his seat. To me, he had a look that for most of his life he had rarely ever worn, but was wearing the look more and more often every day, it seemed. He looked like he was lost for what to do next.

I took a seat beside him, “Don’t worry, Pop. We’ll figure this out.”

Father turned to me with concern swimming in his eyes, “Do you remember when you had your tonsils removed, son?”

“Vaguely,” I answered, “I remember only being awake for half of the time that I should have been.”

“You got very sick. An infection, I think. I don’t know if it was somehow some common mistake or if the doctor was an idiot and he made a mistake. Maybe he didn’t wash his hands, maybe he wasn’t as careful as he should have been. But I remember how sick you got, I remember your fever, and the color leaving your face. For days you were bedridden and in and out of consciousness. I’ve been through a lot of things in my life, and that was the most terrifying of them, both then and even now. I was so frightened that I would lose you, my son. I tongue-lashed that doctor somethin’ fierce over it, I was so angry and frightened.” He rubbed his brow with his hand, “But all the shoutin' in the world couldn't keep me from feeling so…useless. I didn’t know what to do to help you. I kept thinking, ‘Oh Lord, why can’t I do anything? I can’t save my son.’ All I could do was pray. But then, by some chance, by some miracle, you recovered [1]. As simple as that, your color returned to your face and the illness left.”

“Maybe your anger scared the doc into workin’ better to save me,” I suggested.

“Maybe,” Father replied, “but that’s the thing. We can never know if something will work or make something happen until after the thing has happened. We tried this approach here, and it hasn’t worked. In my opinion, the situation is now worse. They could now be even more reluctant to sit down with us…one thousand, my god…”

After a brief moment of thought, I commented, “we fought fire with fire, but it wasn’t the right fire.” My eye wandered over to the picture of George Washington hanging on the wall nearby, and I commented, “You know, you remind me a lot of him, Father. He swore like a madman and still found glory in the darkest of times through sheer resilience. Crossing the Delaware in the frigid cold and all that.”

Father suddenly lifted in head in revelation, “By gummit, that’s it!”

“What is?”

“Junior, how’d we win the Revolutionary War? By standing in orderly lines? No, that’s what the British did and they lost! Gentlemen!” He now turned his attention to his other advisers, huddled around at the main table.

“Yes sir!” they all barked.

“We have to try a more effective approach. We tried to go in there with our most advanced tools and this was the response,” holding up one of the photos. “No, no, we have to be more clandestine. Gentlemen, I think we need to seriously organize an 'un-criticize-able' response to this mess. We need to tweak our traditional approaches. But not only that! There’s also something else on my mind.”

“You got some ideas, Pop?” I asked curiously, a small grin forming on my face.

“Oh, just wait, Junior,” Father chuckled, “Like my chicken before it’s fried, we ain’t licked yet!”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



NOTE
[1] The POD: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/72197162/harland-david-sanders

WATCHED.

But what exactly is this "mess" that the Colonel is referring to?
...You'll find out eventually... :biggrin:
NHBL said:
This could be interesting....subscribed
I hope it will be interesting...thanks!
OldNavy1988 said:
Will the Colonel run against John Y Brown or Happy Chandler?
I'm not going to spoil my own TL, but I will tell you that he will meet and interact with both of them
Gentleman Biaggi said:
AWWWWWW YISSSS HE FINALLY DID IT

I literally only told him what day to post on
Indeed I did!

You also helped with choosing the title, the title card, with ironing out the details of the POD and with planning out key plot points! Don't sell yourself short; you were a big help! Thank you! :)
Emperor Norton I said:
Will Harland Sanders promote himself from Colonel to Generalissimo Sanders?

colonel-sanders.jpg
Lol, maybe... :p
Roberto El Rey said:
Very much watched. One thing I do have to ask, will Sanders be racist in this timeline? I was actually pondering this question last week and my (admittedly not too in-depth) research didn't seem to turn any evidence that he was racist. Well, other than the fact that George Wallace considered him as a running mate, but there doesn't seem to be any evidence that Sanders himself was enthralled by the idea of running with Wallace.
There's no evidence suggesting he was racist that I could find. In fact, I found more to suggest that he was pretty progressive and forward-thinking for his time (which I'll cover in more detail in upcoming chapters). IMO, Wallace likely offered it to him not due to racial views but more likely because of The Colonel's fame, businesses success, being a known Republican (so the ticket would have been more bipartisan in nature had it unfolded that way I guess) and most likely because of his OTL comments regarding protestors and J. Edgar Hoover, which will also be covered in an upcoming chapter as well.

Thanks for all the comments and positive feedback, everyone! I really appreciate it!

5/2/2021 EDIT: Also, here’s a link to a photos thread for this TL, created on 3/1/2021 by @PNWKing: https://www.alternatehistory.com/forum/threads/photos-from-kentucky-fried-politics.506103/



Chapter 1: December 1950 – April 1955

“The two most important days in your life are the day you are born and the day you find out why”

– Mark Twain



I really do not think that I will ever forget how fateful the day before my 1950 recommissioning was. Early that December morning, Junior, who was staying over with us at the time, reminded me in the morning that I had to go to the bank to check out my taxes so I could avoid the chaos I had gone through earlier in the year in April. I came back about an hour or two later with what must have been a very pale complexion, because when I walked in, Claudia bolted to fetch me some water.

“What’s wrong?” I remember her asking as she handed me a cup.

“I’ve realized something,” was my response. See, I had made a very startling discovery at that bank, and had to talk to the bank teller and one of the men from one of the side rooms to confirm it. “As it turns out, if we lost all of this,” I stretched out my arm as I stood up to go to the window overlooking our mighty Sanders Court and Café, “this restaurant and everything, we’d be penniless.”

At the bank, they were touting the ending of Social Security’s 1-percent payroll tax on the first $3,000 of annual earnings. They were spouting all of this financial hoo-haw about the program’s many new new benefits (an increase of 77%, apparently). About how the program’s benefit payments were under 1 percent of the nation’s GDP but rising (and I had no idea what that meant at the time), and how only 1 in 50 Americans actually received Social Security [1]. New parts for Social Security created by President Truman back in August of that same year were expected to make it so 9 or 10 million more workers were getting covered by the program [2]. But the number of people in the workforce over 64 was dropping, and the program was acting accordingly [3]. Curious, I asked what this all meant to me; “How much would I make if I retired today?” After several minutes to doing their math, I was shocked by the numbers. “If we didn’t have the restaurant, we’d have to live off of a monthly Social Security check of merely 92 dollars and 81 cents [4]!

I could not live off that, nor could my Claudia. My wife did not deserve to scrimp, nor did she like to. All my early life I had been dirt-poor, and after finally becoming comfortable, I was not willing to give up any of it. It would be like it had all been for nothing, to revert back to those conditions. I couldn’t allow it!

But those numbers frightened me, and I was anxious to do something about them, “I’m thinking of expanding our business, but I’m not sure how.”

“You’re worried about a silly hypothetical, Harland!” I remember my wife telling me.

I disagreed, “I just want to know that we aren’t keeping all of our eggs in one basket with this place.”

I would have kept talking on about it if the whole thing hadn’t taken up so much time at the bank. And Claudia and I had to get ready for the recommissioning. On the drive up, I figured, while we were there, I might as well ask my ol’ friend Wetherby [5] about it.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



Now I can’t remember exactly when I befriended the Colonel, but I do recall being on a first-name basis with him by the time I became Governor. Of course, even before then, he was fairly well known across the state – at least in restaurant circles – for his café in Corbin. He had been for many years by then. But, uh, still, I like to think that I somehow contributed to his rise to greater fame in some small way at the beginning of it all.

– Former Governor Lawrence Wetherby (D-KY) in CBS Interview, 1965



“Thank you all for showing up to this here commissioning. Actually, I should say re-commissioning. See, I was originally commissioned in 1935 by Governor Ruby Laffoon for the same reason as now – my menu over at my gas station and restaurant, which is now a motel, too. I hope you’ve all been to it, by the way! But anyway, in the years since that time I seemed to have misplaced the official commission document, so I asked my good friend here, Governor Wetherby, to recommission it for me. So now, I guess this makes me a Colonel twice over!” After this brief speech I mingled with the people gathered around for the event. But really, I wanted to talk to Wetherby. I tried and failed to pry him away from several chatterers until I finally cornered him at the small buffet table over to the side of the room. Quickly, I told him about my financial fear, that I had nothing to fall back on without the restaurant. “I need a safety net of sorts.”

“What about your family, Harland? Doesn’t your wife work with you in the restaurant business?”

“No,” I explained, “Claudia used to run the restaurant when I worked at that federal government cafeteria down in Tennessee during World War Two [6]. But I don’t want her to have to keep on workin’ now that we’re older – and I don’t want her to be laborin’ on after I’m gone. She deserves to enjoy her autumn years. Besides, I learned long ago to not mix business with pleasure, on account of that’s how I lost my first wife.”

Wetherby didn’t seem to hear that last bit over his disapproving of the buffet’s repulsive-looking salad, but he continued on, “I thought you had children, Harland. Any of them in the cookin’ business?”

I shook my head. “My daughters are too busy with their own lives. My oldest, she’d rather work with clay than with cookery [7]. My youngest, she’s keen on helping, sure, but she’s raising a family of her own right now. I don’t trust either of their husbands, to tell you the truth. And my two stepchildren ain’t interested in cookin’ at all.”

“Oh, I get that, uh, the son-in-law…part” Wetherby said while picking up a crumbly donut, wincing at it for a second, and quickly putting it back. “But what about your son, Junior? I just saw him the other day; he seems to be doing better.”

I thought for a moment, “Oh, Junior’s got enough of his own problems. His back’s still out of commission from Utah Beach. So is his busted leg from the last fire he fought. And his wife just left him, so, really, he’s struggling...” I thought back to all his misfortunes and sacrifices, “You know, Junior gave up college to hold down a job during the Depression, but he’s finally going now. He started this semester and, uh…” At this moment I noticed Wetherby’s eyes focusing on some sort of slimy-looking sandwich. “Lawrence, that there turkey troublin’ you?”

“Hm? Oh, I’m sorry, Harland. It’s just that, well, look at all this! I wouldn’t serve any of this to my huntin’ dogs! Who catered this event?” At this point I think I saw an idea light up Wetherby’s face, as he said, “Say! You know, Harland, if you’re looking to make some more money, and if you’re interested, you could expand into catering!”

I thought for a second and replied with “It’s not a bad idea, but where would I start?”

Wetherby answered, “Well, we’re having a state Democrats event back here in two weeks, maybe you could provide the eats. Here,” pulling out a pen and one of his business cards, and began scribbling on the back, “Ask for my secretary. You’ve met her. I’ll tell her to expect your call and you can set up the specifics with her.” He slipped the card into my hand and tucked the pen away right before another guest walked over. As the two of them departed, I took a look at the card and wondered what the job could lead to.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



The job was catering a government event in Frankfort, the state capitol a fair drive north of our Corbin home. I remember there were two events, one in the morning and one in the evening, but I don’t recall what they were for. Some political hogwash, I suppose. Regardless, for the morning event, we set up a spread of food carefully driven up from our restaurant: delectable honey biscuits, wheat cakes, and various light sandwiches. And for the later event, which I remember attending as it had something to do with business development or something like that, we served pork chops with home fried potatoes, honey-glazed ham, ham biscuits, and, of course, my husband’s famous delicious chicken. Harland and I also made several pies ranging from the pudding-like spoonbread to the classic pecan.

And the catering gig was highly successful – oh, the attendees left nothing on their plates! One portly patron exclaimed, “You fellas sure know how to cook!” while piling chicken pieces onto his plate! A large crowd formed around the table near the end as the folks tried to take as much home as they could, each person practically salivating over our creations. At one point, as I served the gentleman from before his second slice of pecan pie, a young attendee remarked, “This food is fantastic! You should do catering more often, Sanders.” And Harland replied, with a bold and somewhat distant tone, “Actually, I have a different idea.” Turning to me, he added, “Claudia, if this chicken can catch on over here, why not elsewhere, too?!”

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



A 1946 Ford can hold a lot in its trunk – in this case, it held a custom-modified boiler, a rack of spices, some cake flour and oil, and an icebox filled with several cuts of chicken, with room to spare! My car had seen many roads with me already, but it still had a long ways to go before retiring to the junk-heap.

“Be careful, Pop, and remember to let Ma drive whenever you get tired” I remember Junior telling me as Claudia and I hopped in. For the first few weeks it would be just the two of us together travelling Kentucky’s roads.

“Well don’t none of you all bury the business while we’re gone!” I joked before assuring him I heard him, and knew that he and Millie could keep the place from burning to the ground for a few days or so. We then said our farewells and headed north, first to London and East Bernstadt.

At each stop I would give a sales pitch – I would just show up, almost always unannounced, and after a quick inspection, I would make my chicken for the owners or chef, right then and there. If they liked it, we would enter a simple handshake agreement, that they would give me 4 cents for every piece of my chicken they sold. It was the chicken-making process that would coax them – as stated before, I first discovered in the early 1940s that cooking chicken in a pressure cooker tweaked into being a pressure fryer was much quicker than iron frying the birds, and made them taste much better than them deep-fried birds. It seemed nobody else had caught on to that yet, which was more than fortunate for me!

The idea to franchise my flagship food – my specially-pressured chicken – came to me at the catering event. The second government meeting was a discussion on local gas stations and the oil companies, harkening me back to my younger days, back to when I first started running a service station in Nicholasville, after meeting the general manager of Standard Oil of Kentucky by chance in 1924 [6]. Gas was the first industry to widely use the franchising form of business, getting already-established stations to sell engine-runner for them. I’d seen it in action and I knew how well it worked. And I was confident that franchising chicken to already-established eateries could work well, too, assuring us financial security for our twilight years.

Our travels during the early years of KFC were unforgettable, even with the trouble I have nowadays of remembering some parts. But I do remember the important parts. We stayed largely inside the state over tax concerns – it was just easier that way. Right before starting our venture, Wetherby convinced us it would increase revenue for the state if word of mouth of “Kentucky’s unique and wonderful chicken” spilled past state lines. Ol’ Lawrence also hoped that, even in some small way, it might even slow down the number of Kentucky residents moving out of state in then-recent years [8].

Originally, I never travelled too far with Claudia, but with Junior keeping an interest in the goings-on at the restaurant (“just until the right job for me shows up,” he kept telling me) while also taking college courses, I found myself trusting him more and more with the Court and Cafe's day-to-day operations. That trust allowed me to do more traveling with Claudia, in turn allowed the two of us to visit more places. The roads to the coal-mining towns of the state did a number on the Ford; Claudia loved the rolling hills found in the north of the state, though, so we traveled down those smoother roads a bit more often.

Now, selling the chicken didn’t start off as well as I hoped it would. My proposal was rejected many times, often because the pressure fryer seemed too dangerous or high-maintenance – both, understandable complaints that would later hound me like huntin’ dogs on a jackrabbit – but many other times, the proprietors just didn’t understand why I would take a handshake instead of signing on some paper. But I did business with an old fashioned handshake because of what it represented. To me, it was all about trust – if I was a man of my word, so would they be. You’d be surprised by how long a ways honesty and decency can go. At least when it comes to chicken.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



In the early days my mind was elsewhere. The pain and discomfort from the burn wounds. Wherever on Earth my ex-wife was. What my next job would be. When I was going to pay back all these loans. Because of all of this, I approached Millie and tried to convince her to get more involved at the Court and Café. To sort of help me carry the weight. I knew she’s say yes, because Millie Sanders always likes a challenge. When Father returned from his first round of what was to be many trips around the state to check on how we were minding the store, he was noticeably impressed with Millie’s handling of some things. I remember asking him about his trip. “No biters,” he admitted, “But we’ll try again starting after Sunday.”

Millie ended up proving herself helpful in areas outside the restaurant, too. That next week, Millie helped me with organizing tax documents and coordinating workers during the café’s heavy lunch hour. Impressed further by this, Father asked her “You sure you aren’t going to, uh, burn out, Millie? Maybe you should take it easy.”

Her rebuttal was bold and clear, but with a smile: “I’m still raising three kids, Pop. Motherhood is a crash course in organizing, where keeping things in check and in line, and testing your resolve in the face of stress and pressure is a daily requirement. Trust me, Pops, I can handle this.”

Enjoying seeing his children having such determination, Father grinned with pride from ear to ear and chuckled. “You sure can, Mildred!”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



It is often said that Harland’s chicken was rejected 1,009 times before it was first accepted [9]. Let me finally put that ridiculous rumor to rest – it was not 1,009 times, but somewhere between six-hundred- or seven-hundred-and-nine times, I’d say.

…Oh, we went everywhere – across the whole state, from the plains to the mountains, from the high-class restaurants in the cities to the humble diners in the country. We visited potential buyers in Richmond, Morehead, Campbellsville, Hodgenville, the peculiarly-named towns of Burning Springs and Hazard, and even the city of Lexington, all without success. But Harland wasn’t desperate. Once, we stopped over at some greasy spoon somewhere later than planned, as they were closed up for the night when we got there. Still curious, Harlan went around back while I waited in the car. A minute later, I saw Harland darting back to the car, and immediately told me how through the back window he could see how filthy their kitchen was; “no chicken deserves to be served here!” he declared.

…With each failure, Harland tweaked his sales pitch. He practiced the swiftness of his moves and his preparedness. He enhanced his style and persona by presenting himself as a wise old gentleman and calling himself “Colonel,” a title he embraced after the second commissioning. He was becoming more professional with each passing rejection until finally we reached that six-hundred- or seven-hundred-and-ninth spot, a family-run diner in outside of Danville, near the very heart of the state. That family is rich now, and they still frequently comment with a grin how sorry the six-hundred- or seven-hundred-and-eight people before them must have felt about rejecting Harland’s offer once KFC caught on! I mean, many of them later became franchisees once the chicken increased in popularity, yes, but it was still good for a laugh.

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



It was now the beginning of the summer of 1951, and I was travelling across the rugged hills of the Cumberland Plateau, along the same roads that once made up the old Dixie Highway, and would soon be made up into I-75. When traveling alone, I would sleep in the car, sometimes with the windows down, as these were back in the day when petty crime was not a concern like nowadays, at least not in those parts of Kentucky. For food, I’d subsist on the chicken made during the demos to cut down on expenses as much as possible. I was roughing it, but never doubting my goal – to create a security blanket for Claudia and I’s retirement.

…It had been a long time of trying, but my chicken was slowly becoming a hit around the state. Leave it to good ol’-fashioned Kentucky word-of-mouth to make it so, before too long, potential franchisees knew exactly who I was the moment I told them my name!

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



After months of living on the road, Father took a short break from driving to do some running. The 1951 campaign for state senate was set for August 4, and he figured that if the chicken franchising idea didn’t work, perhaps a brief career in the state legislature would help him better understand how to better ensure his family’s savings long-term. On election night, the margin was incredibly narrow, but Father was not the victor. He threw it up to him not campaigning enough for it. In retrospect, though, that failure was a blessing in disguise. It kept his intermittent interest in politics alive. It wasn’t his first run for office [10] and I could tell he didn’t want it to be his last. The narrow loss gave him the courage to be active in politics again if a time came for it later, because he believed that if he ever ran again, he’d know from this experience how to run better. That if he ever ran again, he would win.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



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[ imgur: SK1kvoU ]
– Sanders political campaign poster, 8/4/1951



On November 26, 1951, father was in his den, going over his plans for traveling through the state during the winter, deciding to focus on the less mountainous parts until the spring thaw set in, when the phone rang. We both ran to it, but he was quicker. He then regretted answering when he heard it was my mother. But then his face went from showing annoyance to sadness.

“What’s wrong, Pop” I asked.

“Your Uncle Joe, um, he died yesterday [11].”

“Oh, no.”

Father returned to the phone receiver, “Yeah, uh-huh. Yeah, 59, that’s awful, I kind of liked him…” Then the two then started arguing. After several minutes of exchanging insults, retorts, and rebuttals, Pop got one insult too many, and slammed the phone down in a huff.

I remember their divorce was shocking to me and my sisters, while both of our parents seemed resigned and accepting of it all. Years of conflict, tension and resentment had nearly exploded like a mishandled pressure fryer, but the two had managed to keep the divorce proceedings mostly civil for our sakes. It possibly was their way of making up for not being so civil during the preceding years.

Pops was always restless while Mom was most comfortable nestled into one spot, so maybe it was meant to happen. The two of them may have just been too different from one other. I remember them fighting often when we were younger. One of their biggest fights occurred during my near-fatal tonsils operation in 1932. The two of them responded to death differently. "Maybe that was the start of this fight, too," I remember thinking when they told us that they were divorcing. But despite all of what had split them up, a small piece of what brought them together still remained: after father finally slammed the phone down, he paused for a few moments to see if Mother would re-dial.

Pop saw I was still there, and I guess he figured he should say something. “You know, I didn’t really know your mother when we married. We were both two youngin's that just went to the same movie-house. We were, well, we were kids, and before we really understood what we were getting ourselves into, we were married kids. Then we were married with kids before we really even knew what hit us!” [12]

“Millie recently told me that Ma once said that she never wanted any children,” I decided to just cut to the chase concerning the thought buzzing around my head like a horsefly on a donkey butt for the past few days.

“Only at the beginning!” Father defended Mother. “After we got married, she told me only then that she didn’t want to be overwhelmed by maternal obligations. But, she thought that resolve alone could stop nature. Margaret was born just 40 weeks after our wedding night, y’know!” [12] He chuckled, “But you know what? I’ve never regretted our marriage, because it gave us you and your sisters. Never forget, son, a mistake can always be a blessing in disguise if you respond to it in the right way.”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



Kentucky Fried Chicken was built on the efforts of one old man tirelessly driving around to back-road diners nearly as decrepit as himself. He would get himself booked onto local TV shows in order to promote the opening of some new franchise, and he would…hand drumsticks out to members of the audience. He was a natural performer and began filling his everyday speech with the backwoods slang he’d been at pains to shed when he thought the insurance world [in which he once worked] didn’t approve of it [13]. But the Colonel was moving up from his insurance days of the 1920s. By 1952, Sanders’ chicken was becoming a common weekend dish for many Kentuckians. However, the Colonel would push outside of Kentucky’s borders after seeing the quick success of his chicken in Utah…

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



I first met Pete Harman and his lovely wife Arline at a convention that the National Restaurant Association held in Chicago, Illinois in 1951. It was one of the few non-KFC-related trips that Claudia and I had made that year, and I'm glad we did. Pete and I found we got along fine over our shared disapproval of the vice of alcohol. ...On August 3, 1952, Claudia and I were driving to California to catch a plane for a Christian retreat in Australia, where I hoped I would finally cut out my constant swearing [14][15]. The retreat didn't work, but it didn't hurt to try. Which brings me to my next point - that when were passing through Utah on our way to California, I figured, well, “why not give franchising out here a try?” I approved of Pete's work ethic. I liked the man’s establishment – a fancy hamburger stand called the Do Drop Inn – and I liked the cut of the jib of the humble Utahan who ran it. It was the farthest place from Kentucky at which my chicken had ever been sold at the time. But as it turned out, working with Harman proved to be a crucial catalyst for KFC.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



This stocky man with a shock of white hair and peculiar greying goatee graciously came around back with a business proposition. It took me a moment to remember him, it but the recognition clicked as soon as he referred to himself as “Colonel Sanders," and I was elated to re-make his acquaintance.

"Say, how about you let us treat you and the misses to dinner tonight?" I remember asking him. "We can go to the Log Haven restaurant over in Millcreek Canyon, and you can see our Wasatch mountains - they're a real sight to behold."

"I've got an even sight for ya, Pete," The Colonel replied, "The thing that'll give ya a long line of eager and happy customers spillin' in through those doors over there."

He offered to franchise to me a product that he was calling “Colonel Fried Chicken.” As the Colonel started the pressure fryer, he explained that Bertha was his nickname for his first pressure cooker. The Colonel added pressure relief valves to Bertha and then spent years experimenting with various marinades, oils, temperatures and the like; “I guess you could can me a scientist or an engineer for that,” he said, “I got a patent for the design so at least I can be called an inventor [16].” He then pulled out an opaque packet, some flour, and the chicken. I carefully studied his device and how quickly he prepped the birds, eager to impress a business colleague and potential business partner. “Now here’s the part that puts my chicken above the rest,” he explained as he grabbed the packet, “a mixture of eleven spices and herbs that I perfected way back in 1939 [17]. If you don’t mind, I’d like to keep it a trade secret, you understand.”

He surprised me with how quickly the chicken was cooked, and I remember being wowed upon my first bite of his heavenly crunchy chicken. I decided to give it all a try, and I am so glad I did. Because in just a few months, we really did have long lines of customers, each one waiting for and looking forward to their turn to order. Cars lined up and down the street many-a-time. And sales at the Do Drop Inn tripled in the first year, with 75% of that increase stemming from the selling of the Colonel’s Chicken [18]!

Soon I began maintaining regular contact with the Colonel, first as a business partner, but soon enough as a friend. A major idea that I – well, a sign painter of mine named Don Anderson [19] – contributed to his creation was the name, by switching the Colonel for Kentucky, since southern cuisine in Utah was a rarity back then. It gave it an exotic aura of sorts that caught local attention better. Soon enough, sales of the chicken were so successful that I had a huge sign erected over my diner saying “Kentucky Fried Chicken!”

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, early 1992



As the traveling and franchising continued, I found myself more and more taking a liking to being called Colonel and being treated like the Southerly Gentleman type, so I decided to change my look to better match the man I wanted to be. I started wearing a string tie and a sharp black suit, and I started using a fancy cane like the man on the monopoly board game. I also decided I wanted make myself look older and wiser, so I dyed by spotted grey beard and moustache to match the snow already on my head.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



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– Sanders and Harman, c. early 1952



At first I didn’t think he was serious about wearing the old-timey outfit all hours of the day, but he started wearing the getup every time we were in public, whenever we went to family events and activities, and even at places when someone, anyone, could have just decided to drop on by. But I never thought he was silly. In fact, I thought he looked handsome and dignified. I even started to wear a matching ante-bellum dress when joining him on trips around the state, in order to complete the look.

– Claudia Price Sanders and interviewer, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



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[pic: imgur.com/oBijLKp.png ]

– Sander's business card, c. mid-1952



A lot of people don’t know this, but I was the one that convinced him to switch from a black suit to a white one.

And why did you do that?

Because whenever he’d make the chicken, flour stains would end up on his coat! White cotton clothing breathes in a kitchen and can hide such stains much easier, too. Harland embraced the look; he took to it like a duck taking to water. By early 1952, he was using two kinds of the outfit: a heavy wool white suit in winter and a light cotton white suit in the summer.

Yes, many of the Colonel’s aides have said that they never saw him wear anything other than his iconic outfit.

Oh, that sounds about right. Even after stepping out of the bath, all the bathroom towels were either white or white with black details! By, I’d say, the Summer of 1952, the iconic ‘colonel’ image we all remember him by today was present and staying.

– Claudia Price Sanders and interviewer, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



By the end of 1952, Father had fully transitioned from being “Harland” into being “The Colonel.”

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



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– Colonel Sanders on the road, c. late 1952 (photo likely taken by Claudia)



EISENHOWER LANDSLIDE LEAVES DEMS REELING; GOP Leads House Race, Senate Close

By Harold H. Harris and Richard J. Roth

Dwight D. Eisenhower has scored a smashing victory tonight, being elected the 33rd President of the United States and ending the 20-years Democratic control of the White House. The former General defeated Democratic nominee Adlai E. Stevenson by a popular vote and electoral college margin that even his most enthusiastic supporters had not dared to predict. Cracking the "Solid South" for the first Republican triumphs below the Mason-Dixon Line since 1921, Eisenhower won or was leading in 38 states with a total electoral vote of 431. ...The popular vote - currently incomplete - was Eisenhower in first place with 28,434,963 votes and Stevenson in second place with 22,871,179 votes. Never before in American history has a candidate received so many votes for the Presidency, and never before have as many persons journeyed to the polls to cast their ballots. The previous individual record vote was 27,476,673 set by Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936. Four years later, 49,901,835 Americans went to the polls in the Roosevelt-Willkie election, and in doing so established the previous total voting record. ...Whether Eisenhower's tremendous landslide swept a Republican-controlled Congress into office is still in doubt as late returns continue to trickle in. At the time of this publication, the G.O.P. was leading, but only by five seats, in the fight to wrest control of the House from the Democrats. Republicans had won 199 House seats and were leading in contests for 24 others for an indicated total of 223, five more than the 218-seat majority...

– The Brooklyn Eagle, 11/5/1952 [20]



“I remember when KFC outlets started poppin’ up in our corner of Kentucky. It was in, I want to say, 1953 or so, and we’re in Appalachia territory, see, very mountainous, so if you’re driving around up there or opening up a store up there, you have to know what you’re. You have to know the area. And the Colonel knew how to work around the place. He was a mountainous type himself, though you wouldn’t be able to tell from just lookin’ at ’im.”

So can you tell us what your first experience eating KFC was like?

“It was good! It was actually at this one restaurant at Wheelwright Junction, right off of Route 122, not too far from the Cardinal Country Store. Part of some kind of tie-in offer. I thought the stuff was delicious. And because it was convenient to get good chicken so easily, I remember going back there to get some KFC every Sunday for dinner, time and time again.”

– Mary Woodson, former resident of Pikeville, KY, 1991 interview



As the enterprise grew, Harland continued to run the company’s business specifics concerning travelling and selling to new franchisees both on the road and in Corbin, while the children and I would mix and ship the spices to the growing list of restaurants, even running to the train station to see the shipments off on midnight deliveries every now and again. Soon enough, we had to expand our number of employees to beyond just family.

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



Throughout the year 1953, Sanders began to expand his franchise locations to places outside of Kentucky, emboldened by praise from his chicken, especially from Harland Junior (or Harley, as he began to be called a different name at around this time as well! Apparently, according to a 1963 interview, the "label change" had something to do with there being another person named "Junior" in one of his college classes, but Harley quickly grew fond of the new nickname and it simply stuck).

Contemporary reviews in various forms of literature – food magazines, travel guides, and cuisine booklets – commended the quality of the Colonel’s chicken and gravy, along with more items such as Colonel Biscuits (honey biscuits made with zesty spices and healthy herbs, a creation of Harley and Claudia's design and work) as the year progressed. At the same time, local and regional worker unions praised Sanders for his choice in workplaces, albeit were sure to also comment on the occasional accusation of the Colonel having “a mean temper when provoked.” However, these accusations, at least at the time, were dismissed by most as slander from competitors wishing to replicate the Colonel’s successful introduction of chicken into the fast-food industry.

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



I worked at one of The Colonel’s first South Carolina franchises for over ten years, beginning in 1953. Down there it’s nearly impossible for someone like me to get a job working at a white man’s diner, but The Colonel never struck deals with them hatin’ types. Sanders cared more if you were a good worker than if you were a black worker or a white worker. You know, that’s why I hate it when I hear rumors that The Colonel was a racist because that is a lie through and through. I met The Colonel, and I learned from him how to make the chicken. One time, some customer started giving my boss flack for hiring black people instead of white people just when The Colonel was visiting. I tell you, he gave that customer such a yellin’! Told him the skill of the cook’s hands matter more than anything else, and pushed and kicked that Pasty right out of the malt shoppe! Believe me, if you could do the job, The Colonel didn’t care what color you were, trust me on this. [21]

– Anonymous former KFC Employee, interview for ABC report, 2002




…It is worthy of note just how fortunate - or smart - The Colonel’s company was to avoid unintentionally oversaturating the market with their product. The heads of the business were also smart enough to not expand too quickly and overwhelm their business models. Instead of blind ambition influencing its growth, the company went at just the right pace, naturally branching out to organically stay in step with the ways of supply and demand…

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



Rookie workers would start off complaining about The Colonel’s strict policy of forbidding us waitresses from collecting tips. I worked as a waitress at the Sanders Court and Café during the 1940s, so I knew where they were coming from, but The Colonel wouldn’t risk customers getting the wrong idea from flirtatious youngsters and causing any ruckus in any of his franchise’s locations. Instead, from the get-go, The Colonel paid his customers what he would later call “a livable wage” that took average tip amounts into account. In some places, the Colonel was a really smart fellow. Even ahead of his time, in fact!

– Anonymous former KFC Employee, interview for CBS report, 1975



The summer of 1953 was when I really started selling my franchise beyond Kentucky’s borders in full force. I knew we were making enough money and our financial future was looking as bright as Montana at noon. But I just loved travelling those roads and seeing so many great and interesting people! That summer, I convinced an old friend of mine, Jo Clemmons from Oak Ridge, TN, to open up the first KFC franchise in Tennessee [22]. Then, on my first try at selling my chicken in northern Illinois, much farther north of Little Egypt and Alton, I was driving north along the eastern side of the state toward Tuscola in September of 1953, when I witnessed a terrible car wreck happen, with one car almost hitting mine in the melee. One driver, a young man, ended up pinned under what was left of this panel truck of sorts; without thinking I hurried over and held out my cane. He grabbed it, and another man and I pulled him out of the wreckage [23].

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



I’ve never read the Colonel’s autobiography, so I don’t know if the Colonel ever visited Illinois in the early years of KFC, but I understand he was passionate about infrastructure. I agree with that. My father almost died in a car accident once when I was little. He told me it was a miracle that he survived it. By the Grace of God, right before he lost consciousness, some man with a smooth tree branch pulled him out of the wreckage and saved his life. The point is that the accident wouldn’t have even happened if the roads were safer, and they have gotten worse across the country in the decades since then. …My father also developed a temper from the pain of his injuries, but at the end of the day he was still a good man. I saw him struggle with the pain, and struggle to pay for medication and treatment for his wounds causing him pain. Seeing someone you care about go through that is absolutely heartbreaking. It shouldn’t happen to anyone, and it should not happen anymore, but it still does, despite the progresses made in healthcare of the years...

– Jim Edgar, speech on the costs of highways and healthcare, 11/3/2009



STATE CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION RESULTS: Democrats Maintain Majority Control

…“Republicans have repeatedly accused half of the state House and Senate – the Democratic halves – of corruption, but tonight the voters proved that they were not falling for any of it. Tonight showed how smart the voters of Kentucky are, and they have overall rejected the malarky. Now, the Party of Jackson is going to hold Republicans accountable, and make sure that corruption, big business favoritism, and partisan bias are kept out of Frankfort,” claims Democratic Caucus aide and legislative assistant John B. Breckinridge…

The Louisville Times, 11/3/1953



…But the big news story of today is the one about last night’s School Funding Referendum. Across our Commonwealth, the people voted on how to pay for schoolin’, and a slim majority of Kentuckians who went to the polls voted to repeal and replace our current per capita distribution process for school funds and permitted the General Assembly, by a general law, to prescribe the manner of distribution of the Common School Fund. This referendum was opposed by segregationist groups on the claim that the General Assembly will unfairly distribute funds to Black schools. …The referendum passed by a very narrow margin, with the latest report suggesting a margin of roughly 2%...

– Thomas T. Hall, WMOR 1330AM radio broadcast, 11/4/1953



By the start of 1954, my chicken was becoming incredibly popular in the state. Claudia and the children were instrumental in getting the word out by word of mouth within Kentucky, while Harman began to spend more and more time helping me come up with interesting eye-catching ideas – advertising details, and what have you. Business was so successful that by the end of 1953, people were actually traveling to me, requesting to become my next franchisee. I was truly surprised the first time it happened and didn’t expect it to be the new phase of KFC. It meant that now any travelling was more often spent inspecting franchisees than finding new ones, turning the focus from quantity to quality. But, like a farmer getting a better tractor, I didn’t mind this change; it just made the trips more leisurely, and so, more enjoyable for me and Claudia!

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



Harley graduated from college with a law degree and a BA in business administration in June 1954. After lengthy discussions with my husband [John Foster Ruggles Jr.], I told the family I wanted to take some night classes in business. I thought it could prove beneficial to both my father’s chicken business and to John’s sign-making business. Father agreed, as did my husband after some convincing. As one Sanders left the world of education, another entered.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



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[pic: imgur.com/d5Mkhcr.png ]

– American mandolinist and singer-songwriter Bill Monroe, often called "The Father of Bluegrass" for creating the bluegrass music genre in the mid-to-late 1940s, meets with Colonel Sanders, circa July 1954; Monroe was stopping by a KFC outlet near Hebron, KY, on his way to a venue in Frankfort, KY, just as Sanders was dropping by the outlet; Sanders was a fan of Monroe, and greatly enjoyed the unexpected and rather serendipitous visit



When I first met Colonel Sanders, I was 22 years ago. It was August, 1954, and I had been working at the Clauses’ Hobby House Restaurant in Fort Wayne since was 15 – except for my aforementioned army years, that is. Counting from my discharge, I had been at the Hobby House for just over a year, and was working as its head chef, when The Colonel first stopped by. I remember thinking how odd he looked in his nearly all-white outfit, and for some reason I didn’t recognize him until he said his name. He was odd-looking, but charming, and gave a sales pitch that really won over the Clauses. ...Soon I started working with The Colonel more directly on matters of the kitchen …But of course, I was only 25 then; I had no idea that he was going to be such a huge part of my life. …Of course it wasn’t all flowers and sunshine. When I first started making the chicken, he cussed me up big-time for dumping the chicken out of the fryer. He wanted them ladled out, because that minimizes damage to the crust. But despite his mean temper, I recognized that he had the wisdom and skills of a lifetime in the restaurant business; wisdom and skills that he could tell me and teach me; wisdom and skills that I could use for my own dream of having my own restaurant someday [24]. I just didn't realize at the time how greatly The Colonel and his chicken would end up being a part of that journey...

– Dave Thomas’ Under the Colonel’s Wing, Mosaic Publishing, 1982



BARKLEY BEATS COOPER IN CLOSE SENATE RACE

…The Democratic victor, Alben W. Barkley, who is “77 years young,” as he repeatedly puts it, previously served as Vice President of the United States from 1949 to 1953. Before then, he served in the US Senate from 1927 to 1949 and in the US House of Representatives from 1913 to 1927. …The Republican loser of the election was 53-year-old incumbent US Senator John Sherman Cooper, who had held the seat since November 1952, after winning a special election to finish the term won by Virgil Chapman, a Democrat, in 1948; Chapman passed away in office in 1951, prompting said special election. …Cooper’s loss – by a margin of roughly 9% – demonstrates a major problem that the Kentucky GOP has been facing for years now. Frankly, they repeated fail to nominate the right kind of candidate…

The Louisville Times, 11/2/1954



…The 1954 US congressional elections were held two years after Eisenhower’s election to the Presidency. …Republicans lost gubernatorial seats and seats in both chambers of congress, largely as a result of public backlash to McCarthyism and several relevant controversies, most notably McCarthy’s hearings on the US Army, and the machinations that led to the suicide of incumbent US Senator Lester C. Hunt (D-WY). …In the House, Republicans lost 18 seats, costing them majority control. Furthermore, Republicans lost only 2 Senate seats, but as they were holding the Senate by 1 seat, the results cost them control of that chamber as well. …Republicans lost 8 governor seats...

– clickopedia.co.usa



…Travelling to all of these new a different places in that state allowed my father to really reinvent himself. With each new location, with each new person he met, he tweaked his sales pitched and watched his swear-filled mouth. He was able to separate himself from his reputation of swearing like a sailor. I remember how he’d often say how the priest in Corbin refused to eat at his place until he quit cussing, and as a result the priest had never tried KFC. And he apparently wouldn’t until after “The Swearer” became “The Colonel”…

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



My stepdad seemed to really have his pulse on image and marketing and all that. Inside the state, the chicken was called “Colonel’s Chicken,” and had become incredibly popular in the state by the start of 1955, if I remember correctly. Outside the state, though, people called it “Kentucky Fried Chicken,” which I guess what an intriguing title to non-Kentuckians. It sounds like a brilliant marketing strategy, but it was actually accidental, as someone who worked for my stepdad, I forget who, called it K.F.C. when it started out in Utah, and it just kind of spread out from there to the rest of the states I guess, you know? Anyway, I do remember that the Colonel once commented about how unbelievably successful the whole thing was, and actually sort of feared that the whole thing could be growing out of hand – by 1955, I think he had, oh what was it, about two or three hundred franchisees? And as his chicken’s popularity spread across the nation, which he really, honestly, he really wasn’t expecting that, I really think it became a tiny bit overwhelming for the man. Really.

– Elvis Ray Price, Colonel Sanders’ stepson, in a rare interview, 1994



“The easy way is efficacious and speedy, the hard way arduous and long. But, as the clock ticks, the easy way becomes harder and the hard way becomes easier. And as the calendar records the years, it becomes increasingly evident that the easy way rests hazardously upon shifting sands, whereas the hard way builds solidly a foundation of confidence that cannot be swept away.”

– Colonel Sanders, c. 1954 [25]



In the years after World War 2, Kentucky experienced economic peaks and valleys. Under President Eisenhower, federal construction of the Interstate Highway System helped connect even the most remote areas of Kentucky to one another, improving communicate and trade throughout the state.

Lawrence W. Wetherby served as governor during the first half of the decade, from December 1950 to December 1955. A moderate Democrat, he was considered pragmatic, solid, and effective, though unspectacular. As lieutenant governor under Earle Clements, he had been out of the limelight. After Clements was elected as a US Senator in 1950, Wetherby succeeded to the office; he was elected to his own gubernatorial term in 1951. He emphasized themes of road improvements, and increasing tourism and other economic development. Wetherby was one of the few Southern governors to implement desegregation in public schools after the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education (1954), which ruled that segregated schools were unconstitutional. Furthermore, Wetherby supported agriculture workers at a time of change for the state agricultural scene. Though still important to the state’s economy, the agriculture sector was being supplanted in many areas by industry, which stimulated urbanization (in fact, by the end of the 1960s, Kentucky had more urban than rural residents). To ease the transition for mostly-rural to mostly-urban, Wetherby promoted pro-farmer legislation at the start of the early 1955 state congressional session. The bill was later credited in helping workers such as farmhands for the state's tobacco farmers avoid financial hardships later on down the road. Although decreasing in overall importance, tobacco production remained an important part of the state economy for the next several decades, bolstered by a New Deal legacy that gives financial advantages to holders of tobacco allotments.

At the start of the 1950s, 13% of Kentuckians migrated out of state largely for economic reasons. Dwight Yoakam's song "Readin', Rightin', Route 23" is named after a local expression describing the route that rural Kentuckians took to find work beyond the coal mines. (U.S. Route 23 runs north from Kentucky through Columbus and Toledo, Ohio and to the automotive centers of Michigan.) Rather than the standard line that their elementary schools taught "the three Rs" of "Readin', 'Ritin', and 'Rithmetic", Kentucky residents used to say that the three Rs they learned were "Readin', 'Ritin', and Route 23 North. Governor Wetherby fought against this growing trend during his term by strongly supporting “home-grown” enterprises to lower unemployment, and promoting multiple Kentucky-based businesses, including Kentucky Fried Chicken… [26]

– Lynda Downard’s Kentucky In The 20th Century: A History, Borders Books, 2020




NEW HIGHWAY BRINGS NEW JOBS, STORES, EATS

Covington, KY From north to south, construction workers are pouring out concrete and asphalt to create I-75, the latest road development project transforming the face of Kentucky and improving it's connections to the road systems of the rest of the country. The massive transportation infrastructure is reportedly adding thousands of jobs at a time when the state truly needs them. New buildings are also being established ahead of the highway’s completion, with half-built lots dotting the sides of the mega-road’s path – gas stations, appliance stores, motels, and of course, restaurants and diners galore flank the future transportation "lifeline," as its planners call I-75. …“this new road can help bring Kentuckians and Americans closer together and expand their consumer options” says a franchisee for the state-wide famous Colonel’s Fried Chicken. His restaurant in Williamstown will be serving the famous “pressure-fried” chicken alongside its own menu items to hungry customers stopping on by on their way into Kentucky, out of Kentucky, or even just plain through Kentucky. …“It seems this new highway will bring good fortune to all!”

The Courier-Journal, Kentucky newspaper, 1/9/1955



In early 1955, about a week or two after the start of the final session of state congress, I joined Wetherby for some political social event, not as a caterer this time, but as a welcomed guest. I found myself captivated by the patriotic rhetoric spouted out there. When he finally had the time to do so, when everything was winding down and the Governor had had some Champaign or what-have-you, Wetherby said to me, “I’ve really got to hand it to you, Harland – I mean, ‘Colonel.’ You went from having one local institution to handling a national enterprise!”

“Yeah, but now that I’m getting all this attention, people keep asking me to do things for them. I’ve been invited to several business conventions and discussion groups for this year alone!”

“Well if you ever need a plus-1, just give me a call.”

“Aw, what are you talking about? You’re way too busy being Governor!”

“Actually…nope!”

At this, I turned my head to face him directly, “What do ya mean, Lawrence?”

He quickly looked around and lowered his voice to confess, “Do you know how easy this job is? In the first 90 days, you fix the budget and push for the programs and ideas you campaigned on, then the state congress takes a summer break. You only do voluntary legislation in the fall, and the congress is off to focus on the midterm elections during your second year. Then, in your third of only four years in office, you repeat the intense 90-day period of budget-balancing and program-pushing before summer break, and after the final fall session, you’re basically a lame duck!” [27]

I was shocked by this revelation, “Balancing the budget every two years for um, uh…”

“Four years,” Lawrence returned his voice to normal.

“…and that’s it? That’s all you have to do?”

“Well, personally, you and I know I’ve done a lot more for this state than just that, but constitutionally speaking…yes! That’s it! Really, to tell you the truth, Colonel, it’s a very easy job.”

“Really.”

“I’m telling you, anybody could serve as governor, Colonel Sanders. Anybody.”

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



NOTES
[1] Source of boring tax specifics: https://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v66n1/v66n1p1.html
[2] As it was described and can be found here: https://www.ssa.gov/history/1950.html (August 28, 1950 entry)
[3] Source: one of the charts found in the above link (so, I really should have just written "Ibid." here...huh...)
[4] IOTL, Sanders received a Social Security check on $105 dollars in 1955 (according to several sources); in 1950, that amount would be valued at US$92.81, according to this site: https://www.saving.org/inflation/inflation.php?amount=105&year=1955. Also, the 2018 value of $105 in 1955 and $92.81 in 1950 are $969.48 and $969.49, respectively (same site)
[5] Their friendship is often mentioned, albeit just in passing, whenever I look up his 1950 re-commissioning
[6] Mentioned here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/
[7] She was a sculptor, according to this: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6247063/margaret-josephine-sanders. The Colonel’s sentiment towards it is mention in her Associated Press obituary: [imgur: c1Hty3C.png ]
[8] Mentioned on wiki’s Kentucky (history) article; seems legit
[9] Rumored # of rejections mention here: http://securitymarketingguru.com/bo...g/65-years-old-and-105-social-security-check/ and on other sites as well
[10] Briefly mentioned in list on the KFC website
[11] Who? This guy!: https://www.geni.com/people/Joseph-King-Sr/6000000024406367921
[12] Mentioned (and paraphrased from) here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (page 7 when printed out)
[13] These sentences are taken verbatim from here: https://www.thenational.ae/arts-cul...eam-inside-a-bucket-of-fried-chicken-1.386876
[14] Found here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ And additional information can be found in this OTL article here: https://australianfoodtimeline.com.au/kentucky-fried-chicken-opens/
[15] Source: https://www.deseretnews.com/article/865615974/Utah-man-who-founded-first-KFC-dies-at-95.html
[16] Quote is from here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (page 18 when printed out)
[17] Pulled from here: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-kfc-founder-colonel-sanders-achieved-success-in-his-60s-2015-6
[18] Taken from sourced/cited sentence found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_KFC
[19] Found in this source here: https://www.thedailymeal.com/eat/10-things-you-didn-t-know-about-kentucky-fried-chicken-0
[20] A slightly edited OTL article!
[21] Based on Johnny D. Miller’s comment found here: https://www.quora.com/How-racist-was-Colonel-Sanders, along with the comments of family members such as this one: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...ory.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.b018cc1fd11f and especially this one: https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/2018/07/17/colonel-sanders-family-defends-him/788795002/
[22] Source: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (page 20 when printed out)
[23] Some details concerning Jim Edgar’s father’s death found on a PDF found when googling “Jim Edgar 1953” (edgar_jim_4fnl_vol i.pdf (I don’t know how to link it, sorry…))
[24] Thomas commenting on Sanders can be found throughout this: [ youtube: f7u8HjdvUpk ]
[25] This is an OTL Colonel Sanders quote, which was pulled from here: http://www.quoteswise.com/colonel-sanders-quotes.html
[26] Italicized parts were pulled from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Kentucky#1945–1980
[27] Clements' exact comments are noted here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governor_of_Kentucky#cite_note-clarkxx-51
 
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Post 2
Post 2: Chapter 2-to-Chapter 3



Chapter 2: May 1955 – September 1955

“Politics is the art of the possible.”

– Otto von Bismarck, 1867 interview



It was sometime in either the start or the middle of May, 1955. A man arrived at the Colonel’s franchise’s headquarters in Corbin; I saw him poking around the café and I asked him what we could do for him. His accent was local, “Hello, I’d like to speak with Colonel Sanders on some very important –”

“Do you have an appointment?”

“Yes, I –”

“Back here,” I ushered the man around back to my father’s office. Like his image, Father kept his “paperwork room” tidy despite its noticeable age and small size. The wallpaper kept peeling and the air was never as hot or cold as should have been. Cabinets and files lines the sides of the room, making it even smaller. Opposite Father’s desk hung the 1939 entry on Sanders’ Court and Café that Duncan Hines included in Adventures in Good Eating:
“A very good place to stop en route to Cumberland Falls and the Great Smokies. Continuous 24-hour service. Sizzling steaks, fried chicken, country ham, hot biscuits.”

Father was reviewing some papers on his desk when the man and I entered the open doorway; he sat up and bluntly asked, “Hello, stranger, what’s your business?”

The man quickly answered while we entered the room, “Sir, I represent the state’s Republican Party leaders, and –”

“Hey Dad, you know your main franchiser in Colorado?” Millie quickly popped her head into the doorway, interrupting the stranger; she was holding the nearby phone in her hands.

“What about him?” Father inquired.

“He just bought 400 plastic buckets on a whim and wants to know what you think he should do with them.”

“Heh-heh, what?! Oh, boy, that fella. Ha… oh, uh, I don’t know, was it a local bucket store or something?”

“Maybe.”

Father, failing to come up with an idea he thought would be sensible, dismissively said, “Well, uh, oh, I don’t know, maybe he could sell my chicken in them as a tie-in – or whatever it’s called – to the bucket store or something [1]! We’ll see how well it goes to see if it should be done again.”

“The chicken, huh? That could work. Sir, did you hear him?” Millie spoke back into the receiver as she went around the corner.

“Sir, we are wondering if you would be interested in –”

“Harley!” Claudia entered the room next, “someone spilled a drink and it's gone everywhere. Where do we keep the extra towels?”

A few more interruptions from the day-to-day business invaded the area until finally the man, growing agitated at starting his thought again and again, reached his limit. Raising his voice, the man quickly blurted out as politely as he could, “Colonel Sanders, we’d like you to run for Governor!”

Everyone – Father, Claudia, Millie, and I – stopped talking to look at the stranger.

Not sure what to say next, the man added “Please.”

Father sat up in his chair. He was noticeably surprised but also genuinely curious. He inquired if it was some joke, but the look of seriousness on the man’s face answered that question. At a loss for words, Father chuckled, “Why?”

The man presented the case. “For three very good reasons, sir. Number one: the chaos brewing in the Democratic race could be the Republican’s chance to finally win back the governorship. Secondly, your strong showing in your Republican primary bid four years ago shows that support for your candidacy can be built up instead of made from scratch. And on the final note, above all, your name recognition within the state. Every Kentuckian knows your name, and can see you as a traditional well-meaning man whom wants what's best for everyone. That’s the image you have, and that’s the perfect image for a successful Republican campaign. An honest businessman with heart, compassion, vision and – ”

“Hold on, sonny,” Father cut the brownnosing session to mull over his points a bit before replying, “Sir, my life has been in chicken. As you can see by how busy I am here, I have my hands full already.” I’m not sure why he stopped himself from saying the franchise was mainly for retirement funds. It's most likely that, given the uniqueness of the circumstance, my intrigued father just wanted to see if there was anything more to this strange Republican man’s even stranger pitch.

The man with the offer switched tactics. “The governor’s seat is a wonderful way to be of bigger help to this state. Everyone loves your chicken. I love your chicken, but regardless, the GOP state leaders believe it to be every Kentuckian’s duty to do the best thing when they can.”

“Hmm, I still don’t know, stranger,” Father replied.

“At least think about it, Colonel, sir,” The man took out a card and left it on the desk. “We would really like you to say yes to this wonderful opportunity. But get back to us soon. Very soon, in fact; the filing deadline is the first of July [2].”

Fathered quickly returned his gaze to the man “Wait, Why so soon?”

“It gives the candidates time to run for their respective primaries on August 9 [2].”

“A primary run? You mean I’d be running two times for the one job?” Father held up his two fingers, then one, to illustrate his point.

The man quickly went on the defense with the line, “You’re a shoo-in, Colonel! The only other person in the race is a small-time businessman with no name recognition.”

“What’s his name?” Father asked.

“Um, Ed…Edwin Denney [3], I believe” the man eventually answered.

Father thought for a moment more, “I know lots of businessmen, but I’ve never heard of him.”

“My point exactly. Colonel, we need you, your state needs you. Please think it over, and call us when you have, sir. Thank you for your time,” he then made his cordial goodbyes and left for the door. His last words on that day were, “Kentucky needs you, Colonel. Will you answer the call?”

It was a corny conclusion, but it still struck Father, who fiddled with the card as he sat back down in his office chair, the man’s words still swimming through his mind. His taste for politics was rekindled; I could detect the spark in his eyes. Finally he huffed, “there’s just one problem – what about my chicken? All of this, this empire, what would happen to it all if I ran for Governor? What would happen to it all if I won?!”

Millie took her turn to speak her mind, “Pop, many businessmen have become Governor before. And businessmen wouldn’t run if it meant having to give up everything, that’d be ridiculous. And personally, Pop, I think you would win. I mean,” walking over to the window, likely to take a peek at the giant sign out front, “your chicken has made you the most popular and beloved man in this state! They’d have to be crazy not to vote for you!”

Over the next several hours, between managing the restaurant, motel, employees, and franchise, all of us chimed in to voice support for the run. We all agreed that this was something that Father should go for.

Early the next day, at the breakfast table, Father finally asked Claudia, the visiting Millie, and I, “Now, suppose I did run and then win this here election. Who would take over as the head of this company? Harman has his own restaurant and wouldn’t want to move across the country. And the term is only for four years, so after the job is done, I’ll definitely want to return to running the company I started!”

Millie gave me a look, then visually gestured to me that I should step up to the plate, so I did. “I can run the business for you, Father!” I offered boldly.

“But Junior, you need to really know how to make the chicken. One does not simply walk into KFC.”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



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– Sanders discussing business with family members, c. 1955



“I can run the business and more! I’ve made the chicken before, and when it comes to handling the ins and outs of the company, well, I do have a BS in business administration.”

“No offense, son, but the only business you’ve ever run was a lemonade stand! [4] And if I recall correctly, it didn’t do that well!”

“Failure never stopped you, Pop,” Millie rebutted.

Father let the sentiment sink in for a moment, “Heh, you’re right about that, Millie.” After a long pause, he drew out a long exhale and asked with all seriousness and expecting all sincerity, “Alright, son. If I win the governorship, the company’s yours – but only for four years. And only if I win. …But do y’all really think I could pull that off?”

Each one of us nodded in an unspoken agreement. When opportunity calls, you’ve just got to answer!

A warm smile stretched across our old man’s face. He stood up and walked over to the phone, the card pinned to the wall by a thumb tack. “This is The Colonel,” he ultimately said into the receiver, “Get the ring; I’m throwing my chef’s hat into it!”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



…and here’s a news bulletin: Food Magnate Colonel Sanders Announces Bid For Governor! Well, how about that? Yes, ladies and gentlemen, that’s the latest out of the southern-central town of Corbin, where the famous Colonel Sanders has decided to try to move from the kitchen to the governor’s office, announcing his bid for the Republican nomination for Governor of Kentucky earlier today outside of the Sanders Court and Café restaurant and motel. Now, I don’t know about the rest of y’all, but since the Colonel is also a noted figure outside the state, this is certain to bring more national attention of this race. And even inside the state, since to be completely honest, folks, I didn’t even know we had an election this year! Heh. And now, back to the music!...

– Thomas T. Hall, WMOR 1330AM radio broadcast, 5/29/1955



For my campaign, I needed a base of operations, and the folks in the party found a place for it right in the middle of the drive between Corbin and London (home of the GOP’s state party headquarters). What we got was a rented-out office space that was small and stuffy but still bigger and more advantageous than my office in Corbin. On my first time walking into that place, I saw people running around like busy-body hens, too busy to even greet the very man they were trying to make governor. In a side room, rows of women were clacking away at typewriters in a cacophonous roar of metal bells and whistles. Already, posters were being printed: a sign reading “Sanders for Governor” covered most of the narrower wall of the main room. Underneath sat my new desk.

My campaign manager escorted me over to them all, and at one point noted, “Now remember, Colonel, if you’re going to mention KFC, then mention how it qualifies you for the governorship.”

Margaret walked over from her station and added, “Separating your own personal businesses from politics is essential to prove you’re in it for the people, Pop, not to promote yourself, because while you know that, the people don’t. Not yet, anyway.”

“I reckoned, I reckoned. Now we just have to tell the people why they should vote for me. Oh, and Margaret?”

“Yeah?”

“…Those are some nice posters. Keep it up!” It was nice to see her finally taking an interest in family activities.

She nodded before getting back to work. I think she smiled, too.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



Initially, John [Ruggles]’s Sign Company didn’t work for the campaign. The state Republicans already had a guy making posters and whatnot for them, but Pops convinced them to let John do some things here and there. It was a crucial moment for John’s company, as it exposed him to all the details necessary – the machinery and materials, the number of workers, the organization overall – to run a sign company big enough to run a statewide campaign. John very much enjoyed it, and thereafter sought to make the Ruggles Sign Company even bigger.

There was never any conflict-of-interest or what-have-you between KFC and the Ruggles Sign Company. Even still, strangely, an allegation of nepotism - of the state GOP hiring their preferred candidate's son-in-law for some marketing tasks - was one possible accusation that Chandler never made…

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



Business Edwin R. Denney met with Father near the middle of June, but it was not exactly a social call. According to Father, who told me about it right afterward, Denney was bitter and stubborn about the political machine’s "malicious and underhanded" machinations, endorsing and throwing their money behind Father instead of staying out of the primary to make it a fair run. "Kentucky Republicans ought to have a choice in this affair - otherwise, how will we know they want you instead of me?" he apparently bellowed.

“He wasn't willing to just give up without some kind of fight, That’s why I like him; he’s willing to fight for what he thinks is right – just like me!” Father said.

"I don't know," I remember Claudia saying with uncertainty in her voice. "Do you think it's right to try and make him forfeit?"

"I don't know myself, dear," Father said to her, "But those folks tell me that they've been takin' internal poll after internal poll, and that those polls keep saying that he'll lose to me anyway if he saying in. And I told him just as much. After that, the ball was back in his court."

After about 40 minutes of them talking and arguing over the merits of the KYGOP's proposal, both and Denney and Father had lunch with the state Republican leaders. Eventually, Denney was convinced to drop out of the primary run to redirect party attention and materials to the general election. In exchange, Sanders agreed to back Denney strongly if he ran for Lieutenant Governor instead. Denney did just that, reportedly saying, “I’m going to run for something, dammit!” Denney couldn’t be removed from the primary ballots for governor, but he was added to the primary ballots for Lt. Governor at the last moment, much to the relief of the KYGOP and to the printers’ annoyance.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



Kentucky State Party Gubernatorial Primaries, 8/6/1955:

For Governor:
Republican Primary Results (3.30% Total Population):
Colonel Sanders – 65,602 (67.42%)
Edwin R. Denney (withdrawn) – 16,181 (16.63%)
James L. Clay – 15,519 (15.95%)
Total votes cast: 97,304

Democratic Primary Results (17.16% Total Population):
Happy Chandler – 259,875 (51.40%)
Bert T. Combs – 241,754 (47.82%)
Jesse N. R. Cecil – 3,965 (0.78%)
Total votes cast: 505,594

– ourcampaigns.com [2]



"I was happy for The Colonel, but I could not possibly openly support his candidacy despite the very public open dissensions between Chandler and I. It would eviscerate my standing in the Democratic party. Well, that is, that is how the situation started out, I mean. At the beginning of the race."

– Former Governor Lawrence Wetherby (D-KY) in CBS Interview, 1963



Making light of how long the former Governor had been involved in state politics, Chandler ran for his former job on the slogan “Be like your Pappy and vote for Happy.” Meanwhile, incumbent Governor Wetherby and former Governor Clements continued their somewhat complicated and deep-rooted feud with Chandler as the 1955 party primary arrived. The state Democratic Party's Clements-Wetherby faction’s candidate, an inexperienced state judge named Bert T. Combs, ran an inefficient campaign against the better-known and better-funded Chandler.

Not only that, but Chandler also assaulted the incumbent administration with a series of scandalous accusations, alleging corruption and financial misuse against Clements and Combs before switching to the next accusation against Wetherby before any of the three anti-Chandler men could sufficiently respond to the previous claim. I remember two of his many allegations concerned office furniture - he claimed that Clements had purchased a $20,000 rug for his office and that Wetherby had paneled his office with African mahogany. Chandler promised that, if elected, he would use "good, honest Kentucky wood" in his office and that all Kentuckians would be invited to the capitol to walk on the $20,000 rug. Clements responded by publicly releasing invoices that proved that no $20,000 rug had been purchased by Clements, and Wetherby's paneling had been purchased from and installed by a local contractor. Now one might think that the fact that Chandler's charges may have been inaccurate [8] would be enough to slow down his momentum. But like I said, before the truth of one scandal could catch up with him, Happy was one spinning another yarn. And the voters paid more attention to the claims than to the explanations. It seemed to be what they always did.

With all this in mind, when Combs lost by a considerable margin to Chandler, it was not exactly a surprise upset. They were a huge blow to the Wetherby administration, that's for sure, but more importantly, the results seemed to only boost even further the former MLB Commissioner’s ego and confidence in the November election results. “The general election is practically over. They should just give me back the keys to the governor’s mansion right now!” I remember Chandler saying soon afterward, laughing jovially and confidently.

I however, was much more cautious than my boss. “So we shouldn’t be worried at all about the Republican nominees?”

Chandler thought otherwise, exclaiming boisterously “The voters of Kentucky will always vote for the more experienced candidate. And Sanders and Denney have none! This is going to be a cakewalk!”

– Anonymous former aide to Happy Chandler, radio interview, 1971



THE COLONEL & DENNEY’S A WINNING COMBINATION

– Poster promoting the Sanders/Denney ticket, 8/7/1955



I should have figured that it would happen. I saw the trucks and machines driving by from time to time. I saw them tearin’ up the earth to widen the roads. I just hadn’t put two and two together.

Right after winning the primary and nomination, Millie ran into the campaign headquarters with some startling news – it seemed that the development of the new highway, I-75, would completely bypass the Sanders Court and Café (a famous local institution!), by several miles!

“The cut could seriously hurt the flow of customers,” Millie bemoaned.

I thought for a minute before noting, “Y’know, if things were different, this would seriously worry me a whole lot more.” After all, this turn of event was coinciding with me turning 65, coinciding with me getting Social Security for the first time. I would probably be much more fearful of my financial future if I hadn’t already created my franchise. But instead, because of fate, or luck, or whatever intervention had occurred, I was blessed to not have such worries. Thanks to the franchise catching on like a fire in dry brush, I avoided woe in advance. I didn’t have to worry about losing customers or finances shrinking up like a river in a heat wave. We were fine!

But Millie was still mightily concerned about the restaurant, the one that had started it all, and the workers involved. "We might have to lay people off when revenue dry up. I don't want that to happen, Pop. Most of the waitresses at the Café are single mothers, for pity's sake."

"I know, I know," I agreed that the situation was less than fine for the spot's workers, and so I decided to give Millie a challenge of sorts. “That restaurant has a lot of history. So we won’t sell it. Instead, Mildred, I’m giving you a job.” It was a test to see if she really did have what it would take to run the business with her brother if I made it to the Governor’s seat. “I want you to scout out a spot right on this I-75 where we can open up a second restaurant, the Sanders’ Café II,” holding up two fingers for effect. “It’ll be the location for our new headquarters if the business continues to expand and customers do indeed stop pouring in on account of this here darn highway. If it works, those waitresses will get to keep working for us, just farther on down the road a-ways.”

Millie accepted the task, “I won’t let you down, Pop!”

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



The Colonel reportedly had little difficulty adjusting from selling chicken to proprietors to selling himself to voters. His campaign platform tended to focus on the human side of local issues. Social issues were non-existent until Sanders started discussing food prices, agriculture, and infrastructure improvement. Government corruption was dropping in relevancy with each passing week, likely due to voters being exhausted from debating it during the 1951 election and the 1955 Democratic primaries.

Rather, for most of the campaign season, the primary focus was fiscal responsibility, and managing the efficiency of government programs in order to make them more productive without adding to their costs. At one event, Sanders explained “We have to go about not cutting corners so much as cutting the fat – the excess. The government should not be spending good money on something that the people can more than take care of themselves.” The Colonel also ran on his record as head of the Sanders Court and Café, especially his compassion for the working man, by pointing to his long-held practice of employing single mothers and assuring “a decent wage” in order to keep the Court’s waitresses from needing to ask for tips. “Tips encourage a humiliating form of living where you have to practically beg the customers for what you should be getting from your own boss.” Despite these moments of pro-worker rhetoric, the Colonel was invited to several business events, where the Colonel would apparently, “work his charm” as Claudia Sanders once put it. His charm explains why many wealthy Kentuckians financially divested in his campaign – the campaign's funds doubled between August 7 and September 7.

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



My first public speech was a lukewarm speech to a small crowd of supporters; it was meant to test my public speech skills. Of course, I’d done this sort of thing before, when I was a practicing lawyer, but this was different; here, it was my neck on the line, not my client's, and that puts things into a different perspective for me. Still, speechin’ is speechin’. It’s all about showmanship, always. I gave the speech and they clapped, and everything seemed fine. But then, when someone after the speech asked me a question, I did not know the answer to it, and I had to give the man the old run-around. It left a bad taste in my mouth – the taste of doubt. “What am I doing?” I remembering thinking to myself. “I don’t know how to be a politician. You can’t teach an old dog new tricks!”

But then again, I’d never been a millionaire before, and I seemed to be handling that pretty well!

I told my concerns to Junior. By then I was getting used to calling him “Harley.” After talking it over with me, he directed me to an obvious source of help – the library. Junior and Mildred went and picked up for me books upon books on the state’s economy, on local histories, and on statewide politics; they got archived newspapers showing what the problems were, too. It was helpful, sure, but it still wasn’t enough. I needed more – I needed to do what I always did – talk to people. So, I went back to the tried and true method of travelling around the state and casually striking up conversations. Instead of offering chicken, I offered an ear to listen to their woes. I listened to the coal miners in north-central Kentucky, to the farmers of the bluegrass plains, to the grease monkeys of the factories (though I can’t recall if they were called that back then), to the single mothers of the cities, and to the nuclear families of the surrounding newfound suburb lands. I even met with a group of people, plus some of their youngin’s, and listened to their claims that goblins from outer space had attacked their farmhouse (because a voter ignored is a voter not votin’ for you!) [5]. And of course I talked to businessmen, but of businesses big and small! I listen and I learned, and I showed that I did hear them, and that I was concerned. And I'm real sure the people could tell that my concerns were genuine.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



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– Sanders on the Campaign Trail, 8/30/1955



“Back in 1926, I was in a terrible car accident. I got out of the wreck with only a torn scalp, and my wife, uh, at the time patched it up [6], but many folks aren’t so lucky. We need to have better healthcare in our state – more funding for doctors, more doctoral programs at Kentucky’s colleges and Universities. More incentives for doctors to work here and medical students to come and learn their trade here. We also need better roads – safer highways and bridges – to keep painful accidents from ever happening in the first place!”

– Sanders, stump speech in Ashland, KY, 9/1/1955



SANDERS GAINING ATTENTION: Businessman’s “Listenin’ Tour” Picking Up Steam

The Advocate-Messenger, KY newspaper, 9/7/1955



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– Colonel Sanders discussing road safety with local servicemen, Paducah, KY, 9/8/1955



…I again reminded Happy that he was failing to win over liberal Democrats, and that the party was still bitterly divided from the mud-caked primary race! Repeatedly, he’d brush off the idea of a more active campaign. However, after about a month or so, his resistance was growing weaker. I think it was beginning to dawn on him he was not as formidable as initially believed. That the Democratic domination over the state, which had been experienced for the past several years, was not going to hold forever. I believe it was his wife who reminded him that he had lost races before. But the thing was, those unsuccessful bids for higher office in then recent-years had only hurt his ego - it had not killed it. If anything, the losses made him even more focused on - and more desperate to win - the November election.

On September 8, Chandler finally began giving formal speeches, largely at charity dinners and fundraisers for his political allies. He was not exactly reaching outside the base, but it was a start, at least. However, even with the more active campaigning, Chandler was greatly reluctant to stump on major issues instead of one generic platitude, because despite the early polling, he was pretty much still convinced that the people who backed him in the primary would be enough to win over the Republican vote in November…

– Anonymous former aide to Happy Chandler, radio interview, 1971



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– Chandler/Waterfield Campaign Button, c. 1955



Oh, we went all over that state. We visited all the major cities – Covington, Owensboro, Bowling Green, Paducah – and the small towns, too. Oh, you name it, we probably visited it. We even stopped over at Louisa on the Tug Fork part of the Bid Sandy River, the eastern border of the state and the site of the famous feud between the Kentucky McCoy and West Virginia Hatfield families, though if we met any McCoys that day, they kept the last name to themselves. I was there when he made that speech in Nicholasville, at the same place where he had managed a Standard Oil service station during the ’20s [7]. My, that was a big crowd. I remember, Harland actually won some big-time local union’s endorsement after that trip!

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



Chandler began to slowly take the general election more seriously as the days and weeks went by. By September 9, he had only visited 6 cities. Sanders, meanwhile, had dropped by over 50 communities in less than 40 days; this statistic finally made Chandler begin to legitimately worry.

Another moment that made him realize that running an 1890s-style "front porch campaign" might not work this time around came on September 10. On that day, the Commonwealth Journal, a small newspaper near the state’s center, reported that when one Kentuckian in Pulaski, County asked a local Chandler supporter “If Chandler wants this job, why isn’t he campaignin’ around like this Sanders fella is?” the Chandler backer failed to answer.

Ultimately, Chandler decided to be more active a campaigner the only way he knew how - by reusing the tactics of the primary race and going negative with a mudslinging attack campaign. However, as The Colonel had already begun the process of divesting interests in KFC to avoid conflict with this political aspiration, Chandler decided to try to attack The Colonel from a much different angle.

– journalist John Ed Pearce’s Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics 1930-1959, A University Press of Kentucky, 1987



CHANDLER ATTACKS SANDERS ON LACK OF EDUCATION

…“Education is monumentally vital when it comes to running a whole state.” The former Senator continued, “Records show that Mister Sanders never completed the seventh grade. I believe it is dangerous and irresponsible to put the responsibilities of the Governor’s office into the hands of a man with merely a sixth-grade education.”

The Courier-Journal, KY newspaper, 9/9/1955



"I met my husband at Chandler’s 1935 inauguration [9], so of course, I had with a fair amount of respect for him. But I did not appreciate his personal attacks, and neither did my father…"

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



“Now it is true that I left school during the seventh grade, because I couldn’t understand why letters of the alphabet were being used in math class. But you know what? Academia isn’t everything. Politicians are often highly educated, and yet they are often terrible at their jobs, so maybe someone who’s not confined to bein’ book-smart is who the people of Kentucky really need. Besides that, these remarks were not so much an insult to me as it is an insult to everyone who’s never graduated from high school – including those who dropped out to go fight for this country in Europe and the Pacific. But trying to insult me, he is insulting a great swath of Kentuckians who had to put taking care of their families by going to work a job ahead of learnin’ algebra.”

– Colonel Sanders, in a rebuttal of Happy Chandler’s comments the day prior, 9/10/1955



“Doesn’t anyone else think it’s silly? An old man going around lying about him being a Colonel? It’s ridiculous. He’s not a Colonel; he didn’t even serve in the Army apart from hauling a few donkeys onto a boat for a few weeks when he was 16. That kind of service is pathetic!”

– Happy Chandler at a formal dinner at the exclusive Pendennis Club in Louisville, KY, 9/12/1955



“Every job in the army is important. You don’t belittle the people who perform the less glamourous jobs. That is uncalled for, Hap, it's shameful.”

– Colonel Sanders, in a rebuttal of Happy Chandler’s comments the day prior, 9/13/1955



KY ARMY ORGANIZATIONS WITHDRAW CHANDLER ENDORSEMENTS

...we believe that Mr. Chandler's disrespectful attitude toward certain occupations found within the United States armed forces make him unworthy of both the governorship and of other endorsement for the governorship," the press secretary remarked, "Not all military service positions are glamorous, but every single one of them plays a part in keeping America safe and secure..."

The Jeffersonian, KY newspaper, 9/14/1955



After nearly five weeks of scouring along the southern half of Kentucky I-75, calling people and learning the property values, taking into account every variable I could think of, I finally found the perfect spot. Florence, near of the Ohio border, while being fairly far from Corbin, lied close to the Ohio river, was a short drive away from Cincinnati, and was sure to be a site of growth as the years passed. Father approved of the spot, and beamed with pride. His support made me know that I could do anything if I just worked at it right.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



“Senator Chandler, since you’ve promised to not raise taxes to balance the budget, do you plan on cutting any government programs, if elected?”

“That’s 'when' elected, and I think that the statewide programs are very helpful, like, uh, for instance, um, the Youth Authority program and others. Excuse me.”

“That’s not an answer.”

“Well it’s what you’re getting. Excuse me…”

– The “not an answer” Chandler Gaffe, local press recording, 9/15/1955



“I did not know he could muddy up answering the press so badly. If Chandler went to rob a bank he’d hold onto his money sack and toss the teller his gun.”

– Colonel Sanders, 9/15/1955, multiple sources



STATE OF THE RACE: IT’S NECK-‘N’-NECK!

Louisville, KY – This year’s upstart political newcomer, famous “fast food” businessman Colonel Sanders (R.) is dead-even in polls against former Senator Happy Chandler (D.). The latest results contrast sharply with polling taken earlier in the year, which repeatedly showed Chandler in the lead and Sanders losing to him by as much as 20 percentage points. Since then, Sanders has gradually won over the support of multiple organizations, in light many of Chandler’s evasive comments in recent weeks. The polling results also follow several missteps from the Chandler campaign. ...While the G.O.P. is united behind Sanders, members of the Wetherby-Clements faction of the state Democrat party are refusing to back Happy after a bitter Democratic primary in August. Chandler, in turn, is "purposely doing very little" to win over full party support "out of spite," according to an anonymous members of his campaign…

The Courier-Journal, 9/16/1955



CHANDLER ACCUSES SANDERS OF VIOLENT TEMPER

Corbin, KY - In another attack on political opponent Col. Sander’s character, Chandler claims his opponent was once thrown out of court when practicing law after “a violent confrontation with his own client in front of the local judge” [10]...

The Kentucky Standard, 9/17/1955



“Now folks, I admit my passion can get out of hand at times. As a lawyer, I once used my fists instead of my words to give an ornery client of mine a well-deserved wallop. But that just proves that I’m a fighter who never backs down from a fight. Not then, not now, not ever. As Governor, I will fight for all of you. I will fight for your rights, to have them be protected and heard. I will fight for lower taxes. I will fight for road repair and for better hospitals and for better schools. I will fight for the things that matter most, even if it means kickin’ and screamin’ and bitin’ and beatin’ all the fat cats in Frankfort!"

– Colonel Sanders, 9/18/1955



CHICKEN AND POLITICKIN’: KFC Founder Leading Ex-Senator in Gov. Race

Frankfort, KT – Kentucky’s political derby this year is one for the ages: a chicken-selling underdog may just defeat an experienced DC insider. Coming after weeks of personal attacks from ex-Senator A. B. "Happy" Chandler that Col. Harland Sanders has successfully deflected, the latest polls make it seem that Chandler’s criticism of the Republican candidates’ intelligence and alleged temper are being seen as attacks on the undereducated and discontent people of Kentucky. These voters are moving en masse to Sanders’ column, and may prove pivotal in the elections’ outcome, provided they can be mobilized well enough for Election Day. If the Colonel is victorious, it would give high hopes to the Republicans as the 1956 election races approach.

The Washington Post, 9/19/1955



“Why even campaign, Colonel? There’s no way we can’t win!” [11]

– Edwin R. Denney, 9/19/1955, upon seeing the latest polls




"In September, another story came out concerning Sanders’ wild early years, this one about his apprehension to two rival bootleggers who were shooting up his neighborhood. Basically, Sanders was awoken in the middle of the night by them firing at each other, and Sanders bolted out of his home in his underwear and held both gunslingers at gunpoint until the police arrived [12]. The image of Sanders being as tough as nails when it came to crime and protecting those he cared about really excited voters that cared more about image than policy."

– Kent Prestwich, a KFC Executive Vice President from Utah [13], ABC interview, 1963



“Does he do everything by the gun?!” Chandler proclaimed, “He’s making a mockery of the office I once held…and will hold again.” Happy was fuming. He was becoming very desperate in his efforts to find something to attack Sanders on to bring him down. A second story “arose,” let’s say, about a week later, describing how the Colonel, back when he worked as an unlicensed midwife, once forced a drunk doctor, possibly at gunpoint, through stormy rain to help deliver a difficult pregnancy [14]. Instead of the story depicting him as a brute, it instead seemed to be cast him as a responsible and moral citizen; it backfired even worse, though, as the story helped Sanders win over female voters and the state’s medical community, causing the Colonel to boast “they can’t assassinate my character!”

Chandler began demanding his more intellectual goons to dig into any old records and files they could think of to see if there was any dirt on him “with enough weight to bring him down.” Happy personally perused through old papers – everything they could find on Sanders – and scanning over them, muttering a swear under his breath from time to time, until finally he stopped at some piece of peculiar parchment. Happy, widening his eyes as an idea grew in his mind, shouted “Wait… hey!” He called me over and said, “get my lawyers, I want to run something by them.”

– Anonymous former aide to Happy Chandler, radio interview, 1971



CHANDLER CLAIMS SANDERS INELIGIBLE FOR GOVERNORSHIP!

Louisville, KY – Outside of his political headquarters, former Governor Albert “Happy” Chandler today made a serious accusation against his political opponent. According to Chandler, Col. Harland Sanders of Corbin is not constitutionally eligible for the Governorship. …The part of the oath of office for the position of Governor of Kentucky, written as part of the current 1891 state constitution, involved in this accusation is the following passage: “I do further solemnly swear that since the adoption of the present Constitution, I, being a citizen of this state, have not fought a duel with deadly weapons within this state, nor out of it, nor have I sent or accepted a challenge to fight a duel with deadly weapons, nor have I acted as second in carrying a challenge, nor aided or assisted any person thus offending, so help me God.” Chandler claims that in 1931, Sanders shot in the shoulder and wounded a man name Matt Stewart in a confrontation that the Chandler campaign is calling a duel. If Chandler's claim is true, and that this armed conflict really was a duel, this would disqualify Col. Sanders for the office of Governor. Already, a member of the Colonel’s campaign has come to the Colonel’s defense, saying the accusation refers to a “self-defense incident” and is being “atrociously distorted in a blatant act of mud-slinging meant to disrupt the state's entire voting process”...

The Washington Post, 9/21/1955



…Also in the news, The state Democratic party leaders are claiming that several pro-Sanders broadcasting stations are, quote-unquote, "excessively" running advertisements for the Colonel's Kentucky Fried Chicken, which they believe violates the Federal Communication Commission's equal-time rules, a part of the federal agency's "Fairness Doctrine" policy introduced in 1949. A spokesman for KFC claims that KFC is working independently of the Colonel's aspirations for governor, and that it is the local stations that determine, quote, "the exact frequency of advertising," unquote. Nevertheless, the Democratic party spokesman has just announced that the party will go to court to hand them a judicial injunction if the stations continue to air KFC commercials. We will have more on this story as it develops...

– WKCT 930 AM Bowling Green, KT, radio broadcast, 12/2/1955



ELIGIBILITY DEBATE RAISING PASSION, HOSTILITY

London, KY – An incident outside of Republican headquarters occurred today, in which a yet-unidentified man, allegedly known to be in Chandler’s inner circle, reportedly heckled Republican candidate Col. Sanders. The man allegedly egged on Sanders by calling him, among other things, a “deceitful bum.” Sanders reportedly had to be held back in order to keep the confrontation from becoming physical, with the Republican candidate shouting back to Chandler’s associate several unprintable slurs and the vow “we’ll see you all in court! I will not stand for this fowl play!”

– Follow-up article, The Washington Post, 9/23/1955



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] In OTL, the idea for buckets of KFC actually came about in 1957, when a KFC franchisee in Colorado purchased 500 buckets from a travelling bucket salesman! (at least, according to source 23 on The History of KFC’s wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_KFC#cite_note-autogenerated26-23)
[2] Source: https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=402814
[3] Who? This guy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_R._Denney / https://www.ourcampaigns.com/CandidateDetail.html?CandidateID=71565
[4] They were around as early as 1879!: https://bizfluent.com/facts-5039147-history-lemonade-stands.html
[5] I’m talking about this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelly–Hopkinsville_encounter
[6] OTL, as described here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/
[7] Mentioned here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/: (page 12 when printed out).
[8] These italicized parts were pulled from this source here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Wetherby#Later_life And can apparently be found on pages 61 and 62 of this book: Pearce, John Ed (1987). Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics 1930–1963. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1613-9.
[9] Noted here: http://www.thetimestribune.com/news...cle_bd94847c-1fc5-5e33-98d8-35eecf93f297.html
[10] This really happened!: https://books.google.com/books?id=qh5AEnwoJuIC&pg=PA12&dq=colonel+sanders+arkansas+judge&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjBsMvVosLdAhWL7FMKHWZxB3sQ6AEIJzAA#v=onepage&q=colonel sanders arkansas judge&f=false (page 12)
[11] Denney’s high level of confidence in the race is suggested here: https://books.google.com/books?id=zP4wDcT3PeQC&pg=PA349&dq="Edwin+R.+Denney"+1955&ei=PfbnSICINp7ItAOS18DtBg&sig=ACfU3U37Tq4dV0UxHFupjXmPFBJB4DJpCw#v=onepage&q="Edwin R. Denney" 1955&f=false
[12] OTL, as depicted in here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (pages 13-14 when printed out)
[13] This guy: https://ldsmag.com/article-1-15038/
[14] OTL thing, mentioned here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/



Chapter 3: October 1955 – December 1955

“Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.”

– The Bible, James 1:22



JOHN CAMERON SWAYZE: Today, the highest court in the state of Kentucky today hears the case between candidates for governor Happy Chandler and Colonel Sanders. The race for governor detoured into the courts as former Governor Chandler claims his opponent, Republican businessman Colonel Sanders, is ineligible to serve. The accusation has caused a ruckus across the state as the election date nears. We take you now to our correspondent in front of the Kentucky Court of Appeals building in Frankfort.

CORRESPONDENT: Thank you, John. The state’s Court of Appeals [1] will listen to both sides of the story, so to speak, in a special session called to settle the matter before the election occurs. Happy Chandler is making the case that Colonel fought a duel with a man named Matt Stewart roughly 20 years ago. And because fighting a duel disqualifies one from serving as governor here in Kentucky, Chandler is calling for Sanders must be disqualified and removed from the ballot. Chandler’s representatives as repeatedly stated that Sanders and Stewart knew each other and that the encounter was a planned confrontation, while the Sanders campaign have argued otherwise.

JOHN CAMERON SWAYZE: Well either way the court rules, this will have an effect on the election, isn’t that right?

CORRESPONDENT: Oh yes, and we are waiting to see how this court case unfolds…

– NBC news broadcast, 10/1/1955



The seventh of May of the year of 1931 [2] was the day of the shooting incident in question. On this day, the accused, Mister Sanders of Shell Oil, and a one Mister Matthew Stewart of Standard Oil, confronted each other in the region of Corbin known as “Hell’s Half-Acre.” The two men knew each other; the two men talked to each other; the two became angry at each other; and the two men fired weapons at each other. And a duel, my fellow Kentuckians, is defined by Merriam-Webster, as, and I quote, “a combat between two persons; a conflict between antagonistic persons; or a hard-fought contest between two opponents,” unquote. Thus, in compliance with the state constitution, Mister Sanders is an illegal candidate for Governor. As such, we beseech the court to uphold this state’s institutions with a firm upholding of the law. Sanders must be removed from the ballot for dueling, or at the very least, have any votes cast for him be declared invalid votes! And let the Republicans offer up a legal candidate, for it is a matter of letting the voters have a legal candidate that they can choose to vote for or against on their ballots, and it is a matter of upholding the standards of the integral office of the governorship of this, the greatest state in the union. Thank you.

– Chandler’s representative at the hearing, 10/1/1955



Let us review the facts of this case as laid out in the official police report. Matthew Stewart fired first and without warning, killing Shell Oil executive manager Robert Gibson, a business associate of Colonel Sanders whom was present at the scene. Sanders, fearing for his life, promptly fired back in self-defense, most probably saving the lives of himself and his other associates present at the scene. Justification for such a response as can be seen by the fatality of Stewart’s initial round of fire. Stewart was wounded, apprehend, trialed and jailed for his crime; no charges were ever filed against Colonel Sanders. Gentlemen, an exchange of gunfire in the act of defense and self-defense does not at all equal a duel. Sanders, by becoming a nominee for Governor, has not broken the law. Far from it! By defending his fellow businessmen, Sanders was a defender of the law, an enforcer of the law – Sanders singlehandedly brought a scoundrel and a murderer to justice and upheld the sacred institutions of this state’s constitution. Furthermore, Sanders had just cause for carrying a gun in a part of town witnesses have sworn was at the time of this incident commonly known by locals as, pardon the language, “the Devil’s A** hole” because of its “odor of deadliness.” Most importantly to this case, however, is the fact that neither Stewart nor Sanders had agreed to meet each other at this region. Ergo, this was not a duel. And gentlemen, if self-defense is now the definition of a duel, then most of Kentucky’s citizens will have to be locked up for dueling with prowlers, trespassers, and would-be killers and harm-doers. Judge, I plead you to use common sense in this ridiculous case. Thank you.

– Sanders’ representative at the hearing, 10/1/1955



While Mother's comments toward our dad were usually very negative, she stayed neutral during the court case. "It didn't matter what I said about it," I remember her telling me when I later talking to her about it. "I lived through that mess, but you didn't have to live through that mess to know that what Harland did back then was common-sense self-defense. You certainly don't need a judge's ruling to figure that out." She then conceded, "There's one good thing I can say about your father - he's a fighter, and sometimes, being a fighter is a good thing to be."

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



KFC HEAD WINS COURT CASE: State Court Rules In Favor of Col. Sanders, Verdict Quick: “Self-Defense Is Not a Form of Dueling.”

Louisville Times, KY newspaper, 10/6/1955



WETHERBY CROSSES PARTY LINES, STRONGLY ENDORSES SANDERS

Frankfort, KY – Governor Lawrence Wetherby (D) at a press briefing delivered a condemnation to his party’s nominee for governor, Happy Chandler, and an endorsement to Republican nominee, K.F.C. founder Colonel Sanders. “Out of party loyalty, I stayed out of this election in which my friend the Colonel opposed my party’s candidate. But my party’s candidate has proven himself to be a man unworthy of the affiliation. He does not represent the moral standards of Kentucky Democrats. I do not believe that such a man should be governor. Compared to Chandler, Sanders is the man Kentucky needs to vote for this November.”

Kentucky Post, northern KY newspaper, 10/7/1955



Chandler was furious at the blowback of his legal challenge backfiring so badly. His standing in the polls began dropping as voters interviewed by the local media voiced disapproval of how much time the court case had taken up. One poll showed a majority of voters were unclear where Chandler stood on the issues, which befuddled Happy. He soon realized that, because he had been out of office for so long, many older voters had forgotten his previous gubernatorial campaign, while younger voters were completely unfamiliar with him. So, Happy decided to try to fix that by refocusing his campaign on the actual issues, although really, it was done with the hope that it would distract voters from the failed court challenge.

– Anonymous former aide to Happy Chandler, radio interview, 1971



“The people are right – we should focus more on the actual issues of this race. Take, for instance, Sanders’ desire to perform an extraordinary amount wasteful spending. Despite being a businessman, this self-declared Colonel would suffocate the free markets if given the chance. In his speeches, he frequently mentions dangerously borderline socialist concepts. He wants good Kentucky men and women to pay through the nose for things they don’t need or can get for themselves. If he likes the government having that much control over the people’s lives, then maybe Mister Sanders really was a Colonel – in the Red Army!”

– Chandler at a speaking engagement at the Brown Hotel, Louisville, KY, 10/13/1955



During the final campaign stretch, Chandler claimed that Sanders was “dangerously unfit for public office,” while Sanders focused on policy. Publicly, Sanders only occasionally mentioned his opponent. Privately, though, Sanders confessed that he didn’t “want to think of the sneak,” so instead focused on what he wanted to focus on. For instance, in a stump speech on October 14, Sanders talked about better education, noting he already was a grandfather, and only quickly referred to “his opponent” as “painting himself into more corners than Moe, Larry and Curly ever have.” Sanders took his first-hand accounts to use, advocating for road repair, farming and rural development, and vocational education programs. Most pivotal, however, was his supporting of small businesses, his calling for the “untangling” of the state government’s bureaucratic process, and his repeated claim that, as a businessman he knew what to do to get businesses to return to Kentucky. According to J. D. Vance, “13% of Kentuckians migrated out of state largely for economic reasons” in the 1950s, with most of them heading north to the car industry hubs of the Midwest [3]. State businesses heavily funded and/or otherwise backed the Sanders campaign in the belief that a business-oriented Governor would reverse or at least curb this situation.

– Robert A. Powell’s Kentucky Governors, Bluegrass Printing Company, 1976



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– Colonel Sanders on the campaign trail, getting out of his car to talk to potential voters, 10/17/1955



NIXON STUMPS FOR SANDERS IN KY RACE

Bowling Green, KY – Vice President Richard Nixon travelled to Kentucky earlier today to endorse and speak at a campaign event for gubernatorial hopeful Harland Sanders. “The Colonel is a fine example of American hard work and self-reliance, and he will be an excellent governor,” Nixon said. Nixon also reportedly sat down with Sanders for a brief discussion before Nixon left to return to Washington.

With the state’s election for Governor only two weeks away, the Nixon endorsement may narrow an already-tight contest. The Democratic and Republican candidates that have received much press coverage in recent weeks…

The Philadelphia Inquirer, 10/23/1955



The Colonel went to Denney’s on election night. His running mate’s house was large enough for a small party. Even if we lost, we knew that at the least it would be the closest the Republicans had gotten to victory since 1943, and that would be worthy of at least some celebration. On election night, anticipation filled the air, surrounding us like bugs surrounding an abandoned caramel apple. Our father, the boisterous mountain man, sat on the edge of the couch he shared with his more urban-based running mate. As the election results came in county by county, most of the attendees anxiously listened to the radio, while others scribbled the digits onto a blackboard or inspected the state counties map on the wall. The results were narrow; the night wore on. At 1:05, we cheered when two northern counties put us in the lead. Then, at 2:31 AM, the election was called.

It was been a fight harder than the one Father had been promised by the man with a card all the way back in May. But now, finally, the fruits of our labor could be picked and enjoyed.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



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– ourcampaigns.co.usa



Kentucky Gubernatorial General Election Results, 11/7/1955:
Colonel Sanders (Republican) – 434,552 (52.91%)
Happy Chandler (Democratic) – 384,206 (46.78%)
Robert H. Garrison (Prohibition) – 1,397 (0.17%)
Jesse K. Lewis (Free Citizens’) – 1,149 (0.14%)
Total votes cast: 821,305
Turnout: 31.94% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa [4]



“That son of a deep-fried f@#ker!” Happy bellowed out in rage.

Reports on the state level showed that Democratic voters were still split between the Clements-Wetherby-Combs and Chandler camps, with some former Combs backers even crossing party lines to vote for Sanders. For the state legislation, the Sanders campaign had energized enough Republican-leaning voters to increase the number of Republicans in the state legislature, but not by much. Results were similar for the Democrats holding majority control – among the Democrats there were slightly more “Clementines” then “Chandlerites.”

Chandler searched for a silver lining, “Well, at least Waterfield will be there to throw a few wrenches into his work.”

“Um, Boss?” another campaign worker chimed in, “the Lieutenant Governor results are in… Denney beat Waterfield.”

“Oh that son of a…” and Happy continued on like that for a little while before finally calming down again. He then asked the room, “Who’s stupid idea to challenge his eligibility was it anyway?”

“Uh, sir?” I began to speak, uncertain of how to remind him that it had been his own idea, when he interrupted.

“You? Well then you’re fired!”

That’s how I stopped working for that miserable miser of a man. And that’s why I really hope he doesn’t win in November…

– Anonymous former aide to Happy Chandler, radio interview, September 1971



Dad was overjoyed. When he heard that he had won, his facial expression switched from tired from working so much on the campaign to suddenly ebullient, practically charging him with a great surge of energy. He was ecstatic. Immediately after the election was called, the phone began ringing off hook, with one of the congratulators being President Eisenhower himself, much to Dad’s elation. It was only after several minutes of additional celebration did it begin to dawn on him that soon he would have to say goodbye to direct involvement with KFC, his brainchild that had brought him there. His face shifted to showing worry, but Harley was able to reassure him that he could handle it.

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



“Never let anyone ever tell you that your ideas and opinion don’t matter. Because if it’s a good idea, people will support it. And judging by the election results, me running for Governor was a pretty good idea! But this election also shows your trust and belief in me. And when somebody puts their trust in me, you better believe that I deliver, so help me God. I swear and promise, folks, that I will not let y’all down. You will not be forgotten, because it was the hard work – and also, the actual voting, of course – of all of y’all that made this new era of government responsibility possible! During the next four years, we will make Kentucky a state that benefits all! Thank’ya all so much for this incredible opportunity! Y’all will not be disappointed, I swear to it!”

– Colonel Sanders, 11/8/1955



…And another story today is the conclusion of the FCC case over the right to air KFC commercials during the past gubernatorial election. Democrats, after failing a cease-and-desist measure to be imposed for the final weeks of the campaign, backed Happy Chandler’s claims that his company’s advertisements created an unfair advantage and violated fair-use policies. Today, the judges at Kentucky’s Court of Appeals nor agreed nor disagreed – they threw out the case on mishandled documentation regarding the airings of the KFC commercials and other paperwork issues. Not exactly an exciting conclusion, but hey, that’s politics…

– WKCT 930 AM Bowling Green, KT, radio broadcast, 12/2/1955



“It’s a fast but delicate process. You have to be careful but strong-armed with the fryer. Don’t overcook, don’t undercook. And above all, don’t tamper with the recipe! It took me many years to get it down just right, and just one moment of idleness, laziness, or greed could wreck an entire franchisee’s revenue. There will be no sub-par chicken connected to my name!” Pops instructed Harley and I.

After several additional semesters, I had finally earned a business degree, and just in time for me to join the family business, no less. My post-college years truly started with our father finally (with Harley being 43, and I being 36, it was better late than never, I suppose) teaching us how to properly prepare his chicken. “The cracklin’ gravy takes advantage of the bits of breading left in the oil after frying” [5] were one of many details he successfully urged us to absorb. Pops adamantly claimed that “knowing the tricks of my trade” was essential to transitioning power from him to us. Harley would run the place, “at the top,” Pops would say, while Margaret and I would work part-time as the co-heads of marketing, joining a growing number of high-end workers to study recent trends, analyze the latest fads, and brainstorm and test a plethora of creative concepts and ideas. Staying true to his old policies, a majority of workers in those years were widows with young children [6], a fact that really made the company stand out in social circles.

When the day came to hand over the reins of organizing his franchising empire, there were mixed emotions, for sure – Pops seemed anxious and almost frightened that he would miss the company too much. However, we all were excited about the days ahead, and as those days marched past us, Pops grew to embrace the many possibilities of being governor more and more.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ biography, My Father The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



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– Kentucky Governor-elect Colonel Sanders inspecting pressure fryers at a KFC franchise location in Valparaiso, Indiana, 12/3/1955



FRIED CHICKEN MOGUL PASSES TORCH

Corbin, KY – Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) Company founder and Kentucky Governor-elected Colonel Sanders has officially stepped down from the company, relinquishing managerial control to his son Harley Sanders. The move is to assure that the Colonel will have no potential conflict-of-interest incidents while Governor. According to some reports, however, Sanders will retain certain elements connected to the company that do not inhibit his upcoming administration, though the specifics of these elements are currently unknown. The move will likely not negatively affect the company’s soaring popularity, especially if the young Harley Sanders keeps true to his promise of “running the same tight ship” his father did. Stock is not an issue here, as KFC is a privately owned franchise company...

– The Wall Street Journal, 12/16/1955



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– Colonel Sanders at the beginning of the gubernatorial inaugural parade of 12/13/1955



…The Soon-to-be-Governor rides from his home in Corbin to a hotel room here in the state capital for final preparations. …The inaugural parade is kept simple under Colonel Sanders’ request. Still, large stands are built for the audience and the media, assembling their cameras and microphones and other equipment for the event. …Everything is ready for the big day. …The special guests are escorted to the platform. Colonel Sanders is congratulated by the outgoing Governor Clements. It should be noted that, while former Governors Clements, Willis, Johnson, Sampson and Stanley are in attendance, it appears that former Governor A. B. "Happy" Chandler, whom Sanders bested in this year’s election for Governor, is not. …Sanders takes the oath of office. …Sanders now addresses the audience…

– Transcript of dialogue of archived footage of the 1955 Kentucky Gubernatorial Inauguration, University of Kentucky Video Archives, 1955



“Ladies and gentlemen, words cannot express how humbled I am right now, but I will try to find the best words to use anyway. I guess that’s like politics. You never know what you’ll get unless you try. That is exactly why I am here and why you are all here. Because in Kentucky, we try things – we work, we explore, we create. We push the barriers that may try to hold us back. And as governor I will follow in this ethic. I promise to work for the people of this state. Because now is the time to work. Now is the time for action, to ensure for prosperity, stability, and greatness, for the people of Kentucky now and years from now. Together, we will make great accomplishments for this state – better roads, better education, and more jobs. What will make all the difference what will make these accomplishments happen, is combining of the efforts and ideas of conservatives and liberals, Democrats and Republicans, rich and poor, black and white, city folks and country folks, to make our state even greater than it already is. It will be a lot of work to clean up our problems, but in Kentucky, a problem is just a challenge that hasn’t been defeated yet. So let’s quit all this lollygaggin’ and let’s go to workin’!”

– Colonel Sanders, Inauguration speech, 12/13/1955



NOTE(S)/SOURC(ES)
[1] IOTL and ITLL, this was the state’s highest court until the Kentucky Supreme Court was created in 1975: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kentucky_Supreme_Court
[2] The date of this OTL incident and description of its location were found here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/
[3] This quote is directly taken from the Wiki page for History of Kentucky and based on the 111th Reference
[4] These election details were based on info on the OTL race, which can be found here: https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=174294. The voter turnout is 5.5% higher than IOTL. The Prohibition Party’s nominee received less votes than OTL due to the Colonel’s teetotalism luring in those voters.
[5] Quote from here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (page 19)
[6] He’d “always hire” them; yes, really: https://www.brainyquote.com/quote/colonel_sanders_600677
 
Post 3
Post 3: Chapter 4-to-Chapter 6
Chapter 4: January 1956 – December 1956

“I recognize the Republican Party as the sheet anchor of the colored man’s political hopes, and the ark of his safety.”

– Frederick Douglass



…"If the Colonel could make it, then so can I!" Contrary to popular belief, Ray Kroc was not inspired by Colonel Sanders’ success in the early 1950s to franchise McDonald’s, but by Kroc’s own experience in various industries since the Great Depression. Kroc instead drew inspiration from the KFC success story, and aimed to turn the then-small McDonald's franchise into "the KFC of the burger world" [after first discovering the original San Bernardino diner in 1954, one year after its first franchise opened] …Weary of Kroc’s increasing presence and influence in what was still their company, the McDonald brothers began 1956 by selling the licensed franchise rights for Cook County, Illinois, to the Frejlach Ice Cream Company. Within a few months, however, Kroc had purchased the rights back from that company. Kroc’s successful reclamation seems to have only increased the brothers’ concern over Kroc’s increasing control over their creation. “They were the only ones that seemed to regret letting me into their lives,” he would later comment in a 1977 interview…

– John F. Love’s McDonald’s: Behind the Arches, Bantam Books, 1986



When we finally relocated Kentucky Fried Chicken to Florence, KY, in January 1956, Pops dropped by to check out the place. He reminisced, “I remember when we first came to Corbin. There was no electricity yet, and it was a rough area. But, as painful as it may be at times, there’s no changing the fact that times change. Places change. …People change… And sometimes you just got to go and accept it, especially when it is for the better.” I think he was talking more about moving to the governor’s seat than the company moving out of Corbin, but he soon warmed up to both changes. All he had to do was find the right angle to look at it all in the best possible light.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ biography, My Father The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



“No more running off or around making deliveries and cleaning up messes for you, Claudia,” the boss told his lady, “no more cleaning out pots and packaging spices for train deliveries in the middle of the night [1]. From now on, the only grease touching your hands is the fancy kind they use in message parlors!” When Lady Claudia moved in to the governor’s mansion she was mightily impressed. After her first gaze upon the main foyer left her awestruck for a bit, Lady Claudia ran around the first floor and then up and down the stairs, canvassing the place like a youngin’ seeing a newly-opened candy store. She loved its rich history, its impressive size, and its ornate architectural style. She later told me that when it was their first time sleeping in the house, she awoke feeling like a queen, but it soon dawned on her the scale of her hosting duties, and later still, the need to develop a hobby for when there weren’t no guests around. She found her spot in women jobs programs and promoting us women having our thoughts and opinions heard; but don’t misunderstand – Claudia was an old-fashioned hostess who disapproved of skirts cut above the knee, once saying “Uncovered knees won’t land you a job.” She had no tolerance for such clothing being worn by any members of the staff when on duty, either, though she became a little more lenient with those rules as time wore on. With cooking and packing spices no longer a top priority, it shouldn’t have been such a big surprise when she took an interest in the lives of the staff. She wanted to really know us, and she was very friendly and kind with the staff members. Lady Claudia was like the main character in My Fair Lady – fancy, but never forgetting her humble origins. She paid us very well, and while hotheaded at times, just like her husband, she was truly a delight to have as a boss!

– Former personal assistant to State First Lady Claudia Sanders, former employer, 1997 interview



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– The Kentucky Governor’s Mansion



When I first started working as governor [in December 1955], I learned quickly how much the state congressmen weren’t my subordinates. They were more like my chicken fryers – if you pressured them too much, they would explode on you. I soon figured I’d get nothing done if I shouted and made enemies with everyone, so I focused on praise and support instead. I shied away from blame and pushed for what I guess modern folks would call a “positive work environment’ or so.

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



GOVERNOR PRESENTS GOALS IN ADDRESS TO STATE LEGISLATURE

...In a detailed speech, the new Governor laid out an ambitious legislative agenda focused on reversing the flow of workers leaving the state to seek out better employment opportunities elsewhere...

The Louisville Times, 1/24/1956



Governor Sanders received an expense account of $10,000 a year (the modern equivalent of roughly $90,000 a year). Living frugally, he rarely used his "incredibly generous" expense account for himself, apart from custom all-white clothing. …Initially, Lieutenant Governor Ed Denney was reportedly highly upset over his low salary of only $3,000 a year (especially after learning that the state Agriculture Commissioner’s salary made more than double that, at $7,500 a year). Denney made less than a third of Sanders’ salary, but received $30 for every day in which he presided over the state senate. As a result, Denney soon came to support long, extended, and special sessions because they added to his paycheck. [2]

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012




First thing on the agenda was the budget, which had to be set before the end of the summer and would be for everything until the end of 1957. I told the state congress, “I raised three children with little money, but despite the amount they needed I always had a little stashed way somewhere. After doing all that and starting a business, this should be should be easy.” Turns it, it wasn’t!

Working with the state legislators made me realize how little revenue was being brought into the state treasury on account of workers moving to Michigan in light of economic issues. Nobody could hire, and nobody was willing to spend. Some Democratic legislators wanted to raise taxes in order to pay for (and possibly even improve) the popular existing services that had been set up under Clements and Wetherby. Keeping to my campaign promises, though, the only taxes I would agree to (and would ever agree to) were taxes on vices (smokes, drinks, dirty pictures, and the like). As a result of these exceptions, a major 10% tax hike was proposed for alcoholic beverages. State legislator Karl D. Malone [3], proposed a better plan – a bond issue, which would allow for a hefty budget for the states’ education centers and highway maintenance system. Now the only way to get a bond issue would be from a wealthy investor, but thankfully we found some among the new businesses moving to Kentucky thanks to the new highway systems.

Unfortunately for the concept of pragmatism, talks slowed over some of the more ornery congressmen wanting to raise taxes instead, believing the bond issue may not be paid back. One in particular was J. B. Breckinridge, one of the more liberal state house Democrats, a lawmaker whose pokin’ of any idea I shot out fueled my nasty temper. Fortunately for him, the arguing never ended with any bruised faces, just hurt pride.

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



On February 9, after weeks of discussions, Governor Colonel Sanders created a “Penny Crow” Fund so the state could build up a rainy-day fund. At first completely empty, the fund increased alongside the state’s revenue. The project was named after a pet crow The Colonel once kept during the Great Depression named Jim, whom, as the story goes, could form an impressive trick at Sander’s motel. The author Alan Bellows writes that “guests could drop a penny in their pant cuff and stroll around the yard, and Jim would hop behind them, pecking a probing until he got the penny out, much to the amusement of onlookers. Nobody knew what Jim did with the pennies until some years later, when Sanders was renovating the hotel. He tore out a staircase and it paid off like a penny slot.” [4]

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012




Ma'am, two days ago the Sanders’ Court and Café cut its business hours down by three hours. Do you have anything to say about the ironic fact that road development has ruined the business of the birthplace of KFC?

I wouldn't say ruined, because we still appeal to local tastes, so I think impacted, or maybe, inhibited, would be the better word for our financial situation at the moment. But to answer your question, I don’t oppose road development, far from it. I want more roads, uh, roads connecting everyone and everything to everybody everywhere, so nobody is left out, dashed to the curb in the name of progress. As for the Court and Café and irony, well, my father has told reporters before that he is longer has any financial connections to the place’s management and that is true. The Court and Café and the KFC franchise organizing are under the new management of myself and my brother Harley, and before you are, we are not firing workers from the Court and Café, we are relocating them to new locations.

So just to clarify, the original KFC is not going to shut down?

We're not going to close the outlet. The roads might influence where some customers go, but not all customers.

– Exchange between a reporter and Mildred Sanders, 2/14/1956



GOV. SANDERS’ EXECUTIVE ORDERS BAN DISCRIMINATION

Frankfort, KY – In the capital today, Governor Col. Sanders signed a series of executive orders outlawing racial discrimination in public facilities, interstate commerce facilities, public workplaces, public housing, public education, and most contentiously, at all voting stations. …the executive order even outlaws refusing to serve a customer based solely on their skin color. …These executive orders prove the Colonel is a man of more than just rhetoric, but a man who is keeping to his promises to uphold the freedoms promised to all in the Kentucky and United States Constitutions…

– The Colored Kentuckian, African-American newspaper (now defunct), 2/24/1956



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– Activists protesting against (left) and activists supporting (right) the city of Louisville’s politicians’ reluctance to integrate the city’s schools, c. March 1956



SENATOR BARKLEY DIES OF HEART ATTACK WHILE DELIVERING SPEECH IN VIRGINIA: Slumps Over Before 1,700 At University

...Governor Sanders will appoint someone to the former Vice President's now-vacant US Senate seat to serve until a special election is held in November ...The Democratic and Republican parties’ "Chiefs" will select the candidates for this impromptu autumn race, with the leaders of both state parties citing the lack of time left in the year to host primary election contests...

The Courier-Journal, Kentucky newspaper, 5/1/1956



Finally, we reached an agreement. The two-year budget featured a bond issue and a 5% across-the-board tax on all vices; I called it a “Sin Tax” until some rich snobs started making puns about it. I’m still not sure was the joke was, but regardless, the plan aimed to reduce unnecessary and wasteful spending in order to break even at the least. To improve the economy, we gave companies tax incentives to move to Kentucky, boosting the state’s markets and expanding the state’s tax revenues.

I ended up opposing many of my fellow Republicans, though, when I sided with some of the Democrats in refusing to cut public sector investments. “A strong economy always makes it easier to cut spending,” they argued. But I figured that it could badly impact economic growth to makes cuts in that particular place, and that would defeat the very purpose that we were setting out to achieve. I also refused to cut pension spending, as it would mean forcing people to work longer. Now, as I’ve made clear in the previous chapters on this here book, I highly value hard work, but I think people should be inspired to work hard for success – not forced to work hard to get by!

The moderate in the state congress added the finishing touches – lower interest rates to boost spending, et cetera – and after going over it again and again just to make sure I knew exactly what I was approving, it was done and done.

Of course, there were still problems to address, the biggest one at that moment being who I would appoint to the US Senate in the wake of Senator Barkley passing away. But before that moment came, I was treated to an old gubernatorial custom, a lighthearted venture I considered a short-enough break from the stuffy rooms of the capital.

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



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– Governor Sanders congratulating the winner of the Kentucky Derby (an annual tradition/unofficial duty of the job), while holding a nonalcoholic beverage, 5/5/1956



SANDERS PICKS FORMER CONGRESSMAN TO FILL US SENATE SEAT

Frankfort, KY – “The Colonel Governor,” Harland D. Sanders, today announced his appointee to the state’s vacant US Senate seat will be James Stephen Golden. A lifelong Republican, Golden, 65, represented Kentucky in the US House of Representatives from 1949 to 1955, and is currently a senior member of the state government’s Highway Commission. Golden, whom appeared alongside Governor Sanders at the announcement, stated that he “will not contest the upcoming special election,” and will instead serve as a placeholder until a special election in November determines whom will serve the remainder of the late Senator Alben W. Barkley’s term…

The State Journal, Frankfort-based Kentucky newspaper, 5/15/1956



COL. SANDERS’ JOBS PROGRAMS SEE EARLY RESULTS: State Welcomes New Investors, Workers

The Courier-Journal, 6/23/1956



The Colonel was bossy because he was a perpetually restless man. When he was Governor, he apparently met with congresspersons like crazy, and would often get red in the face over the slow legislation process. So three months into office, he realized he might be able to get more done at a grassroots level, so he began meeting more local politicians like mayors, um, commissioners and the like, and began, you know, pushing them to do more for their communities.

– Billie Jean Johnson, Colonel Sander’s stepdaughter, in a rare interview, 1999



After setting the budget, the Colonel moved to reign in an aspect of the state government that had gone unmanaged under the past Democratic Governors. The state’s commissions were organized and hired by the Governor as a way around the state constitution’s ambiguous language regarding the extent of the executive branch’s powers. While Governors Ruby Laffoon and Happy Chandler had simplified the number of commissions, agencies and boards from 69 in 1934 to 10 by 1937, unchecked expansion afterwards had led to several dozen commission boards and departments by the start of 1956. Sanders, urged by Lieutenant Governor Denney, called for a special session of the state congress for the passing of the Administration Reorganization Act, which reduced the number of commissions to 11 (the Colonel swore “that number was just a coincidence” several times afterwards). To cut down on the unruly and disorganized departments, Governor Sanders merged many of the similar ones together into eleven statutory departments: Finance and Revenue, Transportation, Health and Housing, Justice, Industry and Development, Business, Environment, Education and the Arts, Mining, Agriculture, and Technology. Administration “overlap” concerning topics concerning more than one department lead to Sanders establishing a clear set of instructions to ensure “the buck was not passed from one place to the next” and encourage the departments to “work together on shared causes” and “keep each other in line.” The results were mixed, but Sanders’ “bucking-stopping rules” paved the way for future Governors when it came to streamlining the administration’s topic-reviewing process.

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



GOVERNOR MOURNS DECEASED RELATIVE

…Violet A. Dunlevy of Scottsboro, Scott County, Indiana, passed away yesterday at the age of 76. She was the daughter of Richard and Catherine Clegg Dunlevy of Henryville, Clark County, Indiana. For twenty years, Dunlevy operated a millinery shop (a store selling women’s hats and other garments and apparel) in Shoals, Indiana. She was the last one of a large family of Indianans, and having no husband or children of her own, her only survivors are several nieces and nephews. Kentucky Governor Harland “Colonel” Sanders is the son of Dunlevy’s oldest sister, Margaret Ann Dunlevy Sanders, who passed away in 1935 at the age of 69.

Speaking of the passing of the last of a generation of Dunlevys, Governor Sanders said, “Aunt Violet lived not too far away from us. When she could help, when she was not too busy working, and helping out other relatives, she would come over to help our family, especially after my father passed away. Aunt Violet was much younger than my mother by roughly 15 years, so she was only, I want to say, a bit more than ten years older than me, but that was the kind of person she was – she cared about her family members and she helped out when she could. I’m really going to miss her.”

The Reverend M. R. Wertenberger, the pastor of the Scottsboro Christian Church in Indiana, will conduct the funeral services on the 30th at the Bollix Funeral Home in Henryville, Indiana. The burial will occur at the Scottsboro Cemetery in Scottsboro, Indiana. According to the Governor, the terms of her will have dictated that her millinery shop and her house will be left to the Scottsboro Presbyterian Church and dedicated to the memory of her brother James C. Dunlevy and his wife. The Governor explains, “Aunt Violet lived with the two of them in their final years. They were very sick, and she went and helped them out the best she could, like always.”

The Advocate-Messenger, Kentucky newspaper, side article, 6/28/1956



Claudia ultimately decided to open up the mansion to the public in early July – just in time for an Independence Day fireworks spectacular – letting the people see it in order to get more people interested in government and interior decorating. She went even further by opening up the grounds for public use, which required the hiring of additional grounds workers. “I’m often inclined to make any home one proud to live in,” she told me. Indeed, the mansion went through much renovation and modernization during her time living in that mansion, or “grand home,” as she called it.

– Former personal assistant to State First Lady Claudia Sanders, former employer, 1997 interview



In July 1956, Governor Sanders raised the salaries of teachers by raising the amounts allowed from state aid and from state revenue [5]. At the start of the 1956-1957 school year, the Colonel visited dozens of schools to urge students to stay in school: “Not seeing high school through to the end cost me job opportunity after job opportunity for decades. I struggled to pay the bills, and at one point, times were so bad that my wife almost left me. I don’t think anyone should ever find themselves in that sort of position, where they are doing the best they can, but because of a foolish mistake they made in their youth, it just isn’t enough. Save yourselves from the headache and heartache, and see high school ’til the end.” Analysts believe that the Governor’s financial backing of schools in the state during his term cut down the state’s lost earning capacity from high-school dropouts between 1956 and 1958, “significantly lower from the 1954-1956 period.”

– Lowell Harrison and James Klotter’s A History of Kentucky, University Press of Kentucky, 1997



NLRB commends KFC

Washington, DC – The National Labor Relations Board approved of Kentucky Fried Chicken’s expansion of labor union representation in KFC’s managerial decisions, lauding the move as supporting “an open canal through which the workers can better participate in the KFC business and have their voices and ideas be heard in decision-making process that affects them.” The NLRB, a federal agency, approved the move as part of their review of the company’s latest collective bargaining agreement between management and unions for their truckers, cooks, waiters, and numerous other workers. Kentucky Fried Chicken has nearly 400 franchise locations in the United States and Canada…

The Wall Street Journal, 7/29/1956



In 1956, I decided to stop by KFC’s new headquarters to see how my sister was doing, seeing as how we hadn’t seen much of each other since Dad’s inauguration. After passing through that tall lobby, nowadays covered with giant banners of the founder’s face, I finally met with Millie in her giant office. “I have to say, I really like what you’ve done with the place,” I told her. It was so orderly and pristine. “You are very professional when Harley and Pete [Harman] are away,” I joked.

“Yeah, the two of them are handling business in Utah this weekend,” sis explained their absence. Unfortunately, she couldn’t stay and chat. She had to meet with a group of people, “our core customers,” she told me, and hear their comments and suggestions. Nowadays, I guess one would call it a “focus group.”

Not ready to leave and a little bit curious, I urged, “Oh, let me sit in! I promise, I won’t cause a scene.” After some hesitation, she obliged.

I was surprised by the demographics – the entire room was full of women. Judging by their appearances, all them were either mothers or new wives. Each of them were clamoring to have their comments heard, even though they were practically all the same. The fans thanked the company for easing their time at home, taking dinner off their list of things to do. Only some had anything useful to share – some called for additional items to be offered alongside the chicken, and suggested expansion into the neglected states of their in-laws. Other comments were less helpful, such as one spinster who criticized the growing “bucket-o-chicken” idea because, basically, she thought it was undignified to purchase dinner in a “glorified milking pail.” I was happy to see that nobody in the room seemed to have her back on that.

After the meeting was over and these dedicated fans were given a tour of the building before being shown the exit, Millie and I returned to her office. “Well,” she sat down, somewhat boasting her handling of the group, “What did you think of all that?”

In all honesty, I was proud of her. I thought she’d really come a long ways from being just an annoying younger sister; she had matured into a competent businesswoman in just a few short years of both schoolin' and experience. “Eh, it could’ve gone worse” and a kind smirk was my reply.

– Margaret Sanders’ biography, The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and A Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



Approaching the end of the summer, I returned to Corbin, where the original restaurant was almost as vacant of human life as a ghost town. According to Millie, customers dropped by 70% as more accessible franchise locations thrived elsewhere. I had what I guess you could call mixed emotions; a part of me wanted to do something, as, just because I couldn’t have ties to businesses, didn’t mean that I couldn’t care. After that trip, I started drop by KFC spots more often to inspect franchise quality under the guise of having a simple lunch or dinner. Despite some liberal Democrats looking for a fight, nothing seemed to come about concerning these visits. I think it was because politicians know when to back off, and respect what their opponents hold sacred – well, state politicians, at least!

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



“Hello?” [footsteps] (faintly) “Oh my, what a house. It’s terrible what they’ve done with it.”

“Millie, that you? Hey, I wanted to ask you about – …Josephine! What are you doing here?”

“Can’t a mother drop off a birthday present for her own daughter?”

“Millie’s party is later, Jo.” [sounds of present being moved, placed somewhere]. “I’ll tell her you dropped by.”

“Hm. I honestly didn’t expect you to be here, Harland. I figured you’d be busy playing governor.”

“It ain’t no playful thing, Josephine, I have a stack of papers on my desk this high.”

“Oh? Making confetti for yourself? The chicken-selling clown needs some pizzazz, huh?”

“You ain’t gonna insult me in my own house, Jo. You’ve got no right!”

“Oh, quit acting so high-and-mighty, Harland, we both know you wouldn’t even have this house if it weren’t for me.”

“What?! You’re crazier than usual!”

“It was my encouragement that led to you being a lawyer and being interested in politics all those years ago. Face it, you’d be nothing without my encouragements. You’d still be toiling away on the railroads if it weren’t for me!”

“Nagging isn’t encouragement.”

“I never nag. I just encourage aggressively.”

“You’d belittle me every chance you got! I was already trying to do right by you, to have the job to have the money to give you what you wanted.”

“I wanted you, you idiot!”

“Well you had a weird way of showing it, packing up the kids and leaving like that.”

“Oh, Harland – “

“Don’t deny it. I get a job shoveling coal into a firetruck engine, and I write letters that you don’t answer. And don’t dare try to say that what you did was in the heat of the moment – you packed up all the kids, and gave away all the furniture an’ stuff, too! …That hurt me more than you’ll ever know, Josephine... When I found out where you all were I was so angry that – well, I’m just glad your father was there to calm me down.” [6]

“You cared more about yourself than us, Harland. And I can never stay where I’m not wanted.”

“Then why are you still here?! Git!”

[footsteps] “Just remember, Harland, that I was a part of your life for almost 40 years. I made you who you are today.” [sound of door closing]

[long pause] “Nah, Jo. You made me who I was for 40 years. Claudia made me who I am today.”

– Audio recorded by equipment meant to record Millie’s birthday celebration that evening (recorded 8/15/1956), discovered in 1997 and released to the public in 2010 under the parameters of the Freedom of Information Act of 2009



1956 Republican National Convention
CONVENTION:
Date(s): August 20-23, 1956
City: San Francisco, CA
Venue: Cow Palace
CANDIDATES:
Presidential nominee: Dwight D. Eisenhower of Kansas
Vice Presidential nominee: Richard M. Nixon of California
VOTING:
Results (President):
Dwight Eisenhower (KS) – 1,323 (100%)
Results (Vice President):
Richard M. Nixon (CA) – 1,323 (100%)
Robert B. Anderson (TX) – 23 (4%)
Harland D. Sanders (KY) – 3 (1%)

– ourcampaigns.com



SANDERS CAMPAIGNS FOR EISENHOWER ON VP NIXON STATE VISIT: Governor Welcomes VP at Lexington to Roaring Crowd

Tri-City News, Kentucky newspaper, 9/1/1956



In 1954, the US Supreme Court voted unanimously in the Brown v The Board of Education of Topeka case, declaring that segregated schools were unconstitutional. By 1956, though, schools nationwide were still struggling to implement integration into the classrooms. On September 4, 1956, the conflict came to a head in the Colonel’s Kentucky. Nine African-American students attempted to enter the all-white Sturgis High School in Sturgis, KY, but were blocked by roughly 500 opponents [7].

Early into his administration, Governor Sanders had signed an executive order demanding school districts comply with federal regulation concerning ensuring “every citizen’s access and freedom to exercise their constitutional rights.” It allowed blacks to access previously prohibited aspects of society. Areas found even in their own towns were now suddenly open to African-American Kentuckians. Some white communities still resisted, though, with the most famous incident soon occurring in the eastern Kentucky town of Sturgis.

Colonel Sanders quickly decided to travel to the school to defend the integration, telling the superintendent that he would refuse to leave until he had resolved the conflict; with hubris, he boasted “I ain’t going to rest until I have changed their minds. I’m a salesman; I’ll sell them integration.” According to multiple sources, including then-state representative John B. Breckenridge, right before leaving to address the crowd, the Colonel contacted the local business leaders and state representatives to threaten to cut off funds to their businesses and campaigns if they in any way supported the protesters.

Upon arriving at Sturgis High, Sanders climbed aboard to the back of a pickup truck to speak to the seemingly-adamant crowd. “...Blacks are the same as whites. They both want the same things – safety for their families, decent education, security and opportunity, and to be fairly rewarded for the hard work they do. These are the very promises of America that make us a destination for millions of immigrating people and a beacon of hope and admiration to the world. Now I understand that change is hard to adjust to. You get used to something, you expect it to stay that way. But this is not the beginning of something dangerous. This is the beginning of something great. ...In December, I swore that every voice is heard in Kentucky, and I am seeing to it right now, that every voice, white or black, is heard.”

Sanders was booed by many, but even when some threw things at him, the Colonel refused to leave until the children were allowed in. Soon, Sanders failed to convince them that the violence made them look bad, a made a major gaffe with the offending line “Nobody wants to pet a growling dog!”

As the hours passed, the need for people to return to their jobs and families (along with pressure from their employers in connection to Sanders' earlier "talks") gradually shrunk the crowd’s size. Slowly, the crowd became the less hostile. In the P.M. hours, local police monitored the school grounds, and the Colonel, while retaining his vigil on the pickup truck, sent his aides off to round up as many white counter-protesters as they could under the cover of darkness.

The next day, the segregationists that remained were becoming disheartened. The African-American children returned, joined now by five more, totaling 14. Again, the Colonel verbally debated the jeering crowd, which slightly swelled in size. The segregationists were surprised, however, by the even larger forming band of counter-protesters. After much intense shouting, police officers managed to clear a path for the children into the school building. Inside, the students were heckled and harassed, but to the people outside – upon realizing what had happened – their fight had ended in defeat. The Colonel tried one more time to disperse the upset crowd through the power of persuasion. The incident was leading to more and more media scrutiny of the protesters, whom were becoming more and more reluctant to fight. “If you truly love your state, if you truly love your family, if you truly love the peace and democratic way that America stands for, y’all will calm down and allow for the innocent – the children – to do something that is peaceful and innocent. Let them learn, and they will love this country as much as you do.”

After a sum total nearly 50 hours of intermittent shouting, from the beginning of the confrontation to the end of it, the crowd reluctantly dispersed in defeat, and the Governor, hoarse and exhausted, took a quick nap on the back of the truck.

– food writer Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



Colonel Sanders was praised across the northern states for his stand – even making the cover of Time Magazine – and was criticized in the South by Dixiecratic politicians...

…Lester Maddox, at the time a segregationist businessman in Georgia, failed to lead a call for the Governor’s impeachment. He would later cite the Sturgis Standoff as a catalyst for his involvement with the Ku Klux Klan and other groups and organizations...

…Weeks later, local reports described an example of the more peaceful implementations of school integration in Kentucky by covering Graves County, which saw African-American students begin their classes at Mayfield High School, in Mayfield…

…Police routinely monitored school grounds as adults and students adjusted to the new social structure. An incident in Dunbar concerning a female junior student’s poodle skirt being set on fire led to an implementation of not only additional police officers, but also new fire safety features at schools…

– Lowell Harrison and James Klotter’s A History of Kentucky, University Press of Kentucky, 1997



...Another Gallup Poll showed Governor Sander’s approval rating reaching a new high of 60% in October. On October 20, [Martin Luther] King commended Sanders in a phone call for his handling of school integration, and would later cite the Sturgis Standoff as an example of how a Republican can maintain law and order through communication, not police brutality...

– Taylor Branch, Parting the Water: America in the King Years 1954-1963, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988



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– Colonel Sanders privately dining at Dr. King’s house in Atlanta, GA, 10/3/1956



“The Sturgis Standoff? I guess that’s a good name for it… I understood where those angry people were coming from – I didn’t like change when I was younger – I think you know about how I feel about algebra – but when you are suddenly in the place of being responsible for how something plays out, you see what is really important. And at that moment what adults thought was not as important as what the children needed. And they needed to see from the adults around them when you must fight others and when you must listen to others. That’s why I held back my temper that day. Usually, when people upset me, I give ’em a tongue-lashin’ they never forget, but I knew that if I started I wouldn’t be able to stop myself from shakin’ my cane and cussin’ like a madman. And I knew that I couldn’t have none of that because there were children there, and the Governor of any state has got to set an example for the young people of their state.”

– Colonel Sanders to a reporter while attending a fundraiser for Eisenhower/Nixon ’56, 10/20/1956



EISENHOWER RE-ELECTED AS GOP SWEEPS THE STATE: Cooper, Morton Win US Senate Races

Washington, DC – President Eisenhower won a second term last night by a wide popular and electoral amount over Democratic challenger Adlai Stevenson in a rematch of the 1952 Presidential Election… Kentucky voted for Eisenhower by a nearly 10-point margin, with 55.2% of the vote going to Ike, and 44.3% going to Adlai. …In the regularly-scheduled Senate race, former Congressman Thruston Morton (R) defeated incumbent Senator Earle Clements (D) by a very narrow margin (50.5% v 49.4%)… Morton was likely helped by Governor Sanders’ high popularity. …In the special Senate election, former Senator John Sherman Cooper (R) was elected back to his old seat, defeating his opponent, former Governor Lawrence Wetherby (D) by a narrow margin (52.1% v 47.8%)…

The Paintsville Herald, Kentucky newspaper, 11/7/1956



On the national political level, the Colonel was conflicted over the candidates for the November 6, 1956 special election to finish the US Senate seat left vacant by Senator Alben W. Barkley’s death. Sanders partially owed his success to Wetherby for giving him the catering job that gave the Colonel the confidence to franchise his chicken, and felt campaigning for his Republican opponent would be “rotten of him.” On the other hand, openly supporting Wetherby would make him appear “treasonous to the party” by the state Republicans. Ultimately, the Colonel sat that election out after complimenting both candidates and suggesting that voters “vote for whom you think is best for the job.” In the end, Wetherby lost to Cooper by a narrow margin. Sanders reportedly apologized by Wetherby for not endorsing him, as Wetherby had crossed party lines to endorse Sander's gubernatorial candidate just a year prior. However, Wetherby alleged in a 1976 interview that he held no grudge against the Colonel “whatsoever,” which makes sense when one considers both the differences between the 1955 and 1956 races and the state of Wetherby’s career by the time of that interview…

– journalist John Ed Pearce’s Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics 1930-1959, A University Press of Kentucky, 1987



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] Noted here: http://www.ronford.net/ui/kfc3/wkfcnews/kfcnews/claudia.htm
[2] The newspaper article uncovered here: https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/110333740/ (8/4/1951 The Courier-Journal, Louisville KY, page 13) reads that “the 1950 Legislature enacted a new salary law for elective and appointive offices. It put in motion by statue the $12,000 constitutional salary ceiling adopted in 1949. But the law does not become effective for legislators and elective state officers until their new terms start next January. The next Governor… will draw $10,000 a year and will have a $10,000 expense account. This is the present compensation arrangement for the Governor’s office. The 1950 Legislature didn’t change it. …the next lieutenant governor will be the first one to draw a salary [of] $3,000 a year. He also will get $30 a day during sessions of the Legislature while he presides over the Senate… the commissioner of agriculture will get $7,500…” According to saving.org, the value of $10,000 in 1955 equals $92,331.09 in 2018, and $10,000 in 1959 equals $85,302.42 in 2018.
[3] A state legislator mentioned in the 8/4/1951 newspaper article discovered here: https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/110333740/
[4] Quote found here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (page 18 when printed out)
[5] Teacher Salary Link: https://books.google.com/books?id=wL0fBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA240&lpg=PA240&dq... (“‘The Public Papers of Governor Bert T. Combs: 1959-1963,’ by Bert T Combs,” found by Googling “salary of governor of Kentucky in 1951”). The source reads “Kentucky lost a minimum of $824395000 [?] in earning capacity through students who dropped out of high school in a single class” between 1954 and 1959.
[6] Story and even further details (and OTL discrepencies) located here: https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/colonel-sanders/
[7] This happened IOTL, but in OTL Governor Chandler handled it differently: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happy_Chandler#Governorship



Chapter 5: January 1957 – December 1957

“It was the possibility of darkness that made the day seem so bright.”

– Stephen King (OTL)



KFC IN MEXICO: What to Expect

Mexico City, Mexico – On Thursday, January 3, KFC began the new year with a new milestone. The first Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet in Mexico opened its doors in that nation's capital city today, welcoming in locals to the company’s 408th outlet overall. The franchise's newest outlet means that the company's offerings can now be found at locations spread across three countries: Canada, US, and now Mexico.

Businessweek, weekly newspaper, 1/5/1957



Things seemed to be going well for Kentucky. The Governor was slowly convincing companies to invest in the state, roadwork was chipping away at unemployment, and the winter harvest was great! I guess it was all the calm before the storm – er, flood, uh, you know what I mean.

– 1957 Flood Survivor from Wooton, KY, recorded for NBC anniversary report, 1/28/1958



“The first three weeks of January 1957 were drier than normal across eastern Kentucky. However, …one to two inches of rain fell on the 22nd and 23rd, saturating the ground and bringing streams up to normal levels. [When] a frontal [storm] boundary… moved into the state… a weak area of low pressure tracked along the front producing additional light rain across southeast Kentucky. …The heaviest rain occurred…on January 28th and 29th, when a general two to six inches of rain fell over southeast Kentucky.”

https://www.weather.gov/jkl/1957flood.co.usa



The rain beating down on the Governor’s mansion was not nearly as fierce as it was on the other side of the state. The rainstorm roared against buildings, threatening to uproot anything it could, and halting people’s movement with inches upon inches of water, overwhelming the storm drains. It was rougher than a pulp wood truck in a cotton patch. Several phones covered my desk, and none of them were keepin’ quiet. Local officials were anxious, and local utilities were stretched thin. Luckily, the early warning systems seemed to be working fine. Still, I knew I had to do something. Within hours, I was on the airwaves, calling on everyone to follow the safety guidelines the experts handed to me. I urged folks to stay calm, protect their kin and neighbors, then their property. Emergency workers were assembled for whatever we would face.

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



Advanced warning systems assembled under the Sanders administration enabled hundreds of families in Paintsville and surrounding towns to successfully evacuate before the river moved in to their homes. Even still, the rivers overflowed so quickly in some places “that many residents had to evacuate without their belongings. Communications were disrupted and food shortages developed as the result of damage to stores. Water supplies were contaminated in some locations and there was no gas for cooking. Reports indicated that 30 state and federal highways were blocked by flood waters or mudslides and most secondary roads were impassable due to heavy rains.”

https://www.weather.gov/jkl/1957flood.co.usa



The towns along the Cumberland River, which meanders around the border of Kentucky and Tennessee, were hit hardest. Even Corbin experienced flooding, as the town is just 15 miles away from the Laurel River, which is attached to the Cumberland. 400 homes, nearly a hundred businesses (new and old), and several churches and schools were flooded. As much as 10 feet of water rose up in some parts of town, which was higher than at any other time in the past 50 years according the older local residents, even greater than the last two times the region suffered a major flood (1939 and 1946).

There were so many places hit: Barbourville in Knox County, Jeremiah in Lecher County, London in Laurel County, Baxter in Harlan County, and Hazard in Perry County. Buckhorn, Hayden, Wooton, Manchester got hit, too. 80 percent of the small town of Oneida, in Manchester County, got covered in up to 9 feet of water – 80%!

But the city that got hit the worst was Pikeville, at the eastern tip of the state. Experts later told me that at the flood’s height, almost the entire city was submerged, engulfed by the river and rain. One of the experts told me it was “the first time [this has] happened since 1862.” Over 250 homes were destroyed and roughly with 2,400 were damaged in the area overall, along with, reportedly, over 400 cars!

The scenes were incredible; nearly apocalyptic. Now, I had experienced flooding before, but not to this extent. It was awesome in the bad sense of the word.

Immediately, I got my folks to get me a truck, a boat on its back, and some boots on my feet. Parts of the federal highway were submerged, making strips of the gravel into giant urban swimming pools. Despite the pleas from my aides, I set out with policemen and firemen to the affected areas.

I personally visiting the sites hit to ensure services were being provided and to built faith and hope among those whom had lost the most. When I visited Prestonburg, where over half the city was city underwater, roughly a thousand men, women and children had been forced to abandon their homes, and now were cold, hungry, and in need of help. Ordered the local officials – police officers, firemen, priests, anyone in a position to lead – to set up supplies uphill. Sleeping bags, canned food, makeshift tents hugged the waterside. I helped hand out blankets and sat down with the people. Many needed a ear to speak into or a shoulder to cry on, and I saw no reason not to oblige. At one point, a crowd of displaced locals, emboldened by my presence, called for me to make them some KFC. After some hesitance, I used the truck’s military-grade radio to order in over 200 buckets of fresh chicken. At a time of disaster, KFC brought people together and raised their spirit. Then the people waited, desperately but patiently, for the next few days, until the waters receded, and they could return to inspect what was left of their homes.

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



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– Colonel Sanders meeting with public officials in Pikesville, 2/3/1957



While there were no deaths in the Kentucky Flood of 1957, several people were hospitalized for injuries. Damage “exceeded $15 million in Pike County alone.” Commercial damage was the focus on the post-flood cleanup. An airport was completely wiped out, and hundreds of homes and commercial space was damaged. For instance, “Twenty-five residences and thirty-four commercial properties were inundated in Manchester.” Fortunately, the state government viewed the flood as a blessing in disguise, as it allowed for the creation of more jobs, which lowered unemployment. Electricians repaired the phone and power lines, janitors cleaned the repairable places and demolition and construction companies went in to replace the irreparable.

https://www.weather.gov/jkl/1957flood.co.usa



On February 28, after Sanders called for a special session of the General Assembly, state legislators passed a set of laws concerning the zoning requirements and levee levels for new buildings constructed in Watershed Regions, along with an allocation of funds to the state’s flood relief efforts.

– journalist John Ed Pearce’s Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics 1930-1959, A University Press of Kentucky, 1987



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https://www.weather.gov/jkl/1957flood.co.usa



I had to run around the state all over again to convince businesses to invest in Kentucky. Many companies refused to bite on the idea of founding anything in the southern parts of the state, so for them I convinced them to look at the northern parts of the state. Those areas were, after all, closer to the industry hubs of Chicago, Detroit, and Pittsburgh, anyway! Still, the flood had cost the state a significant amount of funds, and some of my experts feared we’d be unable to return to the pre-flood levels of revenue until 1961. Fortunately, we had the Penny Crow Fund, which was meant exactly for situations like this – to hold us over until the short-term met up with the long-term. There wasn’t much in it because we had only put under a year’s worth of funds into it, but the flood vindicated the idea of keeping the fund around. Later Governors would adopt it to, though its name was changed in 1971 to the Emergency Relief Fund, or the “Rainy-Day” Fund as some call it.

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



After the Kentucky Derby on May 4, 1957, Harland began travelling the state again to get some more ideas on what to introduce in the next session and, more generally, check on how things were coming along throughout the state. Of course, Harland also took the opportunity to check on the KFC franchisees here and there. He was only human, after all. He was curious as to just how loyal franchisees were remaining in his absence. The lack in quality declination showed that Millie and Harley were faithfully keeping an eye on things, and that filled Harland with pride for his children.

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broacasting) interview, 1979



The more I tried to participate in the operations at KFC, the more male pigheadedness showed its ugly head. Many male workers resented their boss being a woman, and the more influential of them that stayed on quietly opposed my increasing influence in the workings-on in the company. At the time, of course, such feelings were natural to find, but the thing was, I was too proud to admit to Harley or Dad that it did indeed bother me a bit.

One time, I dropped by when Harley was in a meeting with this truckers’ union, and none of them gave me the respect that I deserved. Sure, they courteously stood up when I came and left, but all of them nearly completely ignored me. When I’d ask one of them a question, they would answer to Harley instead of to me. Shucks, even Millie got more respect, it seemed. The treatment was much worse with some of the more elderly and old-fashioned franchisees, men who, ironically, didn’t exactly take kindly to a woman telling them how to run their kitchen. That’s how some men are. They hear you’re only in charge of sales and they figure it’s fine to disregard you, no matter how close you are to the bosses. But instead of telling my father or brother or even my sister about it, I took the matter into my own hands – I looked up and met with their wives, their sisters, and their mothers to see how I could win them over. I held public picnics for their families where the men would arrive expecting to meet the Colonel or Harley, and instead would have to deal with dealing with me.

Unfortunately, the colorful rhetoric in the bathrooms, the elevators, the hallways, behind closed doors and by the water coolers continued on. So finally, in the early summer days of 1957, I talked to Millie. As the number-two at the company, her experience wasn’t as bad as mine. Even still, her handling of the sexist pigs was easy – if a worker, or a candidate for a job or a franchise outlet, turned out to not like working for a woman, she’d simply let them go. And yes, it was tricky, because if you rile up a man too much, they will get violent on you and get other pigheaded men to get violent on you too. So during much of the year 1956 or so, there were confrontations. Franchisees threatening to drop our chicken from their menu despite the revenue they’d lose from it. Employees threatening to strike, or getting their friends to intimidate others into boycotting our food. Finally, Millie contacted the International Federation of Business and Professional Women; their officials really helped clear the air by initiating more open communication between the sexes and other tactics. The company’s collective bargaining agreements were soon updated with stronger wording to protect not just minority workers from workplace harassment, but now female workers as well. Tensions seemed to cool down.

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



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– A vintage KFC bucket, circa June 1957



While he was swamped with work in the middle of a scorcher of a July, I surprised my father one day by applying for the job of Assistant to the Governor. The underrated vizier. Like Father and Mags, I was restless at the company, and had decided to split my time.

Father put me through the same interview grilling he gave all the other applicants. After that, we split some pop – or coke, or soda, whichever you prefer [1] – to celebrate my hiring. I started out helping father with appointments on weekends, and overseeing business at KFC on weekdays. Naturally, many didn’t appreciate it at both workplaces, especially in light of Maggie’s confrontation with a trucker’s union causing some trouble, but Frankfort’s political folks were actually the more hostile ones. Many considered me unqualified for the job despite my business degree, and several liberal Democrats even went so far as to accuse my father of nepotism, despite the aforementioned hiring process. In the end, however, the remarks were entirely ineffective, as I continued to divide my time between KFC, my father, and my younger children, for the remainder of Father’s time as Governor.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr.’s In the Thick of It: The Story of the Colonel and his Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1993



PLAN UNDERWAY TO BRING ENGINEERING JOBS TO LOUISVILLE, OTHER AREAS

…Kenneth P. Vinsel, executive Vice President of the Louisville Chamber of Commerce, will meet with representatives of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers to discuss the "local workers situation" for the new testing facility that is planned to be built just south of the city…

The Courier-Journal, Kentucky newspaper, 8/8/1957



U.S. PARATROOPS TAKE SCHOOL: Guard Federalized, City Told to Obey the Law

Ike Tells Why Army Sent to Little Rock

– The San Francisco Chronicle, 9/24/1957



Privately, Colonel Sanders disapproved of Eisenhower’s handling of Little Rock incident, believing that the President should have been quicker to respond to the crisis. Comparing the crisis in Arkansas with the Sturgis Standoff, the Colonel was, allegedly, also disappointed by how seemingly disconnected the President was from the issue, as he did not personally visit the school in question. This criticism seems to have been forgiven or ignored, however, as the President invited Colonel Sanders to the White House later in the year for a discussion on highway-side eateries. Both figures considered the talk “pleasant” and "productive," with the President later remarking that The Colonel was "an impressive man."

– David Pietrusza’s The Epic Campaigns of the 1960s, 2008



KENTUCKY GOVERNOR AT ODDS WITH WALL STREET: Publicly States “I’ve Never Trusted The Stock Market.”

…Kentucky economists fear Sanders’ rhetoric yesterday could hurt consumer confidence in the state, at a time when the Governor is still trying to overcome financial hurdles. The state’s finances took a hit in February when heavy rainfall caused the Cumberland River to flood, ultimately costing the state “several dozens of millions” of dollars in damage. Nevertheless, the boisterous governor cited his hesitance to “be dependent on Wall Street” for his success as governor over the past two years, and suggested that people “invest in gold” and raw elements, and focus more on banks and “the kind of money you can actually hold in your hand” than on stocks. However, Sanders did concede that “banks are a lot more trusting nowadays, especially after FDR took care of them. But still, you should never keep all of your eggs in one basket. And that way of thinking works not just when it comes to eggs, but when it comes to banking, too!”

– Wall Street Journal, 8/12/1957



…The state Treasury department today announced that they expect the state budget to make a full recovery from its current shortfall within the next three months. January’s flood bit a sizeable chunk out of the state’s funds, but it did lead to efficient cleanup work that was, uh, actually hailed by the, uh, Governor Clement of Tennessee, for quickly mobilizing across the affected region…

– WKCT 930 AM (Bowling Green, KY) radio broadcast, 9/16/1957



...Midterms are always a means for gauging the people’s approval or disapproval of the incumbent leaders, and Kentucky’s 1957 midterms were no exception. Throughout the fall campaign, Sanders campaigned heavily for GOP candidates, relishing in his bipartisan popularity and the economy's steadily increasing health.

Meanwhile, I was just starting out as the new regional manager for the dozens of KFC franchisee locations set up in the Midwest at this time. While not affecting me directly, I was aware that for the neighboring state of Kentucky, KFC franchisees were explicitly instructed to not have any political banners on the premises in order to avoid arguments between Republican and Democratic customers. The Colonel was a Republican, but under Millie and Harley’s watch, KFC was strictly nonpartisan, and his folks in Kentucky made sure of that. but in the Midwestern states like Ohio and Indiana, franchisees had no reservations about promoting the chain founder through word of mouth...

– Dave Thomas’ Under the Colonel’s Wing, Mosaic Publishing, 1982



HOST 1: So, uh, last night was election night for the elections for the state General Assembly, and today we finally have the full picture. The GOP gained two seats in the state senate and they gained seven seats in the state House of Representations.

HOST 2: Yeah, these results are an, um, an indication that the voters really approve of the Colonel Governor, and I think having more Republicans to work with should make it easier for him to get legislation through over the next two years of his term.

– WHIR 1230 AM (Danville, KY) radio broadcast, 11/6/1957 [2]



GOVERNOR SANDERS HEADS NGA MEETING

White Sulphur Springs, WV – A three-hour caucus of Republican state governors attended this resort haven for a three-days-long National Governors Association conference, beginning on Friday. Gov. Harland “Colonel” Sanders (R-KY), Vice-Chairman of the caucus, oversaw the proceedings as Acting Chairman. Multiple state governors convened to discuss multi-state matters, in particular President Eisenhower’s Federal Highway Act, public desegregation, and business regulation. In a prepared speech, Sanders called for better coordination among the state governments to better businesses and trade across state lines. The speech reportedly received a standing ovation…

The Los Angeles Times, 12/16/1957



By the half-way point in my term, I had learned to fully capitalize on whatever opportunity I got to meet and converse with my fellow governors. For example, it was at a meeting of the N.G.A. that I got to talk to several fellow governors. I got along very well with the Civil Rights supporter Teddy McKeldin, the moderate governor of Maryland, who praised me for my handling of the Sturgis Standoff. I chatted with the young but dry-behind-the-ears Cecil Underwood, who did a remarkable job implementing desegregation in West Virginia – not a single riotous incident happened there! I had met with Harold Handley of Kentucky’s neighbor to the north several times before, but this time we chatted at length about his unpopular gas tax (which we disagreed on, but stopped ourselves short of arguing about it again), workers’ unions, and highway development in both our states; I would later endorse him during his US Senate bid. However, the Governor that I had the longest talk with was George Clyde. A Utahan, like Pete [Harman], Clyde was closer to my age, was more understanding of my aversion to alcohol, was mightily concerned about education, and was doing an impressive job overseeing highway construction in his state. I enjoyed working closely with him on domestic issues in the years that came later. But it wasn’t just the Republicans that I spoke to. Soapy Williams of Michigan was a young Democrat there who seemed to be more cantankerous towards the Dixiecrats than the GOP. …I learned, albeit a little too late in some areas, that the best way to understand someone is to actually meet with them. Through the NGA, I better understand the political positions that were dividing communities and legislators across the American landscape. And by golly, would that knowledge come in handy soon enough!

– Colonel Sanders’ autobiography, Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



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– A Kentucky Fried Chicken poster, c. December 1957



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] Corbin is located around the border between the “pop” and “coke” regions of the US, according to the map found here: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/soda-vs-pop_n_2103764
[2] General elections in Kentucky occur on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November

BTW: The next chapter will very likely be posted next week; thanks for reading!

EDIT: fixed desegregation typo. Good eye @nbcman ! Thanks!



Chapter 6: January 1958 – December 1958

“If you’re going to do anything new or innovative, you have to be willing to be misunderstood”

– Jeffrey Preston Bezos (OTL)



List of Foghorn Leghorn Episodes:
Ep. 21: “May Your Man Be Mayor” (1958)
Premise: Leghorn runs for mayor of the chicken coop to impress his new beau!
Running time: 11 minutes, 5 seconds
[snip]
Fun Facts:
Fun Fact No. 1: This episode makes several subtle references to Colonel Sanders, whom in 1958 was famous for going from selling chicken to becoming Governor of Kentucky in 1955!
Fun Fact No. 2: Contrary to popular belief, Foghorn Leghorn was actually not based on Colonel Sanders, as the cartoon character was created and first appeared in Looney Tunes shorts in 1946, before Colonel Sanders was even famous!

– mediarchives.co.usa/Foghorn_Leghorn



Since the Colonel’s departure, the company had seen little innovation apart from expanding the range and number of franchisees. In early 1958, fearing local competitors would siphon away customers with more exciting options, Pete Harman and Millie Sanders began to micromanage their roles in the company, becoming bolder in offering new ideas without neglecting the company’s roots. While eating KFC one evening with Harley Sanders’ family, Harman commented on how the younger children would loudly lick “all ten fingers after diving into a plate of the birds,” leading to one of the children replying with “they’re finger-lickin’ good,” a reply that in turn lead to Harman trademarking “Finger-lickin’ Good” and eventually making it the company’s most famous tagline [1]. Additionally, Harman created a business model that allowed management teams to own significant interests in the restaurants where they worked in, in order to better share in the profits [2]. A second major change was to better utilize the idea of packaging complete meals for families on the go; Millie would privately work with Claudia Sanders on selecting the specific meal dish options. Millie Sanders also took her mother’s experience with the delivery aspect of the fast-food world to streamline the pick-up process, and increased the number of takeout (or “take home”)-only locations found in the United States (starting in 1958) and Canada (starting in 1960, after Harley’s 1959 review of international law greenlit the move).

– Bob Darden’s Secret Recipe: Why KFC Is Still Cookin’ After 50 Years, Tapestry Publishers, 2002



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– A KFC Take-Home Only locale, Tallahassee, FL, c. Summer 1958



…and if you’re driving on U.S. Route 23, please note the reduced speeds there are still in effect, as construction work in the area is still going on. The Riverside Resort on the Levisa Fork, uh, which is set to open in April...

– Ernest Sparkman, WSGS radio broadcast, 2/28/1958 [3]



“[Toronto-based] Scott’s Restaurants had offered Sanders’s chicken in its four downtown diners since the late 1950s. When it opened a Scott’s Chicken Villa at Lawrence and Victoria Park, it was strictly takeout. This model offered convenience for suburban families wanting to eat at home without turning the stove on, and higher profits, thanks to its lower overhead. Within five years, Scott’s opened 20 stores and their giant roadside buckets plastered with the Colonel’s face across Metro Toronto, while franchisees elsewhere converted to the takeout format.”

https://torontoist.com/2015/12/historicist-a-finger-lickin-good-mississauga-colonel/.co.ca/en



Up until the 1950s, many American women felt as if life was nothing more than a never-ending series of chores. KFC, and its iconic take-home Dinner Buckets, introduced nationwide in 1958 after just three months of regional success, eliminated the chore of dinner-making, freeing up enough time for women to realize that they were people with their own ambitions. Women here in the UK went through the same realization when KFC came over here a few years later. In a way, or at least in a small way, the Kentucky Fried Chicken company helped in the propulsion of the world’s feminist movements of the Twentieth Century.

– Conservative feminist writer and politician Louise Burfitt-Dons, while speaking at a rally, 2004



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– Two KFC advertisements, using “stock” photographs of the Colonel that were originally shot in late 1955, c. Summer 1958



During the new legislative session [of Spring 1958], John B. Breckinridge locked horns with me once again. This time, though, he was weakened by the midterms replacing many of the Chandler Democrats with Republicans willing and ready to continue my agenda – primarily, expansion of healthcare options, allowing people to have a say in who was their doctors, and allowing doctors to have a say in who were their patients. This would cover folks who needed the help their bosses wouldn’t give ’em, as forcing employers to follow government orders is far too Red for both Kentuckians and me.

However, once out of the House, there was much opposition to the bill in the Senate. To get it passed, I agreed to back the Term Specifics Revision bill, a piece of legislation that would allowing incumbent governors to run for a second consecutive term. See, both Democrats and Republicans had been wantin’ to pass such a bill since the 1850s, but no incumbent was willing to exempt themselves from the bill to placate the opposing party [4].

But I was the exception – I was elected understanding I’d only get one term, and I had planned out my time as governor accordingly; “Fine, I was planning on a one-term stint anyway!” I told the state senate leader when he sprung the proviso on me.

With the passage of these two laws, Kentucky, a state of nearly three million people at the time, got better healthcare and the choice of longer-serving governors.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



By March 1958, the end of the state’s active legislation period was approaching, and Colonel Sanders was pecking at a massive omnibus spending package proposed by the state Democrats meant to expand education funding. The Governor negotiated to only add more funds to colleges if the package also included a vocational programs and apprenticeship programs offered by state businesses. Two sides came to an agreement, and Sanders supported and passed the bill into law in April.

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



While the Recession of 1958 officially began in August 1957 and officially ended in April 1958, its effects were still felt across the economy as 1958 continued, although they were helped by the June 1958 legislation pushed through in Washington, D.C. …of the states less affected, Kentucky receive much attention. Due to their Governor at the time not trusting the stock market (KFC was still not on the market at this time), [5] then-Governor Harland D. Sanders managed to lead his state through the fiscal year without much damage... April was the height of the recession, as unemployment peaked at 20% in the city of Detroit, Michigan. Sanders responded to this economic crisis by encouraging laid off workers to move to Kentucky, as it was one of the few places better off. This was possible thanks to Sanders’ distrust of the stock market’s “unpredictable nature” leading to him investing in Earth minerals at the beginning of his term. …The long-term effects were a mixed bag. On one hand, long-term, with Sanders adding at least roughly 2,000 new families to the state of Kentucky while also troubling some financial sectors. …The industries hit the hardest by the recession, apart from Ford due to the humiliating flop that was the Edsel car coming out that same year, were the lumber, mining and textile industries; the drop in orders due to drop in demand cost over five millions workers their jobs. Many of these workers, especially those from Michigan, Ohio and West Virginia, found greener pastures in Kentucky’s uninterrupted infrastructure development projects, including irrigation and rural electrification projects begun in the aftermath of flooding in southern Kentucky in early 1957…

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



On April 21, Governor Sanders called the General Assembly into session to address healthcare and wages.

– journalist John Ed Pearce’s Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics 1930-1959, A University Press of Kentucky, 1987



When I started Kentucky Fried Chicken, I paid my employees good salaries. I paid my office staff $7,000 a year ($58,000 in 2016 dollars). Country-bred stenographers and bookkeepers who had been working for $45 ($370 in 2016 dollars) a week in their neighborhood went to work for me at $7,000 a year. I didn’t do that just because I felt like it. I’ve always believed that everybody likes to have a good wage. I got credit for paying them good wages and at the time if Uncle Sam came along and took it away from them in taxes, it wasn’t my fault. [6] I couldn’t do anything about it. But then I became governor. And I figured that I might as well take the opportunity to try to get feds out of the pockets of the states. I’d use the old phrase “states’ rights” but, again, not in any racial way. States have the right to lessen their reliance on the federal government. When you break a limb, you use a cast, but when its healed, you don’t keep the cast! The Penny Crow fund was doing well, but I refused to accept the feds imposing new taxes that were higher than my state’s taxes. The rebellion, albeit unsuccessful, was popular among fiscal conservatives nationwide. By gum, I must have received well over 1000 letters applauding me for standing up for the rights of states. Again, not in any racial way, though.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



After days of negotiations, Sanders got the state congress to raise the state minimum wage by 25 cents, which was a lot back then, about two dollars in today’s money.
With the biannual budget finally set, state congress left for summer break, allowing Harland to take a break from politics. He and I decided to travel, visiting relatives around the state and over in Indiana. I felt like catching up on my siblings after our mother passed away [7]. Harland’s brother and sister, Clarence and Violet, were mighty proud of their older brother [8]. But even during such times of leisure, Harland felt compelled to work, jotting down ideas for executive orders and how to better utilize the committees at his disposal, or taking a break from eating a family dinner to make a call to his advisors to see if an idea of his was feasible or whatnot. One time, during one supper with my relatives in Alabama, Harland left to use the phone three times in half as many hours. After the fourth call, I had a few words with him.
“You’re going to kill yourself if you don’t take a break now and again!” I once screamed at him.
“What do you think sleep is?” was his response.

Was restlessness ever not an issue?

Well, it was manageable. I found as the years wore on that one thing he would slow down his pace for was his grandchildren, and, soon enough, great-grandchildren. He loved them so, and enjoyed his time with them. So we’d visit them many times over the summer breaks during this time. It helped take his mind off the more frustrating parts of politics that he would return to in the fall.

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



THE COLONEL AND HIS TURNING OF THE TIDES

New Reports Show The Flow Of People Moving From Kentucky To Michigan Is Reversing: What Exactly Is Causing Kentucky’s Reversal Of Fortune?

Frankfort, KY – Governor Sanders puts on a show for potential investors, treating them to personally-made meals at the Governor’s mansion and a comprehensive sales pitch. The product? His state. …The new construction of highways throughout Kentucky’s varied realms are presenting stateside businesses with access to the rest of the country, and solid virgin real estate comes alongside these new gravel vessels. …The state was already on the decades-long trend of shifting from becoming more urban than rural, but the Colonel is careful not to neglect agricultural and rural-based businesses. Staying true to his mountain roots, farmers are also seeing relief, as more people stay to work in the fields on new equipment, which is becoming more available to the average farmhand thanks to the revenue coming in from new businesses. Russell Kirk made positive comments on these developments in a New Yorker op-ed last month… Some Michigan politicians worry, though, that this could spell trouble for the people of this Midwestern state…

National Review, conservative editorial, 8/23/1958



“No, there was no rivalry between Colonel Sanders and I. The ’50s were beneficial to both of our states. …the ’60s? Well those were complicated times…”

– Democratic politician Soapy Williams (Governor of Michigan 1949-1961), NBC interview, 1975



The late 1950s saw the golden years of small-family chicken farming come to a close, as the decade saw a steady drop in egg prices nationwide, allowing for larger chicken operators to enter the markets. At this time, Kentucky Fried Chicken got its meat and other products from local farmers in order to ensure freshness. It’s no surprise that KFC franchises easily sprouted up in the south, most notably in Georgia, Arkansas, Alabama, North Carolina and Mississippi – the nation’s highest chicken-producing states, both then and now. In August 1958, Millie and Harley Sanders, the effective co-presidents of KFC during this time, signed an agreement with several chicken small farming organizations in North Carolina in opposition of a local mega-farm attempting to buy out local farmers. [9] “When the small business owner flourishes, the town flourishes. When the town flourishes, the people flourish,” Millie wrote to her father. Millie also understood that larger corporations were much more difficult with whom to do business; “Smalltime farmers won’t try to take us over, and we depend on them too much to ever deny them their needs. Respect and cooperation makes the relationships work. Coordination with the many local organizations (shipping, handling, workers, et cetera), though, still has to be streamlined.”

– Bob Darden’s Secret Recipe: Why KFC Is Still Cookin’ After 50 Years, Tapestry Publishers, 2002



COLONEL SANDERS NEGOTIATES CONTRACT FOR OUR NEW FOOTBALL STADIUM

– The Kentucky Kernel (newspaper for the University of Lexington, KY), 9/10/1958



LANDIS STADIUM RENAMED

…today announced that the iconic sports stadium on the south side of campus will be renamed the Colonel Sanders Lexington University Stadium, in order to honor the late political and fast-food icon… “for his contributions to higher education” and social achievements during his time in office as… Already, students have dubbed it “Colonel’s Stadium,” though “KFC Stadium” is also being used by many…

– universityoflexingtonky.edu.usa/news, 2/27/2006 update-note



Overview Of Latest Sales Report: KFC Quality Rates Steady – Sales Still Gradually Rising At Steady Pace.
Additional: New Franchisees In Tucson, AZ And Walla Walla, WA Opening Doors This Upcoming Wednesday And Friday, Respectively.

– KFC internal memo, 9/21/1958



On September 22, 1958, a U.S. Army veteran was working at a KFC franchise in Georgia when a pressure fryer exploded. The veteran received second-degree burns to his chest and right arm, and less severe burns to his face and hands. As the veteran was covered by the G.I. Bill, the U.S. Veterans Administration investigated the incident to determine the incident.

– Eric Schlosser’s Fast-Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal, Houghton Mifflin Company, 2001



VETERANS ADMIN. CALLS FOR INSPECTION OF KFC PRESSURE FRYERS AFTER WWII VET. INJURED

– The Paintsville Herald, 10/2/1958



At first we thought it was some exaggeration, but then Millie and I flew down to the hospital Atlanta, and we saw the man looked mangled. I felt terrible about it. Millie was the one to phone her father about it, so I’m not certain what his initial reaction was to it. This was the worst accident concerning the fryers we had ever had. It was a real wake-up call. We apparently could have been doing a much better job preparing the workers for their wild-bull-like behavior.

Was The Georgia Employee wearing any protective clothing?

The phrase if you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen comes from the fact that restaurants kitchens are often boiling environments, especially in this franchisee in question. Most of the workers there wore short-sleeve shirts to stand the heat. But that all changed after this incident. A few weeks afterwards, we ordered all locations to maintain reasonable workplace temperatures. Open windows, fans working – or, in cold places, heaters – we wanted the kind of kitchen were the workers would be able to tolerate wearing long sleeves and long gloves nears the fryer.

Was anything else done concerning the incident?

Yes, one big thing. I later called the Colonel, and I also talked to Harley about this, and despite the Colonel opposing it, Harley agreed with me, that the design of the Colonel’s pressure fryers had to be revisited. We had several professionals on our payroll to look over the machinery, and they slowly began tinkering with the Colonel’s design, being very careful to not affect the way the chicken ended up tasting.

And that was difficult?

Oh, yes, we spent many weeks if not months testing and tasting, but, like anything you do with perseverance, it got done.

– Pete Harman and interviewer, 60 Minutes, early 1992



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– Governor Colonel Harland David Sanders (R-KY) giving a speech before a crowd to endorse and rally support for a Republican candidate for the U.S. Congress (standing on his right), 10/26/1958



MIDTERMS RESULTS BAD FOR REPUBLICANS NATIONWIDE

…the Republican party suffered several losses in senatorial, congressional, and gubernatorial elections in the western, midwestern, and northeastern states. Psephologists, also known as people who study elections and their historic trends for a living, observe that the losses can be contributed to both “incumbency fatigue” and the economy. “The swelling of northern Democrats notably to the left of their party’s southern counterparts could prove to be a highly significant development,” reports Howard K. Smith of ABC.

Losses for the Republican Party were greater than expected due to the effects of this year’s recession, though Smith claims the victories of Democrats in the Midwest and Northeast is due to President Eisenhower’s position on right-to-work issues galvanizing labor unions, a majority of which support the Democratic Party.

In last night’s Senate races, Democrats gained 15 seats, which may be a new record for the number of Senate seats changing party hands in a midterm election. Alaska, which will be admitted as a state on January 3rd, elected two Democrats, while members of the party of Jackson gained seats in the typically Republican-leaning states of New Jersey, Connecticut and Maine.

In the House, Democrats gained 49 seats across the country, from California to Maine, in the races for governor, Democrats gained a net total of 6. Due to local and state politics playing a prominent role in how voters chose their leaders at the gubernatorial level, Republicans managed to gain the governorships in four states (Oregon, Arizona, New York and Rhode Island) but lost control of 10 other governor’s seats.

“Republicans should look back on tonight,” says Smith, “And learn from these results to determine how to better address the wants and needs of the American people going forward into the 1959 and 1960 elections.”

– The New York Times, 11/5/1958



VETERANS AFFAIRS ENDS KFC INVESTIGATION: Georgia Franchisee Fined For Negligence, KFC For Ignorance

Washington, D.C. – …The U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that KFC can operate its current pressure fryers as long as workers are properly trained to handle them …Additionally, KFC has agreed to raise safety procedures such as protective gloves and goggles, and to implement safety training courses for new employees and franchisees. A spokesman for the multinational corporation also stated that “if a superior, safer pressure fryer design or method is discovered, Kentucky Fried Chicken will look into the possibility to using them, and working with authorities to ensure safe work environments are maintained in KFC franchise locations in the years to come.”

– The Kentucky Post, 12/23/1958



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– An early model of the Colonel’s KFC pressure fryer



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] The sentence “Harman also contributed…the motto ‘It’s finger-lickin’ good.’ Harman went on to operate more than 200 KFC locations in four states.” Is found here: https://www.thedailymeal.com/eat/10-things-you-didn-t-know-about-kentucky-fried-chicken-0/slide-5 . The slogan “Finger lickin’ good” was actually created in 1956: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KFC_advertising#Slogans
[2] The article https://www.deseretnews.com/article/865615974/Utah-man-who-founded-first-KFC-dies-at-95.html reads “[Harman’s] idea to package complete meals for families on the go to a business model that allowed management teams to own significant interests in the restaurants where they worked in order to share in the profits.”
[3] Without Colonel Sanders being in the governor's seat to instigate business development, this is what happened on this date in OTL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prestonsburg,_Kentucky,_bus_disaster.
[4] This information was found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Governor_of_Kentucky#Qualifications_and_term
[5] I swear to both my God and yours that I thought I saw the Colonel’s aversion to the stock market due to his experience living through the Great Depression mentioned in either his autobiography or in one of the sources in Chapter 1 (maybe the damninteresting article, or the buzzfeed article?). A thousand apologies for being unable to be more specific at this current point in time.
[6] These italicized sections were pulled from Sanders’ 1966 autobiography "Col. Harland Sanders: The Autobiography Original Celebrity Chef," and are also quoted here: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/15767252-colonel-harland-sanders
[7] More information can be found here: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/30176333/nancy-elizabeth-ledington
[8] Information pulled from here: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/176685300/violet-catherine-cummings
[9] This information can be found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poultry_farming_in_the_United_States

The E.T.A. of the next Chapter - November 1; thanks for reading!
 
Post 4
Post 4: Chapter 7-to-Chapter 9



Chapter 7: January 1959 – December 1959

“Don’t let your dreams be dreams”

– Jack Johnson (OTL)



I first met John Y. Brown Jr. in 1963; I never trusted him. Granted, the man started out innocently enough. The son of an unsuccessful politician, Brown was just a young entrepreneur fresh out of college in 1959, working at his father’s law firm while concurrently serving in the US Army Reserve and starting a family of his own. But his ambitions for wealth and fame were his top priorities. In 1959, I was paying close attention to KFC’s rising competitors, the biggest of them being McDonald’s and the man behind its meteoric rise, Ray Kroc. A man who took someone else’s idea and made it their own, pushing the founders to the background and minimizing their influence. As the decade came to a close, I kept my eyes on the effects of this treachery, and so, apparently, did John Y. Brown Jr.

– Dave Thomas’ Under the Colonel’s Wing, Mosaic Publishing, 1982



The late ’50s saw a boom in fast-food mega-chains as businessmen across the country tried to replicate the Colonel’s success. Pizza Hut, IHOP, and Delhelen Meats were born in 1958, with Little Caesar’s and Double-H coming into creation in 1959. And more would come in the 1960s – Domino’s Pizza, Hardee’s, Arby’s, Fridaytime, Dr. Sub’s – all beloved landmarks of Americana now, but at the time just struggling upstart companies working to defeat their competitors. I knew KFC, The Colonel’s brainchild, was going to face competition sooner or later, and within a few years I tried to help protect his franchise as best as I could.

– John Y. Brown Jr.’s autobiography John Y. Brown Jr.: A Lifetime of (Intermittent) Success, Brownhouse Publishing, 2003



BATISTA FLEES CUBA; CASTRO IN CONTROL

…Fulgencio Batista has resigned from the Presidency of the rebel-torn island nation of Cuba, and has fled to exile in the Dominican Republic, as Cuban rebel forces led by Fidel Castro moved swiftly to seize power throughout the island at the start the new year early today. …The rebel leader's militant forces entered the nation’s capital of Havana only a few hours after seizing the city of Santiago de Cuba late yesterday and taking over the Moncado army post without firing a shot; roughly 5,000 soldiers there surrendered during the capturing of the area. At the same time of night, truckloads of revel soldiers moved toward Havana, in conjunction with Castro's “26th of July” militia movement, who proceeded to begin "patrolling" streets while armed with machine guns and rifles...

…The rebel forces are forging ahead across the island, spreading out from Santa Clara, capital of Las Villas Province, which they had seized Wednesday, to other regions beyond Havana, such as Camaguey...

…The fleeing of General Batista has sparked an exodus from Cuba of at least 400 persons, who are fleeing by ship and plane to the United States and the Dominican Republic. Among these persons are some of Cuba’s most key political and military leaders and their respective families…

– The Daily News, 1/2/1959



On February 3, 1959, the United Daughters of the Confederacy awarded the Cross of Military Service to Margaret Sanders. The move was reportedly controversial, as, while Margaret, or “Maggie” to friends and “Mags” to her siblings, had often donated to numerous donations, including the UDC and the US armed forces, she had never served in the US military. However, according to the UDC, Margaret, along with her brother and sister, are eligible for the Cross due to their mother, Josephine King, having Alabaman roots dating back to before the American Civil War. Furthermore, Margaret was an active member of their social circles, and was deemed worthy by the organization’s voting committee for the award. Ironically, Colonel Sanders’ parents were born and raised in Indiana, and their ancestors hailed from the “union” states as well [1].

– Lowell Harrison and James Klotter’s A History of Kentucky, University Press of Kentucky, 1997



Unsure how to spend his lack-duck time, the Colonel would often meet with former governors for advice, but often disagreed with most of them, whom told him to "just take it easy," as one of them put it. “You’re supposed take it easy when out of office, not in it!” Sanders reportedly remarked. Rejecting the "laziness" of his fellow governors, The Colonel decided to travel around the state and meet with people, essentially launching an unofficial “tour” of the commonwealth.

– journalist John Ed Pearce’s The Colonel: The Captivating Biography of the Dynamic Founder of a Fast-Food Empire, Pageturner Publishers, 2017



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– The Colonel eating a Jelly Donut while meeting with locals, near Munfordville, KY, c. 1959



Update: Sales Recovering From Georgia Incident

– KFC internal memo, 3/21/1959



With the party’s gubernatorial primary only two months away, Kentucky’s Democratic state leaders began backing away from allying with Chandler, believing he would try to influence the outcome through the same negative tactics that cost them the governorship just four years prior. As a result, the race between county judge Bert T. Combs (who ran for the nomination in 1955) and Chandler ally Henry Waterfield (who ran for Lieutenant Governor in 1955) became more even-sided. Meanwhile, Republicans were hopeful that Sanders’ popularity could possibly lead to a second straight win. When Lieutenant Governor Edwin Denney announced his bid, he proceeded to the May primary virtually unopposed.

– Lowell H. Harrison and James C. Klotter’s A New History of Kentucky, University Press of Kentucky, 1997



HARLAND DAVID SANDERS IV

Harland David Sanders III and “Candy” Sanders announce the birth of their second child, a healthy baby boy and the couple's first son. Harland David Sanders IV arrived on April 2 at the Louisville City Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky. Weighing in at 8 pounds 11 ounces, the newborn is the first great-grandchild of Kentucky Governor Colonel Harland David Sanders, …

– The Courier-Journal, Celebrations section, 4/2/1959



One day in April of that year [1959], I was dictating to my head secretary, Deborah, when Margaret dropped by with some news.

“My daughter finally got into college.”

“Oh, um…”

"Jo"

"Oh, uh…"

“The troubled one.”

“Oh! Good for her!”

“Yeah, she likes Florida, so it looks like she’s staying there for the next four years. So, with the nest empty, I’m heading off to search for Atlantis off the coast of Morocco.”

“What?”

“So if you can collect my mail –”

“Whoa, hold up there, Maggie, starting an eye bank is one thing, but travelling across the globe?”

“Well I couldn’t find the Lost City in the Bahamas.”

“Margaret, it could be dangerous, like that time you worked at that gun factory.”

“I never shot anything…that couldn’t be covered up until after I had quit.”

“Oh, Margaret, that’s my point! You’re always picking up and moving away like a tumbleweed, going from one crazy thing to the next.”

“You say crazy, I say bold. And what can I say? I get antsy when I’m stuck in one place.”

“So true,” I replied; by this time, Margaret had already held several various jobs in Utah, Florida, Bimini, Lexington, Louisville, and New York City. “Just…just be careful, ya hear?”

“Ain’t I always? And besides, I understand the Theory of Relativity, Millie. Ya really think I can’t figure out how to use diving equipment?”

My sister truly had one of those “far-out minds,” as her daughter Josephine would often put it. She viewed things not as established fact but as unrecognized challenges. Mysteries were just queries left blank on a test – their answers were out there somewhere, but only few cared enough to find them once the test was over.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



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– Governor Sanders reviewing a draft of a speech proposing a Farming Deregulation Bill, c. April 1959



…Another big story today comes from Frankfort, the state capital, where Governor Sanders has called for a special session for one last issue, um, since he’s leaving office this December. The issue that will be discussed, *clears throat*, is the deregulating of the state government’s demands on agriculture. The Colonel today announced, quote, “let farmers be farmers,” unquote, and that he will, uh, quote, “seek to curb the increasing bureaucratic hindrance on the family farms in favor of major farm companies, supporting the sacrificing of local family farms in the name of monopolistic government control and oppression. Let businesses run honest operations and run clean competition without the government taking the side of oppression,” unquote. Some strong words, for sure, but in politics, the pen can often beat the tongue…

– WKYT-TV, Kentucky radio station, 4/10/1959 broadcast



Soon after, J. B. Breckinridge met with several of his fellow legislators whom believed that Sanders’ proposal for a farm reform bill would be detrimental or even dangerous to state agriculture if it passed. “These government demands are a necessary evil, as small farms would fail without them,” Breckinridge allegedly told an undecided state congressman during his campaign to win over enough votes to block the passing of such a bill.

– James C. Klotter’s Our Kentucky: A Study of the Bluegrass State, University Press of Kentucky, 1997



On the day of the vote, Breckinridge managed to defeat the proposed bill, 56-44. Father threw a fit over the results, but after a short accepted it, saying "What's done is done." He decided to keep moving forward with the rest of his agenda for the remainder of the year, beginning with redirecting his focus to executive orders and travelling around. “I did the very best I could do with what I had working for me and working against me,” he later told me. Personally, I think towards the end of his term, he was relieved that he only had a few months left of his time in office. At one point, he even said to me, "If all goes well, Breckinridge will soon enough become Denney’s problem. Maybe he'll do a better job dealing with him."

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



“Turning now to politics, Bert Combs has won the Democratic nomination for Governor in a tight race against Henry Waterfield. ...Bert Combs, born Bertram Thomas Combs in 1911, rose from poverty to earn a law degree from Kentucky University before serving as a private in the US Army during World War II. In 1951, Governor Wetherby appointed him to a seat on the Kentucky Court of Appeals, and Mr. Combs held that seat until resigning earlier this year to run for governor …Across the aisle, Lieutenant Governor Edwin Denney tonight won the Republican nomination for Governor with roughly 89% of the vote, with the remaining share of the votes being split among several minor candidates...”

– Nicholas J. "Nick" Clooney, news anchor for WKYT-TV in Lexington KY (1959-1964), 5/25/1959 broadcast



“Something can happen to open the door of opportunity for you, but it’s your own job to keep that door open and to step through it!”

– Governor Sanders at Murray State University, 5/30/1959



GOV. SANDERS’ EXECUTIVE ORDER FUNDS GRANT FOR NEW BUSINESS, CULINARY PROGRAMS AT U

– The College Heights Herald (newspaper for Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green), 6/3/1959



NEW BUILDINGS ON HARLAND QUAD DEDICATED TO THE COLONEL: Staff, Alumni Celebrates 50 Year Anniversary Of U’s Business Programs

– The College Heights Herald (newspaper for Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green), 6/3/2009



…And now we turn to the continuing nationwide steelworker strike… After negotiations with management the steelworkers’ union broke down, their contract expired on July 15, causing 500,000 labors to vacate their jobs, affecting almost every steel mill in the nation... The Department of Defense has grown concerned that the halt in steel production could cost the nation dearly if a crisis were to occur… as of this moment, both sides appear to be at an impasse…

– Face the Nation, 8/29/1959 broadcast



All of Kentucky’s steel plants were shut down by the strike, cutting into Father’s goal of leaving office with low employment under his belt. Father met with the governors and business leaders of other states to try to coordinate any way to end the standoff, even offering to sit down with the union leaders and management to find some common ground. Richard Nixon, whom was Vice President at the time, warned that the workers’ refusal to return to work could trigger a recession, and that would make them lose support in both political parties heading into 1960. Both Father and I disagreed with the notion that several businesspersons had of looking to steel production overseas, with father angrily telling them to “stay in America; don’t scurry away like cowards, and betray your kin the moment they cause some trouble.” Despite my father’s opposition, businesses did turn to foreign production during the strike. The venture lead to them discovering that it was actually cheaper to import steel from places such as Japan and South Korea, a revelation that forever changed the US steel industry.

A few years later, father would address this domestic employment crisis from a much more powerful vantage point. But that’s for another chapter.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



In early September, Governor Sanders criticized several members of the Southern Governors Association at one of their meetings. At said meeting, the members in question had openly voiced opposing integration and supporting the steel industry’s anti-worker actions during that year’s nationwide steelworkers strike. The Colonel argued that he knew firsthand that management had a responsibility to their workers: “the work they put in, even when not on the clock, stuffs the pockets of me and my fellow businessmen, and because of that, we owe them the kind of wages that they can make a livin’ on.” The Colonel was not invited to the Association’s next meeting, in December, the official explanation being that it was scheduled to be held merely one week before the Colonel left office.

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



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– Colonel Sanders, Claudia Sanders, and Harley Sanders greeting guests at the Governor’s mansion, c. mid-September 1959



“Denney vows to uphold Sanders’ legacy while having none of his own to stand on. The worst county fair in the state has better platforms than Ed Denney.”

– Bert T. Combs, 9/30/1959



Col. Sanders Says “Try Out Denney’s Ideas!”

...The Colonel is trying to improve his Lieutenant's standing in the polls amid claims the Edwin Denney is "weaker duplicate" of Governor Sanders...

The Lexington Herald-Leader, 10/2/1959



In 1959, when I was 20 years old, my first politics gig was passing out pamphlets for the Eddie Denney campaign. That fall, Colonel Sanders campaigned for his first mate with earnest, presenting a Denney term as a second Sanders term, as the lieutenant governor was also a businessman by trade, albeit one much friendlier to big donors than Sanders ever was. The biggest problem was with the candidate himself – Denney himself was just a bad campaigner, often needing to rely on cue cards during speeches, a crutch that his opponent, Bert Combs, had cured himself of since his first bid for the governorship four years earlier. And the thing was, the bigger the crowd, the more embarrassing it was for him, and the more embarrassing it was for his campaign. It seemed that not even the Colonel himself - a man who built up a major fast-food chain by being a salesman - could help Eddie improve his "sales pitch." Both men simply could not make people overlook Denney’s inferior public speaking qualities. I couldn’t either. After the election, I finished school, and moved to Washington, D.C., where the professional politicians worked.

– Ronald Louis Ziegler, 1989 interview



Today marks the two-year anniversary of Cam’s narrow escape from death’s clutches. Tonight he recounted the harrowing event, when his small plane malfunctioned over the waters of the Florida Straits. By a miracle from God, Cam succeeded in bringing the plane down for a non-fatal crash into the dark waters below.

The plane shattered into pieces. All hope seemed lost until Cam caught sight of a capitalist bucket of KFC chicken sticking out of some of the wreckage. KFC chicken, which Cam often would pick up when clandestinely staying in Miami, was a guilty pleasure of Cam’s that he always omitted when telling this story to the public, switching it out for just a regular logo-less white bucket.

But regardless, the fact remains that in the darkness of those freezing night waters, a white bucket, bobbing like a beacon of salvage, waded in the waters on a piece of buoyant wreckage. Cam swam to the bucket, and managed to hold on tight to some of the plane’s more floatable remains as he became adrift upon the waves. Cam swore there was a plane following him, but if there was, its occupants must have thought he’d perished. But actually, brave Cam battled the stomach-churning waters for hours.

The strait carried him to Florida, where upon he landing on one of America's beaches undetected. He then stole a boat without detection or hesitance, and immediately returned to Cuba. It was, without a doubt, a very brave and courageous feat, KFC or no KFC.

Finishing the story, Cam toasted to the glory of the revolution. We cheered, and Cam ordered me to pour some more rounds, and I happily obliged, for the opportunity to fight under the command of Cam is a high honor. Tomorrow, when we return to battle, I promise that I will not let him or my country down!

– 28 October 1961 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



…Well, more reports are coming in, and I’ve got to say, it sure don’t look good for the Republican Party right about now. With the Democrats showing a more united front this time around, Judge Combs is still maintaining a slight lead over Lieutenant Governor Edwin Denney. This may be because, with the national steel strike still going strong, Governor Colonel Sanders’ popularity is dropping, and it looks like Denney’s polling numbers are being dragged down with it…

– WPSD-TV, Paducah, KY, 11/1/1959 radio broadcast



OUR NEW GOVERNOR: BERT T. COMBS

Frankfort, KY – The people of Kentucky elected Bert T. Combs to be their next governor… Combs is a decorated WWII veteran who served on the State Court of Appeals from 1951 to 1959… Despite Governor Sanders endorsing and actively campaigning for Lt. Governor Denney, Combs ran a more active campaign, narrowly defeating his Democratic primary opponents on a campaign focused on “open honesty” in the capitol.

…Possible contributions to Denney’s defeat are the national sense of voter fatigue, and this year’s Steel Strike upsetting statewide business and employment. ...Other election analysts, however, are pointing to Combs running a platform calling for a 3-percent sales tax to pay a bonus to military veterans, and provide greater funding for education and parks, while Denney ran on the less-inspiring platform of fiscal restraint. Interestingly, racial segregation was not a topic of debate during this race, as both candidates support racial integration... Upon being sworn into office next month, Combs will become the first veteran of World War II to hold said office...

– The Kentucky Post, 11/3/1959



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– ourcampaigns.co.usa



Kentucky Gubernatorial General Election Results, 11/3/1959:
Bert T. Combs (Democratic) – 443,310 (51.97%)
Edwin R. Denney (Republican) – 409,702 (48.03%)
Total votes cast: 853,014
Turnout: 28.97% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa [2]



Oh, yes, it was sad saying goodbye to the mansion and even sadder saying goodbye to the staff. By the end, I knew them all on a first-name basis. But at least I stayed in contact with some of them, and even hired some of them a few years later… After some last executive orders and pardons, Harland took what was apparently an unusual step, of packing up early instead of staying involved in political circles in the final few days of the Governorship. I wasn’t surprised. He was very anxious to get out. Hmm. My Harland never did like being a lame-duck… Um, on November 18, I believe, Ben-Hur premiered. Harland had heard good things about it, and eventually we both went and saw it. Harland was very impressed by it, and when he later got to meet Charlton Heston in person - in, I want to say, 1964 or 1965 - Harland was star-struck, absolutely flabbergasted, despite the serious context of the meeting. And, you know, I think that that viewing was the first time that Harland really got interested in the Middle East…

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



GOVERNOR SANDERS: A QUICK RATING OF HIS TERM

…he continued many Wetherby/Clements policies, particularly in transportation, focusing on road construction and development to improve trade and communication venues. These policies made him popular among Democratic donors and voters, and that helped him to work with some Democrats in the state legislature… The Colonel held true to his principles and fulfilled his campaign promises as best he could give the parameters and circumstances of his time in office… His dual presence on the national stage as a political figure and as a fast-food media icon posed the challenge of separating business from government, yet the Colonel suffered no relating scandals as one may have expected from such a bizarre combination of colorful and overlapping careers… …However, his conservative ideology and fiscal responsibility must be called into question for contradictory actions. For example, The Colonel decreased government involvement in some areas but increased it in others, and even though he opposed taxation in principle, he did champion and impose a "sin tax"… Despite GOP allegiance, he was known on the commonwealth’s Capitol Hill for being a somewhat independent-minded leader, picking and choosing administrative focus based on personal preference and how well he got along with state lawmakers and other state officeholders... However, in the end he was actually a very responsible leader, a “master of disaster” as one Frankfort colleague proclaimed. Indeed, Governor Sanders sailed his ship through major maelstroms in each year of his governorship – a Civil Rights confrontation, a flood that consumed half the state, an economic recession, and the still-occurring steel strike. Through each one, he persevered, and in the end, The Colonel leaves office with the state that despite the disasters has a budget surplus and an economy much healthier than many other states - and certainly much healthier than the one it had four years ago... Ultimately, we give Colonel Sanders an “A” rating for both his pragmatic results and his quixotic governing ideology that, while somewhat broad in definition, was consistent, honest, and reliable.

Harvard Business Review, Dec. 1959 issue



“Don’t thank me, folks, no, don’t applaud me. It was y’all, the people of Kentucky, who made these past four years so wonderful. It all happened by y’all believing in me, and trusting me to not become another politician and break the promises I made. When I say something, I always mean it, and the past four years prove that! …Before I leave, though, let me address the younger viewers. The young boys and gals of the commonwealth should know something – you can’t deny that there’s a connection between effort and success. You can’t have one without the other. If there’s one thing to take away from my time as Governor’s it’s that anything is possible if you just add effort to it. …So, in conclusion, what I’m trying to get at here, folks, is that you should never just wait for destiny to fall into your lap. If you have a vision, a dream, a calling, go for it! And make it happen! Why put it off or only care slightly for it? A light switch has only two settings – on and off. Turn your lights on. Put all your effort into your dream; that’s how you get it!”

– Sanders’ farewell address, WFPK-TV (Louisville, KT National Education Television affiliate) radio broadcast, 12/7/1959



“Actually, I just had time to spare that day. It was just how things turned out, is all. See, it was an early radio broadcast, and, well, see, a lot of radio stations and the media and whatnot were focusing on his speech because the Colonel has essentially become a national celebrity despite not living over in California. The media can’t get enough of him. So, on that day, I decided to listen to the Colonel’s speech while in the bathroom, um, shaving and stuff. I thought the Colonel was a funny character – harmless, really – but still, his meteoric rise from Nowheresville is very admirable. Colonel Sanders’ words, his pragmatic, almost pushy kind of speech, I don’t know. It – it inspired me, I have to say, to make me make a run for the Presidency that was a lot more active than the run I was doing at the time. Right after the speech, in the heat of the moment, I called my friend James Rowe, and I told him, ‘Jim, I’m going for it. Full swing, all the way.’”

– Lyndon B. Johnson to Homer Thornberry, 1961 recording, released 1981



For New Year’s Eve, 1959, we gathered around the TV set at the old Corbin homestead.

“By gum, what a decade. So much happened in it!” Dad remarked.

I lamented, “The death of Einstein.”

Harley observed, “AFL merged with CIO.”

Millie said, “That Elvis fella.”

Dad cleared his throat intentionally loudly.

“Oh yeah,” I jovially exclaimed, “And Dad landed that government job.”

“But it was only for four years,” Millie added to the gag.

“Yeah, high turnover rate over there,” Harley noted with a serious tone but a smirk growing on the left side of his face.

“Alright, alright,” Dad continued, “My point is, I went from being local eatery runner to a national celebrity in this decade. So just imagine where I’ll be at the end of the next decade!”

Dad had a consuming drive to conquer all the adversities that occurred in his life [3]. But his life and its collection of adversities were still far from being over.

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] According to this: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104697388/margaret-ann-sanders
[2] The election turnout and total votes cast (almost the same from OTL), and the base-map (that’s what it’s called, right?), are from here: https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=174295
[3] Italicized passage is from Margaret’s book, The Colonel’s Secret, and found here: https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/venessawong/the-real-colonel-sanders



Chapter 8: December 1959 – July 1960

“The scariest moment is always just before you start.”

– Stephen King (OTL)



The Colonel’s rags-to-riches story inspired Martha Layne Hall to major in Political Science, and to forego attending a Baptist Camp in 1957 to instead intern at the state capital. Having spent much of the autumn campaigning for the Colonel alongside her activist parents, the then 23-year-old Martha attended the 1959 inauguration of Democratic Governor Bert T. Combs. It was there that she quite literally bumped into a timid college student, whom had also traveled far to see Combs be sworn in. The young man’s name was Paul Edward Osborne…

– biographer Margaret Carlson’s Martha Layne Osborne: Her Floorplan for a Better Future, University of Kentucky Press, 1982



“Welcome back, Pops!” my three children said in unison as I entered the company headquarters. A banner read “many happy returns,” and a large cake sat at the table in the center of the room. It felt so freeing to return to KFC, to work with the employees in the kitchen and supervise and show ’em how to make the birds just right.

Upon leaving the governorship, I returned to KFC immediately, with Harley handing over full control on December 25. “Think of it as a Christmas gift,” he said. But I told him, “Don’t be pullin’ away from the station just yet, son. I want you and Millie to stay on as Executive VPs – after applying for the job like everyone else, that is.” I was happy to see that even Margaret was willing to continue serving as head of our training and maintenance department. It’s always good to know that when things are down you can always rely on the people you love to help you get back up.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



SENATOR KENNEDY ANNOUNCES RUN FOR PRESIDENT

…However, as Kennedy is a Catholic, his bid may be an uphill battle in the weeks and months ahead… Kennedy joins a wide field that includes fellow Senators Stuart Symington of Missouri, Wayne Morse of Oregon, Lyndon Johnson of Texas, and Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota. According to most polling and political analysts, Humphrey is the frontrunner for the nomination at this point in time…

– The Chicago Tribune, 1/2/1960



NEW STEEL CONTRACT SIGNED, ENDING NATIONAL STRIKE: Settlement Raises Worker Pay, Better Pension, Health Benefits

– The New York Times, 1/12/1960



NIXON ANNOUNCES PRESIDENTIAL BID: Pledges to Continue “Ike’s Greatness”

– The Washington Post, 1/14/1960



SENATOR KENNEDY WINS NH PRIMARY

– The Boston Globe, 3/8/1960



After showing me these new machines, Millie walked me back to my new office to show me my brand-new state-of-the-art personal security vault. It was taller and wider than me, its walls were over a foot thick, and it was made of out cast iron and steel. The combination and the whole locking system was more complex than a Hatfield dating a McCoy, and looked fancier than a Southern Belle on her wedding day.

“So what do you think, Dad?”

“I think if any robbers see this, there’s no way they wouldn’t go ‘Oh, there’s definitely somethin’ valuable in there!’ And then try to find out what that somethin’ is.”

“Good thing it’s the most secure kind of safe on the market right now. Margaret got it for us. She found it while travelling abroad,” Millie explained.

“That girl never tells me anything. When did she travel abroad?”

“Oh, a short while ago, but now she’s doing some site-scouting.”

“Site scoutin’?”

“She’s thinking that the British might like our chicken, seeing as how Kentucky vittles can rarely be found in Europe. We think it could work.”

After pondering it over, I replied, “Huh, good idea.”

The efforts that Millie had made to protect the Eleven Secret Herbs and Spices were also highly impressive. Even after all these years, it still boggles my mind just to think of all the procedures and precautions the company takes to protect my recipe, especially when I think how Claudia and I used to operate. She was my packing girl, my warehouse supervisor, my delivery person — you name it. Our garage was the warehouse. [1]

[snip]

One beautiful morning in the spring of 1960, I was driving up I-75 from Mobile, AL to Florence, KY when I noticed a peculiar repetition. I kept seeing the same thing – these big yellow arches – signs, big Ms on sticks erected higher than the trees. Even the buildings they belonged to, they themselves had big sun-colored Missouri Icons slapped onto their sides.

A day or so later, I brought up in talks at headquarters, “It seems McDonald’s spots are startin’ to show up everywhere.” In the meeting, Harley brought up what he deemed was Kentucky Fried Chicken’s “weak spot.” “The only standard look is the giant bucket with Father’s face on it. The buildings themselves are all different in design and color. But the McDonald’s are completely under that company’s control, and so they’re more uniform in look. As a result, they’re more recognizable that our franchisees’ places. I think we need to set up some ‘look’ of our own, something iconic and easy to spot from far aways.” Ultimately, Pete [Harman] and Harley came up with the idea of simply having all our franchisees paint their buildings in red and white, the unofficial colors of K.F.C. since 1953 or so. This would make the company be a more than a menu added to someone’s eatery, but a menu that was part of a certain, iconic type of eatery.

“We could also have a certain roof style,” [KFC regional director] Kent Prestwich suggested.

“I liked the barn look of that stage prop store we used in that commercial we shot a few weeks ago,” I said.

“I dunno, Colonel,” Pete replied, “that might be too hokey for our suburban-based franchisees to stomach.”

Millie offered her two cents of “I think we could cut it at the paint job, because redesigning a new roof, a whole new design for established locations would be a huge undertaking. So many architecture problems,” she emphasized, “and some franchisees – like that nice elderly couple in Peoria – would sooner sell their store then change it into something different from what they spent years building themselves.”

“Yeah, you’re right,” I commented. Harley concurred.

“How about this?” Pete compromised, “old franchisees only need a new paint job, but if there’s ever a chance to build a location up from scratch, we go with a new, Colonelesque design for the building.”

“Sounds like a plan!” I agreed, “But I think it still needs something more.”

After we all chicken-scratched out some designs on some paper, we eventually decided to add a Cupola with a weathervane to the tops of willing franchisees. The weathervane shows that you can find an outlet – and your next meal – in any direction – north, south, east, and west. [2]

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974




ylbnvvx.png


[ imgur.com/ylbnvvx.png ]
– A Colonel Sanders weathervane atop a KFC outlet, c. 1961



“After coming back from some trip to Morocco or wherever, Margaret went with some of our surveyors to the U.K., and the survey results revealed a lot of untapped potential. Fried chicken was not exactly a staple of the British diet back then, so, just like how it had been in Utah, the people there were very likely to see the Colonel’s birds as this exotic import! But before we could branch out to Europe, we had to understand what we’d be getting ourselves into. Selling overseas, as we soon discovered, required several crucial steps. First, get the people to develop an appetite. Scout out a single location to do a test run; London during the spring gave us high hopes moving forward. Step Two, adapt to the locals’ wants and needs; it is important to understand those. Thirdly, we found that native competition was much less severe when we focused on the more touristy, more urban parts of the UK. Doing that cut down on any alleged ‘damage’ to the local culture, or to the general ‘look’ of an area. The British love to keep their quaint neighborhoods quaint, and as prospective investors, we respected that. Native competition was a more delicate manner we had to really dance around a bit to figure out what the best spots were. For instance, near Manchester, there was this one village that had poor employment rates despite good access to the major roads. We set up a franchise there, the people had jobs, and the town grew a bit from it. Which just goes to show just how good the Colonel’s chicken is - it often boosts local economies!”

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, early 1992



I wanted the Colonel to be in more commercials. I helped him get on TV, and helped organize much of the behind-the-scenes work. To be honest, I’m much better behind camera; I’ve never been comfortable in front of it. At 27, I was still one of the Colonel’s youngest higher-ups, so I believe the Colonel figured that if anybody at the company knew how to connect with younger customers in the growing era of television advertising, it would be me. I told him, ‘Your face is iconic, but the people need to see the rest of you. What you sound like. Your demeanor, your contagiously positive personality.’ …I also worked on other aspects of the company’s post-governorship expansion. When management was divided between expanding the menu or focusing on the main signature dish, the Colonel and I favored the latter, but Harley and Millie convinced us otherwise, that both variety and high quality were key to staying ahead of the growing national competition.

– Dave Thomas’ Under the Colonel’s Wing, Mosaic Publishing, 1982



When I first started Kentucky Fried Chicken, I never liked the idea of using my photograph on things…I had always referred to my face as my mug. But I did have a line drawing made for use in advertising, and when I saw it on the boxes containing my food I nearly fainted. [3] But now things had changed, and I was getting used to people looking at my mug every time they went for dinner. I was becoming increasingly comfortable with having the sin of pride on my conscience, especially since I was doing a whole lot of good with it. When they saw my face, they knew they were getting a good meal for a good price. I could live with that sin on my heart, and I still do.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974




[ video: wt9VctrBOZY ]
– KFC commercial, c. April 1960



SENATOR KENNEDY WINS STATE DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY

...The results improve Kennedy's odds of winning the nomination. At the same time, they also put the viability of the Humphrey campaign into question...

– The Milwaukee Journal, Wisconsin newspaper, 4/5/1960



“Tonight, Senator Lyndon Johnson secured victory in the third Democratic primary of the year, beating fellow Senator Jack Kennedy by a 4-point margin here in Illinois.”

“…do you think Mayor Daley helped Johnson tonight?”

“There’s no doubt about it, pal. Daley strongly backed the Texas Senator, and that made Daley’s backers back Johnson.”

– Exchange between a local anchor and correspondent, NBC’s WMAQ-TV, Chicago, IL, 4/12/1960



POLL: KENNEDY LOSING GROUND, JOHNSON GAINING

By George Gallup

The Los Angeles Times, 4/15/1960



SENATOR JOHNSON WINS STATE DEM. PRIMARY

...popular incumbent Governor Robert B. Meyner of New Jersey's endorsement of the Texas Senator may have influenced the primary voters of the Garden State tonight...

– The Star-Ledger, New Jersey newspaper, 4/19/1960



Last night, the states of Massachusetts and Pennsylvania held their respective Democratic and Republican primary elections for President of the United States, and the final tallies have just come in. On the Democratic side, in Massachusetts, Senator John F. Kennedy won with almost 90% of the vote, with Senator Johnson coming in second place with less than 5% of the vote. While that contest was a landslide - which was not surprising, given that it is Senator Kennedy's home state - in Pennsylvania, Kennedy defeated Johnson by a mere 4% margin – Kennedy won with 48%, and Johnson came in second with 44%, with the remaining 8% going to all the other candidates still in the race - Senator Humphrey, Senator Morse, and some minor candidates. These results give Kennedy a substantial lead in primary season, totaling his primary victories to 4, compared to Johnson’s sole primary victory in Illinois. However, Johnson is close behind Kennedy in the delegate count. For the GOP, Vice-President Nixon won both of tonight's Republican Presidential primary elections in landslides…

– The Huntley-Brinkley Report, 4/26/1960 TV broadcast



KY U GIVES COL. SANDERS HONORARY DEGREE

…At the ceremony, Sanders also replied, “If more folks knew it was this easy to get a degree, more folks would run for Governor!”

The Kentucky Kernel, college newspaper, 5/1/1960




[ video: Wk4Eq8IcQMk ]
– Colonel Sanders appearing on “What’s My Line?” (at the time when his company controlling the K.F.C. locations was briefly named “Southern Fried Chicken” in a quickly-aborted attempt to appeal to investors beyond just Kentucky), 5/3/1960



…And here’s the composition: Indiana – Johnson; Ohio – Governor Michael DiSalle, a surrogate candidate for Johnson; Washington, D.C. – Senator Hubert Humphrey, who touted his Civil Rights activities across the capitol this week and has been desperate for a win as his campaign continues to run low on both funds and delegate pledges. The two wins for Senate leader Johnson come after the two-term Texan increased his intermittent campaign activity, after losing the Pennsylvania primary contest to Senator Kennedy on the 26th of April. Meanwhile, Senator Kennedy failed to pick up a single primary despite superior funding, possibly due to a lack in active campaigning on his part, as he is currently under the weather, according to a campaign spokesman…

– TODAY, 5/3/1960 broadcast



According to Bobby Baker, “Johnson had decided to not wait until the convention because of the belief that Kennedy would use his daddy’s connections to win the nomination and, being a Catholic, would assure Nixon the White House.”

After weeks of negotiations, the first televised debate between Kennedy, Johnson and Humphrey was scheduled for May 5, just five days before the West Virginia primary (Morse was excluded for uncertain reasons). Johnson contemplated bringing up Kennedy’s weak health outright, but instead simply criticized Kennedy for being absent from voting on the Civil Rights bill of 1954. Kennedy replied by saying he had missed the vote because he had needed back surgery. According to Baker, Johnson held back the urge to attack Kennedy on his health; “Exactly how unhealthy are you, Jack?” was the phrase on his mind. He claims Lyndon believed voters would see Jack's charm as shallow, and see his own abrasive demeanor as being that of "a tough fighter for democracy on the world stage."

Walter Jenkins, however, offered a cruder retelling shortly before his death in 1985: “Johnson was holding back an urge to mercilessly rip into Jack [Kennedy], and criticize not only his health record but his family's affluent lifestyle as well. But I convinced him that doing so would lead to the Kennedys using their money and influence to bring him down in any way they could.”

Johnson ultimately chose not to “rip into” his opponent. According to Jenkins, the Senate leader understood that he could not afford the jab – he was aware that he himself was vulnerable to attacks: the 1936 congressional race, the nickname “Landslide Lyndon” scratching at the back of his mind; the 1941 Senate race; his paranoid suspicion that the Kennedys knew of his visits to a certain Madame’s abode in Texas. Johnson determined that he couldn’t afford to have the entire Kennedy clan – or any bitter Catholic voters – working against him in the general election. So he let the moment pass. Analysts believe Kennedy won the debate, with Johnson coming in a close second and Humphrey a distant third.

Soon after, the Johnson campaign decided to “fight fire with fire,” as Baker sought to start mimicking the campaign coordination techniques used by the Kennedys, such as getting family and friends to vouch for the candidate. “Johnson really dove into his rolodex,” Baker explained, “and we soon had endorsements from half the Senate Democrats.” Ladybird Johnson and daughters Lucy and Lynda met with female voters in two-thirds of West Virginia's counties, building up the image of Johnson as an understanding leader…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Pursuit of Power, A. A. Knopf Inc. New York, 2012



JOHNSON IS THE STRAIGHT-TALKER WE NEED IN THE WHITE HOUSE

– The Charleston Gazette-Mail, West Virginia newspaper, endorsing Senator Johnson, 5/7/1960



LBJ BEATS JFK IN CRUCIAL WV PRIMARY; Nebraska Also Goes to Johnson

…The Kennedy family, especially the candidates’ five energetic siblings, tirelessly canvassed the state, but Johnson still won by connecting to poor and rural voters via displaying his roots, discussing his early years growing up in a farmhouse in impoverished rural Texas. Senator Humphrey’s presence on the ballot may have also siphoned more votes away from Kennedy than Johnson due to Kennedy and Humphrey having closer political views, and splitting local union voters. However, to Kennedy’s credit, the margin of victory was only 5.7%, meaning Kennedy fared much better than pundits initially believed any Catholic candidate could in a state as heavily Protestant as West Virginia…

– Associated Press, 5/10/1960



The Black Friday HUAAC Protests, also known as the Staircase Protests and for a while known as the Black Friday Riots, was the largest mass student demonstration in decades. It was the diving board for a generational movement. It was, at least to me, the true start of the ’60s.

I know it was a pivotal moment in our country because I was there. I was a 23-year-old college student, and I participated in the peaceful protests outside of HUAAC hearings in San Francisco City Hall, held at the building’s second-story chamber. We protested outside the chamber, close to the top of the building’s interior marble staircase. On May 12, the second day of the protests and the second day of the hearings, city police fire-hosed us. With there being roughly 40 steps behind us when we were hit by the water, many were hurt. More students were injured further when the police dragged them down those marble steps, many of them hitting their heads on each hard, uncarpeted step. Dozens of us were arrested.

We had been protesting the harassment of decent Americans – professors, teachers, journalists – for expressing their right to free speech. And we in turn were attacked for expressing that same right.

– Becky Jenkins, San Francisco Chronicle, interview, 2010



When Pops saw the riots on TV, the media called it a riot and blamed the whole thing on the protesters. He fell right for that crock. “They should be getting jobs for themselves instead of causin’ trouble,” he told me at one breakfast when I was visiting.

“Dad,” I exclaimed, “I’m surprised at you! You ain’t exactly docile whenever you see something you know ain’t right. That’s what these kids were doing – objecting to something that’s wrong.”

His defense was, “Your splittin’ hairs, Margaret. I get ticked off by people trying to harm my life’s work, or judging others on skin color alone. But the HUAC fellas want to protect our country. These youngins, though, they seem to be ornery ’cause they’ve got nothin’ better ta do. When I was their age I was working all sorts of jobs and startin’ a family. I was too busy to stir up a ruckus over somethin’ that wasn’t even a problem.”

“Ruckus? They were peacefully signing the national anthem.”

“I heard some of them tried to roughhouse the officers there. Kick ’em and spit on ’em and such.”

Soon, Hoover claimed the rioters were Communist infiltrators, professionals hired and trained to disrupt government work. The HUAC even made a one-sided propaganda piece called 'Operation Abolition' to support their narrative. Pops watched it and believed every bit of it. At the time, he had no reason not to. He still believed in the propaganda that blind faith the federal government's 'national defense' actions was the American Way. That the federal government, when it came to business regulation, was evil, but when it came to its more militaristic tendencies, could do no wrong.

A few days later, Pops wrote a letter to J. Edgar Hoover commending him for his “handling of the San Francisco Riots… I’m confident in your unwavering work defending America, despite what my acquaintance Richard Nixon has said about your lengthy time in office. Some folks say you should retire, but in my opinion, you shouldn’t ever throw out what isn’t broken. Keep on at it, The Colonel.” [4]

Now, I’m not trying to apologize for how my dad thought back in 1960; he was misinformed, but it’s everyone’s individual responsibility to hear both sides of a story so as to know which side is the true side. Now Pops often did that when it came to business, family, people, with everything – except for when it came to what “the defenders from Communism” were saying. At this point in his life journey, his naiveté – his belief that when it came to “national defense” and “the protection of our American way of life,” the Feds always did the right thing – was still unbroken.

Besides, I never said my father was perfect.

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



LBJ REACHES OUT TO NEGRO VOTERS, CRITICIZES JFK

…Johnson claims to have a better understanding of the problems facing Negro voters due to his “humble origins as the son of a farmhand” …In the speech, Johnson also derided his primary opponent, Senator Kennedy, eluding to his family’s wealth with the phrase “nobody, not even some millionaire's son from Massachusetts, can buy his way into the Presidency!”

While Kennedy has called Johnson "a man of unusually high character," Johnson has criticized Kennedy for his mixed record on rural concerns and his performance during debates over the 1957 Civil Rights Bill. "I was present for all 95 calls," Johnson boasted at a campaign stop last night, "While Jack missed around 35 of them. A car won't work without all four wheels - you need a President who will do all of his job, not just some of it!" [5]

The Baltimore Sun, 5/15/1960




SEN. JOHNSON WINS MD PRIMARY

...despite the Senator from Massachusetts's best efforts, the state historically known for serving as a "haven" for Catholic settlers gave no such mercy to the Kennedy campaign...

– NY Herald Tribune side article, 5/17/1960



…Kennedy did not make the ballot in Oregon, but Wayne Morse, the state’s progressive Senator, did qualify for the ballot the day before they were printed. As a result, many supporters of Kennedy and Humphrey viewed Morse as an alternative to their respective preferred candidate, especially as some pundits began to argue more firmly that Kennedy and Humphrey were no longer viable candidates capable of denying Johnson the nomination. On May 20, Oregon's sudden "favorite son" candidate came in second place with 42.7% of the vote, which was considered a surprisingly good showing for a "favorite son" campaign only a few days old. In the long run, however, Morse’s Oregon delegates did little to slow Johnson’s momentum.

– historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed: The Effects of 1960, Centurion Publishers, 2011



…we are getting an update… it appears that Florida has chosen Senator George Smathers, the state’s favorite son for Senator Johnson, in tonight’s primary election. Now, what makes this race interesting is the fact that Senator Smathers has made it known of his personal friendship with Senator Kennedy, and made it clear that if the situation was different and Johnson was not the clear frontrunner, he would be supporting Kennedy's candidacy tonight…

– ABC World News Tonight, 5/24/1960



FINAL PRIMARY CONTESTS HELD AHEAD OF PARTY CONVENTIONS

…In the Democratic primaries, the voters of California opted for "favorite son" candidate Governor Pat Brown, while Hubert Humphrey won the party contest held in his birth state of South Dakota. On the other side of the political aisle, Richard Nixon won the Republican primary in his home state of California with ease...

Associated Press, side article, 6/8/1960



“Going in to this convention, despite his active campaigning winning him the largest number of primary victories, Johnson was still short of the number of delegates needed to win outright, with Senator Kennedy in second place, Governor Brown in third place, and Senator Humphrey in fourth place, uh, in regards to delegate count. How exactly did Johnson win the nomination tonight when the odds seemed to be against him winning it so quickly?”

“As Senate leader, he has clout. He had several favorite sons. As a Texan, he had western and, more importantly, Southern Democrat support.”

“…do you think Daley helped Johnson in primary states such as Illinois?”

“There’s no doubt about it. The fact that Johnson publicly offered Humphrey the second spot on the ticket is most likely what caused Humphrey to drop out and endorse Johnson tonight.”

– Exchange between anchor and correspondent, 7/13/1960



The July 4 festivities of 1960 featured a lot of sales promotion. Early reports linked the increase in KFC commercials featuring the Colonel to an increase in sales. On the day after celebrating our nation’s birthday, though, I learned of a, um, development. Several days later, at around the time of that year’s D.N.C., I believe, I had finally confirmed what was happening, and I broke the news to the Colonel. I cut right to the chase with, “Colonel, something’s come up.”

The Colonel inquired “What has?”

So I told him: “Many franchises have been requesting going public, and we’ve been declining just like you wanted…”

“Yes?”

“…Well now one our more loyal franchisees has informed us several of the rest of them have organized and are looking into possible legal action.”

“That’s incredible!” He was immediately angry because felt betrayed. “I’ve always treated our franchisees like family. How could they go behind my back?” Eventually, after, I’d say, about two full minutes of slander, he asked “They’re really challenging us on this aren’t they?”

“They think it’ll bring in more revenue.”

At this, the Colonel was quick to defend his policy. “But at the cost of priorities! Every time a company goes public, they eventually care more about stockholders than workers. And also, public means being part of the stock market – and if you may recall my distrust of the market paid off very well a few years back,” referring to the 1958 recession.

“Yes, but the fact remains that we need to address this troublemaking – the sooner, the better.”

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, early 1992



…Humphrey is expected to win the Number Two spot on the ticket by acclamation shortly. …Reports that members of the LBJ campaign met with Humphrey, then Senator Morse, and then the Kennedy campaign, shortly before he won the nomination yesterday makes this reporter wonder what is being discussed behind closed doors here in Los Angeles…

– NBC news reporter, 7/14/1960



9otFadZ.png


[ imgur.com/9otFadZ.png ] (note: candidates ordered/arranged by delegate count)
– clickipedia.co.usa



1960 Democratic National Convention
CONVENTION:
Date(s): July 11-15, 1960
City: Los Angeles, CA
Venue: Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena
Keynote Speaker: Gov. Robert B. Meyner of New Jersey
CANDIDATES:
Presidential nominee: Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas
Vice Presidential nominee: Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota
Other candidates: Jack Kennedy of Massachusetts
VOTING:
Results (President): 1,524 Total, 762 majority
Lyndon B. Johnson (TX) – 767 (50.39%)
John F. Kennedy (MA) – 485 (31.83%)
Stuart Symington (MO) – 76 (5.05%)
Adlai Stevenson (IL) – 68 (4.53%)
Pat Brown (CA) – 36 (2.36%)
Robert B. Meyner (NJ) – 35 (2.30%)
Hubert Humphrey (MN) – 31 (2.05%)
George Smathers (FL) – 20 (1.32%)
Wayne Morse (OR) – 2 (0.13%)
Ross Barnett, Herschel C. Loveless, Orval Faubus, and Albert Dean Rosellini: each 1 vote (0.06% each)
Results (Vice President):
Hubert H. Humphrey (MN) – acclamation

– clickipedia.co.usa



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– Lyndon Johnson accepting the Democratic nomination for President at the party’s convention, 7/15/1960



With Jack out of the race, Ted and I finally returned our focus to our dream of moving west somewhere, away from the overwhelming melee of Massachusetts politics. Soon after the DNC, we flew to Colorado, then to California, where Ted had seen little outside of the convention and the airport. The snowy caps of the Rockies were pleasant, but it was the fresh winds of the Pacific coast, and the breathtaking work of Mother Nature that made me enthusiastic for the state. …Overlooking the gentle ocean waves below, Ted turn to me and said, “Joan, this is the place for us.” We made plans for a new beginning for our family in The Golden State immediately.

– Joan Bennett Kennedy’s There Are Always Two Tomorrows: My Life in an American Dynasty, Centurion Publishers, 1999



“I love Massachusetts; I’ll always love it. For decades, it was my home. But in 1960, I really wanted just get out and make a name for myself. Even if that meant moving to the other side of the country, I had to try. But thankfully, it turned out that moving to California was the best decision I ever made.”

– Ted Kennedy, 60 Minutes interview, 1977



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] The italicized passage is a real-life quote from the Colonel, found here: http://www.ronford.net/ui/kfc3/wkfcnews/kfcnews/claudia.htm
[2] Italicized bits found here: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smit...ied-chicken-american-success-story-180955806/
[3] The italicized bits are from this article: https://needull.com/2016/08/10/colonel-sanders-not-so-flattering-story/
[4] The Colonel really did fall for the HUAC’s narrative: https://www.theverge.com/2016/7/5/12096466/colonel-sanders-kfc-meme-life-story
[5] Taken from their OTL debate described here: https://www.ourcampaigns.com/EventDetail.html?EventID=44



Chapter 9: July 1960 – November 1960

“Keep up your morning exercises, because every politician must be able to keep both feet on the fence with his ear to the ground.”

– Gracie Allen, 1940



“I’ve worked at KFC since I was old enough. I always knew my grandfather the Colonel as a fretting man. “I used to run seven pots at a time when working at one of his restaurants, and I once saw him nearly holler the ears right off a fellow employee – not exactly the new guy, but not a veteran, either – who didn’t make the gravy just right… The old man just wanted to sell the best quality food he could…He was likely to take his cane to anyone he caught not doing everything right.” [1]

– Trigg Adams Jr., Colonel Sander’s grandson, 2009 interview




Richard Nixon reviewed dozens of potential running mates, and I was part of the team that looked into their backgrounds. Senator Prescott Bush of Connecticut was the dirtiest of them all, so he was taken off list very quickly. Nixon thought that picking Senate leader Everett Dirksen or House minority leader Charles Halleck could win over the party establishment; I asked him “do the votes of 300 bigshots outweigh the votes of several thousand workers?” and he soon dropped the idea; neither came from a vital swing state, anyway. Representative Jerry Ford’s name was hovered as he was friends with Nixon. Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona could have won over conservatives, but not in any electorally rich areas except for the south, where it’d be facing off against the regional appeal that LBJ seemingly had down there; some of us also thought that the Dixie Sneaks would put a spin on Goldwater’s Jewish ancestry. Plus, Barry seemed too ambitious; Nixon felt the Arizonan - whose presence on the ticket would have made it geographically lopsided, by the way - would try to undermine a Nixon campaign to promote his own Presidential campaign later on. For these reasons, regardless of whether they came from a place of logic or paranoia, Nixon took Goldwater off the list.

Defense Secretary Neil McElroy and Red Cross head Alfred Gruenther could have won over the military vote, but that would have been more helpful if there was a conflict hotter than the Cold War going on at the time. Senator Lodge of Massachusetts also fit the foreign policy bill, but had lost his last election, and did not stand out above the other candidates; had Senator Kennedy been the nominee, Lodge may have been given more thought. Conservatives on the hill – congressman Walter Judd, Senators Thruston Morton and Hugh Scott – and Secretary Fred Seaton and Governor Stratton were next to be vetted when Nixon had a “eureka” moment.

Nixon came up with the idea of getting Colonel Sanders to serve as running mate. He was seriously thinking at the time of adopting this strategy of sorts to win over the southern states, and at the time the Colonel was one of the very few Republican politicians that was – incredibly, given his known stance on Civil Rights – a fairly popular man both in and out of the South. Tricky Dick also figured his extensive business connections could help out the campaign’s financing, an idea that caused me to immediately seek out The Colonel.

– Bob Halderman’s The Haldeman Diaries: Three Decades of Tough Decisions and Tricky Dick, Barnes & Noble Press, 1994



The Colonel was attending the Republican National Convention but had declined to give a speech, which should have been my first hint at the extent of his political interests at the time. Nevertheless, I invited him up to my suite. Our chat was light at the beginning, with me commending him for his company’s unparalleled success. I added, “You know, my brother had a fast-food restaurant of his own for a few years over in Whittier. It was a drive-in place. He called it ‘Nixon’s.’”

Then we got down to discussing more serious business. “Colonel, if you served as my running mate, and as my Vice President, we Republicans could finally wrestle the South away from the Democrats.” I told him about how he could win over more conservative voters and help me unite the country behind my candidacy. “And with your business acumen, we can assure that any American with a dream and the will to work hard for that dream can make it a reality. You’ve found your success, Colonel. Let’s help others find theirs.”

The message was right, but the timing of things was off. When the Colonel declined, I remember him saying the following to me: “Nixon, I’m currently dealing with a dispute with some of my franchisees that want KFC to go public on account of the stock market and everything. I’ve got this Ray Kroc fella tryin’ to fool customers away from me, and the feds and their labor officials are still houndin’ me to build a better, safer pressure fryer. My company is at the moment in a real mess that I just can’t walk away from. Now if I can’t keep chicken in order, how can I expect to keep congress in order?” He suggested that I talk to Senator Thurston instead. I did, but he declined to serve as my running mate as well, suggesting that he would be of more help to me in the Senate.

After hours of reviewing my remaining options, I caved to my advisor’s ideas of abandoning the South to Lyndon. Without a commanding Southerner to take the number-two spot, I doubted the effectiveness of appealing to the region. As such, I instead focused on winning over the more northern states…

– Richard Nixon’s Six Crises, Doubleday Publishing, 1962



NIXON PICKS JUDD AS RUNNING MATE; Civil Rights Plank Revised by GOP Platform Committee

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Chicago, IL – Tonight, in the second night of the Republic National Convention, U.S.. Congressman Walter Judd was confirmed to be Nixon’s running mate by acclamation. Judd, 61, has represented Minnesota’s 5th U.S. Congressional district since 1943, has repeatedly been re-elected to said seat with ease ever since his first election the seat in 1942, and is known for his exceptional foreign policy work. Judd is a strong supporter of Formosa and America’s foreign aid programs to many struggling nations overseas… Judd hails from the same state as Senator Johnson’s own running mate, Hubert H. Humphrey…

– The Times Recorder, 7/27/1960



1960 Republican National Convention

CONVENTION:
Date(s): July 25-28, 1960
City: Chicago, IL
Venue: International Amphitheatre

CANDIDATES:
Presidential nominee: Richard M. Nixon of California
Vice Presidential nominee: Walter H. Judd of Minnesota

VOTING:
Results (President):
Richard M. Nixon (CA) – 1,321 (99.25%)
Barry M. Goldwater (AZ) – 10 (0.75%)
Results (Vice President):
Walter H. Judd (MN) – acclamation

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



Nixon ultimately chose Judd, a conservative congressman from Minnesota with foreign policy expertise, to neutralize LBJ’s pick of Humphrey and any possible claims that Nixon was deficient in foreign policy experience, despite his performance in the Kitchen Debate back in ’59. Nixon and Judd got along well enough, but most of the time, they campaigned separately in order to cover more ground. ...Lyndon had influence in a plethora of high places, and did everything short of physically twisting arms to get as many wealthy donors to back his Presidential run over Nixon’s. It wasn’t enough for him that he had an army of surrogate speakers and a superior funding/financing scheme. LBJ made sure Nixon faced a rough, almost uphill, race for Ike’s job.

– John Ehrlichman’s Witness: What Went on Behind Closed Doors, Folkways Books, 1998



CASTRO NATIONALIZES ALL FOREIGN-OWNED PROPERTY IN CUBA; U.S. COMPANIES REELING

The Miami Herald, 8/6/1960



It is important to remember that the first political debate between two major-party nominees did not occur until 1968. Before then, candidates had several weeks to campaign before the election, and would find other ways to reach out to voters. In 1960, Nixon made the bold step of pledging to visit every state in the union, a decision many considered a mistake, both then and now. The trips to politically irreverent states such as Alaska took a toll on Nixon’s health, causing him to look sluggish, disheveled and physically unfit for office, some said. Meanwhile, Johnson went with an old-fashioned surrogate campaign, making official speeches from time to time while his supporters went about organizing support and mobilizing prospective voters. This benefited Johnson greatly as it minimized the number of gaffes he could make – and as history would show, Johnson was many things, including an impatient and temperamental man of many gaffes. Contrarily, the 50-state campaign exhausted Nixon, making him often look tired, unfocused, distant, and unprofessional, whereas Johnson remained collected and calm in the eyes of the attentive voter.

– David Pietrusza’s The Epic Campaigns of the 1960s, Basic Books, 2008



MOSCOW COURT SENTENCES FRANCIS GARY POWERS TO 10 YEARS IN PRISON ON SPY CHARGES

The New York Times, 8/19/1960



“Mr. President, I was just wondering if you could give us an example of a major idea of his [Nixon] that you have adopted in the role of the decider, and um…?”

“If you give me a week, I might think of one; I don’t remember!” [2]

– Exchange between President Eisenhower and a New York Times reporter, 8/25/1960




DOZENS DEAD IN THE WAKE OF HURRICANE DONNA

...Florida is beginning to experience the storm's destructive force, which flooded and devastated Puerto Rico and other islands in the Caribbean earlier this week...

The Boston Globe, 9/1/1960



“Johnson is courting conservative voters in the south while Humphrey campaigns in the more liberal north. Do you think this is creating a conflicting campaign message?”

“No, Ned, they’re appealing to a broader base – going for a wider range – to show that they will be leaders of all Americans, liberals and conservatives, Republican and Democrats, and not leaders of one specific ideology.”

“At the convention, Senator Kennedy said he would work with the campaign; has he?”

“Well, he’s been making calls for us, rounding up donors and endorsements from the east coast, and he’s even made some speeches for Lyndon. Uh, a few days ago he held a rally in Boston. …I’m confident that if anyone can deliver us the northeast, it’s Senator Kennedy.”

– Host and interviewer Ned Brooks and political strategist for the Lyndon Johnson campaign James Rowe, Face the Nation, 9/2/1960



…After two days of negotiations between management and labor representatives, the Pennsylvania Railroad has resumed operations, concluding a railroad workers strike that had effectively shut down the company’s operations for the first time in said company’s history…

– CBS Evening News, 9/3/1960 broadcast



SUMMER OLYMPICS: Cassius Clay Wins The Gold In Boxing

The Louisville Courier, sports section, 9/5/1960



Lyndon was worried that the bitterness of denying Kennedy, a Catholic, the nomination would lead to Catholic Democrat voters staying at home on Election Day, or even voting for Nixon just to spite him. Lyndon feared that would tip some key states into Nixon’s column. He was also worried that Jack’s loss would dampen the turnout of any younger, first-time Democrat voters. He had to do something, so very soon after the convention, Lyndon sat down with Kennedy to see what he could offer Jack in return for Jack’s support via funding and campaigning for him in the northern states. It was not a proud moment for Lyndon, but it was one that he, and to a greater extent Walter and Jimmy, had to do in order to assure victory in November.

– Mildred Stegall (1908-2014, 105), longtime personal aide to Lyndon Johnson, 1978 interview



SUMMER OLYMPICS: Ethiopia's Abebe Bikila Sets Marathon World Record Barefoot!

...the athlete ran the entire 26 miles and 385 yards in 2 hours and 16.2 seconds while completely barefoot, making him the first person from Sub-Saharan Africa to win an Olympic Gold Medal...

The New York Times, sports section, 9/10/1960



“DONNA’S LATE, BUT MIAMI’S STILL BEING HIT”: Gulf Beaches Evacuated As Donna Slams Florida

…the storm is bringing powerful rain and strong winds onto the mainland United States in a demonstration of Mother Nature’s destructive capabilities…

The Evening Independent, 9/11/1960



“The Hurricane that just ravaged Florida and several other states just goes to show why we need responsible government. When disasters like that happen, you need responsible leadership who will give you the helping hand you need to get up, get brushed off, and recover.”

– Hubert Humphrey, stumping in Sacramento, California (a swing state in this election), 9/22/1960



“I remember going through the cafeteria line and telling every kid that Nixon was in favor of school on Saturdays… It was my first political trick.” [3]

– Roger Stone, 2007 interview




JOHNSON PLEDGES TO "DEFEND FREEDOM AROUND THE WORLD"

...The Texan says "America needs a strong leader at the helm. The kind of leader brave enough to stand up to any and all individuals and institutions that seek to deprive any people of freedom and liberty"...

– The Houston Chronicle, 9/29/1960



'OLDEST IN OFFICE' RECORD FOR IKE

...President Eisenhower today became the oldest President of the United States in history, surpassing the record set by Andrew Jackson on March 4, 1837. Eisenhower will set the new record at 70 years and 98 days upon leaving office on January 20, 1961...

– The Oakland Tribune, 10/3/1960



…On October 9, 1960, Dr. King was arrested at a sit-in in Atlanta. Contrary to popular belief, it was Republican leaders that responded first. KFC President Colonel Sanders took a break from internal company issues to personally travel to Atlanta to protest the incident, and gave free pieces of Kentucky Fried Chicken to the crowd of activists outside the jailhouse [4]. “They serve Sunday dinner everywhere and anywhere – even on the frontlines,” quipped Hosea Williams. Nixon followed next, by asking Eisenhower to pardon Dr. King. President Eisenhower refused, believing it was “an overreach of executive power” onto state and local affairs, a move he feared “would set a dangerous precedent.” Nixon made no further action.

Almost immediately after this, Kennedy approached Johnson with the idea of Johnson using his southern connections and “treatment” to get the Democratic Governor of Georgia, Ernest Vandiver, to release the Dr. King. Kennedy reportedly believed that without the support of Civil Rights supporters, the Democrats were doomed to repeat the election results of 1952 and 1956. Johnson, however, “thought it would cost him the election to defy the whites in charge,” according to Whitney M. Young Jr., “so instead of forcing the governor’s hand or working out some kind of deal with him, Lyndon went on TV and demanded Dr. King to be released.” Johnson’s October 12 speech focused on Dr. King’s “unfair and unequal treatment,” and called for “local improvement” when it came to how laws were carried out and how order was maintained and upheld, before branching off to discuss the strength of what Johnson famously dubbed “the American Community.” The speech was popular, but not without criticism.

“El BJ wanted to make it seem like he was fighting for us without actually doing anything for us. He denounced the doctor’s imprisonment, but at the end of the day, the doctor was still behind bars,” Malcolm X wrote in 1967, “And that’s just how his southern backers liked it then.”

In 1977, Johnson’s political strategist James Rowe defended this perceived inactivity. “It was always Lyndon’s plan to get Dr. King out of jail after winning the election, when Eastland, Thurmond, Russell, and the other Dixiecrat leaders would be in a weaker position to reprimand him for it.”

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Pursuit of Power, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



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– Colonel Sanders with a group of Civil Rights activists, c. October, 1960



…And in the world of sports, the Pittsburgh Pirates today defeated the New York Yankees in the seventh game of the Major League Baseball World Series…

– ABC News, 10/13/1960 broadcast



“I have to say that in this election, the issues overlap party boundaries. And the candidates are divided on multiple issues that affect the American people, not – or at least not just – the American political parties. Furthermore, you can see the supporters of the campaigns – and I’m not talking about the donors, I’m talking about the voters, the average Americans attending events and listening to the speeches and becoming active in the campaigns – they are forming and taking sides based on the candidates themselves, too. Their different lives, their different personalities. So what we are seeing here is a contest of personalities, not just of politics...

– US Senator Wayne Morse (D-OR), NBC’s Meet the Press, 10/14/1960 broadcast



LBJ GETS POLL BOOST FROM NEGRO CONGRESSMAN ENDORSEMENT

The Bronx, NY – Adam Clayton Powell Jr., a Negro-American representing New York’s 16th U.S. Congressional District in Washington D.C., told a crowd at the Abyssinian Baptist Church to vote for Senator Johnson in November’s presidential election.

Powell declared, “Any Negro who automatically dismisses Lyndon Johnson because of the accident of birth automatically qualifies himself as an immature captive Negro, and a captive of his own prejudices. …This is a test of your own Christianity and if you rise to the heights you will be putting the reactionary segregationists of the South squarely on the spot so that all Americans, Northerners and southerners, will know that they alone are the immature people. Let us not be captives of our own prejudices.” [5]

The Congressman’s endorsement comes after Senator Johnson came out in support of Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. being released from prison.

The latest polls show Johnson and Nixon neck-and-neck nationally, but in our state, Johnson is leading the Vice President by roughly 4%, according to an L.A. Times report by pollster George Gallup...

The Charlotte Observer, North Carolina newspaper, 10/17/1960



COL. SANDERS STUMPS FOR NIXON IN THE SOUTH; Touts VP As “Good Ol’ Boy,” “The Man We Need.”

– The Tampa Bay Times, 10/19/1960



“I’ve been in the Senate for twelve years. Nixon only spent two years in there. When Vice President Garner said that the Vice-Presidency is not worth a bucket of warm piss, he meant it! …I am clearly the more experienced candidate in this race. Just ask anybody, even anyone in D.C. - even the President! They'll tell you the truth of the matter and the bare truth of this race...”

– Lyndon B. Johnson, stumping in Springfield, IL, 10/25/1960



…to recap for viewers just tuning in, tonight’s election began with Johnson taking a large lead in states along eastern seaboard. In New England, the states of Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont are leaning toward the Republican column, while the more electorally rich states of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island are favoring the Democratic ticket. Senator Johnson is also leading in the southern states of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. However, as the traditionally Republican states out west report in, the race is narrowing down, and Johnson’s victory is now no longer being considered a shoo-in. …California is already projecting to go to Nixon, while the states of Illinois and Pennsylvania, both too close to call, may determine who becomes our next President. … This just in: New Jersey, originally favoring Senator Nixon, is now being deemed too close to call as well. This is turning out to be a very close Presidential contest, and it is this reporter’s opinion that the winner will not be determined for quite a while…

– Chet Huntley, NBC News, 11/8/1960



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– Richard Nixon and Colonel Sanders watching the 1960 election results on TV in Sacramento, 11/8/1960; Harley Sanders can be seen in the background



NOTE(S)/SOURC(ES)
[1] The italicized part of this quote are from this article: https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/venessawong/the-real-colonel-sanders
[2] OTL exchange, heard in this OTL JFK commercial: http://www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1960/nixons-experience
[3] Quote is from OTL. It’s found on his Wikipedia article; this is the source they cite: “Segal, David (25 August 2007). "Mover, Shaker, And Cranky Caller? A GOP Consultant Who Doesn't Mince Words Has Some Explaining to Do". Washington Post. p. C1.”
[4] Thanks for this idea, @TheImperialTheorist !
[5] This quote was pulled from here https://books.google.com/books?id=rjlFDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA223 and from here https://books.google.com/books?id=hlmmDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA224
 
Post 5
Post 5: Chapter 10-to-Chapter 12



Chapter 10: November 1960 – January 1961

“Never let man imagine that he can pursue a good end by evil means without sinning against his own soul. The evil effect on himself is certain.”

– Bob Southey (OTL)



DEMOCRATS DOMINATE HOUSE, SENATE, BUT GOP MAKES SOME GAINS

The Valley Independent, 11/8/1960



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…Richard Nixon conceded to Johnson at 9:00 PM on Thursday the tenth,[56] after developing "great concern" that recount efforts in New Jersey "strongly hinted" that it was "highly unlikely" that counting the remaining un-recounted votes would deliver the state to the Republican column.[57] …Lyndon Johnson retained the New Deal Coalition by keeping the South (relatively) solid once more while also picking up several key northern states. Low voter turnout nationwide also possibly suggested that at least some voters were tiring of the north-south ticket balancing.[citation needed] …The Democratic victory followed the “six-year itch” pattern of two years earlier, in which voters, tired of the incumbent party staying in power for another four years, voted against incumbent Senate and House Republicans nationwide.[61]

…In many ways, Nixon damaged his own campaign.[62][63][64] Sticking to the 50-state campaign pledge he made at the 1960 Republican National Convention allowed Johnson to focus on winning over several crucial swing states instead of solidly Democratic and solidly Republican states, and the extensive campaign schedule took its toll on Nixon’s health and physical appearance at campaign events. Ted White described his appearance at an October 27 event in Seattle, Washington, IL as being “tense…haggard-looking to the point of sickness…his eyes exaggerated hollows of blackness, his jaws, jowls, and face drooping with strain”[65] [1]. An offhand remark from President Eisenhower, which seemed to suggest that Nixon had not played a significant or helpful role in the Eisenhower administration, was another possible factor, as the Johnson campaign extensively broadcasted the moment on TV and radio stations across the country.[66] Johnson calling for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to be released from prison was a third significant factor, as it helped to galvanize liberal/anti-segregation voters in pivotal states such as Pennsylvania.[67] A fourth possible factor, one that was outside of Nixon’s control, was the 1960 Recession, which lasted from April of that year to February 1961. While less impactful and, in the long term, less memorable that the recession that preceded the 1958 midterm elections, Johnson successfully tied the economic troubles to the economic policies of both Eisenhower and Nixon…

…Johnson was declared the winner the day after the election, with 274 votes to Nixon’s 260 votes, and with Hawaii still being too close to call. As December approached, the Electoral College saw several electors in the south threaten to deadlock the college to protest Johnson’s support of the Civil Rights movement.[75] Two weeks before the Electoral College convened, Johnson was declared the winner of Hawaii, swelling his electoral vote total to 277. With this, and national and statewide Democratic Party leaders (such as former President Truman[76]) applying pressure to anti-Johnson southern politicians supporting the rebellious electors (such as Governor James M. Patterson of Alabama[77]), only six electors successfully defected on December 22 – three votes short of deadlocking the College.

– clickopedia.co.usa



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– Lyndon Johnson, soon after Nixon’s concession speech, 11/10/1960



United States Senate election results, 1960
Date: November 8, 1960
Seats: 35 of 100
Seats needed for majority: 51
Senate majority leader: Lyndon B. Johnson (D-TX)
Senate minority leader: Everett Dirksen (R-IL)
Seats before election: 66 (D), 34 (R)
Seats after election: 64 (D), 36 (R)
Seat change: D v 2, R ^ 2

...despite Republicans losing the Presidential race, they were able to pick up two seats in the US Senate, chipping away at the commanding majority that the Democrats maintained in that chamber. In Delaware, moderate Republican J. Caleb Boggs unseated the Democratic incumbent, J. Allen Frear, by a margin of roughly 2%. The margin of victory was noticeably larger in Wyoming, where Republican Edwin Keith Thomson defeated Democrat Raymond B. Whitaker by a margin of roughly 14% for an open seat being vacated by the retiring long-time incumbent Democratic US Senator Joseph C. O'Mahoney...

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa



United States House of Representatives election results, 1960
Date: November 8, 1960
Seats: All 437
Seats needed for majority: 219
Senate majority leader: Sam Rayburn (D-TX)
Senate minority leader: Charles Halleck (R-IN)
Last election: 283 (D), 153 (R)
Seats won: 256 (D), 181 (R)
Seat change: D v 27, R ^ 28 [2]

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa




United States Governor election results, 1960
Date: November 8, 1960
State governorships: 27
Last election: 35 (D), 15 (R)
Seats before 33 (D), 16 (R)
Seat changes: D ^ 1, R v 1 [3]

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa




“You can forget about U-2 and the missile gap and the economy. Civil Rights was the single most important factor in this election. That’s what brought the Democrats to victory in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Illinois, and almost won them Missouri as well. And the sooner the national Grand Old Party recognizes that, the better.”

– U.S. Senator Thruston Morton (R-KY) to Governor Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY), 11/11/1960



“Johnson didn’t win it – Nixon lost it!”

– U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater (R-AZ), 11/11/1960



“I don’t care what the history books tell you, LBJ stole that election from Nixon. Of course some people point to the Daley political machine in Illinois, but another important state was New Jersey, which at the time was a usual swing state. Just look at the numbers in New Jersey! Look at the absentee ballots – they didn’t announce that state’s official results until November 17, over a week after the election – that’s plenty of time to commit some good old-fashioned voter fraud to ‘confirm’ the false victory announced by the Kennedy family’s media insiders. And in a place as corrupt as 1960 New Jersey, who’d even be surprised by that? My point is, though, is that Johnson won that state by only 2,800 votes. And Hawaii? The incredibly narrow margin of 71 votes. 71!”

“Yes, it was incredibly narrow. In the end, it ended up being the narrowest election since, uh, 1880. All that separated the two men was 40,763 votes, or a margin of 0.06%. That’s less votes than the number that separated Adams and Jackson in the 1824 Presidential election, and a smaller margin than the 0.09% that separated Garfield and Hancock in the 1880 Presidential election. Here, thanks for those cards.”

“I am 100% certain that some Democrats somewhere made sure Johnson won.”

“Well, if the election was rigged, why didn’t Nixon challenge it?”

“I’ll tell you why, because Richard Nixon is a man of integrity. He knew trying to prove the election was rigged would not only tear the country apart, but also make America look bad abroad. The Russkies would be able to say ‘Oh, and you say we are corrupt and undemocratic?’ No, the Nixon of 1960 couldn’t do that to his country. Nixon is an honest man.”

“Well, for Illinois, like you just mentioned, it has been suggested many times that Senator Kennedy’s father attempted voter fraud in Chicago so LBJ would lose that state and in turn the election, allowing Jack Kennedy to run in 1964. What do you think of that?”

“I think it explains the recount the state needed that November. It was a really close count – just 280-some votes, I believe. On the other hand, it was Illinois, which at the time was considered a swing state, so it makes sense that it would have been narrow even without any ballot tampering. I’ve been to Illinois, and let me tell you, it’s a very diverse place – racists in the south, gangsters in the north, and only-God-knows-who-the-f@#ks living in the middle.”

– Roger Stone and Robert Towne, 1975 interview



The liberal Democrats of the north were ebullient over Hubert’s ascension, with celebrations continuing on into the night. The Land of 10,000 Lakes’ early winter morning was illuminated by party lights and fireworks. At the Kennedy compound, the mood was bittersweet. Bobby was especially at war with himself, wary of Lyndon’s true intentions regarding Civil Rights. In California, Nixon was external gracious but internally beside himself; he would call to congratulate Johnson at 11:00 AM, his time, the next day. In Stonewall [Texas], Lyndon and his backers poured the Champaign and danced the house’s favorite tunes, including his new favorite, “Hail to the Chief.” Across the nation, Lyndon voters were overjoyed. Many took the day off work or school to celebrate the victory, while Nixon voters did same to mourn their loss. While Republicans reverted into suspicion, questioning where they went wrong, the nation’s Democratic politicians were thrilled to be getting a President of their own for the first time in eight years, and many of them were looking forward to proving that going for Johnson/Humphrey was the right choice for America.

– Theodore H. White’s The Making of the President: 1960, Atheneum Publishers, 1961



SAMMY DAVIS JR. MARRIES MAY BRITT!

...the mixed marriage began in a private ceremony...

The Hollywood Reporter, celebrations section, 11/13/1960



BELGIUM THREATENS TO EXIT THE UN OVER CRITICISM OF ITS CONGO POLICIES

The New York Times, 11/14/1960



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– Colonel Sanders handing over the keys of a new KFC outlet to its manager, c. mid-to-late November 1960



…President Eisenhower today authorized the use of over $1million for federal programs that will seek to help with ongoing state-level efforts to house and employ thousands of Cuban refugees in the US, who have been fleeing from that island nation's new government and are arriving via Florida at a rate of roughly one thousand people per week…

– CBS Evening News, 12/2/1960 broadcast



6 December 1960: On this day in history, America’s Secretary of the Interior, Fred A. Seaton, issued Public Land Order 2214, which reserved 9,500,000 acres (38,000 km2) of land in Alaska, creating the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

– onthisday.co.uk



SENATOR-ELECT DIES FROM HEART ATTACK, AGE 41

...one of only two Republicans set to enter the US Senate on January 3rd, 1961, Keith Thomson had been serving in the U.S. Representatives, representing Wyoming's At-Large District. since January 3rd, 1955. ...Thomson's passing is shocking and sad for all of his friends, family members, and supporters across his home state...

The Washington Post, 12/9/1960



GOVERNOR TO APPOINT SELF TO SENATE SEAT: Special Election Set For 1962

...Democratic Governor John J. Hickey has announced his decision to appoint himself to the seat that US Rep. Keith Thomson won, but died before he could be sworn into, and will schedule a special election for 1962 to determine who should complete Thomson's six-year (1961-1967) US Senate term...

– The Rock Springs Daily Rocket-Miner, Wyoming newspaper, 12/14/1960



CONGRESSMAN WEIR GETS SENATE SEAT FOR CHRISTMAS

St. Paul, MN – Governor Freeman today appointed U.S. Congressman Roy William Wier to Vice-President-elect Hubert Humphrey’s vacated US Senate seat. Humphrey resigned yesterday to give congressional seniority to his successor. Wier, age 72, has served in the US House of Representatives since 1949, and lost a bid for re-election earlier this year...

– MN newspaper, 12/25/1960



KENNEDY IS BEING CONSIDERED FOR A POST IN THE JOHNSON CABINET

...In the weeks leading up to his inauguration, President-Elect Johnson is gradually assembling his candidates for his Presidential Cabinet. The rumored post pick receiving the most attention is the supposed nomination of U.S. Senator Jack Kennedy of Massachusetts for U.S. Secretary of State. While there is also speculation that Johnson will pick Stuart Symington, Scoop Jackson, or party favorite Adlai Stevenson for the diplomatic position, the Massachusetts politician has visited Johnson at his home in Texas five times in the past month, more times than any other alleged contender. If true, the selection of Kennedy to lead the federal government’s chief foreign affairs office will likely increase already-existing rumors of a “backroom deal” being made at the convention explaining why Kennedy strongly supported Johnson in the autumn campaign season despite the fairly negative campaign between the two candidates during the Democratic primary season...

– US News and World Report, 12/30/1960



The Five Best and Five Worst Aspects of the Eisenhower Presidency

The Best Aspects


1 The Civil Rights Act of 1957 – Ike sponsored it and signed it into law; initially a major law, it was soon cut up by Congress into being ineffective piece of legislation. However, Eisenhower also appointed many liberal judges to several southern federal courts, such as Frank Minis Johnson and others; Eisenhower also backed the passage of the National Defense Education Act, which, upon him signing it into law, provided school funds at all education levels.

2 The Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 – a personal passion project of Eisenhower to better connect population centers to one another and encourage domestic trips and commerce, the act and the highway construction projects that came from it left a lasting effect on the nation and its people’s way of life, allowing for easier travel that encouraged long-distance trade nationwide; it also proved to be beneficial to the American fast-food industry, and other industries as well.

3 The Budget Was Balanced Three Times – Ike refused to cut taxes and refused to raise defense spending; his fiscal conservatism and social liberalism has led to some claims that Ike ran a near-libertarian administration

4 The End of the Korean War – Ike negotiated an agreement that brought our boys home from what would not be America’s last stalemate

5 Maintained Peace and Prosperity – America in the 1950’s had an almost two-faced personality, alternating between fauxtopia and fear: despite the almost-yearly close calls – Korea, Vietnam, Formosa, Suez, Hungary, Berlin, U-2 – cooler heads always prevailed and Americans maintained a sense of pride in the face of rising consumerism meant to make buyers happy; additionally, the calls for African-American equality was finally being heard louder and louder each year.

The Worst Aspects

1 Farmers Continued to Suffer – Despite some efforts, Ike overall failed to get Big Government out of agriculture and strengthen the family farmer

2 Left the CIA and FBI Unchecked – Eisenhower feared butting heads with J. Edgar Hoover over his monitoring of Dr. Martin Luther King, and greenlit many CIA endeavors, most notably letting the CIA and MI6 stage false border conflicts in order to invade Syria’s neighbors in 1957

3 Silence on Civil Rights – Ike failed to speak out against racial violence in the south, most noticeably his unenthusiastic response to 1954’s Brown v BOE, though he did do better in his second term via Little Rock and the aforementioned 1957 Civil Rights Act.

4 McCarthyism – Eisenhower turned a blind eye to McCarthyism, fearing that to oppose the controversial US Senator from Wisconsin would lead to the attention-wanting Joe McCarthy gaining more publicity.

5 The Cold War Continued – Ike kept the US safe, for sure, but he also did not make any significant strides to end hostilities between the US and USSR. Eisenhower took no action in light of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and failed to make significant communication with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. While Ike did deploy troops to Lebanon in 1958, it was the January 1960 U-2 incident that ended the President’s plans for a US-USSR peace conference to be held in the spring of that year.

Overall: Eisenhower is considered by scholars to be a slightly average president, though the public often ranks him higher, often placing him in the top tier of US Presidents, most likely due to public nostalgia for a decade and era often characterized as one that was stable and prosperous for many American citizens.

– The Eisenhower National Historic Site website [4]



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[ pic: imgur.com/cU9Zu7K.png ]
– Colonel Sanders (left) declining Ray Kroc (right)'s offer of a burger from McDonald’s during a sales promotion event, c. December 1960



We had no franchise fee because we weren’t concerned about the marketable asset of selling the franchises [5]. We didn’t want to burden interested restaurateurs with such a demand. It wasn’t about the money to Dad; to him, Kentucky Fried Chicken was about the Kentucky-fried chicken. That is the main reason why my father and Ray Kroc never saw eye-to-eye.

The 70-year-old Colonel Sanders and the 58-year-old Ray Kroc possibly could have gotten along well. Maybe, they could have even been friends. The two businessmen shared plenty of things – both distrusted banks (the Krocs lost everything in the Stock Market Crash of ’29), both lied about their ages to try and serve their country but never saw any fighting (Dad tended to work mules for the Navy; Kroc was trained alongside Walt Disney how to drive an ambulance during WWI), both found fame after turning 50, and both spent their pre-fame lives working a wide variety of jobs across the country (Kroc spent some time as a pianist, a real estate agent, a paper cup salesman, and a milkshake machine salesman). Both also donated to various charities and humanitarian causes that they truly believed in.

But as it turned out, the comparisons ended there. Kroc, who entered the fast-food business due to opportunism, not passion, saw nothing wrong in taking over a company like what he was doing with McDonald’s. Dad and Kroc, or “the Kroc,” as Harley called him, had met each other before at a National Restaurateurs Association meeting, and had even run into each other outside a McDonald's a few days earlier, but at the association’s December 1960 convention, the two giants of the industry finally got to sit down and talk to each other face-to-face. I was standing nearby, and heard much of their conversation.

“Colonel Sanders, I presume?” was what the Kroc said as he sat down. He then offered Dad some wine; the Colonel told him he was a teetotaler. Already, the meeting was awkward, so Kroc sought to compliment Dad. “I just want you to know that I think you did a wonderful job stumping for Nixon.” He then talked about how, as a lifelong Republican, Kroc believed firmly in self-reliance. “I’ve always been staunchly opposed to government welfare, even back when the New Deal came out. America was founded on good work, and it will only collapse if we let everyone become lazy government-moochers.” [6]

“I take it then that you pay your workers well enough for them to not have to tip?”

“Well, the tips indicate which customers work harder. The better you wait, the better you get paid.”

“But the customers ain’t their bosses, you’re the boss. They work to fill the customers’ stomachs, yeah, but that work also fills your wallet. That makes you more obliged to cut out the middle man and all the complicated tax issues and just pay them what they’re due.”

“Then where’s the motivation for them to be the best at their jobs, Colonel?”

“Try the fact that you can still fire them if they get lazy on you.”

“With all due respect, Colonel, businesses aren’t charities.”

“But governments shouldn’t be charities, either. Their already responsible for defense, trade, commerce and national emergencies. You really think nobody should be lookin’ out for the kind of men we used to be?”

“What are you talking about? We got by just fine! If someone can’t make it in this world, then they didn’t have what it takes to begin with! Why should I spend my energy doing something that I never let anyone do for me? Let people pull themselves up by their own bootstraps.”

“And what if they can’t?”

“You mean ‘what if they don’t,’ Colonel.”

“Ray, I’m getting’ the notion that if you came across a foundling on your doorstep one morning, you’d walk right over it while tellin’ it to get a job.”

I was called away from the area at around this time. By the time I returned, the two were tensely gritting their teeth like two alley dogs ready to tumble over whose alley it was. Dad, tightly gripping the handle on his cane, said “Krocer, I appreciate, hehe, the sweet-talkin’, but I’ve got to tell you, sir, that not everything I’ve heard about you has been nice. And now I know why; I’ve wrestled with raccoons with more empathy to people than you have!”

At that moment, one of Kroc’s associates pulled him away from the table to talk shop with some other burger executives.

Father ranted on the train ride back to Florence. “Can you believe that Kroc man actually charges franchisees to sell his burgers?! What a stupid system! How the f@#k is he still in business. McDonald’s must be hemorrhaging money worse than a fine china store without insurance gettin’ struck by an earthquake. What a slimy low-life son of a b!#ch! And you know what he said, Mildred? He said, ‘everyone has the right to how they do business; to each his own.’ But he’s not alone. I’ve inspected his restaurants. He’s got, what, hundreds if not thousands of employees clear across this country? Millions of customers? His business ethics affect all of them!”

“Then, Dad, you must be very happy that your chicken is one hundred time better than the stuff he dishes out.”

Dad, after a brief pause, chuckled, “You’re certainly right about that, Millie!”

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



IKE SEVERS U.S. TIES WITH CUBA

Washington, DC – Today in the nation’s capital, President Eisenhower announced the suspension of all diplomatic relations wit the government of Cuba. The announcement comes less than a day after Cuba’s Fidel Castro demanded that the U.S. Embassy in Havana “immediately” reduce its staff from 87 workers to no more than 11 workers on the grounds of “maintaining security measures” in the island nation’s capital…

The Miami Herald, 1/1/1961



HUSKIES BEAT GOPHERS 17-7 IN ROSE BOWL UPSET

The Milwaukee Sentinel, 1/2/1961



EXTRA! 3 DIE IN REACTOR BLAST!

…an explosion at the U.S. National Reactor Testing Station near Idaho Falls, ID, has experienced a malfunction of some sorts, according to a military technician at the facility, who also confirmed reports of a fatal incident at the location’s “atomic reactor SL-1” earlier today…

– The Spokane Daily Chronicle, 1/3/1961 extra



NIXON CONFIRMS JOHNSON VICTORY IN ELECTORAL VOTE COUNT

The Washington Post, 1/6/1961



FRENCH VOTE FOR SELF-RULE FOR ALGERIANS

…the referendum, which was supported by French President Charles de Gaulle, served as a mandate on de Gaulle’s policies on independence for Algeria, as a clear majority of votes cast (roughly 75%, at roughly 17 million to 5 million) in favor of self-rule for the African region…

The Milwaukee Sentinel, 1/8/1961



GEORGIA U BREAKS COLOR BAR

…Five days after a federal judge order, the University of Georgia has reluctantly ended its racial segregation policy and has admitted African-American students for the first time in the university’s history…

The Washington Post, 1/11/1961



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[pic: imgur.com/1Qdfbgi.png ]

– Colonel Sanders with a trophy and a live chicken, c. January 1961



US BANS CITIZENS TRAVELING TO CUBA

…the United States federal government banned travel by its citizens to Cuba earlier today, except in cases where some kind of “special endorsement” is included on the passport. The move comes as US-Cuban relations continue to disintegrate…

The Milwaukee Sentinel, 1/16/1961



“We must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex...We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes.”

– Dwight Eisenhower, nationally televised speech, 1/17/1961 [7]



NOTE(S)/SOURC(ES)
[1] Taken from the forward of this text: https://books.google.com/books/abou...ver&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false
[2] Because Lyndon B. Johnson as a campaigner is not as popular or effective as JFK was IOTL, less voter turnout affects some politicians down ballot. While there are no changes in the Senate (yet), there are some minor House changes. Congressman Harris B. McDowell Jr. (D-DE) lost re-election to James T. McKinstry (R-DE), 50.5% to 49.5% (an exact reverse of the OTL figures). Incumbent Hamer H. Budge (R-ID) narrowly won re-election. Incumbent J. Edward Roush (D-IN) lost re-election to George O. Chambers (the election was 50.0%-to-50.0%, according to Wikipedia). In Kentucky, Frank Chelf (D) lost to former Lt. Gov. Ed Denney (R), while Frank Burke (D) loses re-election to Henry Heyburn (R). However, Humphrey being on the November ballot allowed the pro-farmers Coya Knuston (D-MN) to get elected back to the House over Odin Langen (R); Humphrey on the ticket also helped Governor Orville Freeman win re-election as well, albeit by a margin even smaller than the one he lost to IOTL. Incumbent Morgan Moulder (D-MO) lost re-election to Robert Bartel (R) (OTL result: 50.%-to-49.9%), Hugh L. Carey still won, albeit by 50.1%-to-49.9% instead of OTL’s 50.4%-to49.6%. Finally, in Utah, A. Walter Stevenson (R) won a recount over M. Blaine Peterson (D). That’s six more seats for the Republican column than in OTL.
[3] Besides Minnesota’s Freeman, as mentioned above, the only other change in the gubernatorial elections was Indiana’s Matthew Welsh (D), whom lost to Lt. Gov. Crawford F. Parker (R), who won (albeit by a narrow margin) thanks to endorsements from Governor Harold Handley and Colonel Harland Sanders.
[4] This list is more or less based on the ones found here: https://www.nps.gov/features/eise/jrranger/5accompx.htm
[5] The bit here that is in italics was actually said by Maggie IOTL, according to this source: https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/venessawong/the-real-colonel-sanders
[6] This italicized bit and Kroc’s opinions taken directly from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Kroc#Personal_life
[7] This is a famous quote from OTL

Thanks for reading, everyone! Expect the next update soon (like, November 29 or so)!



Chapter 11: January 1961 – April 1961

“When dissent turns to violence, it invites tragedy”

– Richard Nixon, 1970 (OTL)



LYNDON B. JOHNSON’S ADMINISTRATION AT THE BEGINNING OF 1961

Cabinet:
Vice President: US Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota
Secretary of State: US Senator Jack Kennedy of Massachusetts
Secretary of the Treasury: former Director of the Office of Defense Mobilization Henry H. Fowler of Virginia
Secretary of Defense: Lieutenant General Homer Litzenburg of Pennsylvania
Attorney General: former Deputy Attorney General Rosser Lynn Malone Jr . of New Mexico
Deputy Attorney General: lawyer Ramsey Clark of Texas
Postmaster General: businessman J. Edward Day of Illinois
Secretary of the Interior: US Representative Stewart Lee Udall of Arizona
Deputy Secretary of the Interior: Lieutenant Governor Rex Bell of Nevada
Secretary of Agriculture: former Governor Jim Folsom of Alabama
Secretary of Commerce: Governor Luther H. Hodges of North Carolina
Secretary of Labor: former US Undersecretary of Labor Keen Johnson of Kentucky
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare: Chairman of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Panel on Education John William Gardner of California

Cabinet-Level Positions:
Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA): incumbent Director Allen W. Dulles of New York
Director of the Federal Bureau of Information (FBI): incumbent Director J. Edgar Hoover of Washington, D.C.
US Trade Representative: former US Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett of Texas

The President’s Executive Office:
White House Chief of Staff: Walter Jenkins of Texas
Deputy White House Chief of Staff: Bobby Baker of South Carolina
White House Counsel: US Representative Homer Thornberry of Texas
National Security Advisor: former White House Counsel Clark Clifford of Missouri
Director of the Office of Management and Budget: Paul C. Fisher of Illinois
Other Counselors and Advisors to the President: personal secretary Mildred Stegall, strategist James Rowe, spin doctor Fred Dutton, others
White House Communications Director: MPAA President Jack Valenti of Texas
White House Appointments Secretary: W. Marvin Watson of Texas
White House Press Secretary: George Reedy of Indiana
Administrator of the Small Business Administration: businessman Malcolm Forbes of New Jersey

Other Notable Members:
Solicitor General: former Montana Supreme Court Justice Leif Erickson of Montana

Notable US Ambassadors (in alphabetical order):
To Argentina: incumbent diplomat Roy Richard “Dick” Rubottom Jr. of Texas
To Brazil: former Governor Colgate Whitehead Darden of Virginia
To Cambodia: former Ambassador Donald R. Heath of Kansas
To Canada: Governor G. Mennen “Soapy” Williams of Michigan
To Chile: United Press correspondent Edward Malcolm Korry of New York
To France: US Secretary of State Christian Archibald Herter of Massachusetts
To India: US Congressman Dalip Singh Saund of California
To Japan: Professor S. I. Hayakawa of California
To Laos: incumbent diplomat Winthrop Gilman Brown of New York
To Mexico: New Orleans Mayor deLesseps Story “Chep” Morrison Sr. of Louisiana
To Saudi Arabia: former US Representative Wingate Hezekiah Lucas of Texas
To South Africa: Ambassador to Pakistan William M. Rountree Jr. of Georgia
To South Vietnam: diplomat William Healy Sullivan of Rhode Island
To Taiwan: diplomat Everett F. Drumright of OK
To the U.K.: former Governor Adlai Stevenson of Illinois
To the U.N.: Senator Stuart Symington of Missouri
To the U.S.S.R.: incumbent diplomat Llewellyn E. “Tommy” Thompson Jr. of Colorado
To West Germany: Governor Herschel Cellel Loveless of Iowa
To Yugoslavia: former Ambassador to the U.S.S.R. George Frost Kennan of

– LBJpresidentiallibrary.org.usa/cabinet_members/1961



The selection of John F. Kennedy came as a surprise to only some, as Johnson and Kennedy seemed to have buried the hatchet going into the general election... At least from the public’s perspective, Johnson was enthusiastic about working with congress to get several social programs funded, as part of the Grand Society envisioned in his inaugural speech. Kennedy would enjoy a voice in foreign policy as Johnson initially focused almost entirely on domestic issues...

– Theodore H. White’s The Making of the President: 1964, Atheneum Publishers, 1965



Wanting to placate Kennedy, Johnson picked Luther Terry for U.S. Surgeon General to replace the retiring Leroy Edgar Burney, over his own choice, a pediatrician/epidemiologist named William H. Stewart. Johnson also allowed Joseph Kennedy Sr. to ensure his son didn’t go to the State Department alone…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Pursuit of Power, A. A. Knopf Inc. New York, 2012



I was initially reluctant to accept by brother’s offer to serve as the next Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs. My background was in law, and I was aiming at the time to enter private practice in order to spend more time with Ethel and the kids. But Jack convinced me that I could do more for my country and our families if I took the job. The leap from law to defense politics was awkward, but with all challenges I persevered and benefitted from the experience.

– Robert F. Kennedy’s The Definitive Decades, Tangent Writer’s House, 1999



“My fellow Americans, the beginning of this administration marks the beginning of a new and better era for America and the world.”

“As President, I promise to defend all friends and oppose all foes to these United States. I want every nation, group and individual who opposes the basic foundation of our very way of life to know that this nation and its people will defy any despot or dictator that wishes to destroy the spirit of freedom and democracy anywhere in the world.”

“With your courage and with your compassion and your desire, we will build a Great Society, a society where no child will go unfed, and no youngster will go unschooled. [1] And liberty will shine as bright as the sun does shine right here and now. Thank you.”

– Quotes from President Lyndon Johnson’s inaugural address, 1/20/1961



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Lyndon Johnson, US President #35



LBJ’S BLUEPRINT: BILLIONS FOR SCHOOLS, AGED, MEDICINE; VOWS TO CURB POVERTY

Washington, DC – In today’s State of the Union speech, President Johnson detailed his domestic agenda for the year, starting with calls for an expansion in spending on education and medical care programs…

New York Daily News, 1/30/1961



“We must not allow America to dictator our future. We believe that they want war. And we need to take whatever measures are necessary to end any plans for aggression against the free people of Cuba.” Camilo, or “Cam” as he let me call him, was fiery and passionate. ...Fidel criticized the Soviet Union for keeping the poor out of government-level decisions. I pressed him to demonstrate a solution to this, and he offered the notion of national referendums, saying he would implement such votes into Cuba “eventually.” …Fidel had a noticeably higher-pitched voice [2], and while he showed determination, the slight quiver in his speech was more noticeable when beside Cam. Regardless of pitch, their words were undoubtedly inspiring, and more importantly, were effective in raising morale and trust in the young Communist government.

– Journalist Lisa Howard recollecting her “private” February 1961 interviews with Fidel Castro and Camilo Cienfuegos, 1982 publication



The Colonel thought carefully about what to others was not a dilemma at all. He contemplated the composition of his company – In a franchise, ideas flow from the parent company down, but they also come from the bottom up or laterally: People who own franchises often have great ideas – for new menu items, for ways of doing business more efficiently, & for branding – that are taken up by the parent company [3].

Turning to me, the Colonel noted “The business I developed [here is] a personal one. I [know] most all of the franchisees by their first names, and many of them [have] slept in my beds and [eaten] breakfast at my table. …We was just one big family.” [4]

“And you have to keep your family together,” I replied.

…“Yep.”

After several months of deliberations, The Colonel finally managed to gather all the franchisees who wanted to take KFC public together to sit down with them in Florence, KY, in early February. Before going in, he vented his frustration: “These are mom-and-pop operations. Strugglers that I’ve treated kindly and done plenty right by them. Hell, my product has made millionaires out of some of them” [5]. Swinging his cane, he muttered on. “The original plan was to allow the franchisees to do whatever they wanted as long as it did not violate their original handshake agreement, but this thing here is much too different from all that.”

An idea of creating a sort of subsidiary of KFC called Kentucky Fried Chicken of the South was floated. But the idea was quickly cut down, as too many of us feared it would lead to a balkanizing affect, decentralizing corporate responsibility and in the long run dooming the entire company. No, we had to stick together like a family, and when it comes to family, sacrifices and compromises always have to be made.

As such, after much reluctance, Sanders finally agreed to the move. “On two conditions: every move made concerning the stock, all the manipulatin’ and hullabalooin’ that goes on in the stock market, all of it goes through me. And we are going to find some mighty fine experts we can trust for all this, too!” We shook the hands of every man and woman in the room, making the agreement a personal vow for each individual. It would mean much change for the company, and Sanders was finally ready to let it happen, but he was wise to know to not go in guns a-blazing without some sort of plan.

– Dave Thomas’ Under the Colonel’s Wing, Mosaic Publishing, 1982



JOHNSON MEETS WITH SENATORS TO DISCUSS SOCIAL SECURITY, COMBINED PAYROLL TAX

– Wall Street Journal, side article, 2/5/1961



Johnson knew exactly where each Senator new and old stood on the issues. Whenever it became necessary, he’d send a Senator or congressman off on some trip to NATO or wherever to keep them from voting. The man realized, from years of working with the bunch, that if he pushed for anything meaningful concerning Civil Rights, the Dixiecrats would make all of his other proposals come to a standstill. But if he had already passed the small potatoes first – medicine, education reform, tax cuts – there’d be far less items for the Dixiecrats to hold hostage in the Rules Committee…

– Bobby Baker, RNN interview, 1979



As we took to the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, I could see the Colonel was uneasy. “You’re doing the right thing,” I reassured him.

“It’s not that,” the Colonel shouted over the cacophonous room full of mechanical clicking bells and whistles and suited cronies shouting and running, “it’s too chaotic and noisy here; it’s like being stuck in a twister made out of youngins playing rock-and-roll!”

Quickly we moved to the celebration area, where the first ticker of our stock clicked out. After a few cheers, the area around us finally died down just enough for us to pose for photos after making a brief announcement: that the Company of Kentucky Fried Chicken was finally being made public, put on the market for anyone to invest in.

“From this day of February 10, 1961 onward, anyone can financially benefit from the company’s success. This is a wonderful opportunity to connect with the consumers and prospective investors in a way that will grow the company and help it reach unprecedented levels,” Harman prophesized in a dramatic bit of showmanship that he had been practicing before we had arrived.

“Yes,” the Colonel added, “now if only it could take this place down to a quieter level!”

– Dave Thomas’ Under the Colonel’s Wing, Mosaic Publishing, 1982



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[ imgur.com/eRdzRW3 ]
– 28-year-old Dave Thomas, 70-year-old Colonel Sanders, and several other KFC managers, 2/10/1961



JOHNSON ESTABLISHES “THE PEACE CORPS,” A NEW GOVERNMENT-RUN VOLUNTEER PROGRAM

– The Chicago Tribune, 2/17/1961



EXTRA! CUBAN SHIP FIRES ON U.S. BOAT!

– New York Times, 2/18/1961



...Yesterday’s incident in which a Cuban patrol boat fired a barrage of bullets upon an American civilian boat in the Straits of Florida has raised tensions between the two nations. The American boat, called the Gold Marlin, is a high-class vessel that hailed from the Florida Keys and was, according to sources, being taken for a joy ride. A representative from Cuba announced that the patrol boat mistook the vessel for an armed military vessel. The announcement came short of being an apology over their actions in the incident, which left two of the six Americans onboard the vessel severely injured and still recovering in hospital. In the states, American Defense Secretary Homer Litzenberg had this to say… “We will not tolerate a foreign attack on any American no matter how major or minor. Reparations will be demanded soon enough.” …Meanwhile, the Soviet is staying silent on the matter…

– BBC broadcast, 19/2/1961



“I hate the bastard, but I love democracy more. And if he’s going to be the one protecting it, than he better know what the hell it is he has gotten himself into.”

Richard Nixon allegedly said this to one of his aides, concerning his decision to inform President-Elect Lyndon Johnson of the CIA’s plans concerning Cuba. Johnson began dealing with the plans immediately, before even being sworn into office of the Presidency. After this information was publicly disclosed in the late 1980s, questions were brought up by many concerning how much of the back-and-forth between the President-Elect and the many persons involved was a violation of national security measures. However, a 1996 ruling determined that the President-Elect, even if a civilian before their inauguration, was and is entitled to the “limited” access of “certain government elements.”

– From prize-winning historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed, published in 2011



Lyndon wasn’t made fully aware of the government’s plans concerning Cuba until two weeks before the inauguration. Nixon kept him in the dark until then, through all of November and December, just to spite him, I guess, the damn bastard. When they sprung it on him, he listened, but he ultimately their plans down, calling them “ridiculous” and “a suicide mission.” The plans were insufficient, too risky, and in serious need of some kind of overhauled. The incident regarding The Gold Marlin sped up the process of changing plans, though. Heh, funny. Um, in the odd sense. It was like the Maine and the Panay and Pearl Harbor, you see. You would think that America’s enemies would come up with something more original than boat-sinking the third time around, but...nope…

– Bobby Baker in TV interview, CBS, 11/11/1977



EXTRA! US PRIVATE PASSENGER PLANE SHOT DOWN OVER CUBA; ALL 23 ONBOARD PRESUMED DEAD!

– The New York Times, special issue, 3/3/1961



The incidents with Cuba were really beginning to frighten people. Especially in Florida, were I was at the time. The clashes – preemptive attacks, they seemed to be to many – were occurring around Spring Break. I went to Florida to celebrate finally getting ready to graduate from Penn State, and I was looking to party. What I found was a furor of suspicion and paranoia. The highways were full of families travelling north. I saw people hastily packing their stuff into their cars. At one gun shop, I saw the line go right out the door and around the corner. People were told to stay calm, but when a bunch of Commies start shooting up American boats and planes, and you live close by, you are going to fear the worst. Needless to say, it wasn’t the best Spring Break.

– producer/screenwriter Donald P. Bellisario, Archive of American Television, 1991 interview


March 15, 1961

To: Director Dulles

From: The President

I hereby approve the plan involving Trinidad, Cuba. May God have mercy on their Red souls, because we certainly won’t!

BURN AFTER READING

– Private telegram response from President Lyndon Johnson to CIA Director Allen Dulles; discovered, declassified and disclosed in 2001; the “burn after reading” instruction was erroneously stamped on the bottom instead of the top, likely leading to its misfiling due to human error



FRANCHISING IN THE NEW DECADE

...Kentucky Fried Chicken is at the head of the pack when it comes to utilizing the advertising techniques of other industries since the late 1950s and early 1960s. For example, since early 1961, their outlets were were the first to implement lighting that allowed them to promote their outlets at all hours, day and night...

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[pic: imgur.com/Vigmvbm.png ]
Above: An example of a KFC outlet, circa 1961

Nation's Restaurant News, late 1969 issue



On March 23, over 1,800 paramilitaries set out from Guatemala for Cuba by boat. Two days later, early in the morning, six CIA-supplied B-26 bombers flown by the anti-communists attacked Cuban airfields and returned to Guatemala. That night, the rebels landed. The Cubans were caught completely off-guard by this due to their belief that enemy soldiers would land at a position closer to the capital. Several hours later, at the UN, Cuba’s Foreign Minister Raul Roa accused the US of aggressively attacking the nation in an attempt to overthrow Castro’s regime. Via telephone Johnson instructed the US’s UN Ambassador, Stuart Symington, how to specifically word his response. Symington, as ordered, stated that “this administration has been consistent with this issue; the United States will only support anti-Castro forces if, and only if, it is more than apparent that such action follows the will of the Cuban people.” Symington refused to clarify.

– prize-winning historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed, Putnam Publishing, 2011



EXILES INVADE CUBA!

Today, just after midnight, an invasion force of Cuban exiles against Castro landed on Cuba’s coast. Heavy fighting was seen in the streets of the coastal city of Trinidad as the invading forces marched through and spread out into the surrounding areas. The invaders are counter-revolutionary forces aiming to overthrow Fidel Castro, the island nation’s Communist leader. Broadcasts from Cuba’s government-run radio station, appealing for medical help from foreign nations, indicate that the raiders have already successfully penetrated 50 kilometers inland...

– Tad Szulc, A New York Times Special Report, 3/29/1961



It did seem like it had once been a good place to live. Trinidad was much like my own hometown of Mariel. The stone streets, the lush trees, the colorfully-painted homes, the old churches, it all reminded we of what I had lost. We had been content there; we had been content back then. It saddened me to think of how my life had been stolen from me by Fidel. So I turned my grief into anger. And I used that anger to cut down those who stood in our way. And I with my fellow soldiers, my brothers-in-arms, I entered that city and I helped bring it to its knees. We were the first soldiers in the long, long fight to take back our homeland…

– Ricardo Perez’s chapter in Ron Keeva Unz’s anthology They Were There: First-Hand Accounts of the War on Cuba, 2001



“The glorious citizens of Cuba and the brave soldiers of the army and militia are battling the enemy with all of their strength. But it is not enough. Every single abled man, woman and child must do their part to protect their fellow citizens to rise up against those that threaten our prosperity. They will not destroy us because we will never allow it; they will not break our spirits because we will never give them the chance. For we are greater than they are. We are stronger than they are. We are more united than they are. And no matter what it takes, we will be the victors of this war!”

– From Fidel Castro’s 3/30/1961 radio broadcast



At around 7:00 AM – late by LBJ’s standard [6] – on April 2, Dulles came over to us – I was discussing the military proceedings with Jack – with the latest U-2 reconnaissance photos. Lyndon was outraged that the B-26 pilots had exaggerated their claims; they had clearly not been as effective as we had wanted them to be.

“Well, we’re in it too deep to fall back on it all now,” Jack lamented.

I was about to suggest that we cancel the upcoming strikes to retain plausible deniability, just in case the invasion was eventually a failure, when Lyndon immediately responded: “To change the plans now would only cause confusion for our men there, and to fall back now would mean a victory for Communism in the eyes of Castro and the Kremlin.”

“The Castro brothers are already on uneasy terms with Khrushchev. Falling back would lead Cuba right into the arms of Russia and it would leave us embarrassed on the world stage,” Dulles added as they quickly exited the room.

The continuation of the airfield strikes went ahead as scheduled.

[snip]

As the body count rose, Jack discussed the idea of sending troops of our own into Cuba. “A proxy war,” he explained.

“That would keep us from having to get congress to allow us to openly declare war on Cuba, wouldn’t it?” Lyndon mulled. Indeed, while Cuba has agitated us with the Gold Marlin and Intrepid plane incidents, these would still not justify a declaration of war…

– Robert F. Kennedy’s The Definitive Decades, Tangent Writer’s House, 1999



US TROOPS LAND IN CUBA TO ASSIST ANTI-CASTRO CUBANS: Defense Secretary Litzenberg calls for “the preservation of the freedom and independence of the Cuban people.”

– The New York Times, 4/3/1961



“To arms, Cubans! We must conquer or we shall die choked by slavery. In the name of God we assure you all that after the victory we will have peace, human solidarity, general well-being and absolute respect for the dignity of all Cubans without exception.”

– Cuba's DRF leader Jose Miro Cardona, 4/9/1961 (as recorded by the New York Times) [7]



US Citizen Approval of US Involvement in Cuba
Approve: 69%
Disapprove: 27%
Uncertain: 4%

– From a Gallop Poll article, published 4/10/1961



ATMCxj2.png


[pic: imgur.com/ATMCxj2.png ]
– Colonel Sanders, attended a meeting of fellow Shriners, c. April 1961



SOURCE(S)/NOTE(S)
[1] OTL Quote found on the Note 5 of Wikipedia’s Great Society page: https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=26225&st=&st1
[2] Listen to Fidel talk in the Lisa Howard interviews of OTL available on YouTube.
[3] Line italicized taken directly from here: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smit...ied-chicken-american-success-story-180955806/
[4] Quote found here: https://torontoist.com/2015/12/historicist-a-finger-lickin-good-mississauga-colonel/
[5] Quote taken from here: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smit...ied-chicken-american-success-story-180955806/
[6] It is mention in an anecdote found here: http://alcalde.texasexes.org/2012/02/cruel-to-be-kind-lbj-behind-the-scenes/ that LBJ would wake up very early, and would call people at unreasonably early hours.
[7] OTL Quote! (according to his wiki article)

Notes: I'm a bit unsure of the quality of this post. Any constructive criticism is welcomed!



Chapter 12: April 1961 – August 1961

“Remember that God has enabled you to become an example of love, forgiveness, and brotherly co-existence.”

– Saddam Hussein (OTL)



The story’s rather simple. The Colonel was restless. He wanted to travel back to the Old Homestead of Corbin, so after another round of visits across California, the Colonel took a flight and touched down at Florence’s large Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, which has been around since the 1940s. But when the Colonel arrived at C/NKIA, “or Sinkia” as he called it, there were no flights to Corbin. The Colonel soon came up with a solution to the town’s physical isolation – he planned to build the town an airport of its very own [1]. Not a giant international airport, but more of a glorified airfield. Something that would produce revenue for the town and make him see his old waterin’ hole grow out of being a backwater hole-in-the-wall type of place.

Thing is, though, there’s a lot of steps you have to go through to get an airport built. First, you have to get a local government or authority to sponsor the project. Then there’s the big hurdle – the “feasibility study.” The state and federal aviation organizations have to review your plans for location and funding. They look at if the area even needs an airport by looking at local transportation accessibility and its proximity to other airports.

Now Corbin was farther east than all of Kentucky’s major airports, and the closest one was Somerset-Pulaski County Airport, also known as J. T. Wilson Airfield, and while it was 30 miles away, Corbin was separated from it – and all the other airports – by a skinny range belonging to the Appalachians, meaning it’d take just over half-an-hour to drive from the one airport to the next.

Next up, the local land use had to be considered. You can’t build an airport in the middle of a city; planes need plenty of room to land and whatnot. Then you got operating costs, public usability, state licensing standards, hiring policies, construction company hirings, state and federal grant assurances, charts upon charts upon charts – and after that, guess what? Even more charts! – about operatin’ projectories or what have you. And of course, the FAA sends out men of their own to check out the possible sites for the airport, and then the actual facility plannin’ starts [2]. And then finally, you get to build it. But the thing is, all those steps can take up to years to complete, even for a simple stretch of runway, a tiny control tower and a humble hanger. But when the Colonel went around Corbin at the beginning of it all, he promised the townsfolk that he would get them that airport. “I always keep my promises – that’s a promise!” is what he said. And the Colonel did. Harley, Maggie and Dave Thomas all helped out. By April, it looked like Corbin could get one by the end of the decade. All what was needed was patience.

But of course, the Colonel was never a patient man, and he soon moved his primary focus to other ventures.

– John F. Ruggles, WMOR 1330 AM radio, 1/8/1981 program broadcast



33RD ACADEMY AWARDS CEREMONY WRAPS UP IN SANTA MONICA: Jules Dassin Wins Best Original Screenplay For “Never On Sunday”

The Los Angeles Times, entertainment section, 4/17/1961



18 April 1961: On this day in history, the Twenty-Third Amendment to the United States Constitution officially took effect; granting citizens in the US’s District of Columbia the right to vote in Presidential elections, the amendment took effect upon certification by John L. Moore, the U.S.’s Administrator of General Services; the amendment had been ratified by 38 states (the minimum number of state ratifications required to amend the US Constitution) as of March 29...

– onthisday.co.uk



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– Star and Stripes, US military newspaper, 4/25/1961



CONGRESS APPROVES RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING US MILITARY INTERVENTION IN CUBA

Washington, DC – Two days after the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees heard testimony from the US Secretary of Defense Homer Litzenburg and the US Secretary of State Jack Kennedy, the House of Representatives unanimously approved of a resolution to “promote the maintenance of international peace and security in the Caribbean,” authorizing the President to do so through American armed forces if necessary. US Vice-President Hubert Humphrey supported the resolution with the comment that “the United States will always come to the aid and defense of those fighting for freedom, including the democratists of Cuba.” After the House made the move official, the Senate approved the resolution ten hours later, 89-to-1. Senate leader Mike Mansfield of Montana arranged for a swift voting procedure after several other speeches were “efficiently scheduled” for Wednesday and Thursday, according to a Congressional staffer for Mansfield…

– The New York Times, 4/25/1961



CONGRESS RAISES FEDERAL MINIMUM WAGE

Washington, DC – By a 231-197 vote, the House of Representatives today raised the U.S. federal minimum wage to $1.25 per hour. Earlier this month, the U.S. Senate approved the same measure by a 63-27 vote, after President Johnson voiced strong support for it…

The Washington Post, 5/3/1961



INTERVIEWER: Senator, on the night of April 24, the night when Congress approved of the Florida Straits Resolution, why were you the sole Senator to vote against it?

WAYNE MORSE: In the three weeks or so since then we have sent nearly 500 men to Cuba to assist in the efforts made by the anti-Castro Cubans, who are now calling themselves the Cuban Democratic Revolutionary Front, or the DRF. However, an overwhelming number of the Cuban people are now more united than ever against us despite this administration’s claims to the contrary. We are repeatedly receiving reports, not just from Tad Szulc but other journalists brave enough to venture to the front lines as well, and all the reports have a common theme: a strong amount of resistance. Each village, each acre of land the US and DRF armies occupy, is won over painstakingly from ardent locals. It is due to overwhelming evidence that I do not believe it when the Johnson administration proclaims that a majority of Cubans are against Castro. The anti-Cuban exiles are essentially the only Cubans on the island that are actually on the, uh, pro-democracy side. This is also evident in the lack of advancement into Cuba; over the past month, the current borders of the DRF’s territory in Cuba have only expanded roughly five miles farther inland. That why I believe this resolution [was] a historic mistake [3]. And for the record, Senator Ernest Gruening was on the fence about it, but ultimately yielded to the siren call of the rattling sabres because of Cuba’s close proximity to Florida.

INTERVIEW: Is Cuba’s proximity to Florida not an issue, in your opinion?

WAYNE MORSE: If it is, Clark must also be worried about Alaska’s close proximity to the Soviet Union. The Gold Marlin was tragic, yes, but it would not have happened under less hostile geopolitical circumstances. So, no, it’s only an issue if America’s current aggressive foreign policy keeps making it an issue.

– Face the Nation, 5/16/1961 radio broadcast



REPORTER 1: “What about Senator Wayne Morse's comments concerning the war in Cuba?”

CLIFFORD: “Well, I was informed of them, and, um, well, there will always be opposition to what ultimately turns out to have been the right choice all along.”

REPORTER 2: “How soon can we expect the Communists in Cuba to fall?”

CLIFFORD: “That’s a good question, but at this stage, it’s too early to be definitive. Still, judging by the rate of progress at the current time, I would surmise that the war should be won by Christmas.”

– exchange at a D.C. press conference between US National Security Advisor Clark Clifford and two unidentified reporters, 5/16/1961



On April 25, just thirteen days late of beating the Soviets, Alan Shepard became the second man and the first American in space. Upon his arrival back to Earth, LBJ proudly celebrated the mission’s success. Away from the press, though, he was just as outraged as the rest of us – Yuri Gagarin and Khrushchev had once again stolen our thunder. He was determined to see the US beat them at the next giant leap in the space race, telling Director Webb in private what he would not reveal to the public for another few months: “So help me, we will make it to the moon before them, if we have to use a giant f@#kin’ slingshot to get there!”

– NASA scientist Farouk El-Baz’s Up and Away: How The Cold War Competition Pushed Us into The Stars, MacFarland & Company, 1994



April 26, 1961
To: Director Dulles
From: The President

Give Miro all the help he needs.

– Private telegram response from President Lyndon Johnson to CIA Director Allen Dulles, declassified and disclosed in 1992



Determined to have as few bills as possible for the Dixiecrats to threaten to hold back when the time came to push for Civil Rights, Johnson implemented the most productive first 100 days of any US President since Franklin Delano Roosevelt. One of the first things he tackled was immigration. The U.S. Immigration Nationality Act of April 1961 did away with the Asiatic Barred Zone and the hundred-person quotas of the early 1950s. It opened America to the people of Africa, as under the old system less than 3,000 immigrants from the entire continent had moved to the US. Johnson thought it “stupid” to shut out Africa, a continent rich with natural resources. He reportedly once said, “Africa’s interior is just waiting for some adventurous entrepreneur to dig somewhere new and make himself, and a village, and a country, impressively wealthy. I’d prefer the adventurer to be an American. Both the US and African nations would benefit from our doors being made open a little wider,” if you can call quadrupling numbers a little. The only place that suffered from the new law was the Caribbean, which, due to the increasing hostilities with Cuba, was understandable.

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



The Economic Opportunity Act of May 1961 was nicknamed “The Teach a Man to Fish Act,” after Republican Congressman Howard Buffett of Nebraska’s April 27, 1961 speech calling for its passage. The legislation provides federal programs focusing on vocational education in order to give people “the tools of knowledge needed for them to continually maintain employment.” The legislation also allowed for the development of “E.T.P.” programs – social gatherings of concerned volunteer citizens and community organizers meant to “Empower The Poor,” a notion supported on bipartisan lines and endorsed by politicians, celebrities, and Colonel Sanders, a man belonging to both categories…

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



PUBLIC BROADCASTING ACT SIGNED INTO LAW

…the act creates funds for minor stations to create “innovative programing” in order to increase quality, diversity, and public interest in public broadcasting…

Business Weekly, 5/26/1961



ATTORNEY GENERAL CLARK VISITS ALABAMA FOR TALKS WITH GOV. PATTERSON OVER RECENT FREEDOM-RIDER VIOLENCE

– The Washington Post, 5/27/1961



JOHN TOWER WINS U.S. SENATE SEAT IN STUNNING UPSET

Austin, TX – Despite President Johnson’s fair approval ratings, his post-election shift to calling for “strong and lasting” Civil Rights has soured his reputation in his home state, allowing Republican John G. Tower to pull off a narrow victory late last night, winning by a roughly half-a-percent margin… Tower will be the first Republican U.S. Senator to hail from Texas since Morgan Hamilton retired in 1877…

– The Houston Chronicle, 5/28/1961



Tommy Chong Recalls Where He Was at The Start of The Rise of The Beatniks

INTERVIEWER: When did you first start playing music in the U.S.?

CHONG: Hmm, I think it was around May of ’61, cause it was when all the college kids were wrapping up their classes and everything. We [Calgary soul group The Shades] had been in Vancouver for a few weeks when [band member] Bobby [Taylor] got us a gig at some peaceful war protest scene over in Seattle. It was a small thing, no one really paid attention to it, but it was good pay and it was a real good time. We started playing at the early beatnik hotspots long before that culture grew to become bigger and louder, so at the time our music for them was real soft and mellow. We played our song “Junior’s Jerk” and we kind of took offense to them doing that clapping think instead of actually applauding, but they let us hang out afterwards and it was all ’kay.

INTERVIEWER: So how were coffeehouses back then?

CHONG: Well the coffee always sucked, but the people had a great jive, a real natural and calm groove to them, man. A feel that, hey, they thought the war in Cuba was bad, but they were just normal average people, what could they do? The best they could do at the time was to just send out good vibes to the world. And those places could have great vibes, really, like they could just suck you right in. [4]

– usarightnow.co.usa/culture/interview, 2014




My fellow patriots: I am pleased to inform you all that our brave soldiers fighting to release our island home from the clutches of the Castro Brothers’ oppressive regime have successfully captured the city of Cienfuegos. The battle to liberate our homeland from the despotic rule of mayhem creators has only just begun, but it is more than obvious that the regime will fall and that ultimately we will be victorious!

– unofficial leader of “the democratists” opposition, Dr. Jose Miro Cardona’s 5/29/1961 radio announcement



KHRUSHCHEV CANCELS VIENNA SUMMIT

Moscow, U.S.S.R. – Spokesmen for The Kremlin announced today that Nikita Khrushchev, leader of the Soviet Union, will refuse to meet with President Johnson later this year. The official release statement cited the War in Cuba, or as they put it, “the unprovoked and wanton invasion of a peaceful Communist state,” as being “a significant” factor…

– From the New York Times, 6/1/1961



US, DRF Territory Gains Slower Than Expected

…while the troops on the “Democratist” side of this war are advancing slowly, the White house remains confident in the abilities of America’s Armed Forces…

– The Orange County Register, 6/1/1961



We are prevailing over the Americans and our traitorous cousins greatly in the forests, so tonight I celebrated with my comrades by firing our weapons into the sky instead of fireworks.

– 1 June 1961 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



MO5uYH8.png

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– Several new KFC locations featuring the standardized appearance of the era, c. June 1961



After the first KFC spots opened up in the UK, I was convinced that we could expand into continental Europe, starting, of course, with France. Our sales pitch in Paris was all about the company’s positive atmosphere, which was key to the franchise’s regional successes. What really worked was the delightful labor force in France. It was very reminiscent of the good, hardworking people found across the state of in Utah. People in both France and Utah believe in working, and they’re friendly – that’s the culture that got KFC off the ground and into the whole world, and that’s why KFC was able to catch on in France. [5]

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, early 1992




TOP SECRET
From: Director Dulles
To: President Johnson
Change in activities of Cuban airplanes detected.

U-2 planes have detected an increase in training exercises in Castro air force. The evidence suggests they are testing long-range travel capabilities. Suspicion of planned attack on DRF territories in northern Cuba. Will continue to monitor the situation.

– CIA transmission, 6/2/1961, declassified and disclosed in 1991



While Jack and Bobby mastered politics, Ted set his sights on mastering the spreading of honest information through the trusted media of print. In June of 1961, Ted purchased The Sacramento Union, a newspaper [6] circulating an area stretching across northern California that at the time was facing some financial troubles despite having only a small amount of competition from the then-afternoon paper of their home city, The Sacramento Bee. In his first test of leadership, Ted expanded the paper’s range and doubled its staff size, and invested money borrowed from the banks to streamline the newspaper production process, allowing the people of northern California to know of breaking news stories much quicker than before. Within the first quarter, overhead was down, and all projections pointed skyward. With the pop of a champagne cork, Ted celebrated the venture’s rousing success. “Things are looking up!”

– Joan Bennett Kennedy’s There Are Always Two Tomorrows: My Life in an American Dynasty, Centurion Publishers, 1999



“Get down!” I pushed my friend to the deck. There was fire overwhelming us within seconds. We followed protocol and made our way to the remaining lifeboats, only for one of the plane to turn back around and fire at us again. We collapsed as the bullets penetrated us. My friend’s body fell onto me, and as I began to pass out I could feel the blood exiting the wounds. I was certain I would never wake up again.

– Anonymous navy seaman describing the Attack on Guantanamo, 1979 footage for 1981 documentary



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– clickopedia.co.usa



“My heart gives out to the military personnel and their families at Guantanamo Bay… Romans 12-12: ‘Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, and faithful in prayer.’ …In the past several weeks Castro has coaxed us into direct combat with a series of heinous acts of aggression. But yesterday, their attack on US-administered military port of Guantanamo is an attack that cannot be ignored. The freedom-loving people of Cuba, no longer under the spell of Communism, are rising up, and Castro’s threats to discourage us in helping them only strengthen our resolve. I have asked congress to formally declare war on the Castro regime, and begin deploying troops to Cuba’s shores as soon as possible. If it is war they want, defeat they shall have instead.”

– President Johnson in an emergency address to the nation, 6/12/1961



“Remember the Guantanamo!”

– pro-Cuban War phrase, c. June 1961



POPE EXCOMMUNICATES FIDEL CASTRO

...Pope John XXIII today excommunicated Cuban dictator Fidel Castro for Castro's ongoing and continual efforts to systematically suppress Catholic institutions in the island nation of Cuba. Castro, who was born and raised Catholic, has recently publicly criticized the Catholic Church and the Bible, accusing church leaders of being complicit in allowing certain elements from the Bible to be used to justify the oppression of women and people of African descent throughout world history...

– The Daily Mirror, 6/29/1961



We celebrated the night with much hubris. We drank, we danced, we gambled, and we spent the nights with the ladies. We are rejoicing over today’s successful capture of another vital town, the city of Jovellanos. We have cut the island nearly in half, and we are closer to Castro’s headquarters in the capital city of Havana now more than ever before. We have fought through farmland and swampland two weeks straight and so are more than glad for the well-deserved rest from all this warfare.

– 7/17/1961 Journal Entry of Mario Zuniga, DRF soldier (translated)



The post-Guantanamo plan for the US-marine-led "rebel invasion" of Trinidad called for the advance frogmen to light a beacon to show our boys where to land, but someone in the war room – I forget who exactly – realized that the beacon could also alert the local militia to their presence. So, we sent more frogmen who were trained snipers to go around and take out any witnesses. We allegedly had to silence over a dozen civilians. But we were humane. One of the frogmen, for example, came across a ten-year-old boy, but he didn’t kill him, he simply knocked him out and hid the unconscious boy in a nearby toolshed, even propping him up to make it look like he bumped his head and fell asleep. See? We were the merciful ones there. But did the Commie-Cubans do that sort of thing? No, when it came to the innocent children caught in the crossfire of our war games, they went in the opposite direction. Those monsters spared no one…

– Former US Air Force Secretary Eugene M. Zukert’s chapter in Ron Keeva Unz’s anthology They Were There: First-Hand Accounts of the War on Cuba, 2001



US TROOPS OUST COMMIES IN VITAL COASTAL CUBAN CITY!

– The Sacramento Union, 7/21/1961



With his approval ratings spiking over recent military victories in Cuba, Johnson announced publicly his support for the Civil Rights Bill introduced by Congressman Emmanuel Celler (D-NY) earlier in the year. The Colonel, impatient with the slow pace of founding an airport in Kentucky and wanting to distract himself from the increasing number of McDonald’s outlets “popping up like spring daisies,” met with prominent businessmen of the time to drum up their support for the bill. The Chicago Post’s July 29 headline read “Sanders, Getty, Other Millionaires Back Civil Rights Bill.” The Colonel gave numerous television addresses at stations across the country, explaining later that “I knew from experience that a simple op-ed would be less effective than people actually seeing and hearing me and the others talk about it.” The Colonel reasoned “the government should help businesses help the economy. Now, I’ve gone over a copy of the bill in its current form and, contrary to what some politicians on the hill have said, this bill will not interfere with the hiring practices of honest businessmen and businesses.”… Colonel Sanders was more than just keeping himself busy; he was reacting to the problems of the U.S. he genuinely cared about, and was feeling compelled to help fix them in any way possible.

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



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– Colonel Sanders marching with MLK and others in support a Civil Rights march, 8/1/1961



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S):
[1] according to this article: https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/venessawong/the-real-colonel-sanders, Sanders lost $38,000 trying to open an airport in Corbin “[l]ater in his life”.
[2] Information found in the first PDF found after typing in “Eight Steps to Building a New Airport” through Google (from fdot.gov/aviation).
[3] quote taken directly from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_of_Tonkin_Resolution#CITEREFTonkin_Gulf_debate1964.
[4] The speaking style of Chong (who really did start off in a Calgary soul band) is (only sort of) based on this interview: https://www.macleans.ca/culture/tommy-chong-recalls-his-months-in-prison-with-the-wolf-of-wall-street/
[5] Italicized bits are from a quote from Harman himself, found here: https://www.deseretnews.com/article/865615974/Utah-man-who-founded-first-KFC-dies-at-95.html
[6] Why founding a newspaper? Because it was their plan IOTL, as mentioned here: https://archive.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2009/02/16/chapter_2_the_youngest_brother/

nbcman said:
Maybe there could be a Congressional Resolution added to the updated to give LBJ some cover for escalation in Cuba to "protect its national interests" like the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution? Possibly insert it between the excerpt from the RFK book and the NYT article about US troops landing in Cuba.
Great idea, thanks!

Ogrebear said:
Great update.

You seem to be missing a few words in some places- it’s obvious what you mean eg ‘shot down the plan’ but your missing the key words.
Thank you, I'll go back and check; sometimes when I write quickly unknowingly leave out key words.

Unknown said:
Just curious, is anything like Operation Northwoods proposed ITTL?
With Jack Kennedy as Defense State, I'm guessing he would reject such notions, and possibly talk LBJ out of such tactic as well. Instead I wanted to give the impression that LBJ and Camilo's saber-rattling is causing tensions to naturally escalate via border dispute. Any ideas on how I can improve this impression? Thanks a bunch!

Wit, I thought Kennedy was at State, not Defense.
Good eye! Fixed
 
Post 6
Post 6: Chapter 13-to-Chapter 14



Chapter 13: August 1961 – December 1961

“Those who have a ‘why’ to live can bear with any ‘how’”

– Victor Frankl (OTL)



"It really took all of us by surprise - not the wall itself, the speed at which it was set up …After being informed of the Berlin Wall going up practically overnight, Walt [Jenkins] had to calm him [Johnson] down and keep him from ordering something rash…"

– Bobby Baker, RNN interview, 1979



“This is obviously Khrushchev’s response to Cuba. …No, I agree with Clark [Clifford], I advise just monitoring the situation for now. If anything, this could work to our advantage. Think about it: Khrushchev just screwed the pooch by saying we are the oppressors while setting up a blockade to keep people apart!”

– US Secretary of State Jack Kennedy, in a telephone conversation between him and President Lyndon Johnson, concerning the surprise construction of the Berlin Wall, 8/13/1961



…On August 18, Johnson retreated to Camp David for a meeting with French President Charles de Gaulle at Camp David. De Gaulle, the first chief of state to support American assistance to Cuban democratists, discussed military tactics and trade before sharing war stories during dinner with their wives. A week later, Johnson welcomed British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to the quiet retreat, primarily to discuss potential military use of the British-owned Cayman Islands, located just south of Cuba. While the bombastic de Gaulle and Johnson shared an amiable correspondence, MacMillan and Johnson had a more professional relationship with only some forays into a more friendly rapport. Johnson surely would have gotten along better with the mercurial Sir Anthony Eden than with the cool and collected personality of Prime Minister “Supermac.” Regardless, Macmillan, determined to continue distancing himself from the foreign policy follies of his predecessor, supported Johnson’s “treatment of activities” in Cuba, though he was far more contemplative than was his American counterpart. …

– Antiwar activist Doris Kearns Goodwin’s Lyndon Johnson: the Promises and Realities of the American Dream, St. Martin’s Griffin Publishing House, 1991



Camilo Cienfuegos is not just the Chief of Staff of the Cuban Army; he is a battlefield master! His cat-like reflexes in battle make him the stuff of living legend for a reason. Just today, he plowed down several dirty Americans in one fell swoop, spinning his semi around and taking each one out, almost like a deadly samba. While his infectious smile and bravery inflates the confidence of all around him, tonight I saw how he is human like all comrades. While sharing a bucket of K.F.C. smuggled in from Jamaica, Cam confided in me his suspicion that his famous near-brush with death in 1959 was no accident. “An aircraft was following mine. It fired machine guns at me. I don’t know if there were any witnesses, but if there were, there aren’t any more… I trust no one.” [1] His concern for his life contradicted his demeanor when facing the enemy, but I could tell it was genuine.

Early today, Cam met with Fidel to discuss local politics, a topic in which I have no knowledge or interest. And while Cam is a military marvel, he is politically moderate, and is much less politically sophisticated than Fidel and Raul. Working within earshot of the door, I overheard him arguing with Fidel over how to handle captured traitors. I heard him shout that “we cannot torture and assassinate prisoners in the manner of our opponents; we cannot as men of honor and as dignified Cubans use the low and undignified procedures that our opponents use against us.” [2] Fidel seemed unconvinced and stuck to his eye-to-eye philosophy. Their squabbling worries me a little.

– 19 August and 20 August 1961 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



FIRE INJURES ASTRONAUT DURING NASA TEST

– The Miami Herald, 8/21/1961



We all waited outside the room for the President’s “private talk,” but either NASA’s inner walls are thinner than they seem to be, or the President is even louder than one might think. We could hear him shouting and cursing up a storm about how the incident could cost the US the space race. Finally, he bellowed, “Alright, you know what? I’m increasing your funding 50% and I better see progress if you don’t want to see the f@#kin’ unemployment line!” He really did not want to lose the race to the Moon, as did we all. We just didn’t swear that much about it.

– mathematician Dorothy Vaughn’s Human Computers: Me and The Other Women at NASA, Langley Publishers, 1997



SENATE BARELY PASSES THREE MAJOR “LBJ” BILLS INTO LAW

…the sheer narrowness of the passing of the Fair Rental Supplements and Subsidies Bill, the Truth in Packaging Bill, and the Urban Mass Transit Bill arguably stems from the President’s increasing rhetoric favoring Civil Rights, which “worries many of the southern Democrats,” according to one anonymous intern...

– The Chicago Tribune, 8/22/1961



KROC DERIDES LBJ FOR “PLACATING AMERICA’S DRIVING FORCE”

…Kroc stated “the President is mounting a crusade against honest businesses with the Truth in Packaging Bill… this legislation will hurt American companies even worse than the Great Steel Strike of ’59!”...

– The Financial Times, 8/23/1961



FLORIDA RESIDENTS WELCOME, FEAR CUBAN REFUGEES

Miami, Florida – Over the past several months, the Sunshine state has seen a rise in Cuban refugees, as hundreds flee the island nation. …Doctors and teachers seek better employment opportunities, free from communist authoritarianism… Social classes are a major concern for Communists, and the Castro regime is quick to punish anyone who opposes their “distribution of wealth” as they have called it… Members of Cuba’s middle and lower classes arrive at America’s shores, pleading to be let in, and many Floridians are answering the call with donations and organizing humanitarian efforts... Local churches are offering assistance in any way they can… However, some locals are very wary of these new arrivals. “Before the war, there were limits to the amount of people let in. But now with the war and [President] Johnson opening up the borders, and no quotas existing anymore, a scenario quite unique to Cuba is unfolding. As more Cubans come in, more resources are needed to house, clothe and feed them,” Governor Bryant explained at a dinner event yesterday, “They require employment to pay for these things, but this creates new issues as they obtain jobs that should be going to local Floridians.” Other politicians even question whether or not Communist spies could be infiltrating the most recent waves of refugees: “Fidel must be aware of how many are escaping, and we shouldn’t put it past him to try something like that,” says one anonymous state assemblyman…

– The Tampa Bay Times, 8/23/1961 Special Report



DEADLY RIOT IN HIALEAH, FLORIDA: Byrant Sends In State Guard To Maintain Law And Order

Hialeah, FL – …the community is experiencing a riot that has reportedly resulted in the deaths of two people in the most fatal clash between Cuban refugees and US citizens in Florida during the last two weeks. While the specifics are not yet in, it seems that two Cuban men were killed in a confrontation in downtown Hialeah after a local merchant hired a group of Cuban ex-pats, which apparently angered a group of unemployed local residents; the outbreak of violence is possibly also linked to the noticeable rise in recent anti-Cuban sentiment in Florida. Hialeah now joins nearly two dozen other cities, mostly in that state, to have reported minor or major incidents of anti-Cuban Refugee violence over the past several months...

– The New York Times, 8/26/1961



ANTI-CUBAN RIOT LEAVES HOMES, STORES IN RUIN

Port Charlotte, FL – …the fighting finally ceased after almost 48 hours of abject anarchy… allegedly, it was a minor spat over a “stolen job” at a grocery store that snowballed into the tempest of lawlessness…

The San Diego Union-Tribune, 8/27/1961



2004 INTERVIEW

[snip]

INTERVIEWER: And then what happened?

HUNTER: Well, that Mario Savio, who was just a kid in college at the time, he took his shoutin’ up a notch and was just by more youngsters who thought fighting at home and abroad or either or wasn’t a great idea. First there were just nobodies, just pampered idiots who thought it was now the cool thing to wear shades and use any surface like it was a drum, like smoking a blew would really stick it to their parents. Then came the real idealists, honestly passionate for what the Savios and Beatniks and San Francisco Staircase activists of the world stood for. And then soon you saw big names join in the organizing and the mobilizing, like Saul Alinsky, Frances Fox Pivens, and future big-shot Eleanor Holmes. They saw a fire start in that H.U.A.C. ’60 debacle and the Cuban War was wafting the flames. And they weren’t going to let it get snuffed out by anything.

– Anita Thompson’s Ancient Gonzo Wisdom: Interviews with Hunter S. Thompson, Da Capo Press, 2009 [3]



ANALYSIS: ANTI-BLACK VIOLENCE ONLY GROWS SUPPORT FOR CIVIL RIGHTS

… with each news snippet of Southerners attacking black people, more northerners and moderate southerners voice support for the end of segregation… the latest string of polls show support has risen 5% each week over the past six weeks… Southern leaders, however, see the situation in reverse. Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett claims racial violence is being instigated by “Blacks violating the right to separation”…

– reporter Ralph McGill (a friend to Jack Kennedy, Colonel Sanders and Dr. King), Atlanta Constitution, 8/29/1961



K.F.C. CELEBRATES 700th OUTLET: The Chicken King Himself Attends Grand Opening in Genoa, Italy

– The Daily Mirror, UK newspaper, 9/1/1961



Billy Graham, that young Southern Baptist fellow, came to visit Lyndon today yet again. They spent over an hour talking about religious philosophy and common majority, about how moral principles influence government decisions, and the importance of spirituality and inner strength. Then they prayed together in silence for a short while. They seem to get along very well with each other, which, knowing how religious Lyndon is, is no surprise.

– The diary of Mildred Stegall, personal secretary to Lyndon Johnson, 9/1/1961 entry



On September 2, The Colonel attended an NAACP-funded rally in North Carolina, where he proclaimed “It’s well past the time to adhere to the words of the Constitution, some of the greatest words put to parchment: ‘all men are created equal.’”… Concerning business practices in the South, the Colonel stated “when it comes to hiring people, we should focus on only our true differences – years of experience, points of view, and things like that – and work with those differences, not against ’em.”

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



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– Colonel Sanders, spotted participating in a Civil Rights march in Chicago, 9/9/1961



LANDMARK CIVIL RIGHTS BILL PASSES HOUSE, WILL PROCEED TO SENATE “SOON”

By Warren Unna, WP Staff Writer. Washington, DC – The U.S. house of Representatives passed the civil rights bill tonight by a narrow vote… President Johnson remarked, “We are more than halfway through the twentieth century, and yet there are still millions in the land of the free who are ordered which restaurants they can and can't eat at, which water fountains they must and mustn't drink from, which schools they must attend, which homes they must buy or rent, and at which part of the bus they must sit in. No one should have to live such totalitarian and authoritarian conditions – not overseas, and especially not here. This bill will be a major legislative step in righting this historic legal wrong.” ...Johnson, whom had met with multiple congressional leaders during the debating process, cautioned that “the work to transform the will of the people into the rule of the land is only half done,” referring to the U.S. Senate’s upcoming treatment of the bill…

– The Washington Post, 9/11/1961



WALLACE ENTERS GOVERNOR’S RACE, BACKS CIVIL RIGHTS

Clio, AL – Outside his home town’s City Hall building, State Circuit Judge George Wallace today announced his second bid for Alabama Governor, sharing with a crowd of supporters a fairly moderate political platform. …At the announcement, Wallace declared “Let us have integration tomorrow and forever,” and discussed the issues affecting both farmers and city dwellers, such as food, rent and mortgages, and schooling the young…

The Birmingham News, 9/12/1961



After the Civil Rights Bill got passed in the House in September, George knew that running as a segregationist would doom him at the national level. “The old ways are on their way out, and me with them if I stick by them,” he told me. In light of this change in the wind, George decided to look at his 1958 campaign and figure out how to make a more reconciliatory message, a “peaceful-but-powerful populist” kind of message that would appeal to White and Black folks alike. “Nobody listened to me [in 1958] when I talked about roads and schools because I wasn’t outspoken enough. This time, I’ll make ’em all listen! White or Black, they’ll vote for me, just you wait, honey!”

– Lurleen Wallace (1926-1996), 1989 interview



CIVIL RIGHTS LEADER MURDERED!: Organizer Aaron Henry Found Lynched Outside Biloxi, MS

…Henry, 39, had been the President of the Mississippi state chapter of the NAACP since 1959. Henry worked tirelessly to heighten national awareness of the racial violence that Blacks regularly experience, and help to grow support for civil right legislation. At a time when most Blacks want racial reconciliation and some Black want racial retribution, Henry backed the former...

– Chicago Tribune, 9/14/1961



10,000 people, including Dr. King and Hosea Williams, attended Aaron Henry’s funeral procession for a reason. His gruesome murder stirred up outrage that this was still a way of life for us. Despite King’s calls for nonviolence, riots did sprout up in the wake of a lack in justice for Henry, who’s killer where never found. We all felt so angry at white people back then, that Dr. King’s method of passivity was too slow and deadly. We had to fight back, we had to make our voices heard. We tried talking, but after Henry’s lynching, we resorted to screaming.

Then thing went overboard. Neighborhoods went up in flames. It soon became very dangerous to be on the streets at night…

– Wellington Webb and Cindy Brovsky’s Wellington Webb: The Man, the Mayor and the Making of a Better Colorado, Fulcrum Publishing, 1997



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– Nonviolent protestors seen outside the White House (right) after the murder of Aaron Henry (left), 9/16/1961



After September 11, anti-Black violence, coupled by riots and acts of violence towards anyone even resembling a Cuban or a person of Cuban ancestry, broke out in northern cities like New York City, along with several areas of the south and southwestern United States. In Texas, a state with large Black and Latino populations, the destruction of property in “anti-race wars” overwhelming several cities became so severe that the Governor at the time, Price Daniel, requested assistance from the National Guard on September 23. This, however, only made the situation worse in places such as San Antonio and Corpus Christi, as many citizens – Black, White, and Hispanic – opposed the guardsmen with makeshift weapons. Several neighborhoods descended into multisided bedlam. By the time the violence died down in all of these cities (well over a full week later), dozens were dead, hundreds were hospitalized, and millions of dollars’ worth of property was damaged.

The 1960s: A History, Scholastic, 2007



US Sen. Margaret Chase Smith: “…This bill is a long time coming and these riots prove it is needed.”

US Sen. Strom Thurmond: “No, the riots prove the opposite: a clear showing of public disapproval. It is government overreach to force people to conform to a different culture and way of life. Separation of the races promotes racial harmony by allowing each race to pursue their own respective goals. Man has a right to associate with whom he wants to and if he wants to associate exclusively within his own race, there is nothing wrong with that!”

Former Gov. Colonel Sanders: “What are you talkin’ about, Strom? ’Cause this is a talk on lettin’ people eat, drink, sit and work together. That’s fairness, and the government wants fairness. But it’s diehard folks like yourself that’d rather set the building on fire than have to clean it. Now I get people have trouble lettin’ things go, but segregation is a lovable dog with rabies. You might feel some shock from puttin’ it down, but it’s better than keepin’ it ’round.”

Smith: “Yes, separation inhibits any pursuits that could happen between races, Senator. It – ”

Thurmond: “One minute, ma’am – Colonel, you should really let the actual politicians handle national events; you stick with your chicken.”

Sanders: “Oh, you so–Strom, you forget I served four years as a governor, same as you except I learned from the experience; I learned proof-positive that people will care for each other when they are allowed to.”

Thurmond: “Listen you – ”

Smith: “Now cut it out, the both of you, name-calling will get us nowhere. Mr. Sanders.”

Moderator: “Yes, gentlemen, please, let’s stick to the subject.”

Sanders: “Right. Strom, its time your radical friends stopped pushin’ everyone down, but Smith, you do have to admit that old habits die hard.”

Thurmond: “It’s tradition!”

Sanders: “So was burnin’ witches; people move on, Stromy.”

– NBC round table discussion segment, 9/28/1961




[ watch?v=YWjRgzFeE_8 ]

Rocky and Bullwinkle segment, Saturday 9/30/1961 [4], ourvids.co.usa



INTERVIEWER: When did you start playing in Los Angeles?

CHONG: We moved from Vancouver in October ’61 because that was where it was at. We started to reinvent ourselves; we changed our name from The Shades to “the Vancouvers,” and we evolved our music. Together with the beatniks, we developed a new, mellower form of rock and roll that paradoxically was abstract and a more direct, open form of peaceful opposition to authority and warfare. I guess you could call some of our early songs passive-aggressive, but we called them ambient.

INTERVIWER: Ambient?

CONG: Yeah, it’s Latin for going around or something like that. Lot’s of possible names for the new kind of music was tossed around. First it was Baked Rock, then Mellow Rock, then Roller Rock, Roast Rock, Unairable Rock, Urine Luck Rock, in the U.K. they briefly called it Yukay Rock, then Weed Rock, Yang Rock, Yoko Rock, Zong Rock, Zoodo Rock, Beatnik Rock… whole bunch of labels for it, really. I really like the one that caught on a stuck, though, personally, man.

– usarightnow.co.usa/culture/interview, 2014



…In the land of windmills and roses, Colonel Sanders introduces his world-famous Kentucky Fried Chicken to the Dutch, attending the unveiling of the Netherlands’ first K.F.C. outlet in Amsterdam on Monday…

– BBC World News, Wednesday 18/10/1961



PAUL OSBORNE & MARTHA HALL

Paul Edward Osborne of central Kentucky, 22, and Martha Layne Hall of north-central Kentucky, 25, were married today in a private ceremony in Paint Lick, near Lancaster...

– The Lexington Herald-Leader, Celebrations Section, Saturday 10/22/1961



I met Martha in 1959, at the swearing-in ceremony of Governor Combs. I took her out for some ice cream. Then we saw a movie. Then another thing lead to another and three years later we were engaged.

– Paul Osborne, 1992 interview



The next wave of Southern opposition hit the President in October, led by Senator John Stennis of Mississippi. Stennis ranted to one reporter for The Mississippi Daily that “when LBJ ran for president, this liberal agenda was not his sales pitch; if it had been, I would not have voted for him.” The state’s other Senator, James Eastland, also received media attention for opposing the bill, as Eastland is known to be friends with President Johnson. The main legislation still up for debate was the last one most likely to be voted on before the midterms – the Highway Aesthetics Renovation Bill. Also known as the Highway Beautification bill, and, most commonly, the Ladybird Bill, the work of law was pushed by First Lady Ladybird to “strengthen the looks” of our national roadways…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



ALABAMA’S GOV. PATTERSON RALLIES STATE’S US REPRESENTATIVES TO REJECT CIVIL RIGHTS BILL

...calling the legislation an "insult to the core American concepts of free enterprise and personal choice," Patterson has met with every single US Representative from his home state...

The Tuscaloosa News, 10/23/1961



…earlier today, U.S. Senators Al Gore and Estes Kefauver announced their support for the CRA… Senator Gore proclaimed “the South is ready for this social structure shift.” Both Gore and Kefauver are Democrats representing Tennessee, where segregated schools was mandatory until 1954, but the segregation of public businesses is still legal… Their announcement comes two days after meeting with Senate leaders and President Johnson in Washington, D.C. …

– CBS, 10/28/1961 broadcast



LEFTISTS EDGED OUT IN GREEK PARLIAMENT ELECTIONS

Athens, Greece – Tonight’s Greek legislative elections resulted in victory for the National Radical Union (or E.R.E.) party, strengthening the power of Prime Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis. The Results saw Karamanlis achieve victory for the third consecutive time, winning 57.1% of the vote and 189 seats, besting George Papandreou of the brand new Centre Union-Progressive (E.K.) party, whom won 31.8% and 97 seats. The leftist All-Democratic Agricultural Front (or P.A.M.E.) party headed by Ioannis Passalidis, won only 9.6% of the vote, and lost over two-thirds their seats, from 60 to 14; nearly all of those seats were picked up by the E.K.

Karamanlis, whom prefers stronger ties with Europe than with the U.S. for his nation, successfully obtained for it EEC Associate Member status – and subsequently, major financial loans – earlier in the year. A possible rise in Karamanlis support over his main challenger, George Papandreou, was due to Papandreou’s criticism of “America’s war against Cuba” in the days and weeks ahead of the election. Papandreou alleged that news of the war has “cut open old wounds,” as many Greek citizens still remember the atrocities of the post-WWII Greek Civil War, in which loyalists defeated communists in a conflict that left thousands dead. Papandreou’s comments, though, were deemed “pro-communist” by some Karamanlis supporters, and seemed to have spurred support for Karamanlis, whom called to “look to the future by healing, not unearthing the scars of the past.”

At the time of this writing, Papandreou still refuses to concede the election, allegedly due to unfounded claims of voter discrepancy.

The Guardian, 29/10/1961



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– The New York Times, 10/31/1961



…Nations across the globe are condemning Russia’s nuclear test …Tsar Bomba, the most-powerful recorded manmade explosion in history, was detonated north of Arctic Circle… scientists believe the explosion to be equal to over 50 million tons of TNT… …the event comes one day after the United States military reportedly performed an underground nuclear test, according to our American correspondents…

– BBC World News, 31/10/1961 broadcast



United States Governor election results, 1961
Date: November 7, 1961
State governorships: 2
Last election: 35 (D), 15 (R)
Seats before: 35 (D), 15 (R)
Seat changes: D – 0, R – 0

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa



ALBERTIS HARRISON SECURES GOVERNORSHIP: Former State Attorney General Beats GOP Foe 62.7%-to-37.3%

– The Richmond Times-Dispatch, Virginia newspaper, 11/8/1961



IT’S HUGHES!: State Prosecutor Edges Out Favorite In an Upset

Trenton, NJ – Richard Hughes narrowly won last night’s election over the better-known G.O.P. candidate James Mitchell by a margin of roughly 2%. Hughes was a relatively unknown candidate when state party officials nominated him in the summer, but an endorsement from President Johnson in September, coupled with campaign appearance by the popular term-limited incumbent Governor Robert Meyner, helped bring attention to candidacy in the race’s final weeks. Seven other candidates appeared on the ballot, but is appears none of them received more than 0.5% of the total vote…

The Star-Ledger, New Jersey newspaper, 11/8/1961



Nixon Seeking California Governorship Next Year

– Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune, 11/9/1961



In December 1961, Ray Kroc finally purchased McDonald’s from the McDonald brothers. A meeting was set up, and Kroc matched their selling price.

“This is an extremely high amount of money for a franchise,” he reportedly told the brothers over the phone, “I had to borrow from several investors for it.”

“Knowing your business acumen, you’ll bounce back,” Maurice McDonald shot back.

When the trio sat down to finalize things, though, Richard revealed, “You know we are receiving offers from others, you know.”

Kroc went on defense “We shook hands on this – 2.7 mill and 1% royalty on gross sales.”

“We’re not backing out of the deal, Kroc,” Maurice explained, “It’s just that after what you’ve done to us, we’d prefer having it all in writing.” The brothers then revealed pre-assembled documents to confirm the agreement. After a shouting match lasting several minutes, roc finally conceded, read the documents thoroughly, signed them, and left in a huff.

With the matter settled, Richard said to Maurice, “I still agree Colonel Sanders. A man’s handshake is a sacred action; I really think he would have kept his end of the bargain.” Maurice replied, “Yes, but the man also said not to trust a backstabber – fool me once, shame on you; ‘fool me twice, shame on me,’ he told us. I’m not going to argue with the logic coming from a smart guy like the Colonel, are you?”

Looking over the documents, Richard yielded, “guess not.”

Chef Wars: The Start of an American Pop Culture Craze, 2021



“I was 23 years old when the Cuba War began. I graduated from Berkeley that year with a Bachelor of Arts degree and was thinking of applying to Harvard Law. But when I visited a shelter in Florida for Cuban refugees, I didn’t see any lawyers; I saw pastors and reverends and sisters of the church caring for the displaced. They were giving the food, clothes, and most importantly, hope. And I came to realize that I would be able to help more people from the church. I soon returned to my original goal, the one that had lead me to the Sacred Heart Novitiate in 1956. I entered the priesthood and immediately began my participation in the global effort of making our world a better place for all...”

– Rev. Jerry Brown, 1978 interview



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– LBJ celebrating Christmas at the White House, 12/25/1961



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– KFC advertisement, c. December 12/25/1961



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] Based on the claim made by the El Nuevo Herald mentioned here: www.miaminewtimes.com/news/who-killed-camilo-cienfuegos-6548166
[2] Italicized line also taken from www.miaminewtimes.com/news/who-killed-camilo-cienfuegos-6548166 as well
[3] OTL book, ATL excerpt
[4] Please note that I am actually unsure of the exact airing of this bit IOTL at this time.

Ogrebear said:
That is an interesting update indeed. Cuba looks like it won’t be a Vietnam, but not a walk over either.

Is building an Airport still as difficult in 1961 as more modern times? Esp for a millionaire?

How long before Ted buys a TV station one wonders...
I'm happy that you find it interesting!

It still takes several years for everything to be reviewed/approved/planned out even nowadays, but due to how F.A.A. (founded in 1958) procedures have become more complex since their early years, my guess is takes even longer nowadays than it would have in 1961. I think the Colonel would be able to speed up some of the federal bureaucracy with his millions and his connections, but not significantly; it would still take a while.

Ted-TV? Hmm...

DTF955Baseballfan said:
Why am I picturing Ted kennedy as TTL's Ted Turner?

Interesting trivia bit - after a long deadlock someone floated a general's name for baseball commissioner in 1965, and William Eckert was chosen because they got his name confused with the above-quoted Zukert, who, as it turned out, probasbly would have been a lot better than Eckert.

I don't think they'd want to put Batiste (sp?) back, would they? People clearly didn't like him either, and there is oposition to America. I wonder if there's a leader of the exiles who they'd try to put in charge.
Click to expand...
Interesting! I'll be sure to keep that in mind when this TL gets to 1965!

I think any attempts to bring back Batista would be disastrous. Castro rose to power because of how terrible they guy was; returning him to power would just lead to another revolution...

historybuff said:
Good that Cuba isn't becoming Vietnam, at least not so far.
Interesting idea with Ted Kennedy becoming something of a media mogle here.
Thanks!

marathag said:
Don't see the paths crossing, unless the Colonel planned on opening Casinos and/or Hotels
The Colonel was vehemently against all the kind of vices found in Casinos, but he did operate a very successful Hotel from the 1930s to the 1950s ITTL/IOTL. However, Trump did receive accusations of racist hotel tenant practices during the 1970s; the Colonel, by then in his 80s, could admonish Trump for giving businessmen a bad name over that. And that's if Trump isn't hit by the butterfly affect by then. Hmm, we'll see...

Terrible is relative. He jailed and executed far fewer over his whole time in power than Fidel did the first couple years after the Revolution. He was no Papa Doc.
Fair point! :)

NOTE: I'm posting this a day early due to a scheduling conflict. And due to family coming over for Christmas, the ETA for the next post is 1/3/2019. Enjoy the winter holidays, everyone!



Chapter 14: January 1962 – June 1962

“Tame birds sing of freedom. Wild birds fly.”

– John Lennon (OTL)



EUNICE KENNEDY SHRIVER ANNOUNCES RUN FOR US SENATE SEAT

– The Boston Globe, 1/3/1962



Eunice ran because she saw a chance to do something great – a rare opportunity to bring firsthand vital issues to the senate.

– Robert F. Kennedy’s The Definitive Decades, Tangent Writer’s House, 1999



Initially, Father had wanted me to be the one to fill Jack’s seat in the US Senate, seeing as Bobby was to work alongside Jack at the State department. However, not only had I already switched my official residency from Massachusetts to California, but I was also involved in a major newspaper expansion endeavor that I believed, if successful, would be more influential than a US Senate seat. Uh, I mean, that’s how I thought of the situation at the time. Uh, Father was reluctant to accept my declination, but ultimately he understood that I needed to chart my own course. So he turned to Eunice, who saw the vacancy as a great chance to push for the issues she cared about. She ran for the seat instead of me, and I’ve always been grateful to her for that.

– Ted Kennedy, 60 Minutes interview, 1977



Papa Joe got Ben Smith, a harmless lackey of theirs, to hold the post until another member of the Kennedy clan took it during the special election. Kennedy Shriver’s running was due to the process of elimination. Bobby, the second eldest, was to work alongside his brother at the state department, while Ted, the youngest son, had already moved away to California and was not looking back. Joe had only three children left, all daughters – Eunice, Patty and Jean. Jean, the youngest, was an incredibly shy individual – during that point in time, at least. Patty was considered, but Papa Joe deemed her too connected to Hollywood through her then-husband Peter Lawford for Massachusetts voters to take seriously. That left just one and only one Kennedy clan member left – his daughter Eunice.

– Roger Stone’s Nepotism in America: How the Liberal Elite Seek to Control Everything, Vol. II, Stone Stallion E-Publishing, 2013



We will combat poverty, we will return democracy to Cuba, and we will see an American walk on the surface of the Moon before this decade ends, because we have the will, the resources, the intelligent, and the ability to do so!

– Lyndon Johnson, State of the Union address excerpt, 1/11/1962



…Lyndon would work through all hours of the night almost every night, his hand practically attached to the phones and papers that littered his desk. Ladybird often worried the his sleeplessness would ruin his health, but privately, I at the time disagreed; the man seemed to be able to function on just four or five hours of sleep in the way the average man functions on eight or nine hours. His drive for success gave him this energy…

– Clinton J. Hill’s Five Presidents: My Journey with the Secret Service, Simon & Schuster, 2016



War continuing in Cuba had my Jim fretting day and night over our well-being, worried the conflict would escalate into a nuclear war. Then there was this rare solar eclipse event. In February of that year [1962], Jim interpreted a very rare grand conjecture of the planets, an alignment of the heavenly bodies – Saturn, Jupiter, Earth, Mars, Venus, the Moon and the Sun all together in a row – to be a sign of the start of the End of Days. Hindu astrologers on some radio channels predicted a bloodbath would unfold on the 3rd, 4th, or 5th of the month. Hearing this, and seeing no peace in sight for Cuba, Jim put his foot down. “We’re leaving this county before it’s wiped clean off the map,” he was that determined to keep us safe. Then he ventured out to find to where we should move, finally finding the perfect spot during a visit to Brazil. It was a beautiful tract of land soon called Jones’ Oasis, or the Oasis Ranch. But most of us simply called it “the Oasis.” When the conjecture came and went, Jim believed our prayers and his actions had merely bought us time. His philosophy and worldview only grew from there…

– Marceline Jones (1927-2018), 1990 interview



GOV. DON NUTTER DIES IN PLANE CRASH!

Helena, MT – Only one year and 21 days after being sworn in as the 15th governor of Montana, 46-year-old Republican Donald Grant Nutter has died in a plane accident. “Governor Nutter was traveling to a speaking engagement in Cut Bank,” says Nutter’s executive secretary Dennis Gordon, who says he was supposed to be on the flight but had to stay behind to help Nutter’s allies address gridlock in the state senate over the allocation of funding for “pro-Cuba War military recruitment programs.” Gordon continues, “According to what I have been told by our state’s officials, the plane went down in Wolfe Creek Canyon, which is north of Helena.” Nutter and four others were killed in a blizzard sweeping through the area; according to a report from Cut Bank, winds exceeding 100 mph winds tore off one of the plane’s wings, causing it to crash. …Nutter’s short-lived gubernatorial tenure saw him reduce spending and promote Montanan industry sectors. Nutter previously served as a state senator from 1951 to 1959, after serving as a bomber pilot during WWII. He is survived by his wife Maxine and their son John…

– The Powder River County Examiner, Montana newspaper, 1/25/1962



“We will have peace on this planet even if we have to bomb all of Cuba to get it!”

– Gen. Thomas Power, 1/29/1962 press conference



The February 7 Fire was another blow to the program. Scott Carpenter was out of commission until the burns healed. [NASA Director] Webb was in the unwanted position of having to tell Johnson that the program could be delayed even further.

“At least we can take comfort in the fact that the bigger budget lead to us installing the emergency features that saved Carpenter’s life, sir,” Webb said.

Johnson was still displeased. “I spoke with Senator [Clinton B.] Anderson yesterday. He says his committee is going to have to investigate this mess one way or another. So,” he explained, “I want your folks to quell any bad press about the moon program. Downplay the severity of everything, highlight what you learned from the fire, you know, how we know how to avoid something from this when our boys actually are up in space. We can’t look inferior to the Russians, we just can’t.”

– NASA scientist Farouk El-Baz’s Up and Away: How The Cold War Competition Pushed Us into The Stars, MacFarland & Company, 1994



The President was called away to the Pentagon at roughly 5:00 AM on February 11 to be briefed on intelligence’s latest report. The experts had finally confirmed that Soviet officials had discussed with Cuban officials plans to install nuclear weapon silos in Cuba “upon repelling the capitalist swine invaders.” The scheme seemed serious, and needed a response.

“We can confirm that representatives of Fidel Castro did meet with Soviet officials in The Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince. We’re still not sure if Duvalier was aware, but as he still wants to get onto Fidel’s good side [1], I wouldn’t be surprised if we find out he personally set up the meeting,” Secretary of Defense Litzenburg explained.

“How certain are our sources?”

“Very,” Homer assured him.

“So, those commie bastards thought they could try to slip in some nukes into our own hemisphere, and we wouldn’t notice? Bastards.”

“We should proceed quickly but not carelessly here, Lyndon,” Secretary of State Kennedy warned. The New Englander shifted his awkward pose to another to look at the data on the table. Telephone transcripts, photos from CIA men in Port-au-Prince. Kennedy must have secretly loved it; it surely reminded him of Ian Fleming’s famous books that the Secretary often loved to read. “Duvalier still holds a grudge after we suspended aide to them last year,” Kennedy observed.

“He shouldn’t have allied with Fidel,” Lyndon remarked, “At least the Dominican Republic’s President Rafael Bonnelly is on our side; he and the Brits are our only allies in the region, it seems.”

Eventually, somebody in the room wondered aloud how public the situation should become.

“I have friends in the press,” Kennedy offered the President, “If we go public if would show us off as the good guys. Only villains lurk in shadows, Lyndon. We expose them, we could embarrass them into submission.”

“You poke a wildcat, you’re gonna get scratched,” the President disagreed, “Letting this get out could only incense the Soviets into mobilizing troops around Berlin over there, and the revelation could possibly create mass panic over here. We already have people wigging out over rumors of Cuban plans to attack Florida. Announcing to the nation and the world that the Soviets want to move their nukes closer could worsen the problem. Burying the lead wouldn’t help, either.”

“But this sort of behavior cannot go unpunished,” Clark Clifford suggested “We must communicate to the Soviets that such activity will not be tolerated.”

The US Ambassador to the USSR, Llewellyn “Tommy” Thompson, had a novel approach, “Well, how about we just tell that. Stuart [Symington] and I could certainly get Khrushchev on the phone in a few days. Hours if we really push for it.

Lyndon mulled over their options. “If we keep our mouths shut and try anything hostile against them, they’ll know why, but everyone else won’t. On the other hand, the pinkos in Europe would complain about us turning a mountain into a molehill. No, I think this is the sort of thing kept behind closed doors and resolved without the public knowing about any of it until the conflict is resolved. The country can’t afford any more depressing newspaper headlines. Jack,” the President motioned to Kennedy, “work with Tommy and Stu. We’re going to settle this.”

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



I knew shipping Soviet missiles to post-war Cuba was a bad idea [2].

[snip]

Ambassador Valerian Zorin, as honorable and distinguished a man as he is, was uncertain of how to respond to the discovery of our talks with Cuban officials in Haiti. The best he could do was hand the phone over to Nikita, and scurry out the room.

“It is undignified for him to demand my time without asking ahead or calling for a summit. A phone call? The indignity!”

Nikita’s temporal vein always swelled when he was under pressure; during this incident, it was pulsating. I got him to calm down, though, by reminding him of how much of America is refined and informal; “they don’t even cook or even park their cars for food anymore,” reminding him of the rise of drive-ins and fast food in America since the 1950s. He chuckled slightly, and returned to the matter at hand. He accepted the call, but was unsure how to proceed. He considered denying all knowledge of the Missile Plan. The Generals in the room wanted to take the opportunity to mobilize our troops in Europe and conquer Berlin. That was their answer for everything, though, and fortunately, Nikita determined that any military response would be “an admission to something we would publicly deny.”

“We could always just lie. Tell Johnson we’ll abandon the nuclear missiles idea and plant them in the Caribbean when the time comes regardless!” one of the Generals offered.

“Hm, this is an unusual predicament. Never had we had direct private communication with the US President before,” Nikita, now in a much calmer state of mind, interpreted Johnson calling us as sort of a peace offering. “When you want war, you fight. When you want peace, you talk.” Nikita motioned to the translator and he took the call.

Ultimately, Johnson called for an end to those plans, but the Texan was briefly in a corner upon Nikita mentioning the American missiles in Turkey. In the end, Johnson convinced Nikita to promise not to place nuclear devices in Cuba without UN approval, in exchange for the US decommissioning their silos already assembled in Turkey. Nikita would later say “it was an unfeasible idea anyway, to plant silos so close to America’s border without detection.”

Despite the talk diffusing the situation and allowing us all to return attention to our proxy war in Cuba, the Missile Meeting Incident still heavily embarrassed Khrushchev, and lead to many in the politburo slowly distancing themselves from him, even the ones that had more involvement in the actual planning of the Cuban Missile Silo Plan to begin with. They thought he was weak for being near-uncharacteristically diplomatic for once…

– Anastas Mikoyan’s The Path of Struggle: The Memoirs of Anastas Mikoyan (English translation), Sphinx Press, 1988 (written in 1978)



While the incident’s ramifications being felt by both countries in subsequent years, it did not become public knowledge until the December 1988 publication of Mikoyan’s 1978 memoirs. Media reports have since then increased public awareness of it.

– clickopedia.co.usa



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– Colonel Sanders joining Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on a Civil Rights march in Charleston, South Carolina, 2/19/1962



ASTRONAUT JOHN GLENN FIRST AMERICAN TO ORBIT EARTH: Rides In “Friendship 7” Capsule For Nearly 5 Hours

– The Arizona Republic, 2/20/1962



THREE NEGROES KILLED, 15 WOUNDED IN AMERICUS, GA CHURCH BOMBING

The Atlanta Journal, Sunday 2/25/1962



“The attack on Americus, Georgia is one of many immeasurable acts of violence against us and our supporters over the years. But we cannot ever accept these attacks as a way of African-American life. Doing so would not keep alive the memories of these victims. The fallen innocents of cities like Birmingham, Selma, and now Americus. The innocents of America. We can keep their memories alive by never forgetting what they died for.”

“The nonviolent movement for our rights has brought out the best of what this great nation offers, but it has also activated some of the worst elements of our society. Our pursuit for freedom has brought out of the woodwork the very lowest inhabitants of this nation. For as we strive for peace, and show it in our peaceful activities, certain members of our communities wish for the continuation of fear and violence and despair and inequality, and they demonstrate their heinous thoughts and violent racism with acts of violence against our non-violence. They believe that violence can defeat non-violence. But they are wrong.”

“We have been fighting this fight for centuries, but I truly believe that we are winning and that the true destiny of humanity will prevail. We will have peace between the races. We will one day see whites and blacks work alongside one another in total indifference of where one sits or walks or eats; we will one day see our children befriend one another; we will one day see the color of one’s skin be completely obsolete! But we cannot get there, to that glorious day, if we do not continue the cause for which brave men, women and children keep dying over across this great land of ours. Their deaths will not be in vein, for the more they respond to our non-violence with violence, the stronger and more united we become.”

“…The walls of oppression and injustice against their fellow citizens will come crumbling down, and soon. The movement grows stronger every day. Justice and freedom are pounding against the walls of oppression that separate us from our non-Black brethren. This wall must come tumbling down, this wall they erected long ago to deny the black community of the same basic rights as they. It is a wall of hatred and fear and repugnant indignation. But it is an old wall, and it is weakening with every one of our non-violent blows. For we must tear down this wall of inequality, and, as long as we continue on our mission for righteousness, this wall will indeed someday be torn down completely!”

– Excerpts from Ralph Abernathy’s 2/27/1962 “Tear Down This Wall” speech, considered to be one of Abernathy’s best speeches



GALLUP POLL: LBJ POPULARITY UP 10 POINTS SINCE JANUARY 28 SURVEY

– The Chicago Sun-Times, 2/28/1962



US MAKES HUGE GAINS IN WAR IN CUBA

GUANTANAMO, Cuba – The US-DRF Alliance’s toehold on the southernmost coast, where the US’s Guantanamo Bay is, has increased to a strong foothold with the capturing of the inland city of Urbano Noris. However, the fighting is now becoming more intense between the forces of Castro and the US-DRF alliance. With anti-Communist forces being only 10 kilometers from Havana, Castro’s military leaders have begun a scorched-earth policy to any villages and fields that fall into anti-Communist hands. It is uncertain if Fidel Castro himself has ordered this change in policy. If he has not, then we are witnessing dissent and confusion among ranks of Castro’s army. Regardless, DRF forces are continuing to face strong resistance in populated areas, with the battle becoming more or less than a stalemate eerily reminiscent of the stationary front lines of Belgium during the First World War.

In Cardenas, not too far from the battlefields around Havana, I sat down to interview the man leading military operations in northern Cuba, US General Samuel Tankersley “Tank” Williams. With roughly three-fifths of the island under US-DRF control in some way, in what could be described as a stable but delicate situation at best, General Williams, along with military and political analysts, suggest that “if the push against the Communist forces continues as is, this war should be over by this Christmas.”

However, the US-DRF alliance still faces very strong resistance in well over half of the country, which includes land under US-DRF occupation now beginning to see a rise in sabotage and other guerilla tactics. General Williams, though, reminds me of our nation’s “undefeated” record: “We liberated Europe during World War Two; we’re liberating Cuba right now!”

– A Special Report by Tad Szulc, The New York Times, 3/1/1962



US Citizen Approval of US Military Performance in Cuba
Approve: 57%
Disapprove: 38%
Uncertain: 5%

– From a Gallop Poll article, published 3/2/1962



THAT TIME COLONEL SANDERS HAD A CHILDREN’S MANDOLIN BAND

Corbin, KY – Harland “Colonel” Sanders’ famous 11 herbs and spices recipe for Kentucky Fried Chicken is one of the best-kept secrets in the history of American fast food. Figuratively – and, reportedly, quite literally – locked away from public knowledge, the secret recipe has been sought after from eager competitors since Saunders created it in 1940. But far fewer people know of another piece of the life story of Colonel Sanders, something that one wouldn’t expect from someone best known for his roles in the worlds of food and politics. The Colonel’s most unique, most bizarre, and most unusual creations are stored in piles of boxes held inside a KFC storage warehouse in southeastern Kentucky; but unlike the secret herbs and spices, these can see the light of day, albeit only when someone who somehow already knows about them asks to see or buy them.

…The story begins in early March 1962, when Colonel Sanders, at the time supporting civil rights activists calling for landmark legislation,
agreed to fund the pressing of 30,000 vinyl records for a children's Christian mandolin band, who then returned the favor by billing themselves as "The Colonel Sanders Mandolin Band" and dressing up like him—all in the Colonel's famous white suit and black string tie—for live performances. "Around here, he was a pretty famous fella, so everybody was glad to act like they either knew the Colonel or that they had something to do with him," says Frances Hall, the widow of band leader Gene Hall, who founded the band of his sixth and seventh grade students from Finchville Elementary School outside of Shelbyville, Kentucky. It was in that town, 30 miles east of Louisville, that Gene realized the financial benefit to be gained by teaming up with Colonel Sanders, who moved there after opening KFC and later grew the company into an international phenomenon starting in the early 1950s. The group's only record, a 15-track self-titled album that runs under 25 minutes, is still available at the original KFC location in Corbin, Kentucky, having had a treacherous sales history since its pressing and distribution in the early-to-mid 1960s. Throughout the album, the direction often turns into a hilarious representation of southern cliché: the band of young Christian school kids plays songs from "Amazing Grace" to "America, The Beautiful" while vocalist David Arnholter occasionally drops in to rain praise to Jesus Christ. The major difference, which created public draw at the time, was the fried chicken funding behind the record…

It is estimated that Colonel Sanders spent somewhere around $70,000 on pressing the 30,000 copies of the album. Braitman's estimation includes pressing the album on 150-gram vinyl, standard plating, basic labeling, plain inner sleeves, assembly costs and shrink-wrapping. Braitman says the estimate doesn't include tax or shipping.

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Above: a close up (left) of the front cover of the record (right)

But Sanders poured much more than just that into the band. In addition to purchasing their instruments and paying for the recording, he also bought the band a large white passenger van, on which the kids aptly painted THE COLONEL'S MANDOLIN BAND INC., and they toured in it.

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Above: the band’s van

Hall says that, despite the former Governor being in high demand in business, entrepreneurial, and political circles, Colonel Sanders still found the time to take the entire band and everyone traveling with them out to KFC after each show, like a little league team pizza party on a summer afternoon. At the band's live church performances, Sanders would always be sure to leave a "big donation" for the church, Hall remembers. Hall laughs when she thinks about it all now: "That's why all the churches were inviting the group of kids to play and bring The Colonel with them."

In 2015, KFC celebrated its 75th anniversary with a nod to the Colonel Sanders Mandolin Band in a commercial featuring actors dressed up as the members of the band as they were depicted on the album's front cover, including comedian Darrell Hammond playing The Colonel. A KFC representative told usarightnow.co.usa the day after its first airing that the point of the commercial was to bring the company's brand back to its original roots, which "starts and ends with Colonel Harland Sanders." James Wimberley, a Los Angeles musician who was recruited to perform as one of the band members in the ad, points out that bluegrass music originated in Kentucky, making all this even more fitting. "One of the lines in the commercial is when Colonel Sanders says that, 'Mandolin music is America's favorite music,'" Wimberley remembers. But outside the 2015 ad—a deep reference likely missed by the majority of KFC's customers—The Colonel Sanders Mandolin Band album's memory remains largely in photos and poorly kept vinyl records.

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Above: both sides of one of the vinyl records

The legacy it earned among locals for simply being involved with Colonel Sanders, however, has been something of a unique badge of honor. Gordon Parker, a Las Vegas realtor who grew up in Shelbyville, Kentucky at the same time the mandolin band was playing around town, owns one of the mandolins Sanders originally bought for the children and still calls it one of his "most prized possessions" to this day. Parker often saw the band perform live between the time he was nine and 10 years old. "It was just great," Parker, 68, says, sighing in a wave of nostalgia. "How many mandolin bands have you heard of in your life?" That odd curiosity, which got him so interested in the mandolin band as a child, echoes the same interest that draws most customers at the original KFC in Corbin to the decision to buy the record and check it out themselves. Whether it's a vinyl copy of the Colonel Sanders Mandolin Band or one of the actual instruments used to record it, those who own a piece of it all speak with pride for owning a piece of history tied to one of Kentucky's most legendary cultural figures. "The only reason I have the mandolin is because [the saleswoman] told me it came from Colonel Sanders Mandolin Band," Parker admits. "I couldn't even tell you what I paid for it. I didn't care what it cost. I bought it for the story."

– usarightnow.co.usa, 2017 [3]



1962 had began with a hasty double-push to pass the Civil Rights Bill and make significant gains in the war in Cuba. The real hurdle in getting the bill passed was actually not the final senate vote, though. Even if all 22 senators from the former confederate states voted against it, that would still be 29 votes short of the senate rejecting the bill (a simple majority of 51 out of 100). The southern Democrats knew this, and instead sought to kill the bill on the senate floor before it could be moved to a vote. Thanks to the expertise of majority leader Mike Mansfield, the bill bypassed the Judiciary Committee headed by bill opponent Eastland and was instead brought directly to the senate floor for debate.

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



SENATOR RUSSELL LEADS FILIBUSTER AGAINST “BILL TO INTERMINGLE RACES”

The Times-Picayune, Louisiana newspaper, 3/5/1962



March 6: Virginia’s Senator Robertson fails to attend a planned meeting with President Johnson, later explaining by phone “my state needs me during this crisis.” Robertson is referring to what would become known as the Ash Wednesday Storm of ’62, a severe snow storm of fierce wind gusts and mountains of snow- and ice- fall then battering the Mid-Atlantic that would grow to become one of the most powerful storms to ever hit the region. The next day, US Senator Prescott Bush cancels a March 8 meeting with the President for the same reason.

– lbjlibrary.libguides.co.usa/lbjschedule/1962



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– One of many waves on the eastern seaboard during the Ash Wednesday Storm of ’62, Coastal Review, on-net archives



JOHNSON DECLARES NJ, VA “DISASTER AREAS,” SENDS NATIONAL GUARD TO KEEP ORDER, REBUILD

– The Star-Ledger, 3/10/1962



FILIBUSTERS CONTINUE ON THE HILL

Washington, DC – In the US Senate, Senator Absalom Robertson (D-VA) has just sat down from exhaustion. Hoarse and weak-kneed, he has finally finished filibustering on the floor of the US Senate chamber for 18 hours and 21 minutes, making it one of the longest filibusters ever performed. But Robertson is just one of many Senators vocally protesting the Civil Rights Bill. The next person to filibuster, Strom Thurmond (D-SC) shook Robertson’s hand to congratulate him for his efforts.

Six months ago today, the Civil Rights Bill passed through the House of Representatives. Several US Senators, nearly all Southern Democrats and led by Senator Richard Russell (D-GA), are attempting to block its passing by any means necessary. The most publicly noticeable attempt at this has been going on for three months – filibustering, the act of giving a speech or debate in order to delay or prevent a vote. It is always a spectacular event for journalists, eager for a catchy memorable quote or for a new record to break…

– correspondent Robert C. Maynard, The Washington Post, special report, 3/12/1962



March 13: Johnson rejects Senators Dirksen and Mansfield’s offer of a “slightly weaker” edition of the civil rights bill for passage, believing he would “soon” obtain the 67 “yea” votes needed to end the Senate filibusters, a move known as enacting “cloture”...

– lbjlibrary.libguides.co.usa/lbjschedule/1962



LBJ TO MEET WITH SENATE LEADERS AHEAD OF VOTE ON CIVIL RIGHTS BILL

The Greenville News, 3/16/1962



I believe I played a role in the Civil Rights Bill. During that time, my primary focus in life was being there for my husband and four children. But I worried for their future and their safety every single day. So every time I would meet with Thurmond, I would try my best to convince him of the err [sic] of his ways. The talks would be short and private, often far away from where anyone could spy through a window or listen through a wall. And in those secure locations I had my biological father’s ear and undivided attention. He at first would change the subject whenever I brought up racism, but as 1961 turned into 1962, I found myself feeling the need to increase the visits. He had to know of the ramifications of his actions. For example, on one visit, I showed him photographs of his grandchildren. He appreciated that.

On the 18th, I met with my Father Senator just hours after he had met with President Johnson. I told him how I worried for my children, about how his grandchildren would continue to be unhappy and without hope if things did not get better. I really opened up to him in a way that led to him finally opening up to me just a little more than usual.

Strom Thurmond was not as terrible as he presented himself to be. I knew that more than ever when I left that day. I saw this look of deep contemplation on his face, and I returned home to my children with a little piece of hope that day.

– Essie Mae Williams’s Dear Senator: A Memoir by the Black Daughter of Strom Thurmond, 1995



Johnson worried that the bill would not pass before the senate’s spring recess, set to begin in April. He faced fierce opposition from southern politicians, who saw him as a “traitor to the Democrats” (Thurmond) and a “Negro-loving weakling and a lapdog for King and Evers” (Eastland) and attempted to stall on voting for the bill via the filibuster until the end of the senate’s January-April session. Attorney General Ramsey Clark later explained, “Lyndon needed to assert himself, to make clear to all of them that he was a leader to respect and follow, and that he meant business when it came to the Civil Rights bill.”

After weeks of only glacial progress, Johnson threatened to use executive action to extend the Senate’s session indefinitely. This would be perfectly legal because Article II, Section 3 of the United States Constitution, reads the President “may, on extraordinary occasions, convene both houses, or either of them” for an indefinite period of time. Johnson made it clear to Eastland on March 18 that if the Dixiecrats continued to sit on the bill despite his earlier promises to back them in future legislation work, he would call the Senate into extraordinary session and not end the session until the bill passed. In his own words to a private group of supporters later that day, “we are addressing this imperative national issue that can no longer be ignored. I will not let the people elected to serve the states of this union prolong the liberation of their own constituents!”

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



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– The President giving “The Johnson Treatment” to Senator Russell Long (D-LA), White House archives, 3/19/1962



19 March 1962: On this day in history, Columbia Records releases “Bob Dylan,” which is Bob Dylan’s debut studio album; while the album did not receive much attention upon its initial release – largely due to it consisting primarily of folk standards, and due to Dylan only just starting to develop name recognition – it achieved popularity a few short years later, especially as Dylan’s second album, “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,” which was released in 1963, became a surprise hit and quickly propelled Dylan to the national spotlight and to international fame.

– onthisday.co.uk



“After much consideration, I have decided to vote ‘yea’ on invoking cloture on the Civil Right Bill, and I encourage my fellow Senators to do the same. This bill, I believe, will benefit all Americans, both black and white.”

– US Senator Russell Long, Senate Majority Whip since 1961, WBRZ-TV, 3/20/1962



“I vote in favor of cloture not to suppress Southern society with this bill, but to preserve it... I will still fight for all businessmen to maintain the dignity of their establishments and livelihoods, but I will also advocate for the treatment of our fellow human beings with honor and with the sense of dignity becoming of a Southerner...”

– US Senator Ralph Yarborough, US Senate floor, 3/21/1962



SENATE VOTES FOR CLOTURE, WILL VOTE ON CIVIL RIGHTS BILL ON THE 29TH

…curiously, Thurmond abstained from the vote without a public explanation...

– The Washington Post, 3/22/1962



Ladybird was invaluably instrumental in winning over politicians too stubborn to talk to Lyndon, but knew better than to appear “ungentlemanly” when the First Lady asks to meet with you. Her “sweet demeanor and charm” threw politicos off when discussing politics with her, as their male ego blinded them from the possibility that a woman can be exception and astute in a male-dominated workplace – despite the presence of Senator Margaret Chase Smith! …many on the hill were surprised by Ladybird’s knowledge of the issues and the skills of her tongue with words. …Senators Francis Case, Alexander Wiley, and Prescott Bush were all unsure of the bill for one reason of another, but ultimately came to support it after meeting with the First Lady. …The fact that Ladybird and Lyndon made one powerful team should be celebrated. The fact that so few know of how much power she wielded demonstrates the bias spat out by our male-dominant media outlets…

– feminist activist extremist Diana Oughton’s Behind Every Powerful Man, Righteous Publications, 1983



People of America, your voices need to be heard now more than ever! We cannot stand for the desecration of America’s traditions and regional ways of life. The time is now! It cannot wait! We cannot let this bill pass. Call your Senator, meet with leaders, and hold rallies! Do whatever you must do to protect America from the conspiratorial method of constricting its people to the will of the wrongful and totalitarian political elite! Do it now!

– activist Robert J. Morris of Texas at an anti-Civil Rights Bill rally in Winnsboro, South Carolina, 3/25/1962



“AT LONG LAST!” CIVIL RIGHTS BILL PASSES SENATE 77-23; LBJ Set to Sign Act Into Law In April; Senate Prepares For Easter Break

– The New York Times, Thursday 3/29/1962



ALL VOTES
Alabama

J. Lister Hill (D) – Nay
John J. Sparkman (D) – Nay
Alaska
Bob Bartlett (D) – Yea
Ernest Gruening (D) – Yea
Arizona
Barry Goldwater (R) – Nay
Carl Hayden (D) – Yea
Arkansas
John Little McClellan (D) – Nay
J. William Fulbright (D) – Nay
California
Clair Engle (D) – Yea
Thomas H. Kuchel (R) – Yea
Colorado
Gordon L. Alcott (R) – Yea
John A. Carroll (D) – Yea
Connecticut
Thomas J. Dodd (D) – Yea
Prescott Bush (R) – Yea
Delaware
John J. Williams (R) – Yea
J. Caleb Boggs (R) – Yea
Florida
Spessard Holland (D) – Nay
George Smathers (D) – Nay
Georgia
Richard Russell Jr. (D) – Nay
Herman Talmadge (D) – Nay
Hawaii
Hiram Fong (R) – Yea
Oren E. Long (D) – Yea
Idaho
Henry Dworshak (R) – Yea
Frank Church (D) – Yea
Illinois
Paul Douglas (D) – Yea
Everett Dirksen (R) – Yea
Indiana
Vance Hartke (D) – Yea
Homer E. Capehart (R) – Yea
Iowa
Jack Miller (R) – Yea
Bourke Hickenlooper (R) – Nay
Kansas
James B. Pearson (R) – Yea
Frank Carlson (R) – Yea
Kentucky
John Sherman Cooper (R) – Yea
Thurston Morton (R) – Yea
Louisiana
Allen Ellender (D) – Nay
Russell Long (D) – Nay
Maine
Ed Muskie (D) – Yea
Margaret Chase Smith (R) – Yea
Maryland
James Glenn Beall (R) – Yea
John M. Butler (R) – Yea
Massachusetts
Benjamin A. Smith II (D) – Yea
Leverett Saltonstall (R) – Yea
Michigan
Philip Hart (D) – Yea
Patrick McNamara (D) – Yea
Minnesota
Roy Weir (DFL) – Yea
Gene McCarthy (DFL) – Yea
Mississippi
John Stennis (D) – Nay
James Eastland (D) – Nay
Missouri
Edward V. Long (D) – Yea
Albert S. J. Carnahan (D) – Yea
Montana
Michael Mansfield (D) – Yea
Lee Metcalf (D) – Yea
Nebraska
Roman Hruska (R) – Yea
Carl Curtis (R) – Yea
Nevada
Howard W. Cannon (D) – Yea
Alan Bible (D) – Yea
New Hampshire
Maurice J. Murphy Jr. (R) – Yea
Norris Cotton (R) – Nay
New Jersey
Clifford P. Case (R) – Yea
Harrison A. Williams Jr. (D) – Yea
New Mexico
Dennis Wyatt Chávez (D) – Yea
Clinton Presba Anderson (D) – Yea
New York
Kenneth Keating (R) – Yea
Jacob K. Javits (R) – Yea
North Carolina
B. Everett Jordan (D) – Nay
Sam Ervin (D) – Nay
North Dakota
Quentin N. Burdick (D) – Yea
Milton Young (R) – Yea
Ohio
Stephen Young (D) – Yea
Frank Lausche (D) – Yea
Oklahoma
Robert S. Kerr (D) – Yea
Mike Monroney (D) – Yea
Oregon
Maurine Brown Neuberger (D) – Yea
Wayne Morse (D) – Yea
Pennsylvania
Hugh Scott (R) – Yea
Joseph S. Clark Jr. (D) – Yea
Rhode Island
John Pastore (D) – Yea
Claiborne Pell (D) – Yea
South Carolina
Strom Thurmond (D) – Nay
Olin D. Johnston (D) – Nay
South Dakota
Karl Mundt (R) – Yea
Francis Case (R) – Yea
Tennessee
C. Estes Kefauver (D) – Yea
Albert A. Gore Sr. (D) – Yea
Texas
Ralph Yarborough (D) – Yea
John Tower (R) – Nay
Utah
Frank Moss (D) – Yea
Wallace Bennett (R) – Yea
Vermont
Winston Prouty (R) – Yea
George Aiken (R) – Yea
Virginia
Harry Byrd (D) – Nay
Absalom Robertson (D) – Nay
Washington
Scoop Jackson (D) – Yea
Warren Magnuson (D) – Yea
West Virginia
Jennings Randolph (D) – Yea
Robert Byrd (D) – Nay
Wisconsin
William Proxmire (D) – Yea
Alexander Wiley (R) – Yea
Wyoming
Gale McGee (D) – Yea
John J. Hickey (D) – Yea
DofTMdA.png

[ imgur.com/DofTMdA.png ]
Map Key:
Light shade – both Senators voted Yea
Medium shade – one Senator voted Yea, the other Nay
Dark shade – both Senators voted Nay
Red – both Senators were Republicans
Green – one Senator was a Republican, the other a Democrat
Blue – both Senators were Democrats

– govtracks.co.usa/87thcongress/votes/3/29/1962 [4]



JOHNSON OFFICIALLY SIGNS CIVIL RIGHTS ACT INTO LAW: Ends Segregation Across The U.S.A.

Washington, D.C. – in a televised event, President Johnson signed into law. …The law comes almost two years after the Civil Rights Act of 1960 (the establishing of federal inspections of voting polls), which Johnson was also implemental in getting passed. …Rev. King announced “Today, April 4, is a great day for America, a day of great celebration and merriment that will be celebrated in this nation for years to come. But this is not the end of the road to harmony. After freedom is achieved, it must be maintained…” …Johnson proclaimed, “Now begins the time when the law starts to become a custom.” …in attendance at the ceremony, and standing beside Johnson when the President officially signed the bill into law, were King, Abernathy, activist Medgar Evers, 94-year-old writer-activist W. E. B. DuBois (smiling widely), retired federal judge J. Waties Waring, activist and “grandmother” of the Civil Rights movement Septima Clark, musician and activist Paul Robeson, plus many more...

– The Baltimore Afro-American, 4/4/1962



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[ imgur.com/9y3iU7U.png ]
– clickopedia.co.usa



Hubert [Humphrey], Mike Mansfield, and Russell Long were instrumental in getting naysayers still on the fence to change their minds in exchange for supporting their own pieces of legislation later on. One of America’s most pivotal and landmark pieces of legislation finally passed in the end thanks to them. Oh, of course there was outrage among some Southerners, but their jeers were drowned out by the cheering of African-Americans all across the country rejoicing. …I remember, Senators Gore and Kefauver complained to Lyndon about the amount of hate mail they received in the days that followed; they worried they would their respective lose re-election bid. I told Gore, though, that I'd make his tongue-biting worth it; when it came time for legislation of his own, I'd back it up 100%. …On the night of the formal signing, though, to my surprise, Khrushchev wired Lyndon a passive-aggressive sort of message congratulating him on “my leadership skills in finally ending the US’s Civil War.” His words, not mine. >chuckle<

– Mildred Stegall (1908-2014, 105), longtime personal aide to Lyndon Johnson, 1978 interview



“It’s good to see the folks on Capitol Hill are doing their job of making sure every citizen can exercise their God-given freedoms and Constitution-given rights.”

– Colonel Sanders to associate, 4/5/1962



THURMOND JUMPS SHIP, WILL JOIN THE G.O.P.!

The Sun News, South Carolina daily newspaper, 4/6/1962



Washington is ignoring the rise in Cuban refugees invading Florida’s coasts. Boatloads of people fleeing the island nation arrive almost every day, taking up space, filling up shelters, and even taking low-income jobs from locals. It is imperative that the Johnson administration return focus to securing Cuba so these people can return to their native Cuban houses and jobs.

– Florida Governor C. Farris Bryant’s open letter to Washington D.C., 4/7/1962



NEW KFC ADS, COMMERCIALS BLEND COUNTRY TRADITION WITH CONSUMER CONVENIENCE

…the chicken-selling franchise continues to grow, and if these commercials are any indication, the company execs have their licked fingers right on the pulse of America’s fast-food wants and needs.

Life magazine, 4/10/1962



April 15: At 7:00 AM local time, Johnson and Secretary of State Jack Kennedy touch down in Germany. At 10:00, the two meet with West German President Heinrich Lubke to express the US’s concern over the Berlin Wall. Lubke promises to give Johnson “full support if any crisis should ever arise.”

– lbjlibrary.libguides.co.usa/lbjschedule/1962



New Military Hospital Offers Latest In Medicine, Treatment

Pearl Harbor, HA – The Chester Nimitz Medical Center opened its doors today in a ceremony where US Navy Secretary John Connally took time out from his busy schedule overseeing the Navy’s efforts concerning Cuba to cut the ribbon… The hospital was commission and began construction roughly 11 months ago, after the US Department of Veterans Affairs, under President Johnson, pushed for the expansion of medical services available to US military personnel in Oahu… The hospital is considered “state-of-the-art,” featuring the latest techniques, medicines, and methods for assisting wounded veterans…

– The Honolulu Star-Advertiser, 4/21/1962



(vid: jNrKNMfzok4)
– Colonel Sanders showing Tennessee Ernie Ford and Minnie Pearl how to cook KFC chicken, ourvids.co.usa, 4/22/1962



“I WON’T SERVE YOU!”: Infamous GA Diner Owner In Even Hotter Water Over Civil Rights Rejection

...Lester Maddox is being called "the anti-Colonel" for his business ethics being the polar opposite of another restaurant-owning politician, the anti-segregation founder of the fast food chain Kentucky Fried Chicken and founder Governor of Kentucky, Harland "Colonel" Sanders...

– The New York Post, 4/26/1962



youtube: watch?v=7m3JCPrQ3zs
[ watch?v=m3JCPrQ3zs ]
– video compilation of newsreels concerning the incident



Father would gladly fight any businessman, politician, or restauranteur that opposed racial fairness, once explaining “The only customer you should ever kick out is the kind that can’t pay for the meal or is causing trouble. Now if somebody’s spoutin’ communist propaganda or cussing’ up a storm too loudly, then sure, exercise your right to refuse service. But if they just want to give you their money for your services, any reason to not serve them is going to be a really stupid reason.” When one such businessman, a man in Georgia named Lester Maddox, tried to defy the 1962 Civil Rights Act, Sanders denounced him: “That fella has no business acumen if he’s spending his time fightin’ people instead of feedin’ people.”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



It is odd how similar the Colonel and Maddox were. Both were restaurateurs whom entered politics later in life. Both were known for their chicken, with the Colonel’s being pressure-fried and Maddox’s being skillet-fried. Both were religious and avoided drinking and smoking. And yet, they were at opposite sides of the issue of desegregation. Maddox believed his right to private property control superseded the rights of strangers, sought to maintain his segregationist practices through the courts and simple intimidation of any Black inquisitors of his restaurant. …The conflict dissipated when Maddox, presenting himself as a martyr of sorts, closed the Pickwick restaurant (closing it officially the next year due to court fines), saying “I’d rather give it all up then let other people tell me how to run it.” Maddox then switched careers from the restaurant business to politics, throwing himself full-time into the lieutenant governor’s race into which he had already entered…

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



In public, Kroc was all smiles – especially on May 2, when he flew to Illinois to attend the grand opening of McDonald’s 200th outlet. Behind closed doors, though, the man was still agitated over the contractual obligations he’d made to the McDonald Brothers, and over how they had refused to transfer to him the real estate and rights to the original San Bernardino location. The brothers had told Kroc they were giving the operation, property and all, to the founding employees. [5] Ultimately, his anger lead him to opening another McDonald’s location very close to the original McDonald’s restaurant. Kroc would later gloat in an informal radio interview, “The two had to rename the original spot "The Big M" because they had overlooked what you would think would be one of the most important things to negotiate for, a vital part of the entire franchise when it came brand recognition and marketing – the name ‘McDonald.’ It was their own last name, yet they failed to remember to retain rights to it! It’s ridiculous; it’s like if Colonel Sanders was not allowed to use his own face on something he cooks! But…therein lies a lesson – never overlook anything.”

Chef Wars: The Start of an American Pop Culture Craze, 2021



HILL LOSES TO CROMMELIN IN SENATE PRIMARY UPSET

Birmingham, AL – The tally of last night’s election for one of Alabama’s US Senate seats was finalized earlier today: Crommelin has won with just over 50% of the vote, avoiding a runoff; Hill came in second place with roughly 44%; a third candidate on the ballot, a one Donald G. Hallmark, received under 6%. Crommelin, a Rear Admiral who served in the Navy for 30 years and has unsuccessfully run for public office several times since 1950, claimed in April that the incumbent Senator, Lister Hill “failed to protect our state from the Yankee scourge of forced integration,” referring to the passing of the Civil Rights Act two months ago. Crommelin’s polling numbers had been steadily rising since then, but was still expect to come in second place; a Gallup poll published just two days ago projected Hill to win by no less than a 5% margin.

The Birmingham News, 5/2/1962



Alabama US Senate Primaries, 5/1/1962:
Democratic Primary Results (15.10% Total Population):
John G. Crommelin – 248,470 (50.37%)
J. Lister Hill – 215,617 (43.71%)
Donald G. Hallmark – 29,203 (5.92%)
Total votes cast: 493,290

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



SENATOR HILL, OUSTED IN DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY, TO RUN FOR SEAT AS AN INDEPENDENT

The Birmingham News, 5/3/1962



THEODORE H. WHITE WINS PULITZER PRIZE FOR 1961 BOOK “MAKING OF THE PRESIDENT 1960”

– The New York Times, side article, 5/8/1962



A KENTUCKY COLONEL ADVISES AGING TO WORK AT STAYING YOUNG

Washington, DC – The nation's older citizens got a bit of advice today from a man who parlayed his first $105 Social Security check into a multi‐million dollar fortune.

Said Col. Harland Sanders, the former Governor of Kentucky and the Kentucky Fried Chicken king: “For God's sake, don't think about retiring. There are so many things to do.” Wearing a spotless white suit and black string tie, the dapper 71‐year‐old shared his formula for after‐65 success with a House subcommittee that is studying the problems of the aging.

Among his suggestions were the following:

1 – One should not plan his retirement in the spirit of being deprived of something, but in the spirit of having something added to his life.

2 – “Don't be against things so much as for things.”

3 – Even if one can afford it, “don't rely on loafing. Life doesn't have to be easy to be wonderful.”

4 – Get up every morning wanting to do something.

5 – Seek variety, develop original ideas, go with your whole heart, and don't let the minutes “rust away.”

6 – Try to keep healthy (Sanders does not smoke or drink liquor, and he said he takes “great pride” in “always” eating nourishing, well‐balanced meals.)

“In these 70‐odd years of mine,” The Colonel said, “I've had my share of ups and downs, up and downs. But every time you go down, get up again. You'll be stronger than ever.”

By the time he had reached 61, Colonel Sanders said, he had been a farmhand, a railroad worker, an insurance salesman, a Chamber of Commerce executive and a service station operator. He had studied law by correspondence course and he had run a restaurant (fried chicken a specialty).

Then, after a series of business reverses in his 40s and 50s, including his restaurant being destroyed in a fire in 1939, he took his first $105 social security check and began touring the country, sleeping in the back seat of his car, as he peddled his fried chicken franchises.

His hundreds of fried chicken franchises – which were overseen by his children (a son and two daughters) during his time as governor (1955 to 1959) – have made him a millionaire, and he says he still works daily at the company. His earnings last year, he said, were “way over $2,000,000, more money than I even know what to do with.”

In addition, he said, he receives a monthly Social Security check of $255. “That's something I don't understand about Social Security,” he told the subcommittee. “I don't need it, yet I get that check every month. Maybe I shouldn't take it, but, anyhow, I give it to charity.

A self‐styled political conservative who was an avid backer of Vice President Richard Nixon during his run for President in 1960, Colonel Sanders gazed fondly at the 24-year-old legislative assistant and recent Arizona State University graduate Barry Goldwater Jr., the son of Republican US Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona.

“You know,” The Colonel said. “I just love your daddy.”

And The Colonel chuckled sympathetically, along with the rest of the audience, when US Representative Edith Green, a Democrat from Portland, Oregon, told about her husband. “He’s getting on in years right alongside me, but we’ve always been spry and determined,” Mrs. Green said. “Unfortunately, he broke his leg a little while ago. He was dancing at the top of some stairs at a friend’s relative’s bar mitzvah, and I guess you can say his feet stopped dancing by the time he reached the bottom of those stairs.”

The New York Times, Monday 5/14/1962 [6]




FIRST AMERICAN TO ORBIT EARTH RETURNS SAFELY

…John Glenn recovered from injuries sustained in a fire in August last year... After months of delays from related investigations into the worksite fires in August 1961 and February 1962, NASA finally sent Glenn into orbit, where in roughly five hours he circled the globe three times in the Friendship 7 space capsule….

The Guardian, 24/5/1962



…and in North Carolina, incumbent Democratic US Senator Sam Irvin won re-nomination over Ralph James Scott, the three-term US Representative from the state’s fifth congressional district. Scott sought to primary Irvin with a more moderate campaign that called for the state to, quote “move on already,” end quote, from the segregation issue. Congressman Scott won 42% in the Democratic primary, which is considered to be a strong showing for this race. This primary result is already fueling speculation in political circles that Irvin is vulnerable and could actually be defeated by a Republican in November. Speaking of which, Senator Irvin’s G.O.P. opponent will be Claude Greene, whom won his party’s nomination...

– The Huntley-Brinkley Report, 5/26/1962 TV broadcast



IS IT CHICKEN OR BEEF FOR AMERICA?: A Question Two Companies Seem To Want To Know…

...Wherever one shows up, the other quickly sets up shop nearby. So seems to be the latest trend between the fast-food giants Kentucky Fried Chicken and McDonald’s. …Reports indicate that the two companies are heavily competing for not just customers, but for franchisees as well. Both companies are offering freedoms in management, stock options, and other benefits to secure location after location…

– Business Weekly, 5/29/1962



DlOfS3a.png

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Time Magazine, 6/2/1962 Issue



NIXON LOSES BID FOR GOVERNOR!: In Stunning Upset, Former VP Loses Primary To Businessman Joe Shell

…Shell, a military pilot and captain of the winning team of the 1939 Rose Bowl, had served as a state assemblyman from 1953 to earlier this year. Despite being conservative ideologically, Shell’s campaign focused on issues such as clean running water and education – topics that seemingly won over moderate and independent voters amid Nixon’s moderate but largely theme-less campaign.
"I think Dick is just lining up a run for President in '64," said one Shell supporter, "I think the people of California want a full-time Governor." Shell had also spent several weeks campaigning heavily and energetically across the Golden State, visiting lumber communities in the North and farmers in the South. Nixon, meanwhile, made comparatively less stump speeches and held largely private fundraisers in the months leading up to the primary.
It also should be noted that a little-known third candidate on the ballot, a self-declared “Christian militia enthusiast” conservative named William Gale, received a number of votes larger than the margin by which Nixon lost.

– The Sacramento Bee, 6/5/1962



California Governor Primaries, 6/5/1962:
Republican Primary Results (12.5% Total Population):
Joseph C. Shell – 970,756 (49.42%)
Richard Nixon – 957,989 (48.77%)
William Gale – 31,036 (1.58%)
Pat Brown (write-in) – 4,517 (0.23%)
Total votes cast: 1,964,298

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



I considered it an honor to be of Operation Condor, the mission to take out Fidel Castro.

The government had been trying to murder this man since he rose to power, but when Havana was captured, he and his close circle of followers spirited themselves away into the night. Intelligence was certain they had fled to the westernmost part of the island, or possibly the Island de la Juventud, which was then known as the Isle of Pines. Finally our spy plans had located his position in a tiny hideaway in the Vinales Valley of the Guaniguanico mountain range. In the present day, it’s a UNESCO World Heritage site for its unique and steep terrain, covered with sharp cliffs, beautiful waterfalls, and many caves. But back then, it was a war zone. Tanks and anti-aircraft missiles doted the landscape. The enemy used those waterfalls and hid out in those caves. It was by no means a tourist destination.

I had the easy part of the mission – I, with thirteen other men, would swoop in and carpet-bomb the eastern part of the valley as a diversion. American soldiers on the ground would then attack the Castro brother’s headquarters in the western part of the valley during the chaos. There was more detail to the plan, of course, but I did not need to know that information, so I was never told it. All I had to do to serve my country was, essentially, to swoop in, blow some stuff up, and leave.

The target was acquired, and I lit it up like a firecracker.

That should have been it for me. I was supposed to simply return to base and await my next assignment. But we did not expect their anti-aircraft artillery to have such distance accuracy. I was turning west to leave the valley when part of my Skyhawk’s left wing was ripped off by an anti-aircraft missile. I went into a nearly-vertical inverted spin, heading right for a small, swampy lake in the middle of the jungles outside of the city of La Palma, a Communist stronghold.

I had been in crashes before, but it was miraculous – but not a miracle – surviving that one. Ejecting awkwardly out of the cockpit shattered my arm and leg, propelled my dog tags off my person, and slammed my around like I was a paper doll. It was the fall into the lake that almost drowned me.

Drowning is an odd sensation. You are surrounded by water and your lungs are filled with it, yet you feel like you’re on fire. Your chest burns with pain and a small fraction of you is thankful for the relief that comes from beginning to pass out.

I don’t know what happens after that; that is when they pulled me out. A small group of Communist reconnaissance troops that had been nearby. As they pulled me to shore, one of them leaned in and whispered something to me. Only later I would learn the meaning of what he’d said: “Welcome to your doom.”

The act itself of surviving the crash was miraculous, but I would soon learn how far removed I was from any miracles.

– Admiral John McCain’s Boldly Into Hell: A Firsthand Account of Four Decades of American Warfare, Random House, 1996



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– A KFC outlet near Columbus, Ohio, c. June 1962



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] According to Source 18 on his wiki article, Duvalier tried to win over Castro to stop anti-Duvalier Haitians from fleeing to Cuba. ITTL, with Castro busy fighting back American forces, he’s more willing to ultimately accept supplies from Duvalier’s government.
[2] Source 34 on his wiki article supports this as his opinion during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
[3] Everything here (except for the italicized passages) was pulled from this 2017 article: https://www.vice.com/en/article/599...s-30000-copies-of-a-childrens-mandolin-record
[4] OTL source: https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/88-1964/s409.
[5] Italicized passage taken directly from Kroc's wiki article.
[6] Everything here (except for the italicized passages) was pulled from this OTL 1971 article revealing that The Colonel supported George Wallace in 1968 and that he apparently was a big fan of Barry Goldwater, even after his landslide 1964 loss, suggesting that The Colonel may have had conservative and populist political views! (note to self: work more of that into the upcoming chapters): https://www.nytimes.com/1971/11/04/...l-advises-aging-to-work-at-staying-young.html



NOTE: Due to an unexpectedly busy two weeks ahead of me, I'm posting this a day or two early and probably will not be able to post the next chapter until the 17th. A thousand pardons for this TL's glacial pace; hopefully, I'll be back to posting at least one chapter every week very soon. Thank you all very much for your patience, and I hope y'all enjoy reading this!

Why did Al Gore Sr. vote for the civil rights act ITTL?
Edit: Also how did Joe Snell achieve a successful primary?
I went back and added to these bits; Gore was promised backing in future legislation endeavors and Shell ran a more energetic campaign. Hope this helps!

Unknown said:
You remember when the Papa John's CEO, John Schnatter, was forced to step down from his job and also resigned from the University of Louisville's board of directors after he used the N-word during a conference call, and it became a big black eye for Papa John's (to the point that the University of Louisville removed the company's name from its football stadium, while Major League Baseball removed its food from their stadiums)?

Well, guess who he was referring to when he used the N-word (as in, someone who was allowed to use the N-word and get away with it)?

Colonel Sanders, of all people.

Yeah, that destroyed any goodwill he still had left in Kentucky and pissed off the Sanders family (which is really like saying the Titanic sprung a small leak)…

I'm glad for this TL, BTW, because we're getting to know more about Mr. Sanders and the world he lived in...

Waiting for more...
Click to expand...
Actually, based on my research (example: https://www.courier-journal.com/story/news/2018/07/17/colonel-sanders-family-defends-him/788795002/ ) Schnatter's comment was a false claim, in that the Colonel was not a racist (as pointed out in the sources in earlier chapters). Old stereotypes die hard, I guess.

Ogrebear said:
Is it possible the Olly’s Trolly chain could become a real contender against McD’s ITTL?

Seems a shame they got pushed out from the reviews of the food.
Very interesting article! With Dave Thomas, creator of Wendy's, working for KFC like IOTL, I could see Ollie showing up and butting heads ITTL at some point. Great find!

Unknown said:
BTW, @gap80, does this crash still occur ITTL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_France_Flight_007?

Waiting for your next update in the next few days...
Because of the Cuba War, paranoid suspicion of Cuban sabotage (the war started, partially, when a plane was shot down, after all) led to the landing gear on that plane being better inspected, and that day at that airport went on without incident (I really should mention that in some chapter, shouldn't I? (I'll make a note of it))!

:)

Wouldn't the plane have still crashed then? It was most likely an elevator motor failure that caused it so landing gear would have nothing to do with that.
EDIT: I'll make that a "better elevator motor inspection" thing - in fact, the whole plane could possibly be inspected better due to the state's relatively close proximity to Cuba. Or, you know, butterflies from TTL's POD of 1932 (see Chapter 1) could simply "butterfly" the crash out of existence. Butterflies can do that, you know!
 
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Post 7
Post 7: Chapter 15



Chapter 15: June 1962 – December 1962



“This used to be a government of checks and balances. Now it’s all checks and no balances.”

– Gracie Allen, 1940



Due to the extent of the crash site when viewed by spy planes, the Navy had presumed me KIA. Joe would later tell me that the family reacted to the news of me being shot down and likely gone forever in a variety of ways, albeit all typical. “Father was despondent, Sis was beside herself, and I started pickin’ fights in school. Mother was the strongest of us, though. She just I never gave up hope. ‘No body was recovered or even spotted,’ Mom would repeatedly remind us. ‘I would know if my child was gone. I would sense it.’”

– Admiral John McCain’s Boldly Into Hell: A Firsthand Account of Four Decades of American Warfare, Random House, 1996



“Good evening, America. Just a few hours ago, I received confirmation of a pivotal event in our military presence in Cuba… Earlier today, at precisely 1400 hours, or 2-o’clock PM, the United States Air Force conducted an air raid on the headquarters of operations of Communist leader Fidel Castro, and his brother, Raul Castro. The commanding officer of the operation tells me it was a spectacular and valiant fight, but our planes defeated theirs, and their location was leveled. No high-ranking Communist leaders inside the base survived. Not even the Castro brothers, whose bodies have been identified among the other charred remains, and are being secured as I speak. Tonight, believers of democracy in Americans and the world may rest a little easier, knowing that we have may a critical step down the path to assuring freedom for the people of Cuba. The free people of Cuba are now one major closer to reclaiming their island home… God bless you all, God Bless America, and have a pleasant evening.”

– President Lyndon B. Johnson, televised address to the nation, 6/15/1962



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– President Lyndon B. Johnson during a televised address, 6/15/1962



The emptying of our magazines console us in this time of sadness and anger. …Fidel, Raul, Sergio, Ramon, [1] all murdered by the cold-blooded capitalist pigs… I again met with Celia and Vilma [1] today; they still fear for the future of our island. Indeed, already their passing is widening internal management issues. Without Fidel and Raul, Che and Cam are uncertain on how to move forward. Split on how to proceed, the two have begun arguing more and more often, on matters ranging from pivotal to trivial, and in tone ranging from subtle remarks to intense and violent shouting matches. Just tonight, tension rose between the two iconic leaders of the people’s movement, the last half of Cuba’s “Group of Four,” as they discussed proper guerilla tactics – scorched-earth policies, aerial attacks, and sabotage in areas firmly held by the enemy – and whether we should fight a war of attrition or a war of espionage. Che believes all ideas should be tried no matter how morally grey they may be for the good of the cause. Cam disagrees, believing attacking Cubans that are traitorous American sympathizers will only strengthen their numbers. Cam wants to attack Americans with swift ferocity, but leave non-Americans alone. Che is calling for an increase in aerial defense measures. And don’t get me started on which one is technically the new leader of the country; we’ve made no proclamation yet, we just don’t know. So this came up in the talk, too. This discussion devolved into a verbal brawl over what Fidel would have wanted. Each accused the other of wanting to be disloyal to Fidel’s vision, with Che storming out, fury still lingering on his face. I am worried. The tensions are beginning to drip down to the other men. The soldiers are starting to suspect each other of most being loyal enough. Most just want to stay out of the strategy of it all and just follow the orders when they get them. Others simply know that now is not the time for internal disputes, but even still, I think some are taking sides. I hope a reconciliation can occur between the two men, and very soon, too. But, I do not worry too much. I do not believe that our great struggle for freedom could possibly be deterred by petty infighting.

– 17 June 1962 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT CRASHES!: ALL ONBOARD KILLED!

…None of the 87 passengers and 8 crew members survived… “In light of the Cuban Communist’s prior attacks American civilian aircraft, there is reason to believe that American Airlines Flight 1 was the target of another attack by them,” reported Federal Aviation Agency Administrator Najeeb Halaby at a press conference earlier today. He continued “To better ensure the safety and freedom of all Americans, and with the permission of President Johnson, I am calling for an increase in security measures at all American airports.” An investigation is currently underway to determine the still-unknown cause of the crash…

– The New York Times, 6/17/1962



BEATNICKS BEATEN BY WHITES, J.B.S. CONNECTION SUSPECTED

Huntsville, AL - …the suspects are known members of the John Birch Society, a rigidly conservative group which has seen an increase in member openness and connections to racial violence since the passing of the Civil Rights Act back in April. Local police are advising citizens to cooperate with the authorities… The men and women performing a “sit-in” at the local malt shop are part of a growing trend in American youth, a form of activism rooted in beatnik culture that is growing as troops continue to be sent into Cuba… “We are beatniks, friend,” said one youngster in Huntsville, “but we are new, like, we think snapping figures just won’t cut it anymore, so we sit and picket to shout out our concerns to the world. We’re shouting beatniks; we’re shoutniks.”

– The Sacramento Union (Ted Kennedy’s newspaper), 6/19/1962



SAVIO: We were growing in size and relevance, and so many of us were evolving into something more than the standard “café beatniks” of the late ’50s. College students, the children born at the start of World War Two, were beginning to realize the value of human life and the destruction of the war raging just 70 miles from home. 1962 was when we began protesting the draft, though it would not catch so much media attention and latch onto the public’s mind until later. In the meantime, passionate young activists adopting the moniker “shoutniks” mobilized. We demonstrated with sit-ins and picket lines, marching and cementing ourselves to the floors of one place for hours on end. That’s how we determined the loyalists from the fair-weather wish-washy people. Diana Oughton, for instance, was a genuine anti-war activist student at another college, and drove several hours to participate in a draft protest here in San Francisco. As did Murray Bookchin, then a 40-year-old self-described “socialist anarchist” from Vermont. These were the sort of true believers that made the movement what it came to be.

HOST: Well, and I suppose you did play a small role, too. >chuckle<

SAVIO: >chuckle< I guess!

– Mario Savio, KPFB 89.3 FM radio interview, 1/30/1985 broadcast



MODERATE WALLACE WINS BITTER PRIMARY RUNOFF FOR GOVERNOR

Birmingham, AL – Yesterday’s primary runoff to determine whom will be the next Governor of Alabama ended earlier today after George Wallace was declared the winner, edging out conservative favorite Bull Connor in an upset. In the June 24 [2] runoff, Wallace received 306,085 votes (50.19%) while Connor received 304,377 votes (49.91%). The fight between Connor and Wallace, each representing two different depictions of how Alabama should be, cme about after the results of the June 3 [2] primary. That election’s results are as follows:

Bull Connor – 240,570 votes (37.75%)
George Wallace – 218,646 votes (34.31%)
Tom Bevill – 78,066 votes (12.25%)
MacDonald Gallion – 61,371 votes (9.63%)
J. Bruce Henderson – 16,378 votes (2.57%)
Wayne Jennings – 15,549 votes (2.44%)
Albert Boutwell – 7,392 votes (1.16%)
Total votes: 637,273

In both elections, Wallace was endorsed by the NAACP like he was in his 1958 governorship bid. Wallace proclaimed segregation to be a dead issue in the wake of the Civil Right bill becoming law. “It is time for Alabama to move on and join the rest of the south in accepting the disassembling of segregation,” he said in a speech last week. Wallace’s campaign initially feared a split in the anti-Connor vote would cost him the primary race due to the candidacy of prominent fellow moderate Ryan DeGraffenried. However, DeGraffenried left the race in March, shortly after his wife was injured in a car accident, and his name was removed from the ballot. This, alongside Connor’s bombastic, uncouth and polarizing campaign style, arguably helped Wallace advance to the runoff in a way that was much easier than initially expected.

Victory in last night’s election, though, was victory in essentially becoming the state’s next Governor, with the general election being no more than a mere formality – the Republicans have chosen to not field a candidate for that race, leaving just one other person (an independent named Frank Walls) to oppose Wallace on the November ballot. This all but confirms that Wallace will become the state’s next governor, succeeding conservative incumbent Governor Patterson in January of next year.

The Tuscaloosa News, Alabama newspaper, 6/24/1962



June 25, 1962

Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Dear sis,

I hope this letter find you well.

Okay, that should cover the formalities – now let’s get down to business. My work here among the Cuban War refugees has led to many contacts and many ideas. There’s a sweet young man here named Jerry (I forget his last name – it’s a color, like Green or White) and he has shown me how few jobs are available here for these people, to say nothing of their deteriorating dietary conditions. But it is due to our gastric knowledge that I write this letter. I believe Kentucky Fried Chicken should do whatever it can to contribute to the relief efforts down here. We could certainly be of more help than that egg-headed in Tallahassee, Governor Bryant – oh, what a horrid man!

To conclude, upon my return to Florence next week we must sit down and discuss how best to assist our fellow lovers of democracy.

Your younger (and prettier – hey, mirrors don’t lie!) sister,

Margaret

– A letter from Margaret Sanders to Mildred Sanders, during an excursion made by the latter to rural West Virginia where letters were more reliable than telephone lines (according to Margaret Sanders), public record, retrieved 2019



LBJ ORDERS FEDERAL AGENCIES TO ENFORCE THE CRA: Calls For Peace After Weeks Of Sporadic Outbursts Of Racial Violence Nationwide

– San Diego Union-Tribune, 6/25/1962



In March 1962, Justice Whittaker told President Johnson that he had decided to retire from the bench. He had been serving for only five years, but he had already had enough of the workload, and had determined that he would step down as soon as the 1962 CRA passed. On April 5, Whittaker stepped down, and Johnson immediately leaped at the opportunity to reshape the court, and – ignoring suggestions from some of his advisors to consider any other candidate – chose to nominate a longtime friend and political ally to the seat: Abe Fortas.

While never serving as a judge before, Abraham Fortas (1910-1982) nevertheless possessed an impressive resume – law professor at Yale, worked in several positions under FDR, helped assemble the UN as a Harry Truman-appointed delegate. He also was an advisor to Johnson’s US Attorney General, represented Johnson in a 1948 election dispute, and worked on many high-profile cases during the 1950s such as Owen Lattimore’s. Upon nominating Fortas for the seat on April 29, Johnson was certain that any opposition to the selection, be it over genuine concern for Fortis’s credentials or political grudges over Johnson signing into law the 1962 CRA, would be minimal.

– Linda Greenhouse and Morton J. Horwitz’s The Warren Court and the Pursuit of Justice (Third Edition), Sunrise Publishing, 2010



ABE FORTAS, LBJ’S NOMINEE FOR OPEN SUPREME COURT SEAT, CONFIRMED BY SENATE, 70-30

…The main concern was summed up by Senator Carlson (R-KS): “who will Mr. Fortas work for: the Constitution, or the President?” Fortas’s answer: “The people”…

– The Washington Post, 6/28/1962



McDONALD’S COMES TO COLORADO; First Spot in State Welcomes Founder Ray Kroc

The Denver Post, 6/30/1962



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– Colonel Sanders promoting KFC outlets of the "Greater St. Louis and Illinois" area, c. early July 1962



JUSTICE FORTAS’ TIME ON BENCH BEGINS TODAY

– The Washington Post, 7/2/1962



“Richard, back in the 1920s, I was a schoolteacher at a segregated school for Mexican children who were too impoverished to ever even dream of going to college [3], and during that time I was witness to the forms of poverty that Mexicans and Americans are still living in throughout this country. It is an injustice to keep children from the vital tool of school, the tool needed for reaching one’s full potential. So forgive me if I seem to be a bit partial to this here anti-poverty law that y’all keep holding up. It’s just that people are living in this country like they’re peasants in the f#@king USSR! We must be better than those negligent f#@kheads, and that starts with doing what we can to eliminate starvation, illiteracy, and chronic unemployment from as much of America as we can. This legislation will be our declaration of war on destitution in America, a law that the children of this country will be forever grateful for. And a law that’ll surely stick it to all the Reds overseas, and will bring in a new generation of Democrats nationwide!”

– Lyndon B. Johnson in phone call to US Senator Richard B. Russell Jr., recorded by Johnson 7/3/1962 [4]



LBJ SIGNS MAJOR ANTI-POVERTY BILL INTO LAW

…the Community Improvement Bill, has been in development since last year, and effects several government agencies and administrations…

The New York Times, 7/22/1962



My fears that the fighting between Che and Cam, an unnecessary chasm caused by their aggressive personalities and philosophies, has led to a split within the guerilla forces, threatening to complicate this war. I do not think we can win if my fellow Cuban patriots separately fight the capitalist pigs in two separate camps. Both sides not engaging or even really communicating with each other that often. Instead, Cam’s soldiers and Cam’s soldiers work independently of each other to repel The Grave Enemy. Camilo and I lament Che’s inability to compromise. The last time I saw them together, talk over an air strike harming loyal villagers lead to a wrestling match around the dirt. Before diving off in his jeep, Che called Camilo a traitor. Cam believes the exact same thing about Che.

– 23 July 1962 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



KFC COMES TO SYDNEY!

Sydney, NSW – The first Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet in Australia opened today in the Sydney suburb of Guildford. The very founder himself of the famous American fast-food chain, Col. Harland Sanders, attended the opening ceremony of the city’s latest take-out-only American import. American food staples catching on is nothing new – during WWII, American army-men stopping by to fight Japan introduced us to hamburgers and rotisserie chicken [5]. The chicken serves, however, is a new taste sensation thanks to the Colonel’s unique frying style and secret blend of eleven herbs and spices… Sanders, together with local businessman Jack Cowin, seem determined to transform the city with the introduction of more options into the still-minor fast-food market in Sydney [5]. Judging by the massive crowd at the ceremony, their goal had merit.

– The Australian, 22/7/1962





– A commercial concerning KFC coming to Australia, c. July 1962




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– Colonel Sanders tries his first Australian meat pie at Harry’s Café de Wheels in Woolloomooloo [6]



GOLDWATER: What amazes me is how Cuba is slowly starting to become a mess.

UDALL: I disagree, Barry, the death of two of their most important leaders has had the Communists on the defense.

GOLDWATER: But nobody – on both sides of the aisle – is talking about the rise in casualties and millions of dollars lost in military property damaged or lost. And by the way, Castro’s gang never should have been able to even hit Guantanamo in the first place. Miami. Why couldn’t our planes or anti-aircraft weapons intercept the planes in time? Under my watch, they never would have been so irresponsibly sluggish.

MODERATOR: Well at least we’re progressing to this war’s conclusion. According to Defense, the island should be secured by Christmas or so.

GOLDWATER: Yeah, that’s another thing, Mo – this whole war should been all wrapped up by now! What in blazes are the boys in the Johnson administration doing dragging this thing out? I tell you, if I had been elected in 1960, that island would be covered with American flags by now, and not just the Castro brothers but his whole entire gang would be buried at the bottom of the Atlantic. When you invade a nation, you plan it out, and execute it quickly.

UDALL: Well, things don’t always go as planned in war times, Barry. The Castro brothers certainly weren’t planning on getting blown to bits, that’s for sure.

– US Senator Barry Goldwater and US Representative Morris Udall, KYCA’s 7/30/1962 radio broadcast



Arkansas’s U.S. Senate Democratic Primary, 7/31/1962:
J. William Fulbright – 216,559 (56.73%)
Winston G. Chandler – 165,179 (43.27%)
Total votes cast: 381,738
Turnout: 21.48% total population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



I’m not sure how it happened. Rumored are circling like flies on a donkey’s ass. Either Rafael [del Pino] fired first or Juan [Almeida Bosque] attacked him. Either they were arguing or one of them jumped out from the bushes. But none of it matters. What matters is Juan is dead, and the most clear fact after is that Rafael shot him. I knew both men; they both close friends of Fidel. But recently, they had split over how to defeat The Grave Enemy. Rafael had become a Cam supporter, while the older Juan sided with Che. I fear that it will now be even more difficult to reconcile the two factions of our fight now that we have begun to shed each others’ blood. I pray for all of us now, and for all of Cuba.

– 1 August 1962 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



HAVANA LIBERATED! US TROOPS MARCH INTO CUBAN CAPITAL: Major Leaders Still At Large, Suspected To Have Fled During Spectacular Fight For The City

– The Miami Herald, 8/4/1962



Aug 5 1962: on this day in history, Nelson Mandela and Cecil Williams, two activists and members of the anti-apartheid A.N.C. party, are captured by South African police for inciting worker’s strikes; the two are found guilty and sentenced to five years in prison. Their times in jail are extended considerably after a second unrelated trial finds them guilty of treason in 1964.

– onthisdayinhistory.co.uk



US FORCES ADVANCING INTO CUBAN INTERIOR

…The push into the mountainous hinterland is being coordinated and led by Air Force General Scratchy Brown and Army General William Westmoreland... Brown is more cautious of “burn the house to get out the rats” approach, believing carpet-bombing may lead to anti-American resentment. Army Major General Edwin Walker disagrees, believing Westmoreland’s tactics are the “bolder” initiatives needed to “get the commie out of the mountains”… Intelligence officers report back that the uncoordinated response to the push into Havana was due to an ally of Che being killed by an unidentified Cam ally within the past week, increasing distrust between the two camps. Now more aggressive to each other than before, the island is basically split into three parts – Cienfuegos supporters, Democratists, and Guevara supporters… Navy Secretary John B. Connally emphasized the need to defeat the Communists before the Cam and Che factions have a chance to reconcile: “Their infighting situation is dooming their revolution to failure thanks to the lack of clear leadership among their own ranks.” Brown adds proudly, “we’ve really got them on the un now!”

– Tad Szulc, New York Times Special Report, 8/11/1962



At noon, Cam was called away for a message from the Soviets. Another shipment of arms had been delayed due to “internal issues” and “traffic congestion.” We all know the truth. The splintering of the revolution is an embarrassment to the Soviets – the Sino-Soviet split, the rebels in central Europe, the need to build a ridiculous wall, the US’s Jupiter missiles set up in Turkey, and now our struggle not going exactly as they had planned. As if war ever goes exactly as planned. “They are cutting us loose. If we can’t convince Mao to lend a hand…We are on our own, left to our own devices to see the light of freedom shine through this, our darkest hours.” Cam may seem more lugubrious than angry at the moment, but I know him well. Beneath the somber speech is a man determined and resourceful. I still believe in him.

– 15 August 1962 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



The situation in Cuba was not satisfactory at all. It looked like we had picked a dud. Without the Castro brothers, their followers were directionless imbeciles. Reports showed that some of the less…patriotic Cubans were beginning to express doubt in the revolution. The proletariat were already growing dissatisfied with Khrushchev’s leadership endeavors, and questioning his capabilities increased. First after the Kitchen debate and again after the shoe-pounding incident, an ideological expansion snafu this severe, we feared, could be a nail in Khrushchev’s political coffin, to use an American phrase. We initially decided to see if we could cut our losses, but the military admonished us for that, so we backpedaled on this decision fairly quickly and sent the weapons and aid Guevara sought. However, the hesitance was still enough for Che and Cienfuegos to remain suspicious of our commitment to their fight. We feared that if any more territory was seized in Cuba, Khrushchev and I would quickly find ourselves, at the absolutely least, jobless…

– Anastas Mikoyan’s The Path of Struggle: The Memoirs of Anastas Mikoyan (English translation), Sphinx Press, 1988 (written in 1978)



LBJ SIGNS SOCIAL SECURITY ACT INTO LAW

...the landmark legislation establishes two new national health insurance programs called Medicare and Medicaid. The former is for the elderly and the latter is for the poor. Medicare is a basic program of hospital insurance for Americans aged 65 and older, in addition to being a supplementary medical insurance program to aid elderly Americans in paying doctor bills and other healthcare bills. These programs will be funded by a new tax on employee earnings, which will be matched by contributions by employers...

The Washington Post, 8/16/1962



SUPREME COURT RULES COMPULSORY SCHOOL PRAYER IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL: Billy Graham, Other Church Leaders “Disappointed” in Decision

The Las Vegas Review Journal, 8/25/1962



BIRMINGHAM STRATEGY: NEGROES TO DEFY BAN

Birmingham, AL – NAACP leaders said today that they will not obey an injunction banning “racial demonstrations” in Birmingham… A statement today by Negro leader Ralph Abernathy reads “we cannot in all good conscience obey such an injunction which is an unjust, undemocratic and unconstitutional misuse of the legal process. We have come too far to yield to something like this.” …

The Tuscaloosa News, 8/27/1962



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– Colonel Sanders celebrating his 72nd birthday, 9/9/1962



To prove his influence, Johnson sought to recruit a conservative establishment loyalist to oppose Senator Talmadge in the Democratic primary. He found a willing candidate in John William Davis (1916-1992), a freshman U.S. Congressman from the state’s third district. Initially expecting Davis to pull in no more than 15%, Johnson began to believe Davis could actually pull in as much as 30% after Senator Fulbright of Arkansas defeated a surprisingly strong Johnson-backed moderate primary challenger weeks prior to Georgia’s own primary. Davis began campaigning with more enthusiasm and managed to effectively spend an impressively large war chest, while Talmadge brushed him off as “inevitably the loser here;” thus Talmadge did little, if not any, actual campaigning for the election. Neither Davis nor Johnson expected the final results, which indeed highlighted the influence the Commander-in-Chief still had concerning Senate goings-on nationwide.

– A State of Change: Georgia Politics In the Twentieth Century (2nd Edition), Textico Publishing, 2013



Georgia’s U.S. Senate Democratic Primary, 9/12/1962:
John William Davis – 391,673 (51.17%)
Herman Talmadge – 346,131 (45.22%)
Henry M. Henderson – 27,632 (3.61%)
Total votes cast: 765,436
Turnout: 19.41% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



“She Can Do More For Massachusetts”

– Eunice Shriver for Senate slogan, 1962



EUNICE KENNEDY SHRIVER WINS MA SENATE PRIMARY

Boston, MA – …Shriver won last night by a plurality of 48%. In a 4-candidate race, Shriver’s main opponent, state Attorney General Eddie McCormack, came in second place with 42%, the remaining 10% being split almost evenly between the other 2 candidates… McCormack had sought to paint Shriver as inexperienced, and claimed often she would “merely be a puppet for her brother,” the U.S. Secretary of State, Jack Kennedy, whom once held the seat. Shriver fought against the accusations with a more positive campaign focusing more on statewide issues than attacking her fellow Democrats. …Perhaps the most influential part of the race came in the form of McCormack’s aggressive performance during a televised debate; polls taken after the debate showed potential voters thought his performance was “too overbearing” and “mean,” especially when compared to Shriver, whom many agreed remained “composed” and “honest” throughout the entire debate…

– The Boston Globe, 9/19/1962



Massachusetts State Party Senatorial Primaries, 9/18/1962:

Republican Primary Results:
George Cabot Lodge II – 244,921 (55.49%)
Laurence Curtis – 196,444 (44.51%)
Total votes cast: 441,365

Democratic Primary Results:
Eunice Kennedy Shriver – 386,817 (47.95%)
Edward J. McCormack Jr. – 341,319 (42.31%)
George J. O’Shea – 42,030 (5.21%)
William K. Hefner – 36,544 (4.53%)
Write-ins – 22 (0.00%)
Total votes cast: 806,732

– ourcampaigns.com



LOCAL MAN ARRESTED FOR ALLEGED PLOT TO KILL L.B.J. DURING CHICAGO TRIP!

The Clarion-Ledger, Mississippi newspaper, 9/25/1962



This is Walter Cronkite in the news room, where the name of the alleged attempted assassin of President Johnson has just been released: Byron De La Beckwith, age 41, of Greenwood, Mississippi. I would like to remind viewers that as an American like you and me, he has the right to a fair trial, and is innocent until proven guilty …A salesman with ties to the Ku Klux Klan and a member of the White Citizens’ Council, an anti-integration organization in the South, De La Beckwith travelled to the Windy City on the 24th, the day after the President arrived there to meet with Mayor Daley. The next day, De La Beckwith was found by a security guard beginning to assemble a rifle near an open window in the building across the street from the hotel at which the President was staying, and was taken into police custody. According to one anonymous member of the Greenwood Police Department, upon inspection of Mr. De La Beckwith’s Greenwood home, local police discovered De La Beckwith personal journal, in which he describes his anger at President Johnson for supporting Civil Rights, and even expressed interest in attempting to overthrow the United States government. As of now, however, Mr. De La Beckwith claims innocence, but has given no known explanation for what he was doing assembling a rifle across from the President’s location.

– CBS’s Walter Cronkite, 9/27/1962 report



27 September 1962: Houghton Mifflin publishers publish Rachel Carson’s in-depth “Silent Spring” treatise; it becomes a groundbreaking best-seller that fuels popular interest in environmental protection and pro-environment legislation nationwide.

– onthisdayinhistory.co.uk



Johnson’s second opportunity to alter the composition of the Supreme Court arose on September 30, 1962, when Associate Justice Felix Frankfurter suffered a fatal stroke. This left only eight justices remaining – Hugo Black, William Brennan, Tom Clark, William Douglas, newcomer Abe Fortas, John Harlan, Chief Justice Warren, and Potter Stewart. Feeling his domestic policies were safe with the majority-liberal Supreme Court, President Johnson was more open to suggestions from advisors for whom he should nominate. One advisor suggested Leon Higginbotham Jr., a 34-year-old African-American lawyer from Pennsylvania whom was involved in writing the Civil Rights Act while working under Johnson’s Attorney General, as a “bold” choice. Johnson reportedly replied “Too soon; the Dixiecratic bastards gave me hell for the Civil Rights Act and they’ll give me more of it if a Black is put on the Supreme Court only months later. No, we’ll put a Black on the Supreme Court later on.” Ladybird Johnson then suggested picking a woman for the bench, leading to 37-year-old prosecutor Shirley Hufstedler of California and 66-year-old Judge Sarah T. Hughes of Texas being considered. According to Ramsey Clark, “Johnson seemed to personally prefer Homer Thornberry, a U.S. Congressman from Texas, and he seemed like a safe choice.” After several talks with Ladybird, though, Johnson allegedly told aide Bobby Baker “Picking a woman could help me win over woman voters in ’64. Besides, at 66, Hughes may not even serve on the bench for that long.”

– Linda Greenhouse and Morton J. Horwitz’s The Warren Court and the Pursuit of Justice (Third Edition), Sunrise Publishing, 2010



LBJ PICKS WOMAN JUDGE FOR SUPREME COURT SEAT!

The Houston Chronicler, 10/5/1962



“Up until now, I was a fairly frequent traveler. Even after Flight 1 crashed, I was still determined to continue travelling by air. That is, until the airports changed. Suddenly it has become more and more inconvenient to fly. Before the changes, you did not have go through so many ridiculous regulations. I could not believe it when a few weeks back they asked me to raise my arms so they could pat me down, like some common criminal, to make sure I was not carrying anything like a bomb or some weapon on board. The nerve! And don’t even get me started on the longer lines…

– Katharine Caroline Bleckley (1892-1975) [7], recorded for CBS report, 10/12/1962



During the final weeks of the 1962 mid-term races, Sanders turned to the newer political side of his life at the request of his political colleagues, and campaigned for several candidates. The Colonel had proven himself to be an effective asset to any campaign – all of the candidates he endorsed in Kentucky in 1960 won their respective races, which impressed national Republican party bosses. Campaigns in other states sought to repeat the “Colonel Touch” for their respective candidates, and soon the Colonel found himself flying to Wisconsin to back Senator Wiley, and next to James Marin in Alabama and the to New Hampshire for Senator Cotton. …At a rally in South Dakota for Senator Bottum, Sanders remarked, “Joseph and I are a lot alike – both of us never, ever give up on anything. When Joseph first ran for a big public office, for Governor a while back, he lost. But that didn’t discourage him. He ran for Congress a short time later and lost that race, too, but he still did not give up. Eventually, he became Lieutenant Governor and now Senator, all because of persistence. And why? Because he never gave up on the people of his state! He wanted to do right by the good people of South Dakota, and a man with moxie never quits his passion when things get tryin’. I will always work in the interest of my customers and employees, and Joe Bottum will always work in the interest of y’all. It’s like what his campaign buttons say – ‘You can bet your Bottum dollar on him!’” …By mid-October, the Colonel had stumped for over 50 Congressional candidates.

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



After another political stopover in Utah, Father more red in the face than usual. It was such a busy day for him he had to lie down. After I brought him some water, he said to me, “Son, I’m startin’ to face the fact that I’m startin’ to get plum tuckered out.”

“I think maybe you should take a break from the political stump.”

“It’s not just that, it’s also that airport I’m trying to build. The FAA have been draggin’ their feet on approvin’ it for weeks, now, thanks to L.B.J.’s damn government overreach laws seeping into every type of business you can think of!”

I tried to change the subject with “Well, I saw you talking to the regional director for Texas the other day. Maybe you should invite over an ol’ franchisee or two for old times’ sake?”

“Oh, don’t remind me!” he exclaimed with the roll of his eyes.

“What?” I asked.

Father explained with a sigh, “I used to be able to name all our franchisees, and even most of the head managers, but now I’ve taken to keepin’ several rolodexes! I’m realizing that a business this big can never be personal, at least not for all involved.” He looked at me for a beat, then continued, “Harley, you and Millie have been doing a marvelous job runnin’ the store. How’d you like to man the horses, too?”

Father relinquished more responsibilities regarding daily company responsibilities on to Harley and Millie that month. I was reluctant to take on more control, but Father insisted.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



“It may seem like only yesterday, but it has been two and a half months since our capital was overwhelmed by the enemy’s forces. This has been nothing more than a fluke. The true Cubans will persevere regardless. For the imperialist warmongers will never imprison the people of Cuba! All they have done is obtain just enough luck to occupy our buildings, but not our hearts. They have overrun our universities but not our clear-as-ever minds. They may have taken one city, but they can never take our inextinguishable spirit!”

– Che Guevara, 10/19/1962 radio broadcast



Finally, some progress! We successfully blew up a major collection of American troops near Sagua la Grande! The chaos was glorious. We cannot do anything about their presence only 90 miles from our shores, but we sure as hell will make them return to their shores!

– 1 November 1962 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



…despite the formation of small groups of young anti-war activists on certain college campuses across the country, a vast majority of Americans still support America’s involvement in Cuba, according to polls taken in the aftermath of last week’s Communist Cuban attack on American troops in Sagua la Grande, Cuba, which killed 83 U.S. soldiers and 32 pro-DRF/US Cuban civilians. ...It has been suggested that sympathy for the lives lost in this attack may influence the results of tonight’s midterm elections, as American voters nationwide line up to weigh in on matters on the local, statewide, and national level. …Some analysts believe that the Republicans will fare very well in the Senate, pointing to the G.O.P. coordinating and funding numbers, along with numerous candidate endorsements from personalities such as former Screen Actors’ Guild President Ronald Reagan, former Governor Colonel Sanders, Hollywood actor John Wayne, and former Vice-President Richard Nixon. These men and others had zigzagged across the country shoring up support for several candidates. Tonight, we may see how effective they were…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 11/6/1962 broadcast



United States Senate election results, 1962

Date: November 6, 1962
Seats: 40 of 100
Seats needed for majority: 51
Senate majority leader: Mike Mansfield (D-MT)
Senate minority leader: Everett Dirksen (R-IL)
Seats before election: 64 (D), 36 (R)
Seats after election: 62 (D), 38 (R)
Seat change: D v 2, R ^ 2

Full List:
Alabama: James D. Martin (R) over John G. Crommelin (D) and incumbent J. Lister Hill (I) [8]
Alaska: incumbent Ernest Gruening (D) over Ted Stevens (R)
Arizona: incumbent Carl Hayden (D) over Evan Mecham (R)
Arkansas: incumbent J. William Fulbright (D) over Kenneth Jones (R)
California: incumbent Thomas H. Kuchel (R) over Richard Richards (D)
Colorado: incumbent John A. Carroll (D) over Peter H. Dominick (R)
Connecticut: Abraham A. Ribicoff (D) over Horace Seely-Brown (R)
Florida: incumbent George A. Smathers (D) over Emerson Rupert (R)
Georgia: John William Davis (D) over incumbent Herman Talmadge (I)
Hawaii: Daniel K. Inouye (D) over Ben Dillingham (R)
Idaho: incumbent Frank Church (D) over Jack Hawley (R)
Idaho (special): Gracie Pfost (D) over incumbent Len Jordan (R)
Illinois: incumbent Everett Dirksen (R) over Sidney R. Yates (D)
Indiana: Birch Bayh (D) over incumbent Homer Capehart (R)
Iowa: incumbent Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R) over E. B. Smith (D)
Kansas: incumbent Frank Carlson (R) over K. L. Smith (D)
Kansas (special): incumbent James B. Pearson (R) over Paul L. Aylward (D)
Kentucky: incumbent Thruston B. Morton (R) over Wilson W. Wyatt (R)
Louisiana: incumbent Russell B. Long (D) over Taylor W. O’Hearn (R)
Maryland: Daniel J. Brewster (D) over Edward T. Miller (R)
Massachusetts (special): Eunice Kennedy Shriver (D) over George Cabot Lodge II (R) and H. Stuart Hughes (I)
Missouri: Edward V. Long (D) over Crosby Kemper (R)
Missouri (special): incumbent Albert S. J. Carnahan (D) over William C. Cole (R)
Nevada: incumbent Alan Bible (D) over William B. Wright (R)
New Hampshire: incumbent Norris Cotton (R) over Alfred Catalfo Jr. (D)
New Hampshire (special): incumbent Maurice J. Murphy (R) over Thomas J. McIntyre (D)
New York: incumbent Jacob K. Javits (R) over James B. Donovan (D)
North Carolina: incumbent Sam Ervin (D) over Claude L. Greene Jr. (R)
North Dakota: incumbent Milton R. Young (R) over William Lanier (D)
Ohio: incumbent Frank L. Lausche (D) over John M. Briley (R)
Oklahoma: incumbent Mike Monroney (D) over Hayden Crawford (R)
Oregon: incumbent Wayne Morse (D) over Sig Unander (R)
Pennsylvania: incumbent Joseph S. Clark (D) over James E. Van Zandt (R)
South Carolina: incumbent Olin B. Johnston (D) over W. D. Workman Jr. (R)
South Dakota: incumbent Joseph H. Bottum (R) over George McGovern (D) [9]
Utah: incumbent Wallace F. Bennett (R) over David S. King (D)
Vermont: incumbent George D. Aiken (R) over W. Robert Johnson (D)
Washington: incumbent Warren G. Magnuson (D) over Richard G. Christensen (R)
Wisconsin: incumbent Alexander Wiley (R) over Gaylord Nelson (D)
Wyoming (special): Milward L. Simpson (R) over incumbent John J. Hickey (D)

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa



“MRS. SENATOR”: Eunice Kennedy Shriver Wins Senate Seat; Will Be The First Woman Senator From The Bay State

…the only other candidate of significance in the race was Harvard University professor H. Stuart Hughes. Hughes participated in several debates with Lodge and Shriver, where he showcased his views. As Hughes, who is performing well in most polls, strongly favors nuclear disarmament and other liberal policies, exit polls suggest Hughes pulled more voters away from Shriver than from Lodge by a 2-to-1 margin. That advantageous statistic still was not enough for Lodge to win edge out a win, instead losing by a 10-point margin...

– The Boston Globe, 11/7/1962 [11]



ZPl24ct.png


[pic: imgur.com/ZPl24ct]
– clickopedia.co.usa



United States Senate special election, Massachusetts, results:
Eunice Kennedy Shriver (Democratic) – 990,652 (47.24%)
George Cabot Lodge II (Republican) – 770,251 (36.73%)
H. Stuart Hughes (Independent) – 329,411 (15.71%)
Perennial Lawrence Gilfedder (Socialist Labor) – 5,330 (0.25%)
Perennial Mark R. Shaw (Prohibition) – 1,417 (0.07%)
Total votes cast: 2,097,061

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



p4lM09M.png


[pic: imgur.com/p4lM09M. ]
– US Secretary of State Jack Kennedy congratulating his sister, political activist Eunice Kennedy Shriver, on winning election to the US Senate, 11/7/1962



STATE A.G. MONDALE WINS US SENATE SEAT IN SPECIAL ELECTION

…Back in December 1960, Senator Humphrey resigned to become Vice-President, causing Governor Orville Freeman to appoint 72-year-old retiring Congressman Roy Wier to the Senate until a special election could be end, per the rules of the state constitution. The state’s Attorney General since 1960, Walter Mondale won by a comfortable margin...

– The Star-Tribune, Minnesota newspaper, 11/7/1962



United States House of Representatives results, 1962
Date: November 6, 1962
Seats: All 437
Seats needed for majority: 219
House majority leader: John McCormack (D-MA)
House minority leader: Charles Halleck (R-IN)
Lest election: 256 (D), 181 (R)
Seats won: 254 (D), 183 (R)
Seat change: D v 2, R ^ 2 [10]

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa




DEMOCRATS RETAIN MAJORITY IN BOTH HOUSES OF CONGRESS IN SPITE OF MANY UPSET LOSSES

– The Sacramento Bee, 11/6/1962



United States Governor election results, 1962

Date: November 6, 1962
State governorships:
Seats before: 35 (D), 15 (R)
Seats after: 36 (D), 14 (R)
Seat change: D ^ 1, R v 1

Full List:
Alabama: George Wallace (D) over Frank P. Walls (R)
Alaska: Mike Stepovich (R) over incumbent William Allen Egan (D)
Arizona: incumbent Paul Fannin (R) over Samuel P. Goddard Jr. (D)
Arkansas: incumbent Orval Faubus (D) over Willis Ricketts (R)
California: incumbent Pat Brown (D) over Joe Shell (R)
Colorado: John A. Love (R) over incumbent Stephen McNichols (D)
Connecticut: John N. Dempsey (D) over John deKoven Alsop (R)
Georgia: Carl E. Sanders (D) ran unopposed
Hawaii: John A. Burns (D) over incumbent William F. Quinn (R)
Idaho: Vernon K. Smith (D) over incumbent Robert E. Smylie (R)
Iowa: Harold Hughes (D) over incumbent Norman Erbe (R)
Kansas: incumbent John Anderson Jr. (R) over Dale Saffels (D)
Maine: incumbent John Reed (R) over Maynard C. Dolloff (D)
Maryland: incumbent J. Millard Tawes (D) over Frank Small Jr. (R)
Massachusetts: Endicott Peabody (D) over incumbent John Volpe (R)
Michigan: George W. Romney (R) over incumbent John Swainson (D)
Minnesota: Donald Orr Wright Sr. (R) over incumbent Orville Freeman (DFL)
Nebraska: incumbent Frank B. Morrison (D) over Frederick A. Seaton (R)
Nevada: incumbent Grant Sawyer (D) over Oran K. Grayson (R)
New Hampshire: John W. King (D) over John Pillsbury (R)
New Mexico: Jack M. Campbell (D) over incumbent Edwin L. Mechem (R)
New York: incumbent Nelson Rockefeller (R) over Robert M. Morgenthau (D)
North Dakota: incumbent William Guy (D) over Mark Andrews (R)
Ohio: Jim Rhodes (R) over incumbent Michael DiSalle (D)
Oklahoma: Henry L. Bellmon (R) over W. P. Atkinson (D)
Oregon: incumbent Mark Hatfield (R) over Robert Y. Thornton (D) and Robert H. Wampler (I)
Pennsylvania: William Scranton (R) over Richardson Dilworth (D)
Rhode Island: incumbent John A. Norte Jr. (D) over John H. Chafee (R)
South Carolina: Donald Russell (D) ran unopposed
South Dakota: Ralph Herseth (D) over incumbent Archie Gubbrud (R)
Tennessee: Frank G. Clement (D) over William R. Anderson (I) and Hubert David Patty (R)
Texas: incumbent Price Daniel (D) over Jack Cox (R)
Vermont: Philip H. Hoff (D) over incumbent F. Ray Keyser Jr (R)
Wisconsin: John W. Reynolds (D) over Philip G. Kuehn (R)
Wyoming: incumbent Jack R. Gage (D) over Clifford P. Hansen (R)

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa



MIKE’S BACK!: Stepovich Elected Back to Governorship

Juneau, AK – In a rematch, incumbent Governor Bill Egan lost re-election in an upset to former Governor Mike Stepovich. Stepovich, whom was the Governor of Alaska Territory from 1957 to 1958, capitalized on local resentment for President Johnson’s expansion of the federal government’s regulation of local businesses successfully tied Egan to this unpopular domestic policy. Stepovich received backing by many state businesses as well, reportedly outspending Egan by a 2-to-1 margin...

– Anchorage Daily News, 11/7/1962



BROWN BEATS SHELL FOR SECOND TERM AS GOVERNOR

Sacramento, CA – Governor Brown won a second term over Republican candidate Joe Shell in a rebuke of conservatism… Shell’s endorsement from the John Birch Society likely hurt campaign among independents in the wake of an alleged affiliate of that group being arrested for allegedly plotting to assassinate President Johnson. Plus, Shell did not reach out to former Vice-President Nixon or Nixon’s backers after besting him for the G.O.P. nomination. This failure to make amends with inter-party anti-shell factions weakened Shell’s campaign’s ability to maintain a united front among Republican-leaning and possibly weakening Republican voter turnout.

Despite Shell losing, not all California’s rejected the John Birch Society – two members of the organization, H. L. “Bill” Richardson and John H. Rousselot, won election to the U.S. House of Representatives from…

…The approximate breakdown of last night’s election results are as follows:

Brown: received 3,229,852 votes (54.47%)
Shell: received 2,550,605 votes (43.02%)
Prohibition candidate Robert L. Wyckoff: received 106,140 votes (1.79%)
There were 125,115 (2.11%) invalid or blank votes. The total number of votes was approximately 5,929,602. Turnout was 57.5%.

…Other statewide elections were held on Tuesday as well. In the race for Lieutenant Governor, Republican challenger George Christopher, the Mayor of San Francisco from 1956 to 1964, won over the Democratic incumbent, Glenn M. Anderson. For California’s Secretary of State…

– Sacramento Bee, 11/7/1962



Shell’s loss vindicated Nixon, as could be seen in the sudden widespread use among Republicans of the utterance “Nixon would have won it.” Nixon himself, though, was conflicted over such a prospect. A few weeks after the election, Dick confessed to me that he considered the loss a sort of blessing in disguise.

“I don’t think I would have been happy as governor, the more I think about it. Two years of seat-warming and ribbon-cutting and fighting with s bunch of liberal state legislators over where to put the latest fire hydrants while the old men on the hill get to influence national foreign policy? No, my place is in the Senate. That’s more my speed; it’s where I excelled. And it’s a much better platform.” He began considering running for the US Senate again, potentially against incumbent Democratic Clair Engle in 1964. “But what about running for President that year?”

“I don’t know, John. Has a President ever lost re-election in the midst of commanding over both a popular war and a booming economy?”

“You could be the first.”

He shrugged, “Let’s just keep all cards on the table for now. We’ll see what happens.”

– John Ehrlichman’s Witness: What Went on Behind Closed Doors, Folkways Books, 1998



SENATE CONFIRMS SARAH T. HUGHES FOR SUPREME COURT SEAT, 60-40

The Houston Chronicler, 11/13/1962



…Earlier today, federal district judge Sarah T. Hughes was sworn in to Justice Whittaker’s old seat on the United State Supreme Court, making her the first female justice ever to sit on Supreme Court bench. Hughes, whom began presiding over the US District Court for the Northern District of Texas in 1961, is a Texas Democrat known for supporting prison reform and expanding the involvement of and the role of women in the American workforce. Her ascension to the bench marks a historic moment for the Women's rights movement…

– NBC, 11/22/1962 broadcast



WESTERN EUROPE IN CHICKEN TAX TENSIONS: "NOBODY HERE BUT US CHICKENS"

Not long ago, chicken was a costly delicacy in Europe; it was said that the European workingman ate a chicken only when either he or the bird was sick. Now chicken is common fare, and not just on Sunday. Much of the credit belongs to U.S. chicken farmers, who have brought down prices from Antwerp to Zurich by delivering frozen broilers to Europe at 30.5cents a lb. Last year the intake of chicken rose 23% in West Germany alone. Demand for chicken expanded briskly in the rest of Europe, and has resulted in a steady rise in agitation from European farmers against their American counterparts...

– Time Magazine, 11/30/1962 [12]



…the elated Secretary Litzenburg continued: “this major military operation has struck a serious blow to the supplies and morale of the Cuban communists”…

The New York Times, 12/13/1962



"We all lost family members in that war. My father, Alasdair Swanson, was shot down over Guaimaro on December 10, 1962, not long after the birth of my kid brother Andrew. I was three. My father died a hero taking fire to allow the rest of his formation to attack, leaving my mother, Carol Shepp Swanson, a widowed mother of two young boys. But through the help of family, friends, and the community, she survived and her children thrived. She worked hard every day so my brother and I would never starve. Hard work and heroism – these are the pillars of the Swanson family, and they are the cornerstones of a stronger and better America."

– US politician Doug Swanson (R-NV) at a Gold Star Families of America fundraiser in Mason City (IA), 11/16/2003



December 14, 1962

[location withheld], Cuba

Dear Mother,

Teaching Spanish to the translators instead of firing into the jungles is both a blessing and a curse. I seem safe from harm, and everyone here resents me for it. Their stares are almost as heavy as this island’s godforsaken weather. I try to participate in every way that I can, from transferring weapons across the base to inspections. It just makes me come off as a suck-up to the others. They want me to get out there and die or come back bloodied and writhing in pain like all those other men. I now responsible whenever a soldier returns injured or worse. I fear the unreal insanity of this island is beginning to unnerve and overwhelm me. They say this is glory, but to me it is an abyss, a struggle between the fears of death and social admonishment. I find no glory here.

The light at the end of the tunnel is the end of this conflict, which I hope will be soon – after all, that’s what everyone says about it – that it will all be over “soon”! “Soon” should get here faster.

Please write,

Ken

– letter from a military serviceperson to a family member, an example of many sent out during the Cuba War



December 19, 1962

Dear Mr. John Dewey Toole Jr. and Mrs. Thelma Ducoing Toole

On behalf of the Chief of Staff, United States Army, I regret to inform you of the untimely death of your son, sergeant John Kennedy Toole. He died on December 14, 1962, at camp in Guaimaro, as the result of injuries received while defending the base and personnel from aerial attack. His ultimate sacrifice will contribute to the success of this war. He gave his life for his country; take comfort in knowing your son died a hero. While further details are unavailable at this time, you will receive a letter from your son’s commanding officer with additional information… Once more, on behalf of the Chief of Staff, please accept the Army’s deepest condolences.

Signed:

William Westmoreland, General, US Army

– letter to the next-of-kin of a KIA soldier, an example of many sent out during the Cuba War [13]



It was just after George had officially become Alabama’s Governor-elect. I felt unwell, but he was so busy meeting with NAACP leaders, I just went to the doctor without him. That’s how I found out that George had been keeping a cancer diagnosis a secret from me. I was so mad, I immediately went right down to his office, opened the door, picked up one of the chairs in front of his desk and threw it right at him. And it was a heavy chair, too, so I must have been on an anger-fueled adrenaline rush or something. George ducked so the chair hit the wall instead, but he got the message. I remember screaming, “how could you?!! I’ve had cancer for 18 months??! You bastard!!!” He said he was protecting me, but that’s not how I saw it. After all that I’d helped him with, convincing him to stay an integrationist after losing his bid for governor in 1958, campaigning alongside him in 1962, that’s how he repaid me? Well, let me say, you would not believe the amount of groveling for forgiveness I made him do after that.

…George was not by any means a perfect man, but, even still…I miss him…

– Lurleen Wallace (1926-1996), 1989 interview



Father spent Christmas ’62 at my house, where he spent what felt like hours making goofy faces to keep his great-grandson giggling and smiling. Harland the Fourth, or “Lando” was we would late nickname him, had just turned three. Playing with the growing number of little ones in the family was always a good distraction for him, a way to block out the infuriating unfolding events found in the newspaper’s political section, the TV’s political news, and the conservative radio channels. Father did not want to spend the holidays ranting about how much he disapproved of Johnson’s wasteful spending and suppression of free enterprise. He was doing enough of that on Senate campaign trails. At home, he wanted to focus on happier things, like his chicken and his family. With that in mind, he spent what time he could during the fall putting together an album of his favorite Christmas songs. A sort of mix tape, Father wanted to spread the feeling of holiday cheer after a long and trying year of 1962. We played the album several times during that yuletide get-together.

Little did we know that 1962 would pale in comparison to 1963.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991




[ youtube: watch?v=cGRoZ6nVcAA ]

This in my opinion was a mistake to make! I was disappointed by it He dosnt actually sing any of the songs in it! I feel cheated even tho I listened to it for free what a ripoff! 1 star!!!

– albumreviews.co.usa, 2013 post by [name withheld] in comments section for the 1962 “Christmas With Colonel Sanders” Album (average 5-out-of-5 stars)



The American instinct is to jump in with both feet and get an unpleasant job over and done with as soon as possible, but traditional Oriental patience makes them willing to carry on the struggle into generation after generation if necessary. We’re fighting a war over there with a commodity most precious to us and held in value far more cheaply by the enemy – the lives of men…We must fight the war with our strength, not theirs. With minimum cost to ourselves and maximum cost to the enemy…The only solution I see is to use our strength, our air and naval power in the most humane manner possible to destroy the North’s ability to wage war on the South… close their ability to get outside help. The power system that fuels every war – transportation, rails, bridges – eliminate! Every factory and industrial-military installation – gone! Don’t stop until there’s not a single pair of bricks stuck together! Irrigation systems if necessary. If the destruction of every creation of man in ’Nam is necessary to crush the scourge of communist aggression there, then so be it!”

– Curtis E. LeMay, 12/2/1962 interview [14]



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[pic: imgur.com/I27Y4U5.png ]

– Colonel Sanders offering a box of KFC in promotional photo, c. December 1962



SOURCES
[1] As in: pro-Camilo Cienfuegos Army Chief of Staff Sergio del Valle Jimenez (1927-2007); pro-Castro Ramon Barquin (1914-2008) military colonel; Celia Sánchez (b. 1930) research/archivist revolutionary and close friend of Fidel Castro; and Vilma Espin (1930) wife of Raul Castro.
[2] I’m actually uncertain of these two dates. Wikipedia states the primary and runoff were held on June 3 and June 24, respectively, while ourcampaigns.com states they were both held in May of that year. Anyone know which source is the correct one? (If it’s ourcampaigns, then I’ll move this bit to the previous chapter)
[3] Overviewed here: https://www.npr.org/2014/04/11/301820334/lbj-carried-cotulla-with-him-in-civil-rights-fight
[4] Great idea to use his OTL tape recording habit here, @historybuff !
[5] Based on comments made here: www.australiaforeveryone.com.au/kfc-guilford.html
[6] OTL picture and OTL caption found on pinterest
[7] This person is from this unfortunate list: https://www.findagrave.com/virtual-cemetery/915306?page=1#sr-111733604
[8] Happened due to Hill splitting the Democratic vote; Martin received 50.1%, Crommelin received 30.2%, and Hill received 19.7%
[9] McGovern lost by a razor-thin margin. McGovern received little support from the national Democratic party over his criticism of some of President Johnson’s policies, especially regarding foreign affairs, and for allegedly being “not liberal enough” for the national party and “too liberal” for representing all South Dakotans.
[10] Changes from OTL: Because of regional conservative backlash to the Civil Rights Act, the following Republicans won: John H. Rousselot and H. L. Richardson of California, John D. Fox of Missouri, Carrol M. Barringer of North Carolina, and J. Kenneth Robinson of Virginia. Walter Judd’s presence on the 1960 GOP ticket allows him to narrowly win re-election, albeit after a recount. Floyd Spence (R), backed by Strom Thurmond, narrowly wins in South Carolina. A similar rejection of the Democrats also occurs in Kentucky, where, thanks to the Colonel campaigning for them, C. Alex Parker Jr. (R) and Clyde Middleton (R) won their respective election bids. On the other side of the political aisle, the following Democrats (whom lost IOTL) here won, largely thanks to allying with Johnson’s domestic programs and/or supporting the war effort: Albert J. Tomsic of Colorado, Francis X. Lennon Jr. of Connecticut, John Pritchard of Indiana, Frank W. Less of Iowa, Harding C. Noblitt (DFL) of Minnesota, Paul R. Porreca of New Jersey, E. Dent Lackey of New York (over William E. Miller for being just a bit too conservative for his district), Robert E. Cook of Ohio, Peter J. Joyce of Pennsylvania, Wilkes Thrasher Jr. of Tennessee (over Bill Brock), and M. Blaine Peterson of Utah. Everyone mentioned in the November 1960 chapter who was not just mentioned won re-election as well.
[11] Hughes did not perform nearly as well as he did here in OTL because of the Cuban Missile Crisis; without an incident like that occurring to convince voters that the US's nuclear arsenal is warranted, his campaign/candidacy doesn't collapse before the election like it did IOTL, and thus he performs much better here!
[12] This entire entry taken from here: content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,829587-1,00.html (link found on wiki article for the "Chicken Tax")
[13] Styling (and even entire sentences) of this letter is based on the one shown here: https://www.wearethemighty.com/military-life/this-is-how-the-military-conducts-a-death-notification
[14] An OTL quote that he said in the documentary “In the Year of the Pig,” at roughly the 53:50 mark!
 
Post 8
Post 8: Chapter 16



Chapter 16: January 1963 – June 1963



“Famous men have the whole earth as their memorial.”

– Pericles, “Funeral Oration,” 430 BCE



…when asked by a reporter to specify, US Defense Secretary Homer Litzenburg announced that the Cuban War, quote, “is practically over, we have the Cuban Communists on the run,” unquote. Secretary Litzenburg then resumed discussing the development made in combating racial discrimination in the military…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 1/3/1963 broadcast



Johnson privately complained to his aides that Litzenburg’s remark was “premature,” arguing that American forces needed to remain in Cuba until Cienfuegos and Guevara were defeated.

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Pursuit of Power, A. A. Knopf Inc. New York, 2012



…Marina’s uncle, Ilya Prusakov, was a colonel in the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs. It was through him that I made the needed connections. The past several months in the Russian Army had been enough. I was desperate for a change in scenery. Cuba’s heat would be a refreshing change far removed from the drab cold of Russia. And desperate to make my mark, to fight for the freedom of my Cuban comrades. I couldn’t go to Cuba directly, though. Too much attention. So through the connections I made in the Russian military personnel through Ilya, I made contact with a cargo ship bound for Trinidad. I left behind June, whom was almost a year old, and Marina, who as it turned out, I had just gotten pregnant with a second child, I son. From Trinidad, I ventured to Haiti. And from Port-au-Prince, I used what few rubles I had left to get smuggled to the frontlines, where I planned to personally turn the tide of the war. I knew I could do it, and soon I would work to prove my worth. Upon arriving in Cuba in January, though, I was almost killed several times by brethren suspicious that I was an American spy, something I grew quirky of. I even shouted by Russian to them how stupid they were for not recognizing my allegiance. I don’t think anyone had ever suffered such stereotyping. But it was to no avail – suspicion followed me everywhere – even to the camp of Che Guevara. When I arrived there, I feared that they were about to reject me on paranoid belief that I was an undercover provocateur [1]. There was this one soldier kept jotting everything down in this little book of theirs. It was distracting; I kept thinking that he was writing about me, writing where I was to be buried or something like that. That’s how bad the situation looked. So I had to plead with them. I touted my resume: a US marine sniper with experience with Cuba-like geography from my experience in the Philippines; my training as a radio technology expert, I promised I could help my Cuban comrades maintain communications between our soldiers across the divided island. It was humiliating, but Che gave me a chance. He brought me out to the edge of a field, and told me I had one chance, the next sixty seconds, to fire a branch off a tree on the opposite side of the field. If I failed, he’d execute me; if I didn’t fail, he welcome me to the ranks. He then handed me a sniper rifle and took a step back to glare at me. The rifle fell apart in my hands, an unspoken part of the test. As he began to countdown, I hurried to put the pieces together. My heart was palpitating like crazy despite my mental determination. At the ten-second mark, I readied for a shot. I aimed, I fired. The tree branch fell, but not completely off the tree, leaving it dangling of the side of the tree. I quickly looked at Che. After a moment of pause that felt like a lifetime of pause, he smirked, “eh, close enough, comrade!”

– Lee Harvey Oswald’s autobiography “Call Me By My Real Name: Confessions From a Fallen Hero,” published posthumously



We have a commitment to Cuban freedomyou can have more war and more appeasement, but we don’t want more of either. Our purpose is to train the Cuban Democratistas so they can defend their island without us someday, and our training’s going good.” [2]

– Lyndon Johnson, State of the Union address excerpt, 1/14/1963




On January 14, 1963, President Lyndon Johnson delivered his third state of the union address, where again he described the progress being made in Cuba and the space program, but also calling for better social security programs, and touting lower unemployment and poverty rates, while ignoring the slight rise in anti-Black and anti-immigrant activities in the US (particularly in the south in response to the Civil Rights Act and influx of Cuban refugees into Florida and other parts of the country). Johnson called for a bold plan for several social programs that effectively ushered in the start of the second phase of his Great Society social programs.

– Professor Margaret “Midge” Costanza, Rochester University, audio-taped lecture, 1985



Thurgood Marshall nominated for DC circuit judge.

…Marshall, an African-American, had been passed over for the Second Circuit District in 1962 over heated controversy over the Civil Rights Act. The conservative William H. Hastie, another African-American, was the preferred choice for conservative lobbyists, but was reportedly not in consideration for the position…

The Washington Post, 1/16/1963



US Citizen Approval of US Involvement in Cuba

Approve: 59%
Disapprove: 27%
Uncertain: 14%

– Gallop Poll, published 1/21/1963



Together with bandmember Bobby Taylor, Chong opened an L.A. “beatnik-friendly” nightclub in January 1963. They called it "The Blue Balls".

– infopedia.co.usa/Tommy_Chong



LBJ ANNOUNCES HE WILL SEND TROOPS, ADVISORY PERSONNEL TO LAOS-VIETNAM BORDER

…Laotian General Nosavan Phoumi has the support of the White House, and US military advisors approve of his actions to combat the Pathet Lao, the Communist group plaguing much of the landlocked country of Laos…

– The New York Times, 1/22/1963



The situation in Laos was gaining attention in the Defense and State Departments due to an increase in the country’s internal hostilities. In late January, Johnson’s foreign policy officials sat around the cabinet room to discuss how to address it. On Inauguration Day 1961, Eisenhower had told Lyndon “If Laos falls, the US will have to write off the whole area.” Laos geographically was all that separated China from Thailand, Cambodia and Burma, and with Laos practically surrounding Vietnam. “It would be fatal,” he had warned, “for us to permit communists to insert themselves into the Laotian government [3].”

Emboldened by the seemingly done-for communist forces in Cuba, Lyndon disagreed with State Secretary Kennedy in having Laos remain a neutral “buffer” nation between China and a future Democratic Southeast Asia, finding the idea to be unnecessary. Johnson also rejected Kennedy’s notion of sending representatives to Geneva [4] to develop a peaceful resolution to the conflict in Laos, explaining “America has shown to the world time and again that we can take on anyone. I doubt some s#!twater hellhole of a country nobody’s ever heard of is going to give us that much trouble, Jack.”

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



ARMY INCREASES AIRSTRIKES ON CUBA: Targeting “Clearly” Pro-Comm. Strongholds, Military Bases

…the increase comes one week after the Communists’ air forces carpet-bombed the city of Sancti Spiritus, a DRF stronghold where US-DRF soldiers were expanding into the neighboring city of Majagua…

– The Washington Post, 2/1/1963



Mr. Westmoreland:

I want a report on the most effective way to handle the situation involving Communist guerillas threatening American interests in Vietnam. We cannot afford the domino effect to even start.

Respond ASAP,
President Johnson

– Memo from Westmoreland to Johnson, 2/2/1963



U.S.S.R. LEADER KHRUSHCHEV STEPS DOWN, DEPUTY SHELEPIN DECLARED NEW LEADER

– The Daily Mail, UK newspaper, 5 February 1963



Everybody on this island wants to kill us. We have no allies here.

I’ve stopped caring about what city or village we try to take over. They all start to look the same. A bunch of buildings and farmhouses, each containing at least one person firing a gun at us. Every day we live and serve and fight and sleep, all in constant fear that the next [Cuban] we see will pull out a weapon and go for us. Where is this rebellion against Camilo we are repeatedly told of? It is not here, not where we are. It is not here.

We were traveling south, a convoy of tanks and ammo trucks stuffed with men and guns. Just men and guns. Metal and lead. Loud firepower. A lonely outhouse stood on the edge of the road we travelled down, which cut through a large field of unkempt wheat. A shot fired out from the outhouse. Hit our C.O. right in the back. Never had a chance. We quickly fired back. No hesitation. No contemplation. We just fired right at the outhouse, all of us, ripping the wooden door, the frames, whoever the hell was inside, all of it, all to shreds.

We checked the rest of the area and kept ourselves ready in case this was an attack. We could have just kept going. But before we did, I went to see who or what had been breathing, existing, hiding in the outhouse. I opened what remained of the door. A little boy with a rifle fell out. No older than twelve. Blood on pale-white skin. Dark voids for eyes. Look of shock and despair. Hopeless. Pointless. Death.

The innocence of this land is dead. Murdered by the sickness of war. So long live the sickness, I guess. At least I think that is the order. My order. My duty.

– B. Thompson, US military officer, private journal entry, 2/6/1963



With Cuba in disarray, too many in the government did not believe Nikita would adequately respond to America flexing its military muscles in Laos. The ousters were [Supreme Soviet presidium chairman Leonid] Brezhnev and [First Deputy Premier Alexander] Shelepin, with [KGB Chairman Vladimir] Semichastny joining in on their conspiracy at the last minute, it seems. The trio took advantage of Nikita retreating to the Crimea to regain his health during the winter to agree to a peaceful ousting. When they cornered him upon his arrival at the airport to return to the capital, Semichastny was there; he told him “you are needed in Moscow no longer.”

When the dust had settled, Nikita was melancholic: “I only wished to see right by my country, but they made governing a chore and a burden, not a gift. I’m old and tired, but that just means I’m wiser than them. Let’s just see how well Shelepin does.”

Brezhnev had originally eyed the top spot, but when he suggested having Nikita arrested in Crimea, Shelepin objected and offered the peaceful transition of power should be attempted first. Shelepin’s plan working cast Brezhnev as a man of poor leadership, and the politburo quickly rallied around Shelepin. Semichastny was far too close to Nikita to be considered for the position.

Shelepin would immediately shift focus away from Cuba, and call instead for “the strengthening all comrades across the Eurasian supercontinent,” a commanding but vague statement. It was the vagueness, however, that seems to have unnerved American intelligence, causing the US’s Johnson administration to become more attentive to any left-wing movements in either continent.

– Anastas Mikoyan’s The Path of Struggle: The Memoirs of Anastas Mikoyan (English translation), Sphinx Press, 1988 (written in 1978)



dIiblpm.png


( imgur.com/dIiblpm )
– Colonel Sanders congratulating the winner of the first-ever "Miss KFC" pageant (“entries must work at a KFC outlet in any capacity in order to qualify/participate”), 2/12/1963



CONGRESS PASSES FOREIGN ASSISTANCE ACT

– The New York Post, 2/21/1963



Kentucky OK’s Rights Bill; 1st in South.

…Kentucky yesterday became the first state south of the Mason-Dixon line to adopt [its own] civil rights measure. With only one dissenting vote, the state Senate approval [sic] a bill outlawing racial discrimination in public accommodations and employment that is stronger than the federal act of 196
[2]. It sailed thru [sic] the House 76 to 12 last week. A milder bill had failed to get out of committee in 196[1]…’” [5]

– The Chicago Tribune, 2/26/1963




US EMPLOYMENT REPORT: CUBAN WAR DROPS RATE FROM 7% IN JAN ’62 TO 3% IN JAN ’63

– The Los Angeles Times, 2/27/1963



I think he’s one of the best snipers the US has ever seen. It’s almost frightening how good he is, the ferocity of his eyes when he locks onto a target. I tell you, Corporal Charles Whitman is a merciless patriot. You should see how he handles his weapons – it’s as if they become one with his body. He has such natural, or rather unnatural, instincts, his performance on the battlefield – his swiftness, his accuracy in his kills – is a sight to behold. Yesterday, he received a Purple Heart for single-handedly freeing another marine by lifting the remains of an exploded Jeep that was pinning the man down right out in the open. Whitman turns 22 in June; it’s early, but he’s already announced he wants more guns for the occasion! I suspect, however, that his field performance has much to do with his temper – he’s just angry all the time – complaining about regulations and moaning about his distance away from his wife and, on occasion, his mother, too. He’s only lucid right after a battle. It’s like some kind of release for him; I think it’s more than homesickness or hatred of the enemy. It’s as if he has his own demons inside him that he’s fighting against. It’s very peculiar.

– Excerpt from a letter from US Army private Daniel Ray Coats to a friend, dated 3/1/1963



“Good news, American pig. You have been selected to be among the first to try out our latest torture methods,” one of the men said bluntly one time. They had patched me up the best they could at their makeshift hospital only to break me as best they could. The pain I received in Cuba was so severe and so intense that no words can do it justice, but I will try my best.

Of course, I was not alone in the torment. There were at least thirty of us holed up in a temporary POW compound in the middle of some jungle. We were kept in a large room of small cages, often two or three of us in each cage, chained up like animals, and beaten mercilessly over and over like such. We weren’t even allowed to clean ourselves in any way. Fungi developed on the men too tired and beaten to even be aware of anything. Many died from starvation as they rarely tossed us scraps, and others died from blood loss or simply receiving one beating too many, or from being forced to go for days without sleep.

Before long, you were no more than a zombie, a ghost, a shadow of what you once were, either just barely clinging onto life or yearning for the sweet release of death. There was a man I shared a cell adjacent to, who never told me his name. He truly believed he was in fact dead and was suffering for eternity in Hell for his sins. His mind had snapped and I fully understood why.

Five men from the same small room as I – we never really knew how many men were at the compound, we just estimated by the screams – were ultimately sent to the “drawer cells.” Literal hellholes – deep holes dug into the earth – just barely big enough for a grown man to stand in. There the Cubans would leave them in complete darkness and sometimes throw buckets of urine, cockroaches and starving rats onto the men from a cover in the ceiling. Rarely would a man leave the drawer cells alive, and not left whole.

But still they could not break me. “John Smith. US Marines. Serial Number 654321.” That is all I ever told them, no matter what they did to me, and they did a lot to me.

A room separate from the cells was where they interrogated the POWs. There, every time after they returned me to consciousness following a series of heavy blows, a man speaking in broken English would bark at me, ordering me to tell him information. “Tell us what you know” was a common order for him to repeat like some evil mindless robot. In turn, each time I’d respond with “John Smith. US Marines. Serial Number 654321.” For my resilience his men would slash my back open with twisted-up electric cables. The whip stung and shot immense pain throughout my suffering body. “What do you know?!” he would bark, and I would repeat the same three “facts”: “John Smith. US Marines. Serial Number 654321.” They would whip me again, over and over, each time asking variations of the same question. A strong Cuban man, a former wrestler by the looks of his cauliflower ears, would sometimes use my chest as a punching bag at the same time. “What do you know?!” “John Smith. US Marines. Serial Number 654321.” I’d quickly try to catch as much of my breath as I could. “John Smith. US Marines. Serial Number 654321.” Inhale, exhale. “John Smith. US Marines. Serial Number 654321.” I never told them anything else.

One day, I have no idea which one – the days blurred into weeks and the weeks turned into months in that sweltering topical hell – a commanding Cuban officer approached me mid-torture. “So,” he began with a thick Cuban accent, “you are the son of an admiral in the American’s navy. Is this correct?”

My eyes widened.

“John Sidney McCain the third. Lieutenant Commander in the US Navy. Serial Number 624787. Born August 29, 1936.” He walked over to me to reveal the contents of his hands. “We found your dog tags in the wreckage of your plane, McCain. It appears you lied about your name, rank, number, even military branch. You’re quite the liar, Mr. McCain. I hate liars.” And yet another fist met my stomach. I would have spit at him but my throat was dry and hoarse.

The commanding officer shouted orders at the other men in the room. They released me from my bonds and I collapsed onto the floor. They picked me up by my arms, which hurt a great deal due to what they had done to them, dragged me out to a new and unfamiliar part of the complex, and propped up on a small metal chair in a barely-lit room similar to an office, sans furniture. A man kept his gloved hand firmly on my bleeding shoulder to keep me from falling off the chair, his finger digging into my skin the whole time, the man relishing in my pain. Another man splashed water into my face.

“So, you thought that if we though you were just another soldier we’d go easy on you, not execute you or use you as a bargaining chip? Hm. It’s rare to find such cleverness in an American.” The commanding officer then unfolded a wooden chair and sat in front of me “Well, now that we have made you comfortable we can begin our chat. For you see, Mr. McCain, we want to show the Americans that we are a sympathetic people who only want the best for everybody. And to prove this to your government, we are willing to …release you.”

“What?”

“Yes. Releasing you back to father, back to your cozy capitalist home, will prove to the Americans and the world watching that the Communists are, well, the good guys, you might say.”

I was still panting and wheezing, and I managed to say, with the tiniest bit of sarcasm, “Oh, you’re really going to just let me go, huh?”

“Yes, you understand. Good. I thought you’d understand if I kept it simple for you.” The officer was sincere, I could tell.

I lapped up the water around my lips with my tongue and gulped to help my throat. “Only if the rest of the men are released too.” No matter the number of men held in that godforsaken place, large or small, I could not let them suffer while I went free. It was either all of us or none of us. “Release… an entire POW camp. That… will show ’em you’re decent.”

The man laughed “I see you are a joker, Mr. McCain.”

“Actually… I’m not. My answer is no.” I stared at him with all the seriousness the tired muscles on my face could render.

He stopped laughing and lowered his eyebrows, “I’m sorry, what did you say?”

“Don’t know that word? No. Nada. No deal. No hay trato. No way… Jose.”

“Ah. I see.” He stood up, grabbed his chair and smashed it into my face in an explosion of searing agony. “You are not noble… You are a fool. Ah well, no matter, we’ll just go with the other option – sending you to the Isles of Pines.” The sadistic bastard ended with a fake smile: “Please enjoy your last few months staying here, and be sure to visit the gift shop on your way out!”

Again, my eyes widened, even there in the camp I knew the Isla de Pinos was a land of no return, an island stronghold of the Communists and the location of Cuba’s worst penitentiary.

When they brought me back to my cell, I knew the time had come to come up with a plan of escape.

After staring at my surrounding for weeks upon weeks I knew the layout of the building fairly well. I had been thinking of an escape plan but dared not try it until I knew awaited me outside. But when I was taken to that new room, they made one critical mistake – without something to cover my eyes, I had managed to take a peek through two small windows they dragged me past. It wasn’t much, but it was enough of a view for learning to grasp a much broader understanding of what I wanted to escape from exactly.

In Morse code and common hand gestures I managed to tell the other prisoners my idea. We needed all the help we could get if we all wanted to get out of there alive. It seemed like a suicide mission, but we decided to go with it anyway. Timing was everything, but time was on our side.

– From Admiral John McCain’s Boldly Into Hell: A Firsthand Account of America’s Wars in the 1960s and 1970s, Random House, 1987



…in a move deemed highly controversial in his home state, Alabama Governor George Wallace, has pardoned two of the Scottsboro Boys, a group of eight African-Americans accused and found guilty of rape in 1931 despite overwhelming evidence proving their innocence. Since then, some of the boys have either died or have been paroled. Governor Wallace announced pardons for two of them – Charlie Weems, whom was 19 at the time of the incident and has been out on parole since 1943; and Andrew Wright, also 19 at the time, who recently moved backed to Alabama after being paroled in 1950. The move is being considered an act of demonstrating the Governor’s calls for “equal fairness among all races,” and comes just days after passing a farmers’ assistance bill in the state legislature…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News broadcast, 3/3/1963 broadcast



March 5, 1963: McDonald’s sells its one billionth hamburger

– marketplace.or.uk/McDonald’s/timeline/the’60s



SNIPER CHARLES WHITMAN KILLED!: His Murderer, An Unknown Enemy Sniper, Cowardly Flees Scene!

– Star and Stripes, US military newspaper, 3/9/1963



CORPORAL WHITMAN POSTHUMOUSLY GIVEN THIRD PURPLE HEART, LAID TO REST IN TEXAS

…he is being rightfully called a hero back in the states… Whitman’s parents received a phone call from President Johnson expressing his sympathies…

– Star and Stripes, US military newspaper, 3/16/1963



Che said he was proud of me. I had seen my opportunity to finally win Che over, and I took it, and thanks to me that capitalist-loving menace, Chuck the Sniper, was finally a threat to us no longer. Che told me, “you know, when I first saw you, I thought you were an assassin or something. After all, I had just survived two attempts on my life on orders of LBJ, so I had to be careful. You understand.” I did.

– Lee Harvey Oswald’s autobiography “Call Me By My Real Name: Confessions From a Fallen Hero,” published posthumously



HOST: You two are really showing the divide in the interested public over whether or Oswald really did take out Whitman.

VETERAN 1: Well again, the US military recorded his shooting skills when he was in the marines, and he was lackluster, a very poor shot.

VETERAN 2: Even if those documents are true, even a broken clock is right twice a day, and given the circumstances it’s entirely possible for him to have done it. He clearly had a clean shot from the forest edge!

VETERAN 1: I so don’t think so. The truth –

VETERAN 2: Oh, denying the truth just leads to a variety of conspiracy theories, and they range from LBJ being involved somehow to the ghost of Fidel Castro possessing Oswald! None of them should be taken seriously!

HOST: Now that’s where I must disagree with you, bud. All possibilities exist until they absolutely don’t, and even then there’s still room for suspicion.

– Excerpt from in-studio between two Cuban War veterans and host Art Bell, Coast to Coast AM, 2020



I am certain that I will never forget the error I made on the Second of April, 1963. I ruined everything. Finally, I was feeling like I belonged there. I was accepted by my comrades at long last. I was relishing in my popularity over the past month, overlooking the view from the base of camp, enjoying the fair weather beside a large tree. My gun – the very same gun Che had handed to me all those weeks ago – was resting in my grasp. I remember it still smelled of rain. It had been such a nice day until then.

Che called me over. “Ándale!” he shouted. I’ll never know what he wanted.

I was happy and excited, and whatever was the matter seemed urgent, so I ran over.

But then – oh, that damn tree root! It was just stick out of the ground – my foot got caught on it, I tripped and I fell. The gun flew from my hand.

It went off – in my enjoying of the view, I hadn’t remembered to put the safety on.

I looked up quickly. Che said nothing. Che fell, blood seeping out of what was left of his face. I will never forget that horrible image. His face, it stilt haunts me. To this day, I will awake in a cold sweat, the guilt still permeating my slumber, my body, my soul.

I screamed in horror, and in that second, fear and panic fell over me. What would my comrades do? They’d kill me on the spot, that’s what! They had always been suspicious of me. They’d never believe it was an accident, never! I suddenly thought of Marina, and June and Junior – what would happen to them if I was gone, and wrongfully sentenced to being remembered as a traitor, a false label branded to me for the rest of time? (and I thought my mother back in the states, too, for some reason).

My preservation instincts kicked in.

I ran.

I ran for years.

– Lee Harvey Oswald’s autobiography “Call Me By My Real Name: Confessions From a Fallen Hero,” published posthumously



Cam is beside himself, as am I. Rumors have led to Cam offering a month’s worth of rations for anyone with information as to whom committed with atrocity. Julio [Casas Regueiro] is interrogating some alleged capitalist sympathizers over in the next valley, adamant it was a Cuban traitor. I myself believe it was that odd-looking American I spotted in his ranks when I visited his headquarters in January. He must have been a spy, but I do not know enough about him to know for sure. For all I know, maybe it was one of our own men!

Regardless of the guilty, Cam is genuine in his mourning. “I’m sad that he is gone,” he said to me last night, “I had such hope that we would reconcile.” But Cam will not dwell on this what-if forever. I know he knows that he has a revolution to lead…

– 3 April 1963 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



EXTRA! CHE GUEVARA DIES!

US Army Intel can confirm that Communist leader Che Guevara has died, most likely killed by a member or members of the rival Cienfuegos-supported Communist faction on the island. After previously surviving a bombing raid on his location in January, Che’s death could have a massive effect on the military situation in Cuba…

The Washington Post, 4/7/1963



DIEF STAYS ON AS CANADIAN PM; PEARSON CONCEDES

Ottawa, ON – Tories are celebrating across the dominion as Prime Minister John Diefenbaker’s minority government survived tonight’s federal election. While the Liberals made several gains and won an even greater increase in the popular vote, Diefenbaker held on by just 5 seats in the House of Commons. Most pundits agree that the biggest factor in his victory was Canadian approval of Diefenbaker’s support of the American-Cuban War. The leader of the Liberals, Lester Pearson, has formally conceded the race, but did not say if he would stay on as leader of the party. However, as Pearson has now lost three federal elections in a row, it is likely that he will be, at the very least, challenged for the top spot. ...The election victory may neutralize pre-election concerns over Diefenbaker’s mercurial leadership style, which almost led to a leadership challenge last year. What is still to be determined is how Diefenbaker will continue to handle his own party’s split over American nuclear missiles bases on Canadian soil and continued military aid to the US’s war efforts in Cuba. Apart from Diefenbaker opposing the missiles, he has supported American President Lyndon Johnson’s “conventional” warfare methods in combating Communism in the Caribbean, and the production of the almost-cancelled Avro Arrow has boosted the economy, according to the Diefenbaker campaign. Lyndon Johnson himself visited Toronto last week to publicly thank “all Canadians for [our] support in the fight to secure peace in Cuba.” The visit may have contributed to Diefenbaker’s numbers as well...

– The Middletown Journal, Canadian newspaper, 8/April/1963



Canadian Federal Election, 4/8/1963:
[see: outgoing members]
265 seats in the House of Commons
133 seats needed for a majority
Turnout: 79.2% (0.2 pp)
Progressive Conservative (PC) leader: John Diefenbaker (of Prince Albert)
Liberal (L) leader: Lester Pearson (of Algoma East)
Social Credit (SC) leader: Robert N. Thompson (of Red Deer)
New Democratic (ND) leader: Tommy Douglas (of Burnaby-Coquitlam)
Seats won in the last election: 116 (PC), 99 (L), 30 (SC), 19 (ND)
Seats won in this election: 114 (PC), 109 (L), 24 (SC), 16 (ND)
Seat change: v 2 (PC), ^ 10 (L), v 6 (SC), v 3 (ND)

– electionscanada.co.can/English-mode/1963



“We can report that a group of soldiers from a Communist organization located in North Vietnam, called the National Liberal Front, I’m told, have attacked American advisory troops in Laos near the Vietnam border. I’m told by authoritative sources on Capitol Hill that the President is meeting with his foreign policy advisors…”

– NBC, 4/9/1963 broadcast



Cam now has a new plan! He seeks to unify ex-Che supporters by temporarily discarding political ideology to instead focus on what he is calling “strategic sabotage” in the fight to liberation. So this is what the war has come to – measures that seem desperate and will possibly be very regrettable if they go awry, but measures that Cam – and I – believe are necessary.

– 12 April 1963 entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



In 1963, France’s Charles de Gaulle was still trying to solve the Vietnam Dilemma on his own, leading to Jack visiting him in April of that year. De Gaulle was still trying to be “independent of America’s sway,” and while he supported American operations in Cuba, but strongly opposed Johnson’s actions on the Laos-Vietnam border. Unfortunately, the straining of relations between Charles and Lyndon only continued to worsen as the year progressed…

On April 15, the South Vietnamese Civil Guards made a surprise attack on the Viet Cong, thanks to US advisory troops sent to their area from Laos earlier by Lyndon Johnson under Jack’s advice, one of the very few times he actually seemed listen to him concerning Vietnam. To tell the truth (as that is the whole purpose of this book), Jack was repeatedly kept out of cabinet meetings despite his foreign accomplishment. For example, by March 1963, Jack had visited to troops in Cuba twice as many times as LBJ and three times as many times as [Defense Secretary] Litzenburg. Jack spent time looking over details and specifics concerning potential war zones – it was part of his job description. Jack generally knew more about the situation in Southeast Asia than Johnson, but due to the 1960 campaign tension still lingering, Johnson relied more on his own advisors than on Jack and his advisors. I believe it was around this time that Vietnam began to be an important issue to LBJ, albeit one that was still largely on the backburner of his foreign policy oven, to coin a phrase.

– Robert F. Kennedy’s The Definitive Decades, Tangent Writer’s House, 1999



HEROISM ON DISPLAY AFTER CUBAN JET KAMIKAZES INTO AIRCRAFT CARRIER

– Star and Stripes, US military newspaper, 4/16/1963



June Koznick told us about his early days in the Air Force. He enlisted in Florida in 1961, at the age of 18, and was sent to work as a medical records technician. Soon he became a first sergeant on an aircraft carrier off the coast of Cuba. He was “the guy who makes you scrub the latrine, the guy who makes you make your bed, the guy who screams at you for being late to work,” the mean ball-buster barking orders [6]. On April 16, he was walking up the main starboard stairs when the ship was struck by a Cuban military jet. “He was hit by some flames or something, like they just busted out of the wall in front of him, and he fell down the stairs,” Koznick explains. Despite the injury, he immediately got up and helped drag several injured men out of further harm’s way before receiving medical attention. He would later receive a Purple Heart for this.

– Kristin G. Congdon, Doug Blandy, and Danny Coeyman’s Happy Clouds, Happy Trees: The Bob Ross Phenomenon, University Press of Mississippi, 2014



…Let’s move on now to the strength of unions in this country. There is much debate right now over the notion that there a crisis of faith in the American labor union today…

– CBS roundtable discussion, 5/5/1963 broadcast



THE RISE OF THE BEATNIKS: Youth Activism And The Changing Music Scene

...New movements require new slang, with this one being no exception: “shoutniks” are beatniks that shout, “sitniks” are beatniks that engage in sit-ins… The culture is an alluring form of escapism from the pressures of social conformity. Allen Ginsberg is one of the more active beatniks. A poet by nature, he was inspired by the Civil rights Movement to openly criticize aspects of American society he describes as “imperialist and unhealthy” Their most recent major action was a peaceful sit-in outside Florida Governor C. Farris Byrant’s office... Ginsberg is determined. He tells me he has made contact with Saul Alinsky for pointers. “Nobody can emulate his organizing genius,” Ginsberg boasts, “but we are taking the steps we need to achieve our goals.”

– Hunter S. Thompson’s exposé article for Variety’s May 1963 issue



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– Former Vice President Richard Nixon (R-CA) appears in a TV commercial for KFC, filmed like a film noir mystery, showing Nixon paranoid that someone ("if not everyone") is out to get his KFC dinner; first aired 5/3/1963



The latest reports from independent journalists in Havana report that under the leadership of Camilo Cienfuegos, Communist forces are gaining ground. The Communists’ new tactics, such as bombing areas deep in US-occupied territory, appears to be destabilizing American forces stationed in more inland regions. …High casualties are expected as these bombings continue, according to reliable sources…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 5/15/1963 broadcast



LIBERALS GO TO HELLYER IN LEADERSHIP ELECTION

Toronto, ON – After five contentious ballot, dark horse candidate Paul Hellyer has become the new leader of the Liberal Party. Hellyer, 39, and a member of Parliament for Trinity, started out as an underdog in the fight, with Dufferin “Duff” Roblin, Malcolm McCutcheon, and E. Davie Fulton being the early frontrunners. After Ellen Fairclough and Donald Fleming withdrew, they supported Hellyer, allegedly to spite Roblin, whom attacked them fiercely during the competition to win over delegates. Hellyer gathered momentum ahead of the second ballot. In light of Lester Pearson’s retirement after three consecutive losses, Hellyer called for a more centrist party platform to win over “the remaining” Diefenbaker backers. Hellyer’s youth arguably made him the most energetic candidate at the convention. After defeating Fulton on the third ballot and McCutcheon on the fourth, he faced Roblin on the fifth and final ballot. It seems, though, that Roblin’s harsh criticism of the earlier candidates caused him to lose support among their former delegates. However, after losing to Hellyer, Roblin proclaimed that Hellyer “simply won by default.”…

– The Calgary Sun, Canadian newspaper, 5/19/1963



DIEF CONFRONTS QUEBEC SPERATISTS OVER RECENT WAVE OF CITY VANDALISM

Montreal – Prime Minister Diefenbaker, promising to “maintain peace and order across the provinces,” has initiated a police “crackdown” on the Front de liberation du Quebec, a Quebec-based political organization advocating Quebecois independence, after a week of city vandalism for which the group has claimed responsibility. …According to one inside source whom wishes to remain anonymous, Diefenbaker is emboldened by his election victory in April but also “paranoid of Communist spies in the more rebellious spots in Canada after talking on the phone to Lyndon Johnson about Byron De La Beckwith,” possibly in light of the still-ongoing trial of the alleged American traitor, which is covered in the story on Page 1B. While this claim has yet to be backed up by other sources, it is becoming very clear that Tory officials in both the party and the federal government have grown tired of working either for or with Dief. In the past month, seven aides have quit…

The Globe and Mail, 5/21/1963



“I don’t know Louie that well, but from what I’ve heard about the businessman, he sounds like the right man for the job!”

– Colonel Sanders, upon being asked by a journalist whom he backed in the upcoming Kentucky gubernatorial Republican primary, 5/23/1963



Kentucky State Party Gubernatorial Primaries, 5/28/1963:
For Governor:
Republican Primary Results (2.88% Total Population):
Louie B. Nunn – 77,455 (88.53%)
Jesse N. R. Cecil – 10,039 (11.47%)
Democratic Primary Results (19.52% Total Population):
Bert T. Combs – 402,665 (67.89%)
Happy Chandler – 165,893 (27.97%)
Mary Louie Foust – 19,869 (3.35%)
Wilton Benge Cupp – 4,685 (0.79%)
Total votes cast: 593,112

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



US APPROVAL OF CUBAN WAR SUFFERING, NEW POLL FINDS
A new polling study on the approval of America’s intervention in Cuba by average Americans polled demonstrates a noticeable change in opinion:
The Question: “How is the War in Cuba progressing?”
Then: Conducted between March 23 and March 30:
Well: 55%
Poorly: 38%
Unsure: 7%
Now: Conducted between May 23 and May 30:
Well: 47%
Poorly: 42%
Unsure: 11%
The decrease in approval can be contributed to some variables. These include default Communist leader Camilo Cienfuegos remaining at-large despite the capture of Havana by US-DRF forces. Several people polled described anguish over the apparent lack of change in the war’s progress. “Camilo is still at large, and people are starting to wonder why nothing is being done about it,” stated one polled individual who wished to remain anonymous. Others seem to agree with the notion that the War in Cuba has “stagnated,” as US-DRF forces have gained little new ground in the past two months…

– In a newspaper article by George Gallup, Director of the American Institute of Public Opinion, 6/1/1963



From: General Bruce Palmer Jr.
To: President Lyndon Baines Johnson
Mr. President,
I am surprised by the public’s negative views of the war. We are doing our best to keep at bay an enemy only 90 miles way from our shores, as you of course know, but a considerably large portion of the United States seems to have a greater focus on the current casualties rather than the casualties America and its allies would receive if Communism was allowed to spread.
I am very much surprised by this. We are stopping the destruction of the free world right as it pounds at the front door. However, I am also surprised by the slow advancement and continuous resistance here in Cuba. Camilo’s supporters outnumber us in people, but not in weaponry. However, we are supposed to be “liberating” these people who wish to harm us, but no more than a quarter of the Cuban people oppose Camilo, according to our statisticians here. The persistence of these Communists is beginning to overwhelm the men, regardless of rank it seems.
It is because of the unexpectedly high intensity of the nation’s inhabitants that have been duped into following Communism, I again request the increase of weaponry and manpower. However, due to the negative press coverage of the military action down here, I also request a limitation of press access to certain bases and battlefields. I understand that this would infringe on their First Amendment rights. However, we would only be violating the freedom in the name of saving all freedoms of democracy in Cuba and the United States. Mr. President, I believe that sometimes one freedom must be restricted in order to ensure that not all of our freedoms perish in the victory of our enemies.
Please respond to my request at your own pace, but without conscious delay.
In dutiful service and allegiance,
General Palmer

– Then-classified communiqué from General Palmer to President Johnson, concerning the gradually rising disapproval of the War in Cuba, 6/4/1963



On June 6, Bob Ross was transferred to Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska. Despite now needing to wear dark-lens glasses [to combat light sensitivity, as his eyes were damaged by the bright flames and explosions exposed to him during the aircraft carrier incident], he took up painting when it was offered at the base as a form of therapy. He immediately found it to be a cathartic experience, to create a beautiful image of anything the mind wanted out of just paints and a canvas. Still recuperating, he subsequently took art classes at the Anchorage USO club, but found them unhelpful because “They’d tell you what makes a tree, but they wouldn’t tell you how to paint a tree,” [6] as he would later recall.

– Kristin G. Congdon, Doug Blandy, and Danny Coeyman’s Happy Clouds, Happy Trees: The Bob Ross Phenomenon, University Press of Mississippi, 2014



SENATE PASSES “LANDMARK” VOTING RIGHTS BILL

...Thanks to liberal pickups in last year’s midterm elections, Republicans and northern Democrats in the Senate passed President Johnson’s Voting Rights Bill earlier today. The bill, set to be signed into law by Johnson “very soon,” according to an authoritative source on the Hill, will outlaw poll taxes and poll literacy tests – often used to prevent Negroes from voting – in federal, statewide, and even local elections.

– Knoxville News Sentinel, Tennessee newspaper, 6/8/1963



KFC FOUNDER DONATES EQUIPMENT TO 5 OHIO MEDICAL SCHOOLS

…the founder of the nationwide fast-food chain has graciously donated materials to five of the Buckeye State's medical schools…

– The Columbus Dispatch, 6/9/1963



On June 10, 1963, the Equal Pay Act was finally signed into law, as an amendment to the Fair Labor Standards Act.

– Sylvia Ellis’ Freedom’s Pragmatist: Lyndon Johnson and Civil Rights, University Press of Florida, 2013



…In the past month, we have been gaining significant ground, thanks to new members. Many former Che backers are slowly rejoining our faction – the last faction left standing, so I guess it is no longer a faction – but some continue to fight on in opposition to Cam. Several tiny pockets of soldiers – no more than a single village worth of men and women – each claim to be the true successor to Che’s faction, but because of their small sizes they will surely dissolve so long as we ignore then and focus on the Grave Enemy. “Let the stragglers fall into a leaderless void of warfare. Let them cancel each other out,” Cam says. He believes that centralization, consolidating gathering around him will make us strong in the face of the US’s superior firepower…

...I am conflicted because I am happy that we could end the war soon and make Che’s followers join us in that effort, but I am sad because of the destruction that has befallen the land. And because of the many deaths of women and children. Sometimes the smell of the burning corpses makes me retch. An older soldier mocked me for it yesterday, saying I should be used to it by now. Maybe I’m not because, while war is necessary, a part of me thinks it should never reach this level of severity. I pray for the men and women lost, and I pray for my and Cam’s souls as well...

…With Khrushchev gone, the Soviets have resumed clandestine support for us, but Cam still does not trust them. He told me earlier tonight that he would reach out to the Chinese “if the Russians wouldn’t find out. But they would. A sneaky pack of wolves, they are.” Cam is so smart; surely now the tide of this war will turn! I can feel it!

– Excerpts from the 12, 13, and 14 June 1962 entries of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter, published 1996



Marietta > Where To Go > The Big Chicken

THE BIG CHICKEN

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[pic: imgur.com/wCmCIIJ.png ]

The Big Chicken was built in 1961 [7] for a restaurant that opened in 1956 and was originally called Johnny Reb’s Chick-Chuck-‘N’-Shake. Inspired by the success of KFC, the restaurant’s owner, Stanley R. “Tubby” Davis, created the seven-story tall structure as a way to advertise his restaurant. Almost immediately, the towering landmark, standing tall at an impressive 56 feet, and looking like a stylized red chicken with moving eyes and beaks, became a common reference point for locals, with phrases like “turn left at the big chicken” or “just one mile south of the big chicken” often being used by folks in and around Marietta giving out-of-towners directions. In early 1963, just a few years after construction of the big chicken, Davis retired, and sold the profitable restaurant to his brother. His brother, in turn, converted the restaurant it into a franchise of Kentucky Fried Chicken. In June of that year, Colonel Harland Sanders himself visited the restaurant and heartily approved of the avian apparatus atop the building.

In 1993, after years of deterioration and recent storm damage, the famous landmark was in danger of being torn down. When news of this plan reached the public, the outcry was so great that KFC agreed to rebuild the entire structure and restore it to its former glory. The Big Chicken received an expensive do-over, complete with a new paintjob of stronger, longer-lasting, vibrant red paint, essentially returning it to its former glory by the start of 1994.

The Big Chicken is located at the intersection of Cobb Parkway (U.S. Highway Route 41) and Roswell Road (Georgia State Route 120 Loop). There is a small gift shop inside for visitors and customers who would like to purchase souvenirs, or stop by the Marietta Museum of History for some Big Chicken merchandise.

– marietta.co.usa [8]




[vid: youtube /watch?v=sYyxX0s-yRU ]

– footage of the iconic Big Chicken in Marietta, Georgia



“In other news, the people of Buenos Aires, Argentina welcomed Colonel Harland Sanders to the city tonight for the grand opening of that nation’s first Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant outlet.”

– NBC, 6/20/1963 broadcast



“IT’S NEVER TOO EARLY TO THINK ABOUT IT”: Republican Leaders Weighing 1964 Odds, Speculated Candidates

…Early speculation on how the 1964 primary contests and national convention will unfold for the Republicans has seen much discussion on several notable politicians. According to most internal polls taken by the RNC, Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York and US Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona are the most likely Republican politicians to win the GOP nomination for President next year. However, some Republican leaders and donors are hoping that the newly sworn-in Governor of Michigan, George W. Romney, will run for the job. Others support former Vice President Nixon, who lost a very narrow race in 1960 and could run on the theme of “buyer’s remorse” by highlighting Johnson’s “failures” as President. …There is concern that the GOP’s nominee will require military experience. Nixon’s running mate in 1960, US Congressman Walter Judd, or possibly the diplomat and former US Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., could possibly placate those concerns, as both have extensive foreign policy experience…

The Washington Times, 6/24/1963



SECRETARY OF DEFENSE HOMER L. LITZENBERG DIES, 60

…the death has occurred just days after President Johnson sent more American forces to the Vietnam/Laos border. …Already, some pundits on the Hill believe that US Army General William Westmoreland, whom presided primarily over the early aspects of the War in Cuba, could be Litzenburg’s replacement…

– The Washington Post, 6/27/1963



“CAMILO BOMB” KILLS 2 IN FLORIDA: State Residents “Scared,” Others “Uneasy”

…A bomb detonated at the shopping mall… two Americans, a security officer and a janitor, were killed. Their names have not yet been disclosed… A Latino man was arrested fleeing from the scene. Upon being cornered several blocks away from the mall, the man proclaimed himself to be a “co-liberator of Cuba” before shouting “Long Live Camilo” and fatally shooting himself in the head, according to Police Chief… Cuban War veterans are labeling it a "Camino" bomb, meaning a bomb detonated on orders of Communist leader Camilo Cienfuegos, whom began a bombing campaign of DRF/US-held areas in Cuba earlier this year...

– Miami Herald, 6/28/1963



JOHNSON: ...These are not going to be a problem, right?

WESTMORELAND: No sir.

JOHNSON: Good, good, because I and the American voter will not tolerate bombs going off in their shopping mall or wherever.

WESTMORELAND: Yes, sir.

JOHNSON: Just get together with Brown and the others down there and get a handle on that island!

WESTMORELAND: Don’t worry, Mr. President, we’ll establish order here by Christmas!

– President Johnson, in a telephone conversation between him and General William Westmoreland, concerning the possibility of further “Camilo Bombs” detonating in American cities in the future, 6/29/1963



Every seven days, the men who came to torture me for the second time that day did so at noon, the same time as the changing of the guard on that day; for some reason that evades me even today, there was a 37-second-delay, a window of opportunity, between the old guard leaving and the new guard arriving. Very unprofessional, but more than helpful for us. After weeks of planning, the time finally came.

When the two bastards came to begin another torture session, I lied close to the edge of my cell, feigning unconsciousness. When they entered my cell, Rogers and Hopkins, the men in my adjacent cell, grabbed ahold of the guard’s guns. I was tired, but I managed to trip them as they stepped away from their own guns. They hit their heads against the stone wall.

20 seconds left

I quickly scurried to get their keys. I took off my shackles. Yes!

14 seconds left

I unlocked my cell door and freed the two next door, then the three in the cell across from me

7 seconds left

I passed the keys to Valladares, who rushed to open the door of the cell with the largest number of inmates, seven angry men in a tiny smelly hovel.

No seconds. The man was coming around the corner.

“John!” Hopkins tossed me one of the guns. I caught it, swung around and shot the guard in the face at point blank range.

I poked my head around the corner. In no more than 30 seconds the rest of the men would be responding to that shot. Executions normally took place tomorrow. They would be barging down on us and we’d be facing certain doom if we didn’t get out of there ASAP.

Most of the remaining cells were yet to be opened, but we couldn’t stay. Valladares tossed the keys into one of the remaining cells and I lead us down the side hallway.

“There!” I pointed to a white door. “When we get out, run into the forest.”

We all bolted. I fired as accurately as I could at the door handle, finally breaking the lock and bolt just as I reached the knob.

To the Cuban guards outside it must have been mayhem, seeing a band of prisoners bursting out of the side entrance like that. They opened fire on us. Rogers fired back but only took out one of them before being shot in the head. Hopkins picked the gun up and continued to shoot from behind one of their own jeeps parked near the door.

I stood at the edge of the forest to ensure the others slipped into the cluster of plants and humidity. They wheezed and huffed through their broken ribs, and limped and even hopped on their broken legs, all with all their might to escape, but only about half of us made it. As Hopkins and I made it into the cover of Cuba’s geography, the commies continued to fire at us, even after losing visual. They just kept on firing into the forest, until finally realizing they were just wasting ammo.

After running for as much as I could I stopped to turn around and check on Hopkins. One of the last bullets fired before they had stopped had hit him. He was leaning against a tree, holding his side, blood spilling out over his fingers. He fainted, and I rushed back over to him. He died before either of us could say anything.

We never regrouped. Once we were out of there, it was every man for himself. And it would be decades until I came across any of them ever again.

It took me two more weeks to return to land under US-DRF control. Two weeks of rebuilding my strength and surviving in the unwelcoming forests and jungles of Cuba. Thankfully, not only had I been taken to one of the few temporary POW camps located on the mainland that had still not been moved to the Isle of Pines, but most of the land I travelled ended up being farmland, though towards the end, most of the land was burned and useless. For two weeks I avoided capture in enemy land, and when I finally reached a safe zone, I remember, I collapsed from exhaustion into the arms of American soldiers, the greatest and noblest fighting forces on Earth.

I was still in Cuba, but at least now I was home.

– From Admiral John McCain’s Boldly Into Hell: A Firsthand Account of America’s Wars in the 1960s and 1970s, Random House, 1987 (July)



QUEBEC SEPARATIST DEMONSTRATIONS CATCHING ON?

…In the wake of increased violence allegedly stemming from Quebec separatists, Diefenbaker is increasing crackdowns on provincial organizations on the grounds of disturbing public peace and safety… This week, Quebecois opposing the crackdowns took to the streets across the province, holding makeshift banners and signs, singing pro-independence songs, and waving Quebec flags…

– The Telegram (Canadian magazine), 6/29/1963



Over the past eight months I have traveled all across the US-DRF zone to understand the situation here in Cuba from every possible angle. What I found was a large variety of perspectives on the War in Cuba. The opinions of soldiers and civilians from all walks of life concerning the progress of the “pending conclusion” war range from idealistically optimistic to hopelessly dismal. Often these conflicting reports depend on region. For instance, the closer one travels to the frontlines, the more foreboding the aura of the situation becomes. One opinion that many there believe is that this war is far from over. The idea comes from simple indisputable facts. One such fact is that Camilo Cienfuegos is still at large, organizing his forces in the deepest parts of the island’s mountains, areas “still to be liberated from his clutches,” as one DRF officer described it...

– From a report by Tad Szulc, The New York Times, 6/30/1963



ANCHOR: In other news, as hundreds of people continue to show disdain for the continuation of strict security measures at international airports nationwide, over 400 Americans organized a protest rally outside the main entrance of O’Hare International Airport today. For more, Hugh Downs reports.

[Footage is aired showing the large group of protesters, long lines, cargo inspections, and pat-downs].

DOWNS (Voice-over): At the doors of the Windy City’s biggest airport, a large clamoring crowd of American citizens from all walks of life are getting their voices heard. At this busy and very public setting, they are chanting, holding signs, and marching in front of the news cameras, both local and nationwide. They are ordering the FAA to loosen or even drop altogether their security measures. I talked to several of them, and many voiced their concerns and frustrations over what is going on at America’s airports.

[cut to two protestors, both male]

MALE PROTESTOR 1: This just ridiculous. They can’t treat people like this, like we’re cattle.

MALE PROTESTOR 2: Yeah, some of us of have important places to get to. We got businesses to run, families to see. This whole mess is making everyone lose so much of their time.

[cut to adolescent protestor]

ADOLESCENT PROTESTOR: There is no threat. The review-thingy came out months ago. Instead of focusing on how to fix that accident that caused that crash two years ago they’re spending their time on wasting our time!

[cut to female protestor]

FEMALE PROTESTOR: It is a complete invasion of privacy. When you travel now, they make you actually open up your luggage, and then they paw their mitts all over your belongings. Just what exactly do they think they’ll find in my, pardon me, my undergarments?! This whole thing is ludicrous!

[cut to footage of travelling into the airport, long lines, tired faces, man sleeping on floor]

DOWNS (Voice-over): But some people seem to be more tolerant of the situation. I asked around inside the airport to get some opinions.

[cut to man]

MAN: I mean, it’s really inconvenient, but I guess the government knows best, I mean, if they know what they’re doing than I guess it is alright.

[cut to another man]

MAN 2: Sir, I had to go through much worse conditions during the War. Those youngsters and some of them oldsters, they don’t know what inconvenience really is. Not at all.

[cut to young woman]

WOMAN: I just really don’t care. I just want to get to where I want to go.

[cut back to protestors chanting]…

– Part of the transcript of NBC News TODAY’s 6/31/1963 television broadcast



SOURCE(S)/NOTE(S)
[1] Like what happened to him at the Cuban Embassy in Mexico did do IOTL: https://www.smithsonainmag.com/smart-news/a-brief-history-of-lee-harvey-oswalds-connection-to-cuba-180958987/ ...
[2] OTL quote, except with “Cuba” and other non-italicized parts replacing “Vietnam” in the text.
[3] Both Ike quotes are OTL: https://jfkjmn.com/new-page-80
[4] Like what Kennedy did IOTL: https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/eisenhower-cautions-successor-about-laos
[5] Italic bits are taken from Wiki (I believe Kentucky’s history page?), Footnote 154.
[6] OTL, from that book which really is OTL, but is much different in content ITTL.
[7] Roughly two years earlier than in OTL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Chicken
[8] The italicized parts in of these last two paragraphs were pulled from here: http://www.marietta.com/attractions/the-big-chicken
 
Post 9
Post 9: Chapter 17



Chapter 17: June 1963 – December 1963



“[The President’s] emotional state is a matter of continual public commentary, as is the manner in which his personal and official families conduct themselves. The media bring across the President not as some neutral administrator or corporate executive to be assessed by his production, but as a special being with mysterious dimensions.”

– James David Barber, The Presidential Character, 1972 (OTL)



He came out of the fog with his coat flapping in the wind, like an overweight bat out of hell, an accurate description for a con artist in Bayonne, New Jersey.

“Welcome, inspectors,” the pudgy wholesaler and commodities trader in his late 40s said to the men whom had just outside.

The Amek representatives were given a tour of the facilities – a collection of massive warehouses in the most industrialized part of the city. With steam and summertime humidity swirling around the men traversed the interior to inspect the first of several hundred tanks, each one “filled to the brim with salad oil and soybean oil,” the man promised.

The lead inspector approached the first tank and peered in. “Yep, that’s salad oil. Okay, this tank checks out...”

The man’s deception was as simple as that.

Because of a rookie mistake, the inspectors left the warehouse facilities with a document of approval. They had failed miserably to notice that the oil in the tank only went an inch deep – all the liquid below that layer was saltwater hauled in from the Atlantic next door. The inspectors had also failed to even notice the interconnecting tubes to the back of each tank, allowing the man and his knowing and unknowing employees to transfer the oil-seawater mix from already-checked tanks to tanks yet to be checked.

When the inspection was over, Tino De Angelis returned to his office to continue the Scam of the Century.

– Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Norman C. Miller’s, “The Great Salad Oil Swindle,” Coward McCann Books, 1965 (Second Edition, 1979)



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– Tino De Angelis outside his warehouse complex, circa June 1963



LYNDON JOHNSON PRESIDENTIAL APPROVAL RATING:

58% APPROVE
32% DISAPPROVE
10% UNCERTAIN

– Gallup poll, 6/29/1963


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– Colonel Sanders cameos in “Fun in Acapulco,” an Elvis vehicle filmed in January and released on 6/30/1963 (originally scheduled for a November release but moved up after studio execs realized people were less willing to watch a “summer” film in the late fall); the Colonel agreed to the brief spot after learning that Elvis (who served in the US Army from 1958 to 1960) proudly supported the US military



“The President is increasing the number of troops set to be deployed to the Laos-Vietnam border by 500... The search for the late Secretary Litzenberg’s replacement is still underway, though there are several candidates under consideration...”

– White House Press Secretary George Reedy, press briefing, 7/1/1963



CHICKEN WAR ESCALATES

After a recent visit to the U.S., West Germany’s Minister Without Portfolio Heinrich Krone returned to Bonn with a telling assessment of official Washington’s mood. Said Krone: “Everyone is preoccupied with Cuba, Berlin, Laos-and chickens.” Konrad Adenauer confided not long ago that he and President Johnson have had voluminous correspondence during the past two years, “and I guess about half of it has been about chickens.” Last week the cause of all this chicken talk – tariffs – took an unexpected turn. Into effect throughout the Common Market went a raised tariff on imports of U.S. chickens – just when the U.S. thought that [1] tensions were de-escalating around Europe’s farmers opposing U.S. chicken farmers lowering chicken prices across the continent during the past 15 years…

– Time Magazine, 7/2/1963



The National Restaurant Association voted in 1963 to hold its annual convention at its headquarters in the national’s capitol. The Colonel had been to Washington D.C. before, but only to sell his chicken (an endeavor that was not successful until 1953). Joining the Colonel at the “ritzy shin-dig” was Beverly Osborne, a man, only a few years younger than the Colonel, [2] who in 1936 had (with his wife Rubye) founded “Chicken in the Rough,” the fried chicken chain that was KFC’s primary competition in earlier years, with the two franchises eclipsing in the late 1950s. In recent years, however, Chicken in the Rough sales were in a state of continuous decline. At the July 1963 NRA Convention, the Colonel learned that the Osbornes had decided to sell the company.

“But Bev,” the Colonel confronted Osborne, “if you pack up, I’ll miss competing with ya!”

Beverly replied, “I know when I’m beat, Colonel. I’m cutting my losses and retiring.”

The Colonel exclaimed, “Never retire! A man’ll rust out quicker than he’ll wear out! [3] Besides, who’s going to fill your shoes? I can’t be the only chicken salesman in town – I can’t stand monopolies!”

“You’ll be fine, Colonel, there will be plenty of growing chicken franchises willing to take you on,” Osborne assured his friendly rival, “And besides, what about Kroc?”

“If Kroc tried to sell chicken, he’d fail worse than a heifer trying to fly! You’re not like that snake oil seller, you’re decent.”

“Well I’m not throwing in the towel entirely, Colonel. I’m still holding onto my pancake house in O.K. City and a few other assets.”

“Oh,” the Colonel calmed down a bit, “that’s good. Maybe you can expand that into a larger business!”

“Maybe,” Osborne answered unenthusiastically.

The exchange left the Colonel in a bitter mood for much of that evening, according to his wife Claudia. He was already frustrated with the rising tensions between American and European chicken farms that year inhibiting expansion into Western Germany despite his longtime pledge to purchase “local chickens for local outlets,” and the retirement of the Osbornes left him both crestfallen and furious. “He huffed that he would never, ever retire,” she later explained in a TNB Interview, “KFC was his ‘fourth child,’ you could say. Hearing that Beverly was just going to hand over his own child to the highest bidder was shocking to Harland. He told me, ‘Honey, if I get so old and loopy that I try something like that, please slap me upside the head with my own pressure fryer to set me straight.’”

Feeling guilty at “runnin’ Chicken-Rough to ruins,”[sic] the Colonel donated an undisclosed amount of money to the International Franchise Association [4], an organization founded by Dunkin’ Donuts founder William Rosenberg to financially support upstart and growing franchise companies.

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



INTERVIEWER: Over the years you’ve done several collaborations with Frank Zappa. How did that start?

CHONG: Oh, I got to play with Frankie Z for the first time during this Fourth of July concert we both got booked for in 1963. We met backstage right after our parts and we hung out, you know? Smoked some African ganji, got with some groupies, broke into the local zoo, you know, regular stuff. Oh, man! I remember, those koalas were so lazy, we just sat there in the tree with one of them, and one of my bandmates was blowing smoke into its face and it still kept on snoring. I didn’t know koalas could snore but I swear this one was, at least…. Um… where was I? Oh yeah! Frankie was still solo at this point, but he had some really sick tunes. Very groovy. He was inspirational to me, man, and he really helped me hone in on my potential. I learned how to be more instinctive and spontaneous with my music, and it became more natural, more passionate, you know? There’s just something really beautiful about not needing anything. It’s simple when it’s just you and your instrument, the tool of your trade, and that’s all you need to learn who you are and when you discover that, man, you enjoy whatever comes your way. So right after that concert was when my band and I recorded “Please Pass Me By,” and that was our first real hit...

– usarightnow.co.usa/culture/interview, 2014



EXTRA! BOMB DISCOVERED AT KEY WEST INTERNATIONAL BAGGAGE TERMINAL LUGGAGE: Flights Quickly Cancelled, Delayed, Rerouted to Other Airports

– The Orlando Sentinel, 7/11/1963



SAM AND BUD WALTON, BROTHER BUSINESSMEN, DIE IN PLANE CRASH

Samuel Moore “Sam” Walton, 45, and his younger brother James Lawrence “Bud” Walton, 41, died in a plane accident on Thursday the 11th morning. Both men were businessmen and were licensed pilots whom would often use Sam’s personal small airplane to scout out potential store locations from above [5], a friend of the family explained. According to witnesses on the ground and a statement from Key West International, both men were unaware of a passenger airliner, being rerouted from Key West impromptu, entering their airspace; Sam, the brother at the controls, successfully maneuvered their vessel out of the larger plane’s way, avoiding a mid-air collision, but was unable to stabilize the aircraft, resulting in the vessel plummeting to earth. Neither of the two occupants onboard survived the crash. An investigation is currently underway to determine the exact specifics of the crash.

Sam and Bud worked numerous odd jobs during the Great Depression. Sam served in the Army and Bud in the Navy during WWII. Both men owned and operated a small retail store in Rogers, Arkansas called Wal-Mart Discount City. It is currently unknown what will happen to the store.

Sam is survived by his wife Helen and their children Samuel, John, James, and Alice. Bud is survived by his wife Audrey and their daughters Ann and Nancy.

– The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, obituary article, 7/14/1963



As we looked out the windows of the plane, I felt trepidation despite Margaret’s ebullience. “Juan has done a phenomenal job so far in my opinion,” almost giggled in excitement. Dad was finally meeting the man with whom she’d been corresponding for months. I once joked that she saw him as a hot Latin Einstein; Maggie didn’t deny the sentiment. “He’s promoting labor rights and unions – within reason, of course – rights for women, for children, and for farmers and the homeless” thanks to a new constitution he promulgated in April.

“I’m sure I’ll like the fella – just as long as you’re sure he likes my chicken!” Dad half-seriously replied.

Even with the War still raging on in Cuba, the business world continued on, and Margaret was determined to bring Kentucky Fried Chicken to the Dominican Republic. “ ‘The establishment of corporate relations with the economic fixture of the Dominican Republic will help its good people move on past it dictatorship past,’ ” Dad read his speech aloud, “How’s that?” We voiced our approval as the plane finally landed.

We soon sat down to discuss the specifics of the deal with President Bosch and several business and economics advisors.

“The introduction of KFC to an area has always lead to local growth and development, as you can see on this chart,” I mentioned.

“I just hope I’m still in office at the start of the next fiscal year,” Bosch half-jokingly lamented, “I’ve only been in office for five months, and already they want me gone.”

Margaret explained to us that Bosch’s Presidency was already being threatened by upper-class landowners, industrialists, and the Church for being “too Communist,” as they claimed.

“Just because I care about the people who have less does not mean I am a communist,” Bosch spoke bluntly, “it means I am a humanitarian.”

Dad thought for a moment and they said, “Juan, let me give you some advice. Don’t let the military kick you around.”

Maggie interjected, “But Pops, he could face serious trouble from them.”

“Be a hand that feeds and doesn’t hit, and the dogs won’t bite,” Dad explained.

Bosch answered in Spanish, which Margaret later revealed meant “As you are a Colonel and so have military experience yourself, I will consider this feed-don’t-hit policy.”

Two weeks later, Bosch met with the US’s acting Secretary of Defense. According to his secretary, the first thing he asked was “Why does the US military never overthrow its government?” Bosch took whatever he learned from that meeting back to the Dominican Republic. “Clearing out corruption and political ties is necessary to have complacency,” he later wrote to my sister. Soon after, Bosch promoted Francisco Caamano to lead the military, and met with the leaders of the island nation’s Catholic Church to assure them that he was not a Communist. Of course, that wasn’t the end of things there, but I like to think that somehow, through just the introduction of Dad’s chicken to the island or maybe even more than just that, we helped smoothen that nation’s long transition from a dictatorship to a direct democracy.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



The increasingly noticeable atrocities of the Cuban War, and with them rise of the Shoutnik Movement, brought an end to the idealism of 1950s Cold War America. The picturesque innocence of the nuclear family was torn down, images of teens innocently hanging out at malt shops replaced by the images of young men dying in remote jungles merely 90 miles off of sunny Florida’s coast that might as well have been a world away like the jungles along the Laos-Vietnam border. Throughout the Cuban War, fear of Russian retaliation every time the US army advanced replacing one fear with another. Basically, the American people are scared – by 1963, they had worsened into being either numb to the fear or at each other’s throats over it, contributing to the social unrest. Paranoia stoked the fires of discontent and President Lyndon B. Johnson appeared too overwhelmed with the complexities of the office to respond.

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



THE END OF THE CHICKEN WAR

The chicken war – that silly but symbolic dispute between the U.S. and the Common Market – seemed to have finally ended last week with each side holding a leg. After a dispute that, due to the distraction of Cuba’s issues, dragged on for 13 months, a panel of neutral experts decided that the recent tariff hike on chickens had cost the U.S. $26 million in exports. Though the estimate of losses was only about half as high as the U.S. had argued, both sides could claim victory – the Common Market because the loss figure was much nearer to its estimates, the U.S. because the ruling implied that the Market’s tariffs were discriminatory. [6] Despite that ruling, President Johnson has officially ordered a 25% tariff on potato starch, brandy, destrin, and light trucks [7] from Europe. After months of international tensions over French and West German tariffs placed on US chicken imports to those nations, which were allegedly harming local chicken farmers, Johnson appears to be having the final say in the matter. The U.S. Secretary of Commerce explained that the President’s move is “meant to make up for profits lost during the ‘war,’” and that European trucks are part of the tariffs, instead of some other imports, in order to “give American domestic automakers an advantage over foreign competitors.” Additionally, he explained that with Johnson’s proclamation, executed via executive order, the U.S. had invoked its right under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), “whereby an offended nation may increase tariffs by an equal amount of losses from discriminating tariffs.”

– Time Magazine, 7/28/1963 [8]



Commerce Secretary: European Trucks Tariffs Will Promote Domestic Production And Purchases

Engineering News-Record, 7/29/1963



I think these tariffs are going to hurt America’s car and chicken industries. The tax will cripple these industries by insulating them from any real competition. It’s a competitive market that promotes improving a product. Now I mean no disrespect to President Johnson, but what he’s done is dangerous, reckless, and irresponsible to our economy and to our God-given right to choose who we do business with!

– Colonel Sanders, multiple sources, 7/29/1963



NORTH 'NAME TROOPS ASSAULT U.S. EMBASSY IN SAIGON; 2 Officers Dead, 5 Wounded

…our correspondent in Saigon, tells us the attack is a possible form of retaliation against US activities along the North Vietnam-South Vietnam border with Laos

– The New York Times, 7/30/1963



…While Lyndon agreed that outright military intervention should be kept on the table “just in case,” Jack disagreed, arguing that it’d be irresponsible to agitate two spots on the map at once. My co-worker, Under Secretary of Defense George W. Ball, believed that “thousands, if not hundreds of thousands” of troops could end up KIA or MIA in Southeast Asia if the situation was severely mishandled. At the time, Jack truly believed that the situation never could rise to those sort of numbers, [9] but he was still cautious of Johnson’s preference to more direct intervention nevertheless. Jack was not alone in mulling over and calling for moderation in the meddling macabre machinations of military maneuvers. Senator John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky suggested Johnson initiate peaceful negotiations with the Laos and North Vietnam governments to keep Communism from tearing apart the precipitous nation of Laos “like it has the island of Cuba.” Senator J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, as Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, concurred to the notion of diplomacy over military intervention but disagreed on talks with the North Vietnamese…

– Robert F. Kennedy’s On the Precipice of Change, 1999



What puzzled authorities about the quality of Amex’s Field Warehousing operation was that since De Angelis was theoretically buying so much, they essentially authenticated the existence of much more salad oil than was actually accounted for in the entire U.S., according to an August reports from the Department of Agriculture. [10] Amex, however, was lenient with De Angelis, as he was one of their biggest customers. With Amex’s seal of approval and De Angelis’ talent for offering great deals attracted mainstream companies, such as Bunge Limited, Staley, and Procter and Gamble. The Bank of America also provided loans...

– Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Norman C. Miller’s, “The Great Salad Oil Swindle,” Coward McCann Books, 1965 (Second Edition, 1979)



CONGRESS PASSES TRADE EXPANSION ACT

– The Washington Post, 8/2/1963



CAM BOMB KILLS FIVE U.S. TROOPS, 21 OTHERS: Santa Cruz Del Sur, Cuba “Under Siege” By Resistant Communists!

– The Los Angeles Times, 8/3/1963



Mississippi State Democratic Party Gubernatorial Primary Election Results, 8/6/1963:

Lt. Gov. Paul B. Johnson Jr. – 173,873 (36.65%)
Former Gov. James P. Coleman – 163,577 (34.48%)
Charles L. Sullivan – 133,548 (28.15%)
Robert F. Mason – 3,416 (0.72%)
Total Votes Cast: 474,414
Turnout: 21.78% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



DRAFT CARD BURNING: YOUTHFUL REBELLION OR OUTRIGHT TREASON?

Last month, a draft card burning ceremony in Springfield, Illinois, reached an attendance record of 250. That is the largest assembly for such an activity since the draft board founded in 1948. …This latest youth fad certainly has a more treasonous flavor to it... These youngsters are openly defying the government and inhibiting the government’s ability to raise an army when needed… While many claim the current situation in Cuba has devolved into “a quagmire worse than Korea” to quote the former US Congressman-turned-political lawyer George McGovern, in this author’s opinion, it is still far too early to throw in the towel. A majority of the island has been stabilized, and the Communist leader Camilo Cienfuegos remains at large, resorting to bombings and espionage out of desperation. What the draft card burners call “unofficial occupation” of Cuba is more akin to the US’s time spent in Japan after WWII: we are maintaining extensive security necessities for the betterment and safety of the Cuban people... The youth of today are impatient and they are ungrateful. They are too young to remember or even understand the sacrifices made for them during the Great Depression and the ration-book years of World War II …Fortunately, US Congressman L. Mendel Rivers has sponsored a bill that will impose strict penalties onto those whom betray their nation buy burning their draft cards.

– The National Review, conservative magazine, August issue



MEDICARE BILL ADVANCES FROM HOUSE TO SENATE

– The Washington Post, 8/8/1963



REAGAN JOINS A.M.A. IN SPREADING LIES ABOUT MEDICARE Bill.

Los Angeles, CA – Stretching his political muscles once more, actor and former Screen Actors Guild President Ronald Reagan appeared on TV on Saturday to deliver a ten minute speech criticizing the Medicare bill currently in congress. Medicare is a proposed health insurance program for Americans over the age of 65 that, if approved, of would be funded by a payroll tax, beneficiary premiums and surtaxes from beneficiaries and general US Treasury revenue. Reagan’s speech was funded by the A.M.A., or American Medical Association, and supported by several hospital and life insurance organizations. In the speech, Reagan claimed the bill will lead to socialism and dictatorship if passed: “already the federal government has invaded the precincts of private business. Now it wants to enforce upon the American people unwanted and unneeded socialized medicine – socialism disguised as medical care.” Reagan went on to claim that the bill will deprive freedom from doctors: “The bill will prohibit doctors from choosing their patients and their place of practice… nobody has the right to dictate the career path and workplace of someone else.” Reagan even criticized its name despite “Medicare” being coined under the Eisenhower administration in 1956. Advocating for private medical programs to be expanded instead, the actor closed with “Compulsory medical programs will be the first step to allowing government to determine what job your son will have.” [11] What Reagan failed to mention was who the bill would help if passed – everyone over 65 regardless of color and creed. There are roughly 260,000 American doctors of medicine [12], but 189 million Americans total, and roughly 17 million of those Americans are over the age of 65. …Reagan also exaggerated the affect the bill will have on physicians and hospitals… Our advice to Reagan: Take a math class and then go back to being in movies, Ronnie – politics isn’t for you.

– Hollywood Reporter, opinion article, 8/12/1963



Dad moved the family around from place to place, um, from the Fort Sill Army base in Lawton, Oklahoma where I was born in 1961, to Orange County, California in 1962, to NASA’s, uh, Lewis Research Center in Brook Park, Ohio in 1963. My Dad actually worked as a draftsman for NASA, designing shelves, storage compartments and the like, for the insides of the ships. He got hired for some Ohio-based promotion amidst a, um, a US Senate panel investigating a fire that had injured somebody in 1962, I believe, and uh, I remember him telling me that his job may not have been the most glamorous, but it was still important, and I remember that he was very proud of his job. He told he paid attention to the Senate hearings and everything back then because if NASA was blamed for the incident, it could lead to layoffs, which would mean we’d be moving again. Now I was only two at this point, but, uh, the fact remains that the places where I grew up were partially the result of the nation’s bigger problems and worries at the time, you know?

– Stephen Hillenburg, Tumbleweed Magazine interview, 2005



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– Colonel Sanders with his great-granddaughter, visiting the Disneyland theme park in Anaheim, California, 8/18/1963



SENATE PASSES BILL TO STRENGTHEN SOCIAL SECURITY

Washington, D.C. – Just a day after the U.S. House approved of the legislation 310-to-114, the U.S. Senate voted 72-25 in approval of President Johnson’s latest Great Society legislation… the bill creates two new forms of federal health insurance that are additions to the 1935 Social Security Act signed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt… U.S. Secretary of Housing, Education, and Welfare Gardner has noted that implementation of the new insurance will require “extensive data processing and…re-configuration of hospital policies” across the country, and advise anyone uncertain of how this will affect them to “ask their doctor”…

– The Washington Post, 8/24/1963



BLACK MAN’S BEATING SPARKS ANTI-COP PROTEST

Xenia, OH – A group of local African-Americans protesting outside of the Xenia Police Station are calling for an investigation into the assault of an African-American man, who was severely wounded at a traffic stop gone afoul. The man, admitted to the local hospital, claims he was pulled over without provocation and forced out of his car. When he turned around to get his walker, he was clubbed by the officers, and continued to be beaten after falling to the ground. At least 300 people are gathered around, holding quickly made signs and shouting “Justice For All, Not Just For Whites”…

The Columbus Dispatch, 8/26/1963



The riots were started by the police. LBJ tried to disperse us with National Guardsmen, and they started hittin’ us and beatin’ us so we fought back with our signs and whatever we could. Bedlam and panic set in, and a lot of us got our skulls busted before they went and arrested us for demanding fair treatment. It looked bad for him, is guess, but it looked good for the racists, who kept pointing to it and saying that the Civil Rights Act had changed nothing, that we were still “not ready to join white society” and bulls#!t like that. It was sort of a watershed moment, though, as it caused black people across the country to protest our mistreatment and demand to actually see some justice for a change.

– Anecdote from John R., then-resident in Xenia, NBC Special commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the Xenia Riots, 2013



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– Protestors confronted by police in Oakland, California, 8/27/1963



“Folks, it’s high time that some real justice reform happened, and if President Johnson is going to turn a blind eye to it, than the governors and the mayors and even the average Joes are going to have to get up and make sure that peace and safety return to our communities. That police officers remain friends to our communities. And that justice is distributed fairly and equally in this here nation of ours. It’s high time that we live up to the ideals set forth in our Constitution and become the type of nation we’ve always said to be – a fair and equal nation, with liberty and justice for all!”

– Colonel Sanders in Xenia, OH, offering his support for their cause, 8/30/1963



YOUNG NOT KEEPING CALM OVER OVERSEAS TROOP DEPLOYMENTS

London, UK – …the rise in demonstrations in the capitol against the government’s continued support of what the youth groups are calling the American “occupation” of Cuba continues on despite the U.S.’s Acting Defense Secretary describing the conflict as “practically” resolved at a press briefing last Monday...

The Daily Sketch, 9/1/1963



...but it was actually the Stan Lee and Jack Kirby Marvel Comic “the Mutants” that popularized the term “mutant” after its first issue hit the shelves in September 1963… [13]

– James Rolfe, technet video on “mutants” in popular culture, yourvids.co.usa, 9/1/2012




On 3 September 1963, Greece’s legislation elections were held. Support for Karamanlis had dwindled sharply in the face of public disapproval of America’s “warmongering” in Cuba, especially among formerly pro-KKE voters in northern Greece. This development swelled support for the liberal Georgios Papandreou, whose party won 155 seats to Karamanlis’ 114 and the EDA’s 27, securing victory for Papandreou. Karamanlis, whom has actually been out of office since a feud with the King lead to his resignation in June, failed to regain support among the Greek voters to return to office. However, with Papandreou’s liberalism came massive protests from right-wing voters, claiming that the election results a “sham.” As the UK’s Daily Mirror observed, “Clearly, Greece’s political problems are yet to be resolved.”

– Richard Clogg’s Parties and Elections in Greece: The Search for Legitimacy, Duke University Press, 1987



“To the loyal citizens of Mississippi… In light of a recent cam bomb discovered and disabled in the state capital yesterday, and the possible threat of further cam bombs being used to destabilize society, I am declaring statewide emergency in place, effectively immediately and to remain in effect until the tenth of November. Curfew will be immediately implemented… To best maintain security, I have called out state guard to monitor all polling stations in the state during the upcoming governor election... Citizens, answer the call to defend your freedom by reporting any suspicious or possibly unpatriotic behavior, so we can stop the Cuban Communist plans for destruction before they can be executed. Thank you and good night.”

– Governor Ross Barnett (D-MS), official announcement on WJDX radio, state radio announcement, 9/3/1963



VOTER SUPPRESSION FEARS OVERWHELM MISSISSIPPI

…a Majority of Blacks in the state remain unregistered... While Washington, D.C has made steps to open up the democratic process to all Americans, most notably with recent federal Voting Rights legislation, these steps are not enough to enable Blacks to register to vote without intimidation and threats. Politicians across the country, including President Johnson, are condemning Governor Barnett’s recent actions as “an exaggeration of societal safety concern,” and “a desperate attempt to maintain the state’s oppressive status quo,” according to Vice-President Humphrey in a speech yesterday evening...

– The Washington Post, 9/8/1963



AS PROTESTS OVER BARNETT VOTER SUPPRESSION CONTINUE, FEDERAL COMMISSION TO INVESTIGATE

…The US Commission on Civil Rights, a bipartisan federal commission created by the Civil Rights Act of 1957 for investigating civil rights concerns, such as literacy tests, poll taxes, and other practices which became unlawful in 1962, are investigating Governor Barnett’s “statewide emergency” measures… Governor Barnett has impounded state voting records and has threatened to arrest any C.R.C. agents whom attempt to access the records [14].

…Activists have been threatened and arrested during attempts to get Blacks registered to vote, with state police claiming they were in violation of the “statewide emergency” in many of the case… Nevertheless, thousands are taking to the streets in efforts to exercise their right to register to vote...

– The Plain Dealer, Ohio newspaper, 9/11/1963



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– Colonel Sanders confronts state police officers who, under Governor Barnett's orders, are preventing Blacks from “breaking curfew” and registering to vote, 9/12/1963



FORMER GOVERNOR PATTERSON BLAMES JOHNSON FOR XENIA RIOTS

…John Patterson, whom served as Governor of Alabama from 1959 to 1963, accused the President of having “lost touch with the needs of real Americans.” This sounds like the talk of a man testing the waters of a primary challenge... Patterson should look at his own record and history of human decency as well his leadership history before complaining about those of others. …While a supporter of him in the past, Patterson has in recent weeks remained silent in regards to Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett’s ridiculously desperate - and, possibly, federally illegal - actions in his state...

– Journalist Drew Pearson’s critical syndicated newspaper column “Washington Merry-Go-Round,” 9/24/1963



At this time last year we had just occupied the town of Calixto Garcia, and just over three-quarters of the island was ours. But now we have been pushed all the way back to the city of Camaguey. In our arrogance we sought to discourage the encroaching Communist swine by setting fire to the fields they sought to reconquer. From this church tower I can still see the smoke billowing from the fields far off in the distance. The damned stubbornness of the Communists is killing this island. There is the smell of death in the air; it is at times fowl and overbearing. There are so many wounded. Moaning in agony, they spill out of the hospital onto the streets. Smashed clay pots; blood-stained window drapes; blown-away walls; women and children with empty eyes of despair, or scowls of bitterness and hatred. Destruction is everywhere. And yet those damn Communists still will not surrender!

– 9/25/1963 Journal Entry of Mario Zuniga, DRF soldier (translated)



POLL: LBJ POPULARITY WANING

…those polled deemed the situation at home and overseas to be “falling apart” in light of recent events. …70% approve of US presence in Vietnam, but only 44% in Cuba, down from last month...

– In a newspaper article by George Gallup, Director of the American Institute of Public Opinion, 9/27/1963



Mom and Pop were ecstatic when the report came in that after 17 months, their son had come back to them. I was looking at the latest letters they’d sent me and the accompanying pictures of them when my CO walked in with the news.

“McCain!”

“Sir yes sir!” I bellowed as he entered the hospital tent. As he stiffly traversed to my bed, I tried to stand up to salute him but failed. It was still difficult for me to sit myself up in bed with parts of me still tightly bandaged. “Sorry, sir. The Commies did a real number on my back. I’ll recover though.”

“At ease, soldier,” he ordered.

I laid back down in relief.

“McCain, you’re being transferred.”

“What? To where? …The L-V B?” Shorthand for the Laos-Vietnam border.

“Nope. Pearl Harbor.”

“…Hawaii? But why?”

He looked me over. I was wearing a back brace and my arms were still wrapped in gauze. “Do I really have to say it, McCain?”

“Well you are my commanding officer, so, to be frank, sir, yes, sir.”

“Alright, fine!” he sighed and sat down in the chair beside me, “McCain, the official ruling is that for the time being you are… not yet able to serve again, uh, due to your current, um, position. You can’t fly a plane for at least another three months or so. You still have to heal and recuperate from all you’ve been through and that includes physical therapy that we can’t afford here. …But we can afford it at the hospital on base in Hawaii. It’s just been built, state-of-the-art, much better than here.”

“I’ll get better, sir. I always do.”

“Of course you will, McCain.”

“You’ll see sir,” I spoke confidently, “I may be going to Hawaii, but I’ll be back in no time, flying with the rest of the men up there, doing Uncle Sam proud.”

“You’ve already done your part, McCain,” he said, “And I hear that tomorrow General Palmer’s going to give you another medal for liberating that POW camp.”

“‘Co-liberating,’ Sir. But sir, a patriot’s duty is never fulfilled. In times of war he must fight to protect his country and in times of peace he must always be prepared to defend his country. This is no ‘part’ to be filled sir; a patriot gives his all. And I’m still here, and I can still give. So as soon as I can, I will resume my duty.”

He grinned, “Then I hope for the best for you, McCain,” and stood up. “Now I’ll get a nurse to help you pack your things. You’re being shipped out at the end of tomorrow.”

We saluted each other – well, I saluted him as best as I could – and he left the tent.

Dammit, I thought. Sure, it was Hawaii, a land of beaches, beer and babes. But my place was in active duty serving my country. I didn’t want to spend however long I had to spend there being a burden to doctors and therapists. I was seriously not looking forward to it.

But as it turned out, going to Hawaii was the greatest thing to happen to me.

– From Admiral John McCain’s Boldly Into Hell: A Firsthand Account of America’s Wars in the 1960s and 1970s, Random House, 1987



NAACP EXEC PRAISES COLONEL SANDERS

Florence, KY – Roy Wilkins, the Executive Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, met with Col. Harland Sanders, the former governor and wealthy businessman whose face adorns the iconic “K.F.C. bucket” logo, at his company’s headquarters for an hour-long meeting. After which Mr. Wilkins held a press conference to praise the Colonel’s work and “personal role” in advancing the Civil Rights movement. He pointed to Col. Sanders’s pro-civil rights rhetoric and actions, the businessman’s endorsements and financial backing of pro-Civil Rights productions and laws, and his active role in making it easier for colored people to achieve work in the business communities above and beyond custodial and entry-level cooking staff. A report found that, as of December 1962, an above-average number of African-Americans are employed throughout Kentucky Fried Chicken, and over 30% of the company’s employees are women, no doubt a statistic influenced by the Colonel’s daughters playing major roles in the company’s expansion and development.

Mr. Wilkins is an active leader in the Colored community, and a man who champions for social change coming about by means of the legislative system. Such a stance may then raise the question why it Wilkins has been giving so much praise to Col. Sanders and not President Johnson. This is because while the President has made many valiant moves to assure civil rights, most notably the Civil Rights Act passed last year, Johnson is not been nearly as passionate and vocal as the Colonel over the social suppression of the Black man in America.

For example, when the white men started a riot over the peaceful protesting outside Xenia Police Station in Ohio, it was the Colonel whom visited to lend his support. Reverend King, a friend of the Colonel, joined him in calling for peace and justice to prevail, and both visited the wounded victims of the white man’s violence at the local hospitals soon after. And what did President Johnson do? According to the Washington Post, he was busy having lunch with Prime Minister Diefenbaker of Canada.

– The Pittsburgh Courier, an African-American newspaper, 10/2/1963



A COLONEL COMES HOME: Harland Sanders Stumps For Nunn, Other State Republican Candidates

Paducah, KY – As it was at this time last year, the Colonel is resuming the role of politics barker, albeit this time it is for the Republican nominee for Governor of Kentucky, Louie B. Nunn. Sanders’ son, Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr, reported his father preferred travelling and meeting real people to staying in stuffy board rooms. “Every four years, he gets to go down the old roads he remembers as gets to see how they’ve changed.” The Colonel seems to be blanketing the state for Louie Nunn. “Businessmen have to stick together,” the Colonel remarked yesterday at a rally in town. …Fiscal policy is the dominant issue in the race, with both the Colonel and Nunn criticizing Governor Combs raising state taxes in 1961 to pay for further state services…

The Paducah Sun, Kentucky newspaper, 10/3/1963



He [John Y. Brown] left such an impression on the Colonel that Sanders agreed that Brown would take over the franchising of a barbecue chain the Colonel was planning to establish. Brown acquired financial backing from Jack Massey, a millionaire businessman in Nashville, and set about opening his first store and studying the barbecue business [15]. By October, Brown began to believe that barbeque only had regional appeal and it was better to focus on the chicken (which he often called “the moneymaker”), a belief that Harley and I scoffed at. Brown what completely missing the entire reason why K.F.C. had grown to become a multinational enterprise – because something from Kentucky was seen as exotic in places far away from the commonwealth. So Harley told Brown to think outside the box and travel around to find a community with a palate that would welcome barbeque… I saw Brown as an impatient man too willing to give up on the assignment, but despite this the Colonel still saw potential in him for whatever reason. Maybe Brown reminded the Colonel of a younger version of himself, or maybe he saw the admittedly difficult assignment as a test of his abilities…

– Dave Thomas’ Under the Colonel’s Wing, Mosaic Publishing, 1982



IOC Session No. 61
Date: October 18, 1963
Location: Nairobi, Kenya [16]
Subject 1 of 2: bidding for hosting the 10/12-27/1968 (or XIX) Summer Olympics
Results:
Mexico City, Mexico – 31 (Round 1)
Lyon, France – 14 (Round 1)
Detroit, USA – 11 (Round 1)
Buenos Aires, Argentina – 2 (Round 1)
Result: Mexico won on the first round
Subject 2 of 2: bidding for hosting 2/6-18/1968 (or X) Winter Olympics [17]
Results:
Grenoble, France – 15 (Round 1) – 18 (Round 2) – 27 (Round 3)
Calgary, Canada – 12 (Round 1) – 19 (Round 2) – 24 (Round 3)
Lahti, Finland – 11 (Round 1) – 14 (Round 2)
Sapporo, Japan – 6 (Round 1)
Oslo, Norway – 4 (Round 1)
Lake Placid – 3 (Round 1)

http://www.aldaver.co.usa/votes.html



REPORTER 1: …We take you live to the scene now.

REPORTER 2: …the crowd behind me are supporters of the Wall Street Three – shoutniks Jerry Rubin, David Dellinger and Abbot Hoffman – members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, a pro-voting rights and anti-war organization, whom the HUAAC have subpoenaed to testify at another one of their hearings. Their testimony concerns an incident in on August 4 of this year, when the three men led members of the organization to the gallery of the New York Stock Exchange to throw fistfuls of real and fake dollar bills onto the traders below. While the men were not arrested as they left the premises peacefully when asked by security, some are accusing them of inciting a riot and conspiracy to cause, quote “financial mayhem,” unquote. …Inside the hearing room, the HUAAC are reiterating their stance of denouncing the shoutniks and their activities as being un-American and possibly unlawful…

– CBS Morning News (founded 1963), 10/21/1963 report



“Well, sir, I think that burning your draft card is downright treasonous. Why if I was their age I’d gladly take their place on the battlefield and fight for my country. I also don’t approve of their more bothersome crowds – the ones that are unruly and disruptive and smell very funny. But to be fair to them, like my youngest daughter and even some of my granddaughters want me to be, I’m being thinkin’ a lot about what they’re doin’ and I think that if you disagree with your country’s actions, you have every right to make your concerns known, but still think there are more sensible ways to go about it. Burning your draft card and shoutin’ isn’t gonna win over other folks my age. And some of it is just too messy – not at all as organized as the Civil Rights movement, that’s for sure. And also, the actions of the shoutniks are detrimental to the war effort because they inhibit and downplay the valiant and brave hard work of our soldiers. And I don’t think that’s right.”

– Excerpt from Colonel Sanders’s guest spot on Meet the Press, 10/21/1963



FEDERAL CIRCUIT COURT STRIKES DOWN BARNETT’S MEASURES AS “A USURPATION OF STATES’ RIGHTS,” DEMANDS REGISTRATION OFFICES RE-OPEN

– The Mercury News, California newspaper, 10/28/1963



CAM BOMB KILLS 3 AT D.R.F. HQ IN HAVANA: No Passersby Injured As Bomb Topples Building’s 2nd Floor

– The Richmond Times-Dispatch, 11/2/1963



EXTRA! L.B.J. SHOT BY GUNMAN DURING N.Y.C. VISIT!!!

– The New York Times, 11/4/1963



…To recap, President Johnson was wounded during an attempt on his life in New York City earlier today, when the President was exiting a hotel shortly after attending a meeting with Senator Jacob Javits and the city’s Mayor Wagner… The President has been taken to the close-by Metropolitan Hospital, along with Secret Serviceman Abraham Bolden, whom may have also been injured during the attack… …we’ve just received another bulletin…the man accused of shooting the President has been identified as a one Thomas Arthur Vallee. Vallee was shot and killed by Secret Service agents as he attempted to flee the scene of the incident… This is the second known attempt on the President’s life since the De La Beckwith Plot was uncovered last year...

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 11/4/1963



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– Thomas Arthur Valle (11/15/1933-11/4/1963)



The doctors say the first bullet missed his vital organs… Johnson has decided to give a special award to Serviceman Bolden for taking that second bullet for him… Billy Graham [now a frequent White house guest] visited the President at the hospital again. The two men prayed together in silence for several minutes. Johnson believes the prayer his helping him with the recovery…

– Excerpt from the Diary of Mildred Stegall, personal secretary to Lyndon Johnson, 11/5/1963 entry



PAUL JOHNSON ELECTED GOVERNOR BY CLOSER-THAN-EXPECTED MARGIN

Jackson, MS – Lieutenant Governor Paul B. Johnson Jr. was elected Governor over Republican challenger Rubel Phillips in yesterday’s election, the outcome being officially announced earlier today at 2:05 AM. While Johnson was initially predicted to win in a landslide, Phillips slowly gathered momentum to reach a high mark of 45% approval in polls on October 30, but the Johnson campaign was dismissive of his chances. Between then and election night, Phillip’s numbers dropped down to 35% approval. On election night, though, Johnson received 58.7% of the vote (roughly 213,651 votes) while Phillips received 41.3% of the vote (roughly 150,320). Johnson arguably won thanks to backlash to the Civil Rights Act despite Phillips running a strongly anti-Lyndon B. Johnson campaign that in retrospective was possibly too single-issue to be effective at the statewide level. Phillip’s campaign also suffered a serious blow the day before the election when President Johnson was shot and injured in an attempt on his life, making his rhetoric seem too “incendiary,” according to one poll official in New Orleans...

The Daily Mississippian, 11/6/1963



COMBS RE-ELECTED BY 0.5% MARGIN

Frankfort, KY – Governor Combs has proven himself popular enough to become the first Governor of Kentucky to win a second full consecutive term since James Garrard was re-elected in 1800, 163 years ago. Combs defeated Republican challenger Louie B. Nunn in last night’s gubernatorial election by a 0.5% margin. Combs popularity numbers were likely helped by the passage of the April 1963 state Civil Rights Act, which met approval among minorities and union workers. Nunn, whom remained silent on his own opinions regarding civil rights, won over upper-class and white-collar voters, plus many conservatives. Appearances by former Governor Colonel Sanders also helped drum up support for Nunn in the last few weeks, leading to such a narrow margin. Still, the candidate himself and his generic and rather theme-less campaign “are more to blame for the G.O.P. loss than the Colonel” says state representative J. B. Breckinridge. Evidence for this being the case is found in the very close race for Lieutenant Governor, in which Bernie Lawrence (R) seems to have edged out Harry Lee Waterfield (D)...

– The Kentucky Gazette, 11/6/1963



Kentucky General Election Results, 11/6/1963:

For Governor:
Bert T. Combs (Democratic) – 458,175 (51.71%)
Louie B. Nunn (Republican) – 427,872 (48.29%)
Total votes cast: 886,047
Turnout: 29.16% Total Population

For Lieutenant Governor:
H. Bernie Lawrence (Republican) – 429,560 (50.82%)
Harry Lee Waterfield (Democratic) – 415,697 (49.18%)
Total votes cast: 845,257
Turnout: 27.82% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



Nunn lost in an upset due to additional support for Combs rising in the final weeks in connection to the sympathy vote for LBJ surviving another assassination attempt. As Nunn was an open critic of Johnson, this and his lack of a response after the shooting, were quite possibly seen by some voters as being insensitive and callous. Sanders was not blamed for the loss. In fact, his presence was credited in winning the G.O.P. the lieutenant governor’s seat, and in how and why it was such a close race to begin with. GOP leaders were impressed that the Colonel could stir such support. Support from the Colonel seemed to have had a similar effect in Mississippi as well. There, Ruben Phillips was almost elected, and would have made him the first Republican Governor of the state since 1876.

– Lowell Harrison and James Klotter’s A History of Kentucky, University Press of Kentucky, 1997



I lost because I was out n*%%ered by Combs. I should have run a campaign like Byrant, but I was so sure the Colonel’s endorsement would win enough n*%%ers over. Well, now I know better than to rely on a chicken salesman for something like this – so help me, I’m never again gunna be outn#%%gered!

– Louie B. Nunn (according to a Marshall Frady biography from 1972), 11/7/1963 (note: Nunn and others would later deny that he ever said this, making its validity somewhat disputable)



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[ Pic: imgur.com/fGBR6Fq.png ]
– Colonel Sanders makes a surprise cameo as himself in “It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World,” in which Spencer Tracey’s character impatiently asks him for directions only for the Colonel to take too long to give them; filming lasted from April 1962 to early 1963, while the film was released on 11/10/1963



Naturally, Johnson used the attempt on his life to his advantage, using it as validation of his legislative proposals, telling Senate leader Mansfield “Ignorant radicals turn to guns when they run out of words. Smart and level-headed people will just go and get more words!” Shortly after the assassination attempt, for example, Johnson met with Senator Harry Byrd. Byrd was opposing the President on a proposed School Voucher Reform Bill, I believe. Johnson argued to Byrd, and I quote, “the bullet did not do its job… but how do we know that the next crackpot won’t be so unlucky? I may not have that long to live! If I die in this office, do you really think Hubert won’t capitalize off the sympathy from it to get a much more powerful bill passed instead?” The tactic worked because it was a phone call from the hospital, and Senator Byrd was still one of the few Senators yet to personally drop in to check on Johnson, and so Byrd did not actually know how well the president really was. …Lyndon would publicly brush the incident off as not that big a deal. But the truth is, I’ll admit, Lyndon was truly horrified by what was now the second serious attempt on his life.

– Mildred Stegall, personal secretary to Lyndon Johnson, RNN Interview, 1979



The inspectors returned with police and without warning, Commodity Exchange Authority representatives in tow. De Angelis hurriedly descended the main staircase and for over 30 seconds tried in vain to keep the men at the door before the search warrants were brought out.

“Somebody tipped us off about you, Tino,” one of the cops allegedly explained, “Seems you got careless. Tried to bribe some men you didn’t know were the honest type. And you made a couple of delivery mistakes that suggested you keep two sets of books, too.” [18]

The inspectors made their way in, now knowing to look closer at the tanks this time. One of the inspectors went for a dramatic action and spun the release valve on one of the smaller tanks, causing a flood of clear liquid to cover a part of the room. The man tested the liquid. “It’s almost entirely seawater!” The man exclaimed over the discovered proof of their suspicions. De Angelis claimed to have $150 million in salad oil; he only had $6 million.

On November 20, De Angelis was escorted into the back of a police car.

On November 21, De Angelis’s company filed for bankruptcy, at which point investors discovered that hundreds of millions of dollars were unaccounted for.

On November 22, 1963, my report was on the front page of the Wall Street Journal hit the press.

– Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Norman C. Miller’s, “The Great Salad Oil Swindle,” Coward McCann Books, 1965 (Second Edition, 1979)



EXTRA! 90% OF SOYBEAN STOCK WORTHLESS: N.J. Trader Arrested For Falsifying Records After W.S.J. Exposé

The New York Post, 11/22/1963



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[pic: imgur.com/m0yQ1Tw.png ]
– Dow Jones Industrial Average, early October to late November (note the November 3-5 dip following the second Lyndon Johnson assassination attempt)



On Saturday the 23, the futures market crashed… The next day the NYSE, worried about potential U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission involvement, suspended two companies closer to De Angelis, “Williston and Beane” and “Ira Haupt & Co.” from trading. This only made things worse, as these two brokerages’ customers became desperate as they didn’t know if they would get back the money in their accounts. Word started spreading as traders investigated the suspension, and desperately tried to get their holdings out of those companies. While Williston and Beane were easily bailed out, things were more complicated for Ira Haupt & Co. The president of the New York Stock Exchange, G. Keith Funston, sought to avoid a massive crash caused by the 20,700 customers of Ira Haupt fearing their holdings were worthless now that the trading the brokerage firm did on De Angelis’s behalf meant that it owed various banks over $37,000,000 that it could not pay.

With stockholders in a panic, NYSE officials halted trading altogether. The Stock Market remained closed amidst protests of people worried of their money, and did not reopen until Monday the 25th, at which point the market traded below expectations. The closure of the NYSE had not given temporary breathing room, and the scandal’s affects were still being felt. The collapse discouraged investment by small investors. On the 26th, the US Securities and Exchange Commission convened and decided to intervene, reducing the NYSE’s power. The NYSE attempted to solve the problem via imposing a $10 million assessment on exchange members and using that money to make Ira Haupt & Co.’s customers whole, only for the SEC to delay the plan’s implementation over distrust of the NYSE. Creditors, meanwhile, reeled as American Express and other lenders lost millions.

– John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Salad Oil Recession: The Causes and Effects of the Black Weekend of 1963, Excelsior Publishers, 1971 [19]



“Walter, chaos still reigns supreme here on Wall Street. The NYSE and banks across the country closing early has many spooked, as seen today when in just 45, the Dow dropped 50 points, about 10%, and 50 million shares were sold. I’m also being told that the exchange may close early today, but those stories are yet to be substantiated.”

– CBS reporter, early 11/25/1963 broadcast



“Who the hell is Tino De Angelis?!” the President bellowed.

“He’s a commodities trader,” Commerce Secretary Luther Hodges explained as numerous aides scurried in and out of the room with papers containing background information and statistics, wheeled in a second television set and plugged in several more telephones, all in an attempt to rectify, or at least minimize the economic debacle. “According to what this Norman Miller fella’s reporting, this Tino fella’s been buying and selling vegetable oil futures all over the world, and last started to corner the market for soybean oil. A majority of the world’s reserves were apparently transferred in and out of his New Jersey headquarters.”

“Soybean oil?”

“It’s used in salad dressing.”

“I know what it’s for, Luther! I just can’t believe this all went by undetected!”

“That’s what swindler, do, Lyndon,” noted Trade Representative Lovett.

Hodges continued, “Actually, Mr. President, it seems we’ve run into him before. The man’s company, Allied Crude Vegetable Oil Refining Corporation, took advantage of the National School Lunch Act and the Food for Peace program to overcharge the government $31,000 and deliver over 2 million pounds of uninspected meat to schools. He ended up bankrupt but soon bounced back with this endeavor, it seems.”

“And according to our records, he swindled my department out of over $1million in 1960 – that was under my predecessor, sir,” Agriculture Secretary Jim Folsom added. Folsom did not mention how in 1962 his department had predicted exports of the oil would reach record levels later that year, possibly contributing to De Angelis’ active efforts to corner that market.

Johnson, Lovett, Hodges, Folsom and Secretary of the Treasury and former Director of the Office of Defense Mobilization Henry H. Fowler continued to peruse whatever information could be found, though according to Fowler, most of what they “worked on” came from Norman Miller’s tell-all. They soon became aware of how De Angelis had obtained massive loans from various Wall Street banks and companies, and used the cash to buy all of the futures on the oil. This way he would not only own a large quantity of soon-to-be expensive oil, but also cheap futures that would soon be worth a considerable value when the prices went up. [20]

“Christ, this man singlehandedly gutted American Express,” uttered the President. American Express, or Amex in the stock world, was a respected name in traveler’s checks and credit cards in those days.

On the TV, a reporter claimed that the revelations has “crippled” N.Y. Stock Exchange. This was in response to the news that investors in 51 banks had been bamboozled out of a total of over $175 million (around $1.2 billion in 2000 dollars).

Hodges glanced over to the set, and then to the Commander-in-chief, standing but hunching, arms gripping the table as his eyes worriedly danced around over the papers. “Our response, Mr. President?” Hodges asked.

Johnson picked up head up and thought for a moment before stating “we’ll increase spending to promote confidence in the economy again, and you know that tax cut for the middle class we were planning to work on after re-election? We’re doing that now!”

Despite Johnson’s best (and in the case of his more Keynesian measures, worst) efforts, the U.S. energy markets would stay down, resulting in a new economic phenomenon that would be given the label “stagflation”…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



STOCKS CONTINUE TO PLUMMET AS POPULACE RETAIN SKEPTICAL OF MARKET STRENGTH

The Wall Street Journal, 11/29/1963



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[pic: imgur.com/CLyxqhN.png ]

– Sanders in a cross-promotion of KFC and the 51st Grey Cup, held on 11/30/1963



Seeing the “angry mobs” on TV, NYSE officials pointed all of the blame of De Angelis for the failure of the member firm. The stock market would hover at low levels for the rest of the year.

De Angelis brought down a couple of commodities brokers foolish enough to let him trade on margin, made huge dents in a few banks foolish enough to lend him money, wrought havoc on both commodities exchanges and stock exchanges when his scheme finally unwound, and even knocked out about half of American Express’ market cap. [21] He took advantage of government subsidies and programs, provided uninspected goods, cheated on his contracts, falsified reports, covered losses, embezzled money, and so forth. At every step he was trying to beat the system, and as a result, caused financial losses for thousands. [22]

– John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Salad Oil Recession: The Causes and Effects of the Black Weekend of 1963, Excelsior Publishers, 1971




I remember reading in the newspapers how American Express’ stock immediately dropped 50% as the company lost over $50million from the scam. Many banks suddenly closed to avoid a rush, while others tried to downplay the news. Despite their efforts, by Monday the 25th, the 1963 recession had arrived. I remember the Colonel took rather well. His continued distrust of stock had actually helped save the company from really taking a hit from it, but he was still upset to see how the economic dip hit his customers. He felt better, though, knowing that Ray Kroc had to borrow even more money, and lay off many workers that would ultimately end up working for us, just to keep McDonald’s out of the red. Not exactly a silver lining, but, still.

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, early 1992



LONG, MCKEITHEN TO ADVANCE TO PRIMARY RUNOFF

Baton Rouge, LA – Last night’s Democratic primary for governor saw John J. McKeithen, Public Service Commissioner of the state’s Third District, use race-baiting tactics [23] to win first place behind U.S. Congressman Gillis Long. McKeithen accused Long of being too close to President Johnson (dubbing him “the Washington candidate”) and being too liberal for Louisiana. Both men won over staunch segregationist Shelby Jackson, and fellow segregationist Robert F. Kennon, who lost votes to both Jackson and noted taxi-driving KKK member Addison Thompson. Nine men in total were on the ballot. The following list is approximately the distribution of the vote:

J. J. McKeithen – 318,173 (35.1%)
Gillis Long – 275,568 (30.4%)
R. F. Kennon – 127,813 (14.1%)
Shelby Jackson – 102,432 (11.3%)
Louis J. Michot – 38,072 (4.2%)
Claude Kirkpatrick – 29,007 (3.2%)
Wolford Thompson – 7,252 (0.8%)
Hugh Lasseigne – 4,532 (0.5%)
Addison Roswell Thompson – 3,626 (0.4%)
Total votes cast: 906,475

Ambassador deLesseps Morrison had considered running, but ultimately declined to due to “pressing diplomatic duties.” Pundits noted that the President being wounded in an assassination attempt a month before the election produced a sympathy vote-based boost for Long’s numbers but did not damage McKeithen’s, who continued the race-baiting rhetoric but dropped his criticisms of the President “out of respect,” according to a reliable source close to the campaign. McKeithen celebrated the results by…

– The Times-Picayune, Louisiana newspaper, 12/7/1963



SHOUTNIK ABBOT HOFFMAN SENTENCED, GIVEN LIGHT FINE OVER NYSE “MONEY PIT” INCIDENT

– The Financial Times, side article, 12/17/1963



Lyndon was increasingly unnerved after the second assassination attempt. He was, I’d say, somewhat paranoid because both Thomas Arthur Vallee and Byron De La Beckwith were these loner types, both were John Birch Society members with alleged mental problems, um, and both were ex-marines who possessed a large number of rifles, which caused Lyndon to consider pushing to some major gun reform… At the White House Christmas party that year, Lyndon was at the center of an incident that would become, I want to say, uh, legendary, among the White House staff for years. After a few cups of eggnog, perhaps one or two too many, Lyndon started looking over at the tree, his eyes kept darting back over to it. Suddenly, he dashed over to that side of the room and tackled the Scotch pine! Jumped right onto it. The whole thing started to fall down, but the Secret Service rushed in and caught it, and they quickly helped the President to his feet. Lyndon later explained that he was certain that an assassin was hiding behind it. So, yeah, the attempt on his life did certainly get to him. He even started to believe that a right-wing conspiracy of some kind was out to get him, because, as I later found out during a talk with, um, Clark Clifford, at who had just become the Secretary of Defense late in that year, that at some point during the winter recess, President Johnson ordered FBI Director Hoover to look into any connections between Vallee and De La Beckwith, and to investigate the Klan and other such groups...

– Homer Thornberry, White House Council in 1963, New York Times interview for article, 1985



“Released on Christmas Day, 1963, “Dr. Strangelove, or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb,” better known simply as “Dr. Strangelove,” was a satirical take on the Cold War. Ignoring the then-ongoing Cuban War, the plot focuses on a fictional and more direct international crisis between the US and Russia...

[snip]

And how does it end?”

[clip shown]

“That’s right, with all the characters in the war room having a pie fight! (pause) Don’t worry, I’ll explain… Meant to symbolize the chaos of inbound and outbound missiles during a nuclear exchange, the scene had to be reshot at least two dozen times as too often the actors would break character by smiling and blurting out some laughter during the melee. And Mr. Kubrick did not approve! Early test footage shows the pies as being too thick, blocking out the actor’s faces. In the end, Kubrick went through over 700 pies for the 3-minute conclusion, which, to many uneducated viewers – and by that I mean shitheads who can’t understand dark satire and symbolism – was the only clear sign that this was in fact a dark comedy. And those idiots should consider themselves lucky, as this wasn’t even the original ending. The whole bit was nearly scrapped due to Kurbrick’s frustration with the actors. It didn’t help when President Lyndon Johnson was shot in New York half-way through filming the scene, as some felt throwing a pie in the commander-in-chief’s face would be too inappropriate in light of that. However, due to the President quickly recovering and even downplaying the severity and seriousness of the assassination attempt in the following days and weeks, Kubrick kept the scene in, leading to one of the most serious comedies ever made ending with what has got to be the most serious pie fight ever put to film...

– Transcript of a review by Brad Jones, a nationally famous film reviewer and the protégé of Roger Ebert, uploaded to ourvids.co.usa, 12/12/2012



“Christmas ’63 came and went with our soldiers still getting butchered in Cuba. We were lucky, though, that the President’s criticism of the media only made the media more inclined to showcase the war’s carnage. The media’s depiction of Cuba helped more people understand the horrors of war. Funny. For every country, a generation always comes along that needs to be reminded that war is not at all like how their nutty grandpas says it’s like, the nostalgia-happy fool. And each time the new generation figures its out, it’s a complete shock to the oldsters. Every single time.”

– actor and social justice activist Peter Duel (1940-2018), LBC interview, 1984



We welcome you to relish in the first edition of Tumbleweed Magazine. …This magazine is the result of failure to properly represent Americans of the post-WWII Generation variety in mainstream media. The atrocities of the Cuban War has opening our eyes to the need for peace… Music, as seen throughout mankind’s history, can unite people and its expression can confront and contribute to the decay and destruction of negative social plague prevalent in the societies of our country and our planet. Music is a tool, a rallying cry, an entryway into what makes us human… Our mission statement: to bring news of the music world unadulterated by neither the radicalism of underground print nor the censored cautiousness of your parents’ newspapers, and to look for ways to improve society and the world along the way… We have christened this vessel “Tumbleweed” to honor not the Roy Rogers tune but the rootless wanderlust of that plant-based structure found forever roaming across of the American West in an anachronistic imitation of Jack Kerouac...

Enjoy expanding your mind,
Calvin Trillin & Bern Sanders [24]
Head Co-Founders

– Excerpts from the Introductory Page of Tumbleweed Magazine, First Issue (Dec. 1963)



…over in the states, apart from continued presence in Cuba fanning the flames of anti-war youth and being injured in an attempt on his life, things were going swell for President Johnson – then a New Jersey swindler caused the stock market to collapse, rattling the economy and sending out shockwaves felt across the globe…

– Excerpt from A Year in Review, BBC World News Report, 12/30/1963



XleEocs.png


[pic: imgur.com/XleEocs.png ]
– A Kentucky Fried Chicken holiday bucket lid, c. Dec. 1963



SOURCE(S)/NOTE(S)
[1] Italicized part taken directly from here: content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,874857,00.html (link found on wiki article for “Chicken Tax”)
[2] Chicken in the rough co-founder was born c. 1897 based on this article: http://sites.rootsweb.com/~okoklaho/obit/osborne_beverly__neva_l_flanery.html
[3] Famous quote from real life.
[4] More info on this OTL organization found here (there’s no wiki article on this for some reason): https://www.franchise.org/about-ifa
[5] https://www.tuscaloosanews.com/news/20071014/wal-marts-flight-in-air-followed-retailers-rise-in-prominence
[6] Italicized parts are directly from here: content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,875410,00.html (link found on wiki article for Chicken Tax)
[7] I’m actually uncertain if I should keep trucks on this list due to the fact that, according to source 15 on wikipedia: “audio tapes from the Johnson White House, revealed a quid pro quo unrelated to chicken. In January 1964, President Johnson attempted to convince United Auto Worker’s president Walter Reuther not initiate a strike just before the 1964 election and to support the president’s civil-rights platform. Reuther, in turn, wanted Johnson to respond to Volkswagen’s increased shipments to the United States.” So I’m trying to think of some reason for why Johnson here would pick light trucks, and if not, then what would he impose tariffs on instead, since machinery was Europe’s main export at this point in time IOTL/IATL. Anyone have any ideas for this? (I’d greatly appreciate any feedback.)
[8] For more information on the Chicken War and how it started, simply peruse its wiki article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_tax
[9] OTL JFK sentiment found here: https://web.archive.org/web/20100920140844/http://www.amconmag.com/article/2010/mar/01/00032/
[10] Italicized info found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tino_De_Angelis
[11] Sentiments based on this youtube video: watch?v=Bejdhs3jGyw
[12] statistic located here: https://www.statista.com/statistics/186260/total-doctors-of-medicine-in-the-us-since-1949/
[13] the original name for the X-Men comics; just a seemingly minor butterfly...
[14] George Wallace actually threatened to do this IOTL according to his wikipedia page
[15] Italicized parts from here: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1970/02/14/kentucky-fried
[16] Held in Baden-Baden IRL over Kenya having political tensions with Portugal and South Africa; here (due to far-reaching butterflies, I guess (it’s a minor change, though, so I suppose it’s acceptable, right?)), they tolerate them enough the meeting to proceed there as planned.
[17] Held in January 1964 IRL due to tensions mentioned in Note 14 pushing back the bidding.
[18] This is actually how they got him IOTL, through some simple delivery errors!
[19] I’m basically just paraphrasing passages from here, just so you know: https://www.businessinsider.com/the-great-salad-oil-scandal-of-1963-2013-11 . For more detail on what went down in OTL, see the following article: https://uselessinformation.org/the-case-of-the-phantom-vegetable-oil/
[20] Quote taken from wiki quote found on this thread, which must receive credit for this idea as I would not have known about this OTL Scandal were it not for this thread: https://www.alternatehistory.com/forum/threads/kennedy-lives-the-great-recession.413828/
[21] Italicized part here taken from this page: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6576696-great-salad-oil-swindle
[22] Italicized bit from here: https://www.businessinsider.com/the-great-salad-oil-scandal-of-1963-2013-11
[23] McKeithen allegedly used such rhetoric in the runoff election in OTL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1963%E2%80%9364_Louisiana_gubernatorial_election
[24] If a 21-year-old Jann Wenner is not too young for founding a magazine (The Rolling Stones) IOTL, then a 22-year-old Bernie Sanders co-founding a magazine ITTL should not be too young or too unrealistic, either…right?

2/15/19 Edit: fixed a typo.
 
Post 10
Post 10: Chapter 18



Chapter 18: January 1964 – April 1964



“Lord, make me an instrument of Thy peace; where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where is darkness, light; and where there is sadness, joy.”

– St. Francis of Assisi



“During the Christmas break, I talked with my family over an idea that I’ve had for quite a while now, and they agree with me that is sounds like a real good one and I hope you all agree. Ladies and Gentlemen, I am declaring myself a candidate for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States. I’m running because, America, we need a leader with a plan. We need a leader who will reverse the big money and big business domination of government. We need a courageous leader who will stand up and fight the necessary political battle [1] to protect the checkbooks of the average American and remove corruption from our markets. And we need a leader who will and can assure peace at home and abroad, and without falling back on bloodshed to do it. President Johnson has failed at all of these endeavors… As President, I will to withdraw troops from Cuba within 90 days of being sworn in. I will instigate a Senate investigation into Wall Street’s action to determine the true causes of this Salad Oil Recession. I will take a stand in the name of peace and national defense and meet with Soviet Premier Shelepin to work on an agreement to scale back our mutual buildup of nuclear weapons. I will not falter in upholding a national mission of allowing nations to prosper freely and determine their own futures for themselves, without pressure from foreign nations attempting to pull puppet strings. But I cannot do it alone. I will need your support if we are to make the peace of Washington listen to the voices of all of the American people demanding for peace abroad and peace at home. Together, we will make a difference. Together, we can win this. ...Thank you all, and remember – vote Morse, or it’ll only get worse!”

– U.S. Senator Wayne Morse (D-OR), 1/2/1964



PATTERSON CHALLENGES LBJ FOR DEMO. NOMINATION

Birmingham, AL – John M. Patterson has announced his decision to run an active campaign to challenge President Johnson for the 1964 Democratic nomination for President of the United States. Patterson, the fiscally moderate, socially conservative Governor of Alabama from 1959 to 1963, proclaimed “patriots never cower in the face of the toothless snarls of Washington’s fat cats.” Patterson’s national profile was raised in 1961 by his opposition of the Civil Rights Act, and has repeatedly criticized the President since then. The former lawyer and state politicians, who has many connections to the state's biggest political donors, has claimed nationwide integration was “a mistake,” citing last year’s Xenia Riots as an example of “forced legal integration lead[ing] to voluntary social segregation.” Patterson also stated that parts of the country are not yet ready for segregation, and that other regions of the nation “work better with segregation.” A major platform of his campaign is his pledge to “allow segregation to be returned and retained in the places that need it most.” Patterson plans to run in the Democratic primaries in order to “prove that the Democratic voters are not happy with how their party is being run,” and is also reportedly planning to woo over delegates at the Democratic National Convention scheduled for early July.

The Birmingham News, Alabama newspaper, 1/3/1964



"I ran on the platform purely because I thought it was the only way that I would be able to defeat Johnson at the Convention, become President, and bring our boys home from The Cuban Quagmire unless the island could be won by the Fourth of July, 1965."

Do you regret it?

"I'm an old man. I have lots a things to regret. That's one of them."

– John Patterson, 2001 interview



“I support fairness and equality among the races that make up this great nation of ours, and I support Lyndon Johnson for President.” (public)

“If I play my cards right, 1968 or 1972 will be our year, Lurleen!” (private, according to Lurleen Wallace in a 1981 LBS interview)

– Governor George Wallace, 1/4/1964



5 January 1964: On this day in history, Pope Paul VI of Rome and Patriarch Athenagoras I of Constantinople meet in Jerusalem, marking the first time since the 15tth century that the leaders of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches meet in the same room; they discuss strengthening relations and ways of addressing universal concerns in was is described as a “respectful [and] professional” discussion and meeting.

– onthisday.co.uk



Father had been flying in the Cuba War since 1961, but was shot down and captured in 1962 after being part of the operation that took out the Cuban communist leaders Fidel and Raul Castro. In the POW camp, my father was subjected to intense physical and psychological torture, but after months of imprisonment, he orchestrated an escape plan with the other prisoners-of-war, and successfully fled into the jungle wilderness of the Cuban interior. He finally made it back to American territory in 1963, but was in serious need of medical attention. Due his courageous service he was awarded the Purple Heart, and sent to recuperate at The Chester Nimitz Medical Center at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, which opened in April of 1962 after President Lyndon Johnson expanded medical services available to military personnel in Oahu. Father, still serving in the US Navy, could have easily retired – he had done more than had been asked of him – but, as he would often say, “I was not leaving until the job was over, and defending America is a job that’s never over.”

In January 1964, my mother, Ann Dunham, having finalized her divorce from my biological father (Barack Obama) about one month prior, was set to begin a new set of classes at the University of Hawaii’s East-West Center when she first met Father. They told me they met at a busy water fountain in a park off of the base. Father had been lightly jogging to redevelop his muscles and mother was taking me out for some fresh air. They ended up making small talk with each other while waiting for their turn to drink.

“Cute kid,” he commented on her two-and-a-half-year-old (me).

“Nice medal,” she spotted it around his neck, peaking out from under his white sweat-covered cut-off.

“I usually never went out with men like him,” Mom would later explain, “I hated war and tended to avoid anyone who contributed to it. But John was different. We kept talking and we soon discovered we had a great deal in common – we both came from families that moved around a lot, we both wanted to take charge of our own destinies, we both liked the same things here and there. And he had a great smile. We soon they felt this spark, I guess, and before leaving he convinced me to give him my number.”

Father would later confess that when he first met us, he had assumed Mom was my babysitter. Him “sticking around after learning the truth,” as Mom put it, was a major factor in her going out on more than just one date with him…

– Barack McCain’s Lessons From my Fathers, Sunrise Publishers, 1993



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– John McCain and Ann Dunham in Hawaii, c. early 1964



On January 8, 1964, Johnson gave his third State of the Union address, which, along with producing a few notable quotes such as “unity will lead to prosperity, and prosperity leads to societal greatness,” focused largely on his thoroughly-researched economic plan to combat the sudden national recession. Prior to the speech, he confided to Jenkins that “[A president] making an economic speech is like a fellow peeing down his leg. It makes him feel warm but nobody else knows what the hell he’s doing.” [2] Indeed, polls taken shortly after the address showed that most polled were still very worried about their jobs and the cost of goods and services. These results demonstrated that Johnson was slipping on domestic policies as well as on foreign policies, including fiscal and economic concerns. Thus, the speech, while receiving fairly positive reviews from pundits, was considered a "failure" by the White House's inner circle for failing to comfort or reassure a worried public…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Pursuit of Power, A. A. Knopf Inc. New York, 2012



Johnson was facing a massive public loss of faith in the market combined with major companies failing left and right - and all because of one swindler from New Jersey and his lies concerning oils used for salad dressings and mayonnaise. American Express was facing hundreds of millions of dollars in lawsuits and had been forced to place its subsidiary into bankruptcy (reimbursement calls were still being explored at the time). …Eventually, after further, less important details were sorted out, Amex was forced to take a massive loss on their warehouse contracts. Trading firms that were smaller in size but still fiscally wounded by the scandal were eventually snapped up by larger players... The foreign markets that had been closely tied to the US, such as Canada, the U.K., and to a lesser extent France, suffered as well, in an economic version of the Domino Effect. The U.K. suffered a minor recession, along with Canada, because the leaders of those two countries, Douglas-Home and Diefenbaker, respectively, had tightened economic ties with the US under L.B.J.; conversely, other Western states such as the Netherlands and Italy were less affected, especially Germany, due to the 1961-1963 Chicken Tax War... While economists believed the economic struggle’s conditions would lead to a relatively quick recession, it would still be a rather difficult (yet still not unsolvable) recovery…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



CONGRESSMAN GILLIS LONG WINS DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION FOR GOVERNOR

…Long, 40, achieved roughly 53% of the vote against John J. McKeithen’s 47%. ...Gillis William Long is a member of the famous Long political family of Louisiana; he is a nephew of Governor-turned-Senator Huey Long; when Gillis was in high school, another uncle of his, then-future Governor Earl Long, was running for Lieutenant Governor, and young Gillis gave campaign speeches at Gillis’ school on Earl’s behalf… Long served his country valiantly during WWII, receiving a bronze star, five campaign stars, and the Purple Heart before serving at the Nuremburg trials and retiring at the rank of captain in 1947; military service delayed his graduating from law school by roughly a decade… McKeithen was a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from the 20th district from 1948 to 1952, and has been a member of the Louisiana Public Service Commission since 1955. McKeithen also served his country during WWII, rising to the rank of first lieutenant while in the 77th Infantry Division in the US Army's Pacific Theater of Operations; for his service, he was awarded two Bronze Star Medals and the Distinguished Service Cross…

– The Times-Picayune, Louisiana newspaper, 1/11/1964



12 January 1964: On this day in history, the Zanzibar Revolution results in the predominantly Arab government of Zanzibar being overthrown by African nationalist rebels; occurring in less than 24 hours, the revolution ends 200 years of Arab dominance over the island region in eastern Africa, and heightens fears among western powers that communism is slowly spreading into Africa; the new government’s alleged communist ties lead to British and American citizens being evacuated from the territory, with a United States Navy destroyer evacuating 61 U.S. citizens.

– onthisday.co.uk



…1964 started with San Francisco Giants announcing on the 15th their decision to make champion outfielder Willie Mays the highest-paid player in baseball by signing him on to a new $105,000 per season contract…

– John Helyar’s Lords of the Realm: The Real History of Baseball, Ballantine Books, 1994



Conservative pundit William F. Buckley is the one most often credited with coining the term “Jell-O,” as its first recorded use was when the political commentator appeared on Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network on January 18, 1964. Buckley denounced the shoutniks as being “as soft in the brain as the Jell-O their generation grew up on,” only for activists such as Diana Oughton and Bern Sanders to begin using the phrase in a positive manner to suggest that the younger generation was not as "rigid and...stiff as the intolerant leaders of yesteryear," in a jab at continued anti-integrationist politicians (Tumbleweed Magazine, February 1964 issue). Jell-O had reached peak popularity by the start of the decade thanks to its consumption by children born in the 1940s, during and immediately after World War Two. During this time, young mothers didn’t have the supporting community structures of earlier generations, so marketers were quick to promote easy-to-prepare prepackaged foods [3] like Jell-O. The label “Jell-O generation” soon became nationally known, and actually helped the Jell-O company’s earnings, as Jell-O’s sales had begun to significantly decrease in 1962 and 1963 due to multiple factors, including economic issues and changing societal tastes. This boost, however, was only temporary, as sales returned to declination at the start of the 1970s as society's preferred foodstuffs continued to change and evolve. Many Jell-O dishes, such as desserts and Jell-O salads, became special occasion foods rather than everyday items. Marketers blamed this decline on decreasing family sizes, a ‘fast-paced’ lifestyle and women’s increasing employment [3]. In response to this apparent “rejection” by more politically-liberal consumers, many producers of gelatin dessert (with Kraft Brands, holders of the “Jell-O” trademark, being a very noticeable exception) began to appeal to more conservative demographics and in turn develop pro-conservative atmospheres in their workplaces and advertisements, leading to some controversy later on...

– pointlessfacts.co.usa/why-were-shoutniks-sometimes-called-the-jello-generation-question-mark



“A CHOICE, NOT AN ECHO” – GOLDWATER ANNOUNCES BID FOR THE PRESIDENCY

Phoenix, AZ – At a planned press conference held outside the patio of his surprisingly modest ranch home, US Senator Barry Goldwater officially announced early today that he will run in the Republican Presidential primaries, calling for limited government and for Americans to uphold personal responsibility. “We are a strong, independent, and determined people, and the government has no right to hold us back.” The two-term Senator from Arizona also discussed his view on foreign policy, claiming “Cuba is in an awkward state of limbo,” and informed reporters that he supports “increasing military action in Laos to cut off the military activities carried out there by members of P.L.A.F., or People’s Liberation Armed Forces. This is the army branch of the North Vietnam political entity known as the National Liberation Front, also known as the Viet Cong. Their activities in South Vietnam include arming communist insurgents, seeking out American sympathizers, and sneaking troops and various supplies into South Vietnam in order to undermine and destroy democratic and freedom-loving institutions across those areas. The people in control of the White House also need to address the fact that the North Vietnamese government and military are being supplied by Communist China.” …Goldwater concluded the press conference by telling voters to “beware the empty promises of the radical left. The biggest lie you'll ever hear get spewed out of D.C. is 'The Feds are here to help.” ...Polls from Gallup and other polling institutions suggest that Goldwater is a top-tier candidate, and that his biggest opponent in the upcoming Presidential primaries may be Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York, or possibly even Governor George W. Romney of Michigan or former Vice President Richard M. Nixon of California...

Associated Press, 1/20/1964



Our 579 locations worldwide produced a net total of US$[REDACTED] in all 1963 sales, giving the company a net gain of US$[REDACTED] from 1962. …Our least successful outlets were the 37 in Mexico, the 3 in Brazil, and the 25 in France. Solutions for rectifying this situation, as suggested by the respective regional managers, are as follows:

Option 1: refocus advertising expenses from well-established regions to Mexico, Brazil and France.

Option 2: perform survey to better understand local wants and needs.

Option 3: cut our losses and close the least productive of these outlets.

– Annual KFC beginning-of-year sales report, KFC headquarters in Florence, KY, 1/21/1964



Execute Options 1 and Option 2. Option 3 would leave those employers jobless and those customers without a high-quality source for quick, hearty food. I’d rather make less profit than no profit at all. Make the people happy, and that will lead to fortune for all.

– Colonel Sander’s response to above report, private memo, KFC headquarters in Florence, KY, 1/21/1964



GOVERNOR ROCKEFELLER MAKES PRESIDENTIAL BID OFFICIAL IN SPEECH

...recent hypothetical polls have suggested that the New York moderate (in the Governor's seat since 1959) could narrowly or comfortably defeat President Johnson in a November head-to-head matchup. Some critics of Rockefeller, though, believe that he will have greater difficulty winning the Republican party's nomination at this summer's GOP National Convention at the Cow Palace in California...

– The New York Daily News, 1/25/1964



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[pic: imgur.com/T4ZUnmJ ]
– A KFC outlet in Bozeman, Montana, shortly after its grand opening, c. 1/25/1964




[video: hQSkjHysqKk ]
– Colonel Sanders celebrating Australia Day in a commercial for KFC Australia, 1/26/1964



INTERVIEWER: Well what about Gordon Lightfoot? The two of you did jam together a few times, yes?

CHONG: Yeah, only a few times. The guy had a lot of talent, we did some collaborations in early 1964 and onwards, but he wasn’t into smoking. To him, music itself was a powerful drug. At least that’s how it started out at first. I mean, Gordie loved what he was doing, but he actually struggled with actually making a lot of his songs. We’d tell him to let loose, but we meant with tokes. Instead Gordie became quite a womanizer as the years went on. But who am I to talk?

– usarightnow.co.usa/culture/interview, 2014



With Pat’s permission, Nixon began 1964 by quietly creating a staff of workers, specialists and advisors to help him run for the US Senate, seeking incumbent Democrat Clair Engle’s seat. At the same time, he supported the notion of a possible Draft Nixon movement in the Republican Presidential race. The Senate primary had just been scheduled for August to redirect focus in the state to both parties’ presidential primary in June, while the R.N.C. was set for July. This scheduling meant that if Nixon put off the Senate run in the face of a rising draft movement, he could jump into the race for the Senate nomination as late as the last minute if the bid for the Presidential nomination failed. Despite losing the gubernatorial primary in an upset two years ago, Shell’s loss caused some Republican supporters to express interest in backing a Nixon-Johnson rematch, given the experience of "buyer's remorse" paired with how close Nixon got to winning just four years prior. Personally, though, Nixon did not believe that any incumbent would lose at a time of war, which is what he called the situation in Cuba even if the Johnson administration refused to acknowledge that Communism still plagued the island. Furthermore, Nixon surmised that Johnson would seek to develop a rally-around-the-flag effect of some kind to overshadow the “buyers’ remorse” type of campaign that Nixon agreed he would most likely run on; still, Nixon wanted to keep all of his cards on the table, and did not confirm or deny any decisions in a concrete manner for a good while. Instead, he simply waited to see how things unfolded along further first…

– John Ehrlichman’s Witness: What Went on Behind Closed Doors, Folkways Books, 1998



THREE MORE STATES RATIFY PROPOSED 24TH AMENDMENT

Washington, DC – …The legislature of President Johnson’s home state of Texas narrowly approved ratification over the weekend, brining the total number of states to 33. …Congress proposed the 24th Amendment on February 10, 1963 and submitted it to the states 30 days later. Only five more state legislatures need to ratify the amendment in order for it to become part of the US Constitution. While the state legislatures of South Dakota, Maine, New Hampshire, Delaware and Missouri and even Georgia are set to attempt ratification later this year, Governor George Wallace is seeking to make Alabama become the next state to ratify despite heavy opposition from his state house of representatives …If ratified, the Amendment will ban poll taxes from all U.S. election, and reinforce the conditions of the 1962 Civil Rights Act and the 1963 Voting Rights Act, “making them rightly ingrained into the U.S. Constitution…” according to US Vice President Hubert Humphrey, whose home state of Minnesota has already ratified the amendment… Poll taxes are still not illegal in Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, South Carolina and Virginia; this fact means that 38 states must ratify a US Constitutional Amendment because five state governments refuse to pass basic state laws to benefit American voters in those states…

– The Washington Post, 1/29/1964



After surviving the experience of getting shot, Johnson was determined to implement gun reform, only to face a myriad of problems concerning such an endeavor when discussing the idea with several congressmen in late January. First of all, when Congressman Emmanuel Celler brought up mental health, it was shot down by most in his own party as being a moot point, as suspected mentally unwell individuals were kept far away from society and guns via asylums.
Secondly, mail order weaponry would require a strong centralized handling of purchases and transports made across state borders. Conservative congressmen believed that such government overreach would be a severe invasion of privacy and a suppression of businesses. "Attacks" on the most common form of gun purchasing, local purchases at stores, were seen as unnecessary to them due to an assumption the conservative congressmen made – that businessmen would be held responsible for selling weapons to an unwell individual by their other customers shifting to other places of business in the US's free markets.
Finally, the most prevalent obstacle to Johnson's gun reform efforts was a general disinterest in such reform. While Johnson had become the first sitting U.S. President to survive a bullet entering his body, the fact remained that he had survived; in the end, nobody had to mourn. Nevertheless, Johnson’s vocal support for a “nationwide analysis” of America’s gun policies persevered, with its most immediate legislative victory being the Interstate Firearms Shipment Regulation Act, introduced by Senator Thomas J. Dodd in 1965 and signed into law in 1967. But in 1964, the best Johnson could do was focus on the mental well-being of veterans. The President surmised that his would-be killer was unbalanced and argued that Vallee, as a former Marine, should have been more regularly checked on by appropriate medical personnel.
Thus, while gun control measures remained as-is for the time being, the US Veterans Department ultimately saw its 1964-1965 budget double for veterans treatment.

– Journalist Rachel Joy Scott’s The American Gun: A Love-and-Hate Story, Technic Publishing, 2021



February 1, 1964

To: The President

From: Director Dulles

Our men have confirmed that General Nguyen Khanh prevented an assassination attempt on South Vietnam President Ngo Dinh Diem at 2300hrs yesterday. The perpetrators reportedly belonged to the Viet Cong, and Khanh has pursued them into the central highlands. Capture or destruction is likely as Khanh knows the terrain well. I suggest we convince Diem to promote Khanh, as this is the third plot to remove Diem that he has successfully deflected…

– Private telegram from the Pentagon to the White House; discovered, declassified and disclosed in 1992



I said to Lyndon, “It’ll be best for this administration to avoid making the rising conflict in Vietnam another American War. This is their war, the Vietnamese people. We can give them aid, we can even give them advisors and experts. But they must win it or lose it themselves. If it was up to me, I’d be fully prepared to let this be something they lose instead of something that we lose.”

“And let the Chinese take another step in taking over that entire region? F@#k that!” was his response.

“Johnson, if we go in there, we’ll drive the nationalists right into the arms of the communists. We can’t afford to internationalize the conflict by attacking or invading or even bombing the north, [4] because that won’t work, Lyndon. It won’t work.”

Johnson replied, “If we handle the Viet Cong the right way, it will work, Jack. It will work, I tell you!”

Clifford interjected before another shouting match began with “Well first we have to unite the South Vietnamese behind a leader they all like. Diem’s in our pocket, but he’s not in their hearts, so we can either find another stooge or try to win the people over.”

I backed the first choice, but the President went with the second, believing Diem to be too valuable to oust. The situation was precarious, and any changes in command could disrupt alliances and trust, he reasoned.

"So how deeply do you want us to get involved, Cliff," I asked Johnson's advisor when Lyndon wasn't around.

"For the time being, we're going to try and keep the levels of our boys over there as is," he said. I couldn't tell if it was a lie.

– Jack Kennedy’s On the Precipice of Change: The Complete Memoirs of Jack Kennedy, Tangent Writer’s House, 1983



By February, the upcoming trial of Tino De Angelis had become a media circus. Paparazzi invaded De Angelis' home life, hounding his relatives for the inside scoop on "Tino the Trickster," the man that the major companies he had duped were happy to dub a one-man market-wrecker. Photographers and reporters hovered around court houses and lawyer offices like vultures keeping their eyes on a dying animal lost in some hopeless desert, waiting for their next chance to flash their bulbs and barker out their questions. ...De Angelis faced multiple charges, the largest of which were counterfeiting receipts, attempted bribery, and commodities fraud. When bail was set at $200,000, De Angelis claimed he did not have that kind of money. Just weeks later, however, an investigation led by the U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey David M. Satz Jr. revealed De Angelis had hidden over $500,000 in a Swiss bank account. This led to a charge of contempt being tacked onto his list of crimes, since he had already declared bankruptcy. The press ate up the story, along with the follow-up that De Angelis was looking for a new defense attorney after his previous one left over Tino's tendency to lie and deceive even the people who were on his side, either out of mistrust or sheer stupidity...

– John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Salad Oil Recession: The Causes and Effects of the Black Weekend of 1963, Excelsior Publishers, 1971



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[pic: imgur.com/MUYzmGV.png ]
– De Angelis’ reaction to hearing the charges brought against him, c. February 1962



EXTRA! MLK AND ASSOCIATES SHOT, WOUNDED IN ATLANTA

– The New York Times, 2/10/1964



Host WALTER CRONKITE: …we take you live to our CBS correspondent in Georgia, who is now at the scene of the melee. Hello? How are things down there?"

CORRESPONDENT: Walter, people are in a state of panic here after snipers began firing at civil rights leaders, uh, Reverend King, and several members, including members of the NAACP and other Civil Rights groups [pause]. Oh, just a moment, Walter, hold on. [pause] I have an update, Walter: according to the medical personnel, Dr. King, and organizers Hosea Williams and James Forman were hit by sniper fire alongside two security guards, whom reportedly moved to protect them during the shooting. That's according to an anonymous source who works at the hospital. Now, it is still unclear, however, how severe each of their injuries are, but they all have been taken to the Atlanta Medical Center, uh, hospital, uh, which you can see behind me, um, and, uh, we’ll soon be heading over there to learn the latest developments in this terrible turn of events. Walter?…

– CBS broadcast, 2/10/1964



…our correspondents in New York City; Washington D.C.; Oakland, California; and other cities are reporting escalating incidents of civil unrest as the nation anticipates the hospital releasing more information concerning the health conditions of the three Civil Rights leaders… In St. Louis, hundreds are taking to the streets in outrage, with peaceniks leading a sit-in at the city's local colleges, and a small riot developing in the northern side of the metropolitan area...

– NBC broadcast, 2/11/1964



“I was walking in the back… Dr. King got nicked in the shoulder thanks to his bodyguard’s ribcage affecting the bullet’s trajectory. Forman survived his bullet to the chest because it slipped right on past the vital organs. But Hosea…Hosea was walking ahead of all of ’em, eager to return to H.Q. to set up plans for combating continuing unfair employment and housing policies. He never got to see how that’d play out.”

– retired politician A. J. Young, ABC interview, 2014



“Hosea Williams was an inspiring and courageous champion for Civil Rights, and the actions of his fierce bravery, his consistent pragmatism, his undying patriotism, and his tragic sacrifice will be felt for generations to come.”

– President Lyndon B. Johnson in a Special Address to the Nation, 2/12/1964



“People who say that violence isn’t the answer aren’t answering the same question as the rest of us! In order to communicate with savages who cannot speak your language, you need to speak their language. And violence is the language of the white man!”

– Malcolm X, 2/12/1964, multiple sources



RIOTS RETURN TO CITIES NATION-WIDE!: Rev. King Urges Peace as Rage Engulfs Urban Areas

...from coast to coast, from Los Angeles to Boston, flames are engulfing communities as civil disobedience takes a violent turn in response to the latest incident of race-based violence...

– The St. Paul Pioneer Press, Minnesota newspaper, 2/13/1964



In February, Jim returned from the Oasis. He saw the escalation of riots in US as a harbinger of the obstreperous rumpus yet to come, and soon called upon his followers to relocate the church to California, where he was certain we would acquire more followers, as the number of people willing to join to escape the turmoil unfolding across America was surely on the rise…

– Marceline Jones (1927-2018), 1990 interview



L.B.J. CREDITS KING, ABERNATHY WITH CALMING ACTIVISTS, ENDING RIOTS: Leaders Expected to Leave Hospital Soon

...the situation is de-escalating in a majority of cities as cooler heads prevail and communities look to what will come next - recovering from the damage brought about over the past several intense and troublesome days...

– The Star-Tribune, Minnesota newspaper, 2/15/1964



DEGAULLE OPENLY THREATENS TO WITHDRAW FRANCE FROM NATO: Demands France Be Given “More Equal” Say in Military Strategies

…Over the years, the French President has butted heads with almost every single founding member of NATO, though tensions with the US over the Suez Crisis have cooled ever since Eisenhower left office. …the announcement has led to some protests and counter-protests at universities in Paris and Nice, with many French students whom believe the nation’s funds should go to improving social programs, not weaponry, supporting the withdrawal. "I dare him to withdrawal," says one political science graduate student from Marseille, "I want to see him call his very obvious bluff"…

The Sun, UK newspaper, 22/2/1964



SENATE PANEL INVESTIGATION RULES AGAINST CONTRACTOR FOR CHEAP, FOREIGN MATERIAL IN NASA FIRE CASE

Washington, DC – US Senator Clinton P. Anderson, chairman of the US Senate Aeronautical and Space Sciences Committee, handed down a guilty verdict to the companies responsible for the production of NASA’s cockpit materials (primarily, North American Aviation), after the committee determined that the materials, not human error, produced the damage to NASA property and the hospitalization of astronaut Scott Carpenter via a fire that broke out at Cape Canaveral on February 7, 1962. The ruling settled a 24-months-long debate over whom was at fault for the fire… An inspection of the quality of materials agreed to in NAA’s contract with NASA, and a critical review of NAA’s management, delivery systems, and quality services, revealed inconsistencies with the qualities of materials promised and the qualities of still-unused materials that NASA had received… NAA and other companies will likely receive generous fines for what could be viewed as a breach of a federal government contract...

– The Miami Herald, 2/22/1964



MORE TROOPS TO BE SENT TO VIETNAM-LAOS BORDER: L.B.J. Vows to End North ’Nam Aggression; Exact Troop Numbers To Be Announced “Soon”

The New York Post, 2/23/1964



…In an astonishing move, President Johnson today doubled the number of American troops that will be stationed in Southeast Asia… Many of these soldiers are veterans of Cuba who have re-enlisted, but most of them are soldiers who are being transferred directly from operations in Cuba...

– Chet Huntley, the Huntley-Brinkley Report, 2/25/1964



"Cliff, you son of a bitch!"

– U.S. Secretary of State Jack Kennedy, 2/25/1964 (allegedly)



I’m not alone in worrying about Lyndon’s mental health. Ladybird confided in me today that, very recently, he has begun researching some strange rumor he heard about concerning Presidents dying in office - something called The Curse of Tippy-canoe [sic]…

– Excerpt from the Diary of Mildred Stegall, personal secretary to Lyndon Johnson, 2/29/1964 entry



…The 1931 edition of “Ripley’s Believe it or Not” is the earliest known treatise to document the 20-year peculiarity, and was discussed in newspapers again in 1940, 1945 and 1960. Additional writers, including Ed Koterba in his “Assignment Washington” column, suggested either seriously or in jest that the “curse” stemmed from then-Governor of the Indiana Territory William Henry Harrison’s actions against the Shawnee during the 1810s, culminating in the “prophet” Shawnee leader Tenskwatawa cursing Harrison. The prophet allegedly proclaimed that Harrison, and all future US presidents elected in a year ending with the same last number as the year in which Harrison wins election to the Presidency (1840, and thus the "number" zero), will die in office. The “curse” notion holds little water when one considers how Tenskwatawa had no way of knowing Harrison would become President in thirty years unless he truly was prophetic.

Nevertheless, the "curse" was, at the very least, an imaginative explanation for a real-life statistical curiosity, as everyone who had ever won a U.S. Presidential election in a year ending in zero had in fact died while still serving in that office. Harrison won the Presidency in 1840, then died roughly one month into office; Abraham Lincoln won the Presidency in 1860, then was assassinated while in office; James A. Garfield won the Presidency in 1880, and was assassinated in office less than a year later; William McKinley won re-election in 1900, and was assassinated while in office not too long after; Warren G. Harding won the Presidency in 1920 and died in office in 1923; and Franklin D. Roosevelt won a third time in 1940 and died in office in 1945. And most recently, Lyndon Johnson had won the Presidency in 1960.

The Shawnee, who mainly centered in the Ohio valley at that time that the alleged curse was cast, were then repeatedly relocated westward until ending up in Oklahoma by the end of the nineteenth century. While Johnson was typically a level-headed man when it came to superstitions, he nevertheless may have become convinced that the curse was real after surviving two assassination attempts in 1962 and 1963, and possibly came to believe that the only way to end the curse was to make right the wrong made to the Shawnee. These suspicions would explain Johnson’s major upheaval in federal-tribal relations.

In 1964, only two Shawnee tribes were federally recognized: The Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, and the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. The Loyal, or Cherokee, Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma was a contender for a third recognition. In early March 1964, President Johnson quietly met with Nipo T. Strongheart (5/15/1891-12/31/1966), a Yakama Nation Native American advocate whom played a role in the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, for undisclosed purposes. Soon after, for reasons not explicitly known, Johnson called for the federal recognition of four more Shawnee Tribes: the aforementioned "third" Oklahoma Tribe, plus the Piqua Shawnee Tribe of Alabama, the United Remnant Band in Ohio, and the Blue Creek Band of Indiana. This action was praised by politicians on the left, whom saw it as a return to the policy established under FDR and as a rebuke and reversal of Congressional efforts to assimilate Native Americans by terminating the legal standing of dozens of tribes via judging members to be ready to become independent American citizens (efforts that allegedly aimed to destroy Native American languages, histories, and cultures in an attempt to hide the atrocious anti-Native Americans policies and actions of past state and federal administrations).

Upon hearing about the President’s declaration, Congressman Ben Reifel (R-SD), the only Native American in Congress, was inspired to introduce with Congressman Emmanuel Celler (D-NY) the Indian Civil Rights bill. The bill called for the application of the U.S. Bill of Rights to “Indian Country,” a guarantee which Native Americans on reservations had not enjoyed; in short, it would make tribal government more akin to modern American court systems. The true impetus for the bill, however, was most likely efforts to address the noted corruption and disorganization of the tribal courts, and to correct a major legal oversight - that tribes were subjected to the US Constitution while their courts were not covered by the Constitution’s Fifth Amendment.

Regardless of its origin, Johnson was a vocal supporter of the bill and pushed for it to be passed before the year was out. It became law in early 1965…

– Presidential Skeletons: Paranoia, Secrets, Curses and Other Bizarre White House Tales, Penguin Publishing, 1993



DEFENSE SECRETARY REFUSES TO ANSWER VIETNAM QUESTIONS

Washington, DC – US Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford refused to answer questions at a press conference today concerning US military presence in Vietnam. Clifford refused to clarify the short- and long-term goals and purposes of American intervention in the “growing destabilization of the vital region,” as the Defense department has described the situation abroad. The growing split in troop deployment between Cuba and Southeast Asia led to reporters asking which country is “our current top priority.” Other reporters repeatedly inquired "when will our boys return home?” For many questions like these, Secretary Clifford uttered the phrase “I cannot answer that on the grounds of national protection” no less than seven distinct and separate times…

– Journalist Drew Pearson’s critical syndicated newspaper column “Washington Merry-Go-Round,” 3/1/1964



THE SHOUTNIKS GO TO COLLEGE: What Are The Issues Behind The Rise In Youth Protesting?

University of Berkeley, CA - From the conditions soldiers face in Cuba and the Laos-Vietnam conflict, to the rise in racial tensions such as the Xenia riots and Hosea Williams riots sparking nationwide accusations of police brutality, the Shoutniks are being heard. Where they are being addressed, though, depends on who’s hearing them.
For some, these issue are being brought up at the local government level, with sit-ins a mayors' offices or peaceful protests at state capitals. For more academic young minds, it's the many departments on college campuses that are attempting to diffuse tense situations with mediation, negotiating resolutions peacefully in a way one hopes can be replicated on larger scales.
Even sporting events being pulled into the melee. Just last week, shoutnik activists took the field during half-time at a football game at Rutgers University (which the home team, the Scarlet Knights, won 10-2) to demand the audience write to their representatives about defending civil rights.
For other young activists, their audience is of the more political persuasion. For example, this summer, activists David R. Rudd of New York (age: 25) and Mario Savio of California (age: 21) will attend the Democratic National Convention after canvassing swaths of counties to shore up potential Morse voters during the upcoming Democratic primaries.
“Change can begin to happen anywhere in American society, even in politics. At the very least, Morse should be able to influence the party’s platform to make it more pro-peace and less dangerous belligerent to other nations,” Savio explained. "Any small contribution to improving this country's treatment of its next generation of leaders can have a positive and long-lasting ripple effect, and so any little contribution at all is greatly appreciated by people like David and I."
Rudd described to us how even his younger brother Mark is getting involved: he’s running for student body president of his high school to oppose its allegedly "biased" history books and assignments. "He wants to be able to look back on all this with pride. Either pride that he helped change things for the better, or pride that he at least helped to try and change things."
Shoutniks and the political, economic, and social issues of their generation have also been dominating the music scene almost as prevalently as Elvis was not too many years ago, with young performers ranging from the simplistic notes of Tommy Chong and Company and the eloquent ballads of Gordon Lightfoot to the more aggressive energy of the newcomers Frank Zappa and Bob Dylan. These songs often touch on the value of human life, on the beauty of love, and importance of tolerence, history, and cultures around the world.
Regarding publications and literary movements, both musical and political angsts are being related to and expressed through a new journalistic publication called Tumbleweed, which puts the concerns of the young to print. Already catching the attention of the waning House Un-American Activities Committee, the magazine's co-founders express no fear of government reprisals. "We simply direct our critics to the language of the First Amendment," co-founder Bern Sanders curtly tells us in a brief discussion at his office. "These youth activists want to see systemic change to dismantle America's racist institutions and economic reliance on warfare. There is nothing anti-American about wanting to make America better off than it is right now, in this current climate."
Like in recent music recordings, the growing generational divide of our time is also being reflected in the films produced in this past year, causing many parents and older Americans to reject these films due to their unconventional aesthetics. One middle-class father of three explained, “I don’t let my children go to the movies alone anymore because I don't want my children exposed to that junk. You can tell the shoutniks are just socialists in disguise because they openly oppose American authority figures. Never before have I seen a generation behave so disrespectfully to the President, so unruly, so anti-American. Has any country ever had a generation so willing to turn traitor before?”
Bern Sanders offers a different view: “We are told, from the moment that we can comprehend it, that the United States of America is a land of opportunity, where anything is possible. And 'anything' includes making America a land of peace, love, and equality and no longer a land of war, hatred and systematic socio-economic oppression.”

Time Magazine, 3/2/1964 report



Louisiana gubernatorial general election results, March 3, 1964:
U.S. Representative Gillis Long (Democratic) – 446,478 (57.73%)
Shreveport oil businessman Charlton Lyons (Republican) – 307,964 (39.82%)
Mr. Thomas S. Williams (States’ Rights Party of Louisiana) – 18,948 (2.45%)
Total votes: 773,390
Notes/Trivia:
This was the first truly competitive gubernatorial general election in Louisiana since Reconstruction.
At 40 (but 41 on inauguration day (May 12)), Gillis Long was the youngest person elected Governor since Gillis' uncle, Huey Long was elected in 1928 at the age of 35.

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



LBJ, ROCKY SCORE VICTORIES IN N.H.

Concord, NH – In the first contest of this year’s Presidential campaign, US President Lyndon Johnson (Democrat) and New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller (Republican) won the first-in-the-nation primary elections of their respective parties earlier tonight. Johnson deflected two challengers – Senator Morse, running to the President’s left – and former Governor Patterson, running to the President’s right. Surprisingly, a write-in campaign for an undeclared candidate, former Senator Lodge, defeated Senator Goldwater for second place…

Democratic primary results:
Johnson – 80.11%
Morse – 14.54%
Patterson – 4.82%
Other – 0.53%

Republican primary results:
Rockefeller – 38.12%
Lodge – 36.71%
Goldwater – 20.25%
Nixon – 2.60%
Smith – 1.23%
Others – 1.09%

– The Los Angeles Times, 3/10/1964



…I established Muslim Mosque Inc. on March 12, 1964, just four days after leaving the Nation of Islam, much to the ire of my former allies…

– Malcolm X’s The Autobiography of Malcolm X, New York Grove Press, 1990



…Malcolm X’s life was repeatedly threatened. In February, Malcolm discovered a bomb strapped to the bottom of his car [5]. In March, Elijah Muhammad told Boston minister Louis X that “hypocrites like Malcolm should have their heads cut off,” [6]. The threats and intimidating escalated with threatening phone calls beginning soon afterwards. In March, Malcolm X's house was partially burned in a fire [7], causing Malcolm to relocate his family to a friend’s home for the sake of their safety. In light of these dangers Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. reportedly "saw what could be called 'karma,' but he but took no joy from it," according to his son Martin Luther King III. More directly, King expressed mixed feelings toward Malcolm X, agreeing with his style, calling it highly effective and articulate, but not with his substance, once commenting “I have often wished that he would talk less of violence, because violence is not going to solve our problem.” Furthermore, King believed that with only a message of violence, Malcolm was not “offering any positive, creative alternative…urging Negroes to arm themselves and prepare to engage in violence, as he has done, can reap nothing but grief.” [8] Meanwhile, Malcolm began purchasing more guns in preparation of the intimidation tactics rising even futher...

– Herb Boyd and Ilyasah Shabazz’s Malcolm vs. Martin: Violence and Peace After the End of Segregation, Chicago Third World Press, 2013



[ video: pwURoueDzFo ]
– Colonel Sanders in a KFC commercial, c. March 1964



And here’s the latest from France… University student groups have organized demonstration across their country today in protest of the French government approving of French President De Gaulle’s move to send further military aid to Cuba’s attempts to quash remaining Communist guerilla fighters in the island nation’s jungle interior. The move comes weeks after De Gaulle ceased rhetoric critical of NATO, which had also stirred up activism reactions among France's academic student bodies earlier this year... With the French markets suffering from the US’s Salad Oil Stock Collapse in the form of numerous layoffs, many of these student activists believe that the De Gaulle government is ignoring the people who are most in need of federal assistance… De Gaulle has been critical of these protestors, and recently dismissed their calls for French withdrawal from assisting the US in anti-communist operations in Cuba by compared Cuba to WWII-era France. “We did not rest until every Nazi was out of France. We will not rest until every Communist is out of Cuba. France will never abandon its fellow lovers of freedom.” ...France’s withdrawal from Indochina aside, the French President remains confident that he still has the support of the people despite his significant drop in recent approval rating polls…

– BBC report, 3/17/1964



…According to Harley Sanders, “They were invited, along with other members of the press, to sample Colonel Sander’s Country Style Ribs--the first new entré” to the company’s standard “core” menu in three years [9]. Upon their overwhelming approval, the Sanders family got right to work releasing the new item to the rest of the populace. The [1964] introduction of the barbecue spare ribs in select KFC outlets saw “tremendous” operating problems [10] during the first few months, only for Harley’s sister Mildred Sanders to “turn things around” by the end of March by ordering newer machinery, developing quicker delivery methods, and utilizing worker input and suggestions to carefully micromanage the production process in order to discover how to best avoid sacrificing quality for efficiency.

Ray Kroc, not wanting to be outdone by the Colonel, sought to copy the Colonel’s ribs’ success, but because his uniform franchises were designed for mass production and not for the introduction of new foods or new food production methods, attempts to implement their own version of it were slow. Early forms of a McRib Burger were eventually released to limited test locations along the west coast in the fall of that year, missing the crucial summer season, when barbeque consumption rates are highest. When the McRib Burger received poor reviews, Kroc quickly cut his losses – he scrapped the entire endeavor, with the remaining McRib Burger meat being sold to local steakhouses and butcher shops for a slight profit…

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



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– A standard box of KFC Country Style Ribs, c. March 1964



STUDENTS BARRICADE STANFORD DEAN’S OFFICE OVER MILITARY FUNDS

Stanford University, CA – The biological sciences department at Stanford University is at the center of controversy as the dean of the department found himself unable to exit his office today due to a collection of shoutniks blocking the doors and windows. While no violence was reported, the dean nevertheless called the police to the scene of the "disruptive incident," as it was initially reported to police and campus security personnel …Last week, reports revealed that the dean had accepted funds from the US military for “biological research” to be conducted at the university's biological sciences department …The young activists are claiming that the “germ warfare money” is an act of “medical abuse” and have threatened to make a citizen’s arrest if the dean does not return the “blood money” funds. At the time of this publication, the standoff between the activities and local law enforcement is still ongoing…

– The San Francisco Chronicle, 3/29/1964



"I'm proud of those young men and women for actively protesting this academic mistake. They made their voices heard, and in a manner that has resulted in nobody getting hurt."

– US Senator Wayne Morse (D-OR), 3/30/1964



“I think that students definitely have a right to protest, that’s a right protected by the constitution, but like I’ve said in the past, I think they should learn how to compromise and behave in a civil manner when at the negotiating table. There’s something off about being violent for the sake of peace… I think the shoutniks should be more like the beatniks – reasonable and not disrespectful – or neither side will be able to get anywhere!”

– Colonel Sanders during a guest spot on Paul Harvey News and Comment, ABC Radio Network program, 4/1/1964



“It was not until the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in Butts v. Virginia Board of Elections (April 1964) that all state poll taxes (for state elections) were officially declared unconstitutional as violating the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, and eased the passage of the Twenty-Fourth Amendment.”

– From The 1960s: A History, Scholastic, 2007



PUB BOMB LINKED TO IRA: Act Possibly Influenced By Cuba’s “Cam Bomb” Campaign

…The IRA has increased its level of violence in recent weeks, largely over the U.K.’s financial investments in the Cuba War and quite possibly inspired by events unfolding in France and much of the United States…

– United Press International report, 4/4/1964



YOUTH ON THE WARPATH IN QUEST FOR PEACE: How America’s Next Generation Is Affecting Us Now

…Stanford’s Dean is being supported by the teachers and local community for the job creation, but is being heckled and jeered at by shoutniks for expelling the students whom orchestrated the barricading of him in his office last month. The dean has defended the action, claiming "these youngster must learn that now that they are legally adults, their actions have consequences"… In light of all charges being dropped against the first "round" of students that were arrested, and the return of controversial grant money being hailed as a victory by some on the left, some supporters of the shoutniks are calling the situation a "victory." For example, activist Bernardine Dohm remarked on April 5, “This is a movement not confined to this campus, or even to this state. This is a cultural phenomenon, and it will not go away any time soon.” Additionally, one of Dohm's fellow activists, Ted Gold, was bolder in his summation of recent years, predicting “only good things will come for us from here on out.”

Newsweek, April 1964 issue



"America is in crisis, folks, but just because President Johnson is doing nothing about it doesn't mean y'all shouldn't do something about it, neither!"

– John M. Patterson (D-AL), campaigning in Kenosha, WI, 4/6/1964



PATTERSON WINS PRIMARY, LIKELY IN REBUFF OF LBJ’S CUBA HANDLING

…In tonight's Democratic Wisconsin primary, former Alabama Governor John Malcolm Patterson won roughly 40% of the vote, defeating the state's "favorite son" stand-in for President Lyndon Johnson, state Governor John W. Reynolds, by 5%. This was possibly a rebuff of Johnson’s Cuba Policy, which reportedly has Johnson backers worried. “This victory,” Patterson declared earlier tonight, “Prove that the people disapprove of the actions of this administration, especially when it comes to the really important issues.” Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon was unable to get on the Wisconsin ballot, but nevertheless received 1.7% of approved write-in votes. …On the Republican side of the night, an “unaligned” favorite-son candidate, US Congressman J. W. Byrnes, surpassed leading candidates Goldwater and Rockefeller with a plurality of the vote…

– The Milwaukee State Journal, Wisconsin newspaper, 4/7/1964



TOM JONES, CELOPATRA DOMINATE OSCARS; Poitier The First Negro Ever to Win Best Actor

Santa Monica, CA – …The Santa Monica Civic Auditorium hosted the 36th Academy Awards last night and was hosted by Jack Lemmon. The film “Tom Jones” swept the categories with 10 nominations and tying for the most wins (four) with “Cleopatra.” …Bahamian-American actor Sidney Poitier won the award for Best Actor for his performance in “Lilies of the Field”… Surprisingly, Ub Iwerks won the Oscar for Best Special Effects for his work on the Alfred Hitchcock film “The Birds”…

– The Los Angeles Times, 4/14/1964



“Boy, what a turnout, huh? Folks, this isn’t the kind of night you see every day!”

– Barry Goldwater at a victory rally in Chicago, IL, 4/14/1964



JOHNSON, GOLDWATER WON BIG IN PRIMARIES LAST NIGHT

Chicago, IL – The President celebrated a resounding victory in last night's Democratic Presidential primary in Illinois by attending a function hosted by Mayor Daley of Chicago. Johnson won roughly 86% of the contest's vote, against Patterson’s 11% (almost entirely from the southern half of the state), and Morse’s 3%. Meanwhile, Republicans waged a battle that came down to the wire, as Goldwater edged out Rockefeller with a slim majority, marking the Senator’s first primary won. “This is a big moment for him. It could mean Midwestern voters could possibly stomach his dangerous brand of conservatism in November,” an anonymous backer of Rockefeller worriedly explained to our reporters at the Rockefeller campaign's state headquarters in Springfield. ...Tonight was also a big night for US Senator Margaret Chase Smith of Maine, who achieved roughly a quarter of all votes cast in the G.O.P. primary. "A percentage this generous demonstrates how greatly social views are changing for the better in this country," says one of her supporters in Peoria, "It shows that the idea of a woman becoming President is no longer a fantasy to be laughed at, but a real possibility that is taken more and more seriously with each passing day"...

Chicago Tribune, 4/15/1964



JOHNSON UNDERPERFORMS IN STATE PRIMARY; GOLDWATER SECURES SECOND WIN

Trenton, NJ – …The President secured the Garden State's winner-take-all DNC delegation with just under 55% of the vote tonight. The results are far from the landslide predicted in the latest polls. Johnson seemed to lose voters to Patterson, whom surged to 29% in the final results, which is a surprisingly strong showing for the south-based candidate. Factors may have included his strong grassroots support from the southern, more rural half of the state, especially from the more conservative “Pine Barrens” area, and from the state being “socially shaken,” according to Governor Hughes, by rioting in many areas after the assassination of Civil Rights organizer Hosea Williams back in February. US Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon won roughly 15% of the vote, nearly entirely from the urban areas of the state… In New Jersey's Republican primary, which was also held tonight, US Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona won over New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller and the undeclared candidacy of Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts, with the latter’s write-in campaign coming in second place. With 40% of the primary vote, Goldwater may have benefitted from a split in the state’s liberal Republican voters, who were torn between Rockefeller and Lodge…

The Star-Ledger, New Jersey newspaper, 4/21/1964



“I respect Johnson because he is our President. But I have to seriously question his leadership skills. Our soldiers are getting killed 90 miles from home, and now we’re sending them off to get killed on the near-exact opposite side of the planet. Blacks and whites are fightin’ in the cities and laborers are livin’ in hell in the countrysides. What in h*ll’s name does Johnson think he’s doing right?”

– Colonel Sanders on Face the Nation, 4/23/1964



TONIGHT’S PRIMARIES: LBJ Bounces Back In M.A. Sweep; G.O.P. Draft Bids Surge In M.A., P.A.

Boston, MA – US President Lyndon Johnson was the runaway victor tonight thanks to his surrogate on the ballot, former Massachusetts Governor Endicott Peabody, predictably besting US Senator Wayne Morse and former Alabama Governor John Patterson. Massachusetts’ long history of espousing liberal philosophy led to Morse winning 25% of the Bay State's Democratic primary vote despite the work of pro-Johnson US Secretary of State Jack Kennedy of Massachusetts and his many statewide connections. Patterson received a paltry 3.9% in a regional rejection of his outspoken conservatism. …On the Republican side of the night, the Draft Lodge movement finally won a primary, with the former Senator winning a plurality in tonight's Republican Massachusetts primary. Undeclared Pennsylvania Governor William Scranton also won his home state’s primary in a write-in campaign. Scranton seems more open to accepting the nomination that Lodge; regardless, one Lodge support noted that the results are a clear sign that “the people are restless and disapproving of the current batch of Republican candidates. They want a new one.” …In the Democratic Pennsylvania primary, Johnson underperformed in the wake of Patterson managing to appeal to some of the rural conservative Democratic voters found across the state...

The Washington Post, 4/28/1964



[ video: IyRODm5_RXc ]
– KFC commercial, first aired 4/29/1964



“The youth rebellion is a worldwide phenomenon that has not been seen before in history. I do not believe they will calm down and be advertisement executives by the time they’re 30, as the Establishment would like us to believe.”

– William Burroughs, writer, 4/30/1964 interview [11]



SOURCE(S)/NOTE(S)
[1] These italic bits were pulled from a quote found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne_Morse#cite_note-51
[2] LBJ really did say this OTL!
[3] These quotes (italics) pulled from this interesting article: https://slate.com/human-interest/2012/08/jell-o-and-mormonism-the-stereotypes-surprising-origins.html
[4] This quote was spoken (by someone else) in the Vietnam Documentary “In the Year of the Pig,” starting at the 51:25 mark.
[5] Found in Karim, Benjamin; w/ Peter Skutches & David Gallen (1992). Remembering Malcolm. New York: Carroll & Graf, ISBN 978-0-88184-881-6; p. 159-160.
[6] Pulled from Kondo, Zak A. (1993). Conspiracys: Unravelling the Assassination of Malcolm X. Washington, D.C.: Nubia Press, p. 170
[7] Found here: Perry, Bruce (1991). Malcolm: The Life of a Man Who Changed Black America. Barrytown, N.Y.: Station Hill, ISBN 978-0-88268-103-0; p. 352-356.
[8] This MLK Quote is from OTL!
[9] This italicized passage was pulled from here: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1975/05/19/curmudgeon-ribs-chickens
[10] At least, according to Source 56 on the Wikipedia page for the History of Kentucky Fried Chicken.
[11] He said something similar to this in 1968 IOTL.
 
Post 11
Post 11: Chapter 19



Chapter 19: May 1964 – July 1964



“Why not take a crazy chance… If you lose a moment, you might lose a lot, so why not? Why not?”

– Hilary Duff (sung); Charlie Midnight, with Matthew Gerrard (written)




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– Official portrait of Governor Sanders for the gallery section of the state capital building of Kentucky, Frankfort, KY, c. May 1964


LBJ BURIES PATTERSON IN TEXAS PRIMARY

…85% of the voters voted for Johnson, 10% voted for Patterson, 5% wrote in Senator Ralph Yarborough, 4% voted for Morse, and 1% voted for other individuals. …In the Republican primary also held tonight, Goldwater won the delegate-rich primary with 70% of the vote, crushing Rockefeller (whom only won 12%) and several unofficial candidates, including former Vice-President Nixon (7%), who may or may not run a more active campaign soon, and former Governor Colonel Sanders (5%), the latest politician – after former Senator Lodge and Governor Scranton – that a draft movement urging a less divisive candidate to enter the race has formed behind…

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, 5/2/1964



CAM BOMB KILLS GEN. GEORGE SCRATCHLEY BROWN!

“They’re Bombing Us Because Of You!”: Poll Suggests Most Cubans Starting To Resent U.S. Presence

Tallahassee Democrat newspaper headlines on 5/2/1964 and 5/3/1964, respectively



CLIFFORD COMPOSES CASE FOR CUBA CONUNDRUM; CABINET CALLS CLEAR-CUT ON VIET-CONG CONVICTIONS

Washington, DC – Secretary of State Clark Clifford said today that he is convinced that the communist world would miscalculate as weakness any disengagement now in Cuba or Indochina by the United States. Clifford agreed with Sen. Karl Mundt (R-SD) on the issue of military engagement abroad during a 5 hour and 20 minute interrogation of the Secretary before the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Never before in history had a secretary of state been exposed to a probe of American foreign policy on nation-wide television.

Mundt led the proceedings with the query “Well, what exactly are we doing in Cuba and Indochina?”

Clifford defended President Johnson’s attitude and actions towards these two areas with the statement “The executive branch always has looked to treaties and other resolutions for major foreign policy guidelines. But the Communist groups assaulting the nations of Laos, South Vietnam and Cambodia have repeatedly refused to comply with diplomatic functions.”

“And Cuba? Please explain the latest rise in American troops deployed to an independent nation allegedly cleared of civil strife?”

“This administration has never officially announced the end of hostilities in Cuba. Renegade guerilla fighters led by Camilo Cienfuegos still terrorize the countryside hoping to spark a resurgence in violence on the island.”

“So the war is not officially over?” Mundt requested clarification

“Cuba is still recovering from the effects of the war – ”

“So the conflict – ”

“Is still ongoing, but Cuba has become stable. We do not believe Camilo can retake control of the island, but his guerilla fighters and their bombing campaign are a threat to a nation still recovering from the war which is why their interim President, Dr. Jose Miro Cardenas, has permitted American troops to remain in Cuba until – ”

“Who permitted the troops remaining, Mr. Secretary?”

“Cardenas and Johnson agreed to the move, sir.”

“Who came up with it? Who first suggested it?” Mundt insisted.

“That’s classified…”

The focus soon shifted to America’s standing on the world stage.

Clifford explained to the committee that “the executive branch is going to do its best to meet American commitments. If more troops are needed in either region, we will, as we have done in the past, consult with appropriate members of Congress.”

When questioned on the morality of defending a region as geography distant from the US as Indochina, Clifford remarked, “It is essential for Americans to search their souls and determine how or even if we can tolerate the suppression of the principles on which this country stands occurring in foreign lands. This is a morality test. For the sake of ourselves and the world, we must pass it.”

To discuss classified information, Clifford suggested and won from Committee Co-Chair Senator Fulbright the right to meet with the committee in executive session rather than in public. A censored version of their exchange was later released.

– The Chicago Tribune, article by Russell Freeburg, 5/4/1964



…Senator Goldwater is in hot water over comments he made last night at a campaign fundraiser, where he was recorded calling Republican Indiana Governor Crawford Parker a, quote, “all-time loser,” [1] unquote…

– NBC News, 5/5/1964 broadcast



“I’m not yet endorsing anybody in the primaries because I’m disappointed in the hostility I’ve been seeing in the primaries lately. I think if Republicans want to fight, they should be fightin’ the Democrats, not each other.”

– Colonel Sanders at a Republican breakfast function in Washington, D.C., 5/5/1964



COL. SANDERS WINS STATE PRIMARY WITHOUT EVEN TRYING!

Gary, IN – In a surprising turn of events, Colonel Harland Sanders, the former Governor of Kentucky and founder of the Kentucky Fried Chicken fast-food franchise, has won last our state’s Republican presidential primary as an undeclared write-in candidate. Sanders achieved a plurality of 29%, with Senator Goldwater coming in second with 26%, Governor Rockefeller with 25%, Senator Chase Smith with 10%, and undeclared candidate Richard Nixon with 6%, the remaining 4% being split among several other candidates. The upset over declared candidates Goldwater and Rockefeller is currently being contributed to the rise in draft movements in several states meant to convince a politician more palatable than Goldwater and Rockefeller to become a new viable candidate for the Republican nomination ahead of the party’s convention this summer. The Colonel’s opinion on this development remains unknown. When reached for comment outside his company’s headquarters in Florence, Kentucky, Sanders simply replied he was “flattered” before heading to a meeting in his private office. …The G.O.P. Ohio primary was held last night as well; it was won by the state’s favorite son candidate, Governor Rhodes… For the Democrats, the night was busier with an additional primary held for the first time ever in Washington, DC, along with their own primaries in Indiana and Ohio. Johnson secured all three primaries through favorite son candidates, though challenger John Patterson of Alabama won an impressive 40% in the Hoosier state due to grassroots connection in the state’s southern counties...

– The Indianapolis Star, 5/6/1964



I was genuinely surprised. The next day I went on TV and thanked the voters and said that I’d keep their preference in mind. Back in Florence, I was asking left and right how it had come about. Many of my people believed the idea sprouted up from my openness on Kentucky radio stations picked up in Indiana. But officially, the origin of the push for me to run remains unknown. My own guess is that some Republican Hoosiers that knew of my roots in the state thought it was a good idea. So did I, as time wore on. To be honest, the idea had crossed my mind from time to time, but only in jest. I first started to mull it around in my mind with more seriousness after that unplanned May 5 victory. But I was content with my position at K.F.C., and didn’t see a real reason to leave. Nonetheless, because I had won delegates from Indiana, I was invited to the Republican National Convention being held in July of that year, and I figured “Ah, heck, why not go?”

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



“No way, Rob. I think Sanders orchestrated the whole thing, all of it. The old bastard tasted power in the ’50s and he wanted more, plain and simple.”

– Roger Stone, responding to a question by Robert Towne, 1975 interview



…Racial tensions are reaching what our analysts informally referred to as the breaking point after a 15-year-old African-American boy was shot and killed by police offices outside of St. Louis theater… The incident seems to have sparked a second wave of reactionary violence, which Governor Patterson of Alabama has described as “bitterness and violence are beginning their trip back to America’s cities and urban stores.” President Johnson has called for “calm and order,” while Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is urging peaceful protests instead of anger-fueled vigilantism…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 5/8/1964 broadcast



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Maddox (seen here at a rally for Governor Patterson during the 1964 Democratic primaries in Maryland, MD, c. May 1964), having lost his 1962 bid for lieutenant governor, sought to start a chicken franchise in the south to regionally compete with K.F.C., calling the enterprise “Georgia’s Best Chicken.” Hoping to establish a takeout-only marketing design (because “you can’t seat Blacks if there aren’t any seats at all” as he infamously put it), Maddox failed to branch out into other states. Several city governments in North Carolina, Tennessee, and Alabama discouraged or even openly opposed Georgia’s Best outlets being set up in their city limits, over fear that Maddox’s divisive views would discourage other businesses and increase civil unrest. Attempts by Governor Bryant of Florida to support “the right to all forms of free enterprise” enraged shoutniks and beatniks already protesting across his state. As a result, Maddox’s franchise became largely confined only the most conservative (as whitest) parts of the Deep South.

Apart from Maddox’s endeavor, KFC’s closest fried-chicken national competitor during the 1960s was the Texas-based Church family’s “Chicken-To-Go,” which fed into the common saying of the Lone Star state by offering “Texas-sized” pieces of fried chicken that were bigger that KFC’s. However, Chicken-To-Go’s flagship offering was supplemented by far less menu options and a vastly inferior marketing department…

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



“It is my opinion that the draft is an inefficient and expensive way to build an army… people should become soldiers because they chose to.[2]

– Barry Goldwater, multiple sources, 5/11/1964




LBJ CHALLENGER SECURES W.V. PRIMARY; Barry Wins NE, Rocky Carries WV

…John M. Patterson, the former Governor of Alabama, won his second primary contest tonight with an impressive 42.5% of the vote. Johnson won 40.5%, while Senator Wayne Morse secured roughly 17% of vote. It appears that Morse may have siphoned enough votes away from the President to allow Patterson to win with a plurality… This is a large blow to the President, whom won West Virginia just four years prior by a narrow margin.

…In the Republican column, West Virginia’s Republican primary was won by Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York…

Over in Nebraska, Goldwater won that state’s Republican primary with 52%, with Rockefeller finishing in second with 35% and unannounced write-in candidate Colonel Sanders receiving 10%...

– The Baltimore Sun, 5/12/1964



SHOUTNIK FAVORITES SWEEP CATEGORIES AT THE GRAMMYS

Los Angeles, CA – Last night’s 6th annual Grammy awards ceremony saw several members of the “shoutnik” music scene win over classic favorites. …“Tommy Chong and The Others,” formally known as “Tommy Chong as His Gang,” “Tommy Chong and Company,” and “Tommy Chong and The Band,” won the Best Performance by a Vocal Group award for “Dave’s Not Here,” a ballot concerning a soldier named Dave returning from Cuba only to struggle to return to normal society, as he and his mind are “still over there.” …Gordon Lightfoot beat out Bob Dylan for Best Male Vocal Performance with his new single “Black Day in Ohio,” a melody reflecting on the Xenia Race Riots… Barbra Streisand won the album of the Year Award for “The Barbra Streisand Album,” Henry Mancini won the Record of the Year Award for “Days of Wine and Roses,” and Ward Swingle won the Best New Artist award over Gordon Lightfoot and Frank Zappa... The biggest surprise win of the night, though, was Paul, Peter and Mary winning the Song of the Year Award for “Blowin’ in the Wind,” which has been met with controversy as their version of the anti-war tune is actually a cover, or re-make, of a song originally recorded by Bob Dylan...

Variety, 5/13/1964



...Dick [Nixon] stood as an undeclared write-in candidate in Oregon, sensing that Goldwater or Rockefeller could fail to win enough delegates to win outright before the convention. Dick agreed with Ehrlichman and Haldeman that it was very advantageous for us that both of the leading candidates had sons eligible for the draft that had gotten out of it by medical deferments. Barry Goldwater Jr was a recent law school graduate working on his father’s campaign in California, while Michael Rockefeller, after spending, I want to say, 1961 and 1962 splitting his time between Pacific Island cultures and organizing Cuban refugee assistance programs, was now working for some sort of cultural promotion program at some college somewhere in California; I want to say Berkeley. Ah, no matter. Point being, Dick agreed that we would “shine light on these spots if we need to,” as I recall him saying. But on the night of the primary – May 15 – Dick lost. He came in third place behind Rockefeller and Goldwater; the loss was still very discouraging to Nixon. …On the Democratic side of that night, Morse predictably won his home state, pissing off Lyndon, or so I’ve heard…

– Bebe Rebozo, CBS interview, 1988



“A person’s job, their livelihood, shouldn’t be easy, but it shouldn’t be miserable. You shouldn’t ever let work crush your spirit. You got to like your work. You have got to like what you are doing, you have got to be doing something worthwhile so you can like it – because if it is worthwhile, then it makes a difference, it changes the worker from being a pawn or a cog into a person that matters. Small businesses, Mom and Pop stores, like the kind my own company was a few centuries back, heh, well small businesses understand the importance of working with their workers, they understand how that benefits both of them. …Don’t be against things so much as for things.” [3] For instance, don’t be against war so much as for peace, you see? Focus on the bright side to defeat the dark side of the problem. It’s that kind of positive thinking that leads to positive things!”

– Colonel Sanders at a breakfast-and-politics function in Frankfort, KY, 5/17/1964



“…In fact, I think returning to a policy of manned bombings could finally evict Communism from Cuba, and if that doesn’t work, sending some troops back to Cuba could work, too. My view on war is very clear – total victory; once it starts, we finish! But now, let me talk for a bit about lowering taxes and government spending. We need to balance the federal budget…”

– Barry Goldwater during a stump speech in St. Charles, MD, 5/17/1964



PATTERSON RATTLES PARTY LEADERS WITH LANDSLIDE WIN IN MARYLAND PRIMARY

…Patterson achieved 56% of the vote against President Johnson’s 34%, with Morse’s numbers declining back to the single digits with 9%. …In light of Goldwater’s latest controversial comments, it is not too surprising that the Draft Sanders movement achieved another victory in tonight’s Republican primary in Maryland. Sanders came in second place behind “uncommitted,” but ahead of Rockefeller and even farther ahead of Goldwater…

– The Chicago Tribune, 5/19/1964



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– Colonel Sanders appears in a scene with Jerry Lewis in the 1964 film The Patsy; a sequel to The Bellboy and originally called The Bellboy Returns, The Patsy was released on the 12th of August but was filmed in April and May



It is unclear when exactly the Colonel first met Jerry Lewis. A widely spread yet only partially substantiated story goes that in early 1963, KFC was ordered for the film crew of the Jerry Lewis film “Who’s Minding the Store?” just as the Colonel was visiting the studio grounds, leading to the Colonel volunteering to deliver the order himself as he wanted to meet “a big-name star” while he was in town. Regardless of any alleged serendipity, the fact remains that from their friendship arose the Colonel’s involvement in the fight against Muscular Dystrophy – a terrible diverse-in-variation muscle disease/genetic defect that wears down a person’s skeletal muscles and nerves system. Since 1956, Lewis had served as the National Chairman of the Muscular Dystrophy Association, an organization founded in 1950 to fight the disease with research into understanding it better and possibly finding a cure, medical/community support, health education, and other means. Apart from generous donations from his own fortune, the Colonel quickly thought up how to get more people to fundraise this important research.

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



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– KFC poster promoting donations to the M.D.A., released early May 1964



COLONEL SANDERS PARTNERS WITH FUNNYMAN JERRY LEWIS FOR NOBLE CAUSE

– The Hollywood Reporter, 5/21/1964



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– Colonel Sanders and Jerry Lewis hugging upon reviewing the then-recent surge in M.D.A. donations, 5/26/1964



FLORIDA VOTES FOR SANDERS AND PATTERSON

…This latest surprise win for the unofficial “draft Sanders” movement is stirring up discussions on its viability in Republican circles... The Colonel received 35% of the vote; Rockefeller won 30%, Goldwater won 25%, and all other candidates combined make up the remaining 5%.

…Governor Patterson, strongly endorsed by Governor Bryant, trounced President Johnson in the Democratic primary. Patterson described Johnson’s handling of the War in Cuba as “foolish… we left before the War was even over, and in turn left behind an unstable island full of Communist guerilla maniac bombers that will not rest until every American city is petrified by the fear of another Cam bomb attack,” as Patterson declared at a rally in Tallahassee on Friday. Patterson won 55% of the vote to Johnson’s 30% and Senator Wayne Morse’s 10%...

– The Orlando Sentinel, 5/26/1964



SANDERS ADMITS IN INTERVIEW HE’S “INTEREST IN” RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT!

…“If I was President, I would do a lot of good for a lot of people, but I’m already doing that now making quality chicken and affordable prices. As President, though, I could do even more, so the idea is not a bad one…” Colonel Sanders said…

Associated Press, 5/27/1964



“Privately, Goldwater criticized the Colonel. He complained ‘I’m a superior version of him. Business experience? I started running my family’s department store when I was 20! And I have way more military experience. An honorary Colonel? I was in World War Two as an air force pilot and I’m now a major general in the Air Force Reserves; that’s better than any honorary title!’”

– lawyer and 1964 Goldwater aide William A. Rusher, unused interview footage filmed for documentary shown at the 1992 RNC, 1992



Malcolm X was a family man. He was protective of his wife Betty X (nee Sanders), and their seven daughters (born in 1958, 1960, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1967, and 1971) and two sons (born in 1969 and 1974)… On the night of June 5, 1964, Malcolm’s five-year-old daughter, Attallah X, was shot in the right shoulder and arm in a drive-by shooting. Malcolm later described in his autobiography how “when I saw what they’d done to my daughter, her blood dripping onto the sidewalk, I knew I had to do to end the unholy crusade he was waging against my family.” Two days later, Malcolm X grabbed a pistol before leaving… According to police statements and his own account, Malcolm X approached Louis Farrakhan and emptied a pistol into his stomach before returning to his car and driving to the home a friend… Farrakhan died within minutes of the shooting… Two days later, on June 9, Malcolm X surrendered peacefully to police, claiming his actions were in self-defense… The race riots of the month before were very notable in that they were directed more at local mosques than at white neighborhoods. Nevertheless, the wanton bedlam was destructive and increased unease among middle-class voters.

Within days of the news breaking that Malcolm would be held without bail, a group of young black activists gathered in California to form a group of people who sought to carry out vigilante justice. Their unofficial leader, a “big man” known as Elbert X, declared upon its creation, “We are the Men who follow Malcolm X. We are the X-Men!”

– Herb Boyd and Ilyasah Shabazz’s Malcolm vs. Martin: Violence and Peace After the End of Segregation, Chicago Third World Press, 2013



The first early rays of morn ushered in the first of June, and with it the last day before the final round of primary voting… Goldwater’s more liberal Republican compatriots criticized him abrasively for his support of expanding military involvement in Cuba and Indochina despite the increasing casualty rates in both theatres. Independent Goldwater-supporting political organizations, meanwhile, sought to water down suggestions that Goldwater was too adamant in his “extremist” ideology to ever cooperate with Congress while President. One organization in southern California began circulating pamphlets showcasing Goldwater’s known friendship with U.S. Secretary of State Jack Kennedy, complete with photographs of the two men laughing and shaking hands. This however, seemed to only be as effective as a garden hose on an active volcano. At 9:00 PM, polls showed the Republican California primary was a toss-up. When the results were declared 6-and-a-half hours later, Rockefeller had edged out the outspoken Arizonan by a hair… South Dakota voted for an “uncommitted” delegate slate, with Rockefeller in second place and Colonel Sanders in third… In the California Democratic primary, the ambitious but uncharismatic Governor Pat Brown won the state as a favorite son over conservative Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty, who stripped votes away from Patterson. Morse, winning the adoration of beatniks and shoutniks across the state, had the loudest supporters, but as the Senator learned, decibel strength does not equal votes – Morse seized only 18% of the state as a plurality of California Democrats stuck by their popular two-term governor…

– Theodore H. White’s The Making of The President: 1964, Atheneum Publishers, 1965



...At the current standing, the odds favor the notion that Rockefeller will win the nomination, but unless delegates switch allegiance prior to the convention, Rockefeller will not win outright on the first ballot…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 6/3/1964 broadcast



SALAD OIL SLICKER SENT UP RIVER!

…the judge sentenced De Angelis to 25 years in prison, without the chance of parole until after the first 10 years served...

– The New York Daily News, 6/3/1964



NELSON ALDRICH ROCKEFELLER II

New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller and Margaretta Large “Happy” Rockefeller (nee Fitler, formerly Murphy) today announce the birth of their first child, a son. Nelson Rockefeller II arrived on June 2 [4] in New York City, New York. Weighing 9 pounds 6 ounces, the child…

– The Bangor Daily News, celebrations section, 6/3/1964



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Rockefeller – 390
Goldwater – 373
Sanders – 172
Lodges – 41
Rhodes – 29
Byrnes – 26
Scranton – 25

Judd – 15
Smith – 14
Stassen – 2
Other – 5
Uncommitted – 226
Delegate needed to win outright: 655
Total delegates: 1,308

– Republican primary victories (excluding “uncommitted” victories) and delegate count as of 6/4/1964



Chong first met Yoko Ono in the summer of 1964, when he was 26 and she was 31, at a music-themed art exhibit in Manhattan.[23] Ono was still married to art promoter Anthony Cox and raising their daughter Kyoko Chan Cox (b. 1963) in New York City. Chong was still married to Maxine Sneed, the mother of his children born in 1961 and 1965 (although Chong and Ono began having an affair in 1964, Chong “didn’t realize she was pregnant again, though I guess that explained her moodiness. That and me being out on the road so much of the time”).[24] Chong would later explain his initial attraction to Ono in a radio interview with Howard Stern: “I wanted to break the limits, go more out there than the rest of the band wanted to. Then I met Yoko after a gig in N.Y.C. and she had just wrapped up her latest piece of performance art. And man, she wasn’t like the beatnik groupies – she was smart, stoic, wise. She had her own ideas, and when we were together, it was like our ideas had sex and became one, you know? They created something more, something awesome. It was edgy, it was pounding, it was a powerful call for peace and love. One night when Gonzo [clarification needed] and I were stoned off our asses, came up with the name for it – Reeflex (as in Reefer, Love, and Sex) Rock!”[25]

– infopedia.co.usa/Tommy_Chong



On June 21, 1964, Lyndon Johnson issued an executive order that lifted graduate school deferments. This was considered to be a major mistake by July, as it led to many voting-eligible college students actually rallying behind the Republican Presidential nominee in the fall election...

– From The 1960s: A History, Scholastic, 2007



…In preparation of the upcoming Democratic National Convention in Illinois, young and organized Democrats are demanding a platform calling for complete military withdrawal from Cuba by Christmas 1965 to be adapted from Senator Morse’s campaign to the official party platform. Supporters of the Oregon Senator and even some polniks, or “politically-active beatniks,” are supporting the young organizers trying to meet with delegates and holding sit-ins outside of the officers of several leaders, including Mike Mansfield and Chicago Mayor Richard Daley...

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 6/23/1964 broadcast



I first met Barbara during the Berkeley Protests of 1964, a combination residual anger to Lyndon Johnson’s expected re-nomination and his lifting of graduate school deferments, plus the recent controversial activities of one of the school’s dean. It was a massive star-studded anti-war event that I just had to attend. I also just needed some distance away from Colorado. My fiancé, Lyee Rogers, had just broken with me; after years of being engaged we still didn’t have a fixed wedding date, and she couldn’t wait any more. It was my own fault; I was so preoccupied with the shoutnik movement that I failed to think of her own needs. I packed up a suitcase and drove from Colorado to California, and soon found myself joining the protesters set to converge on the dean’s office. Close by, a spritely vixen fresh out of high school had taken the summer off to join the latest uprising of our generation. The young woman ended up pushed over during the subsequent ruckus, and as fate would have it, I was close enough to pick her back up. When the dust settled, she spotted me and thanked me. “Hi, I’m Wellington, and yes, it is my real first name,” I said. She smiled, “I’m Barbara Jean Hutt.” …Barbara would later profess, “It was a big step to take, transferring from Berkeley to Colorado-Denver, but when you care about someone, convenience takes a back seat.”

– Wellington Webb’s Wellington Webb: The Man and the Making of Modern America, Fulcrum Publishing, 2003



The post-primary birth of Rockefeller’s son led to some news sources returning unwanted attention to his recent divorce and remarriage in the weeks leading up to the RNC. By the end of the 13th, several delegates were threatening to vote against Rockefeller.

As expected, the New York Governor seethed with rage. He fumed, “I can’t believe the hypocrisy here! I could very well lose the nomination over my marital status? That’s ridiculous. Just look at all the other divorced people out there – Adlai Stevenson, Ronald Reagan, even Colonel Sanders! The Colonel is a divorcee just like I am, and he’s incredibly popular, at least enough for him to win over delegates! Jeez!”

The fact remained, though, that the Colonel didn’t create the image of breaking up a family with little children in it. I think his youngest was in her 20s when his divorce happened – and it happened 20 years ago. Rocky’s was only one year ago.

We only learned a bit later that the Colonel’s wife Claudia was a divorcee as well. “That makes sense,” I remember Rocky said, “The man often brags about how he always hires single mothers.”

– Political consultant Stuart Spencer, KNN Interview, 1982



…In other news, Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago has had peaceful organizers, participating in a massive sit-in outside his offices, arrested for “aggravated loitering”…

– NBC News, 7/5/1964 broadcast



The D.N.C. was held from July 5 to July 8, and for three nights and all four days, party leaders there experienced dual-fallout over party leaders’ response to the polniks and the Patterson backers, leading to a largely small riot breaking out on July 6 over claims of abuse, first over students arrested for sitting outside Daley’s office and then after word spread that one of the arrested organizers, a black student, was severely roughhoused while being brought in. The riot was quickly contained and few injuries occurred, but it was an embarrassing incident that aptly reflected the turmoil inside the convention. Patterson openly refused to endorse Johnson and instead encouraged Democrats “vote for whom your soul tells you to.” Only some of Morse’s platform were adapted, and while Morse spoke before the assembled masses, he stopped short of outright endorsing Johnson. To win Morse’s endorsement on the final day of the convention, Johnson ordered Daley to release the sit-in protestors...

– David W. Reinhard’s The Democratic Party: A 150-Year History of Revolution and Rebirth, Sunrise Publishers, 1978



LBJ RE-NOMINATED ON 1ST BALLOT AMID TENSION, CONTROVERSY AT DNC

– The New York Times, 7/6/1964



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– clickipedia.co.usa



…Daley could have ended his boast over how the riot did not get out of hand then and there, but he instead continued with the lamentation that “the cops didn’t get the chance to really bust some skulls.”

To this, the President snapped “Are you f@#kin’ crazy, Daley?! Any more bad press and we could have lost more delegates! Patterson and Morse were biting at our heels, calling us out-of-touch and insensitive, whatever the f@#k that means. Because we couldn’t keep this convention in order, we could lose law-and-order-centric voters in November!”

“You’ll be fine, Mr. President,” Daley rebutted, “At least we weren’t as divided as the Republicans still are.”

“Even still, we cannot take any risks. I will not have this end up like the 1960 Electoral College, only worse. I refuse it! If you want to bust some skulls, Delay, go find a graveyard or something!” Johnson rebuked in a huff.

...Even after the convention had ended, doubts over the campaigns’ messaging of key policy worried many near the President’s inner circle. At one instance, Dean Acheson cornered a new Johnson aide to tell him, “Things are going to hell in a hack in Cuba. If we don’t see some progress down there, we’ll go into this orgasm of a campaign period in which things will just have to stall.” …Johnson’s team soon came up with new phrase: “We seek no wider war.” [5]

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Pursuit of Power, A. A. Knopf Inc. New York, 2012




FARRIS BRYANT: “I’M RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT”; Controversial Governor of Florida Announces Third-Party Bid

Tallahassee, FL – In a sharp lambasting of President Johnson and the Democratic party platform established last week, Farris Bryant, the Governor of Florida since 1960, announced his own bid for the US Presidency. …Bryant declared, “Patterson put up a valiant fight, but his failure proves what we have feared for some time, that under Johnson’s yolk, conservatism has no home in the Democratic Party.” …At the announcement, Bryant did not announce a running mate, but he did reveal the party label under which he will seek to appear on state ballots in November: “This is a campaign calling for the protection of our Heritage and Independence. And so, we are calling the party the ‘Heritage Independence Party,’ or ‘H.I.P.’ for short.” Supporters of Bryant’s third-party bid are already calling themselves “H.I.P.ies,” pronouncing it “HIP-eez.”…

– The Washington Post, 7/10/1964



“So now I have beatniks on the left calling me an oppressor abroad, and hippies on the right calling me an oppressor at home. Thank God for the moderates – they’re quiet, but they’re the ones that actually vote!”

– Lyndon B. Johnson, multiple sources, 7/11/1964



R.N.C. STARTS TODAY WITH UNCERTAINTY

– The San Francisco Chronicle, 7/13/1964



The 1964 Republican National Convention was scheduled to start on July 13, with the actual ballot voting occurring throughout the 15th, well into the night if necessary. The final day of the convention – the 16th – would be for choosing the running mate and for finalizing the party platform.

In the weeks prior, delegates were harassed by a barrage of phone calls, predictably from the Rocky and Goldwater camps, and even from the Scranton, Sanders and Lodge draft groups still clinging to their narrow prospects. The RNC Chairman, William E. Miller, personally favored Goldwater, but was not entirely sure if he would be able to keep the party together or even win in November, and stayed publicly uncommitted while privately promising Goldwater to side with him “until the end,” making for a biased and later controversial chairman rule.

During the first two days, each candidate was allowed to speak before the convention, and both Goldwater and Rockefeller received cheers and jeers.

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



BALLOT BREAKDOWN:

BEFORE SHIFTS:
Nelson A. Rockefeller – 381
Barry M. Goldwater – 362
Harland D. Sanders – 199
William W. Scranton – 63
Richard M. Nixon – 32
Margaret Chase Smith – 27
Walter H. Judd – 14
Hiram L. Fong – 2
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. – 2
Uncommitted – 226

AFTER SHIFTS:
Nelson A. Rockefeller – 376
Barry M. Goldwater – 352
Harland D. Sanders – 215
Margaret Chase Smith – 80
William W. Scranton – 39
Richard M. Nixon – 25
Walter H. Judd – 3
Hiram L. Fong – 2
Uncommitted – 226

– RNC 1st Presidential Ballot, 7/15/1964



...Rockefeller has failed to win the Republican Presidential nomination on the first ballot. …Lacking delegates to win outright means that the delegates are now free to choose whomever they want to on the second ballot...

– ABC News, 7/15/1964 broadcast



Nixon hadn’t worried about his primary performances because they didn’t really matter back then. They worked more like preference polls in those days. Instead, Nixon was disheartened by the lack of what he considered to be an inadequate amount of support among delegates at the convention. The liberals, moderates, and conservatives all had a candidate or two to back, and there just didn’t seem to be any support for a compromise Nixon candidacy. His prospects weren’t looking too good, and Nixon knew it. So he figured, “well, if you can’t be on the throne, you can always hold some power behind it…”

– John Ehrlichman’s Witness: What Went on Behind Closed Doors, Folkways Books, 1998



I was eating lunch with Father and Claudia in their hotel room between the first and second ballot when there came a knock at the door. Convention co-leader and fellow Republican Kentuckian Senator Thruston B. Morton had stopped by with Nixon and a man I later knew to be F. Clifton White, a conservative political consultant for Goldwater.

“How do, fellas, what can I do for ya?”

“It’s funny you should say that, Colonel. May we come in?”

“Sure.”

“I think I know what this is about – you want me to release my delegates to ya, right?”

Soon after making themselves comfortable in the room, White went right for the bottom line. “You see, Colonel, in light of Patterson running a conservative third-party campaign and Johnson being popular among domestic-minded liberals but not foreign-policy-minded liberals, we need a candidate that will appeal to both, plus the moderates left out,” White stated.

“We also think that we can win over the dissatisfied voters in the South,” Nixon explained, “and Colonel…we believe that only you can pull off such a feat.”

Father’s eyes widened, “you fellas pullin’ my leg?”

“Yes,” Morton observed as he extracted such a limb from a nearby KFC bucket, “Oh, you didn’t mean this leg, did you?”

“We mean it, Colonel, we want you to be the nominee. That’s what you can do for us.”

I think he didn’t expect the nomination to be so easily handed to him. Father started to look about with a puzzled look on his face, “Fellas…I’m more than honored, but – ”

Morton was quick to intervene, and bluntly explained, “You’re not dealing with a divorce scandal like Rockefeller, you’re not an unreasonably conservative extremist like Goldwater – no offense, White – and you didn’t lose the 1960 election – no offense, Nixon.”

“Only some taken,” the former Vice-President replied.

“Hell, Goldwater himself is now saying he’s sick of that word! [6]” White shouted.

“Easy, Clifton, easy…” Nixon quietly remarked.

“Ooh, what do you think, honey, would you like to be First Lady?” he said with a half-confident chuckle.

“First Lady Claudia sure has a nice ring to it!” she declared with a smile.

But Father was still wary, and quickly his mind turned to his chicken. “Gentlemen, for a long time now, I’ve felt that my governorship was a fluke, an interruption. Before the governorship, I was involved in politics but mainly I sold chicken. And after the governorship, I was involved in politics but mainly I sold chicken. I think chicken is the main thing I was meant to do.”

“You can’t deny you were one hell of a good Governor, hun, and let’s face it, you’ve been talking more about the Presidency than the company for months now!” Claudia noted.

“Yeah, I haven’t shaken off the political bug since 1955, I will admit. And I have been paying attention to how our country is coming along, and frankly, it could be coming along much better.” He pondered for a moment “We do need a better President…But what about Barry? He’ll be out of a job!”

“Nah, he’s going to jump back into the Senate race for my seat. The primary’s in September,” White explained.

“Oh. That’s lucky...for him.”

“Why are so gung-ho for my dad to be the nominee instead of Goldwater,” I asked White.

“When the captain’s eyeing the lifeboats, it’s never for a bad reason,” the man answered before returning his attention to Father. I would only later learn about how Goldwater had dismissed White from his inner circle after losing the California primary.

Wanting to support his political ally and friend, Morton moved to sit in the chair closest to Father, “It is not like you do not have an impressive resume when it comes to public service.”

“That’s true. You know, before becoming Governor of Kentucky I was the secretary for the Chamber of Commerce for Columbus, Indiana back in 1920, or was it 1922? And I even ran for public office for a month in February 1925 in the Louisville area…” [7] Father trailed off for a moment before rejoining us. He confided in us that he feared he was not academically qualified due to his formal education ceasing at such a young age.

“So you quit school during seventh grade; you were a great Governor despite that,” White was quick to point out, “And besides, Grover Cleveland quit school at age 16 and he served two largely successful terms.”

“Really? I didn’t know that!” The trivia seemed to boost Father’s confidence.

“Your life journey is a real Horatio Alger Story!” White praised.

Father started shaking his head, like their positive quips were becoming a bit too overwhelming. He must have been really thinking now about all the weight that came with an entire nation relying on his decisions, and the weight was already giving him aches. “No, fellas, I just don’t think I could handle it, now, if you’ll excuse me – ” Father grabbed his cane and tried to leave for the bathroom.

White cried out, “But you could be destined for greatness!”

At this, Father stopped dead in his tracks and turned around. “What did you say?”

He sat back down.

“Destined… Heh, it’s so funny you’d say that…” Father sat back down and began to tell the visiting trio of his most harrowing dances with death. “Back in 1924, my home was connected to the highway by a swinging bridge. A few days before Thanksgiving I pulled my son’s car to get it started. Suddenly the bridge cables collapsed, and our cars plunged us nearly fifty feet below. There wasn’t a spot on my body that wasn’t bruised black and blue.” [8]

Morton nodded along, having possibly heard the story before but enjoying hearing it again.

I was thrown from the car. The car nosed into the water. Yet I survived without a broken bone.[9]

“That’s miraculous,” Nixon commented.

“And there was another time, too…” Father continued (as I spied White worriedly inspect his watch), “During World War II, I worked in a cafeteria at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and one time, I worked 48 hours or more without sleep. It caught up with me as I drove. I awakened to realize I was headed over a cliff. My car turned over three times, landed right side up next to a creek. And I stepped out without a bruise. I often wondered, ‘Why?’.” [10] And I thought I’d found the answer when K.F.C. became such a success. I figured that that must have been it. But now, I’m thinking, maybe you’re on to something, Mr. White. Maybe I’m on this Earth for more than just chicken-selling. Maybe I am meant to accept this challenge and do things even greater!” Finally, he said to Claudia, “Honey, let’s do this.”

After some further discussion as to the details of his nomination, he that the visiting politico ultimately came to an interim agreement – Father would run, and if he received the nomination, he would temporarily hand over all operations to Millie and I until the November election.

“Fair enough,” Nixon concurred, “Now let’s see if the Cow Palace is ready for the glory of the Chicken King!”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



“It’s ridiculous, I tell you!” Stuart Spencer shouted. We were all huddled together in a large hotel room on the 15th floor, two floors below Goldwater’s [11], the Convention center in full view – if any one of us was to look out the window, that is. Instead of sightseeing, though, we were strategizing. Senator Everett Dirksen sat quietly in a chair alongside Senator Hugh Scott. On the edge of the one bed sat three Goldwater supporters – Dean Burch, Patrick Buchanan, and F. Clinton White – and on the other bed sat two Rockefeller delegates – Stuart Spencer, and a political neophyte whose name I never caught. I stood in the corner with my back to the view.

“Gentlemen, is there really any other option?” Scott now stood to address the group.

“There’s got to be a better option than what you’re suggesting,” Spencer retorted.

“Here, here,” chimed in his associate.

He must be so desperate to get on the Governor’s good side, I remember thinking about the neophyte when I heard the door creak.

“What are you men talking about in here?” RNC William Miller popped his head through the door crack.

“Mr. Chairman!” Buchanan practically jumped out of his seat from ebullience, “Just the man I wanted to see!”

“As did I. Come in, come in. Quickly.” Scott puffed his pipe as Miller closed the door.

“This better be good,” Miller said.

“Well, sir, there’s been a … well, a bizarre development,” Spencer blurted out, “Some of us like it but some of us still don’t.”

I told Spencer “Confound it, I don’t see any other way to win in November.”

“Gentlemen, gentlemen, what do you all mean?” Miller interrupted our quarrel.

Scott brought him over to the window, becoming the first of us to actually observe the picturesque view of the Cow Palace. “You saw the chaos out there today, William. This is becoming the most bitter and hostile convention I’ve ever seen.”

“Both Rocky and Goldie got vegetables thrown at them when they came in. Vegetables! Who even does that anymore?” the young Buchanan added in his annoying Southern drawl.

Scott continued. “We are split between two incredibly controversial and unpopular candidates here. On one side, there’s the Guys and Gals for Goldwater, a man who refuses to moderate on key issues and could be painted as a crazy loon when it comes to foreign policy despite Lyndon’s blunders. On the other side is Rockefeller, an alleged womanizer and now a publicly-known homewrecker who has been painted as immoral. We could send up Scranton or Lodge, but support for them is only at a regional level. Unlike the last option left.”

The upstart Buchanan interjected with a dramatic tone “We believe we just found someone.”

Scott responded with a half-audible “Yes, thank you, Buke, how perceptive” and returned to Miller, “By process of elimination we may have stumbled upon the ideal compromise candidate. He’s a man with a strong civil rights record but a supporter of deregulation. A man who has already done incredibly well in our primary races. A man who has staggered forward into the race without us ever taking him serious, but is a man who can lead us to victory in November, provided we hand him the nomination.”

Burch added “He’s incredibly popular with the media.”

Scott concluded with, “He’s a former Governor from a swing region, he already is a nationwide household name…”

Miller realized, “Wait, I know who this is!”

A figure then rose up from the dark, shadowed corner of the room near the door. The man had been largely ignored throughout most of the conversation, likely lost in thought, but now it was his time to speak. “How do?” he quipped as he boldly signed up for the greatest battle of his life.

Miller turned around to see Colonel Sanders looking back at him.

– Melvin Laird’s semi-autobiography Dining With Devils: The Inner Workings of American Politics in the Twentieth Century, 2001



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– An anxious Colonel Sanders overlooks the large crowd at the Cow Palace, with RNC chairman William Miller to his left and farther into the foreground, 7/15/1964



Standing before the massive assembly of my fellow Republicans, all enthusiastic for the party of Lincoln – a man I would now have more in common with than just our time on farms and railroads – I suddenly felt a sense of trepidation.

Chairman Miller walked over to me, “Great turnout, huh, Colonel? And such fervor!” He smiled widely.

I began to think out loud, “Billy, what if I’m not the best man for this job in the end? What if I lose? What if I’m no good as President?”

“Well, Colonel,” Miller answered, “you’ll never find out until you try it out.”

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



“Ladies and gentleman, I am officially announcing than I am a candidate for the Republican nomination for President of these United States… The leader that this party and this nation needs must be able to tackle the issues facing us today. We have soldiers getting blown up halfway around the world and soldiers getting blown up 90 miles South of Key West. We have a runaway government suffocating small businesses with federal programs that have more red tape than all of the nation’s department stores during Christmastime put together. And we have an administration turning a blind eye to the civil strife tearing apart communities across the country. As Republicans and Americans it is our duty to right these wrongs… The Government should persecute criminals and leave the rest of us alone. Americans need a leader that can wrangle in the chaos afflicting our streets, and rebuild confidence in ourselves and our neighbors. A leader who will bring our boys home and maintain the security of us and our allies. A leader who understands that we need the government’s actions to be limited to ensuring the rights and freedoms of every American regardless of color or creed, and to defend them without ever inhibitin’ ’em. A leader that understands how the economy works, and trust me folks, I know a thing or two about economics! …But most importantly, folks, we need a leader that will listen to conservatives and liberals, rich and poor, white and colored, and even beef-eaters and chicken-eaters! Only that way is how we can restore competence to the White House and restore stability and prosperity to the nation. We need this leader now, not twelve or eight or even four years from now, but right now! And ladies and gentlemen, with your permission, I would like to be that leader. I am humbly offering, for a limited time only, a really good, solid deal – for the next four years, a return to American prosperity, for only one nomination! You can’t get it better than that, folks!”

– Colonel Sanders at the RNC, 7/15/1964



The Colonel’s speech was decent enough to win over a fair portion of conservative of even moderate and middle-of-the-road centrist delegates. Prior to the second round of voting, Sanders enthusiastically stuck to the task of meeting with as many delegates as possible, which was “fun” for the extroverted Sanders, according to his autobiography. This makes sense, the man worked his salesmanship talent and turned on the charm. With the Hotel Room Deal made, Clifton White, Miller, and the rest of them contacted and mobilized powerbrokers and delegates ahead of the vote. In the second round, Sander’s delegate count increased, while everyone else’s diminished to various degrees. Dick could sense that we were going to end up nominating the Colonel, and so he figured, ‘I might as well get this over and done with.” The sooner the party nominated someone, the sooner the party could start focusing on defeating Johnson in the fall…

– Bob Halderman’s The Haldeman Diaries: Three Decades of Tough Decisions and Tricky Dick, Barnes & Noble Press, 1994



“…I believe that Colonel Sanders will lead us to victory in November and I support his candidacy for this nomination. …Here is man that can unite this bitterly divided party. A businessman who found success when confronted with the realization that a social welfare program would not provide him with an adequate retirement. A man of strong moral convictions who understands and addresses that issues that matter the most to the American people. A man I am proud to call my friend and will soon be proud to call my President!”

– Richard Nixon at the RNC, 7/15/1964



Nixon’s endorsement pushed our numbers up on the third ballot, but we were still short of the required amount: 655 out of 1,308. Soon after what I guess you could call recessing for the night, Goldwater dropped by our room. The Senator candidly told me, “Every time I pick up KFC for dinner, I ask for no left wings – only the chickens’ right wings.” I chuckled. “Colonel, the people of the nation are forgetting how to live lives of dignity, meaning, and autonomy. There is a stir in the land, Colonel, a mood of uneasiness. We need to restore inner meaning to every man’s life in a time too often rushed, too often obsessed by petty needs and material greeds.” [12]

“Well that’s a mighty fine speech, Barry, but I don’t think the edge of a hotel bed is the best place to give it,” was my reply.

Then Barry got right down to business. “Colonel, I can’t make amends with Rocky – too much bridge-burning – but I’m willing to let you be the nominee because you’re much closer to me ideology-wise.” Of course, the offer was not without a hitch.

“What’s the catch, Barry?”

“I’m willing to step aside in exchange for having a say in who gets chosen for Secretaries of Defense, State and Treasury.”

Now, as I have come to understand it, most politicians do not take kindly to this kind of assertin’. But I was knew to this, and saw these conditions as being fairly fair. I answered, “Hmm, I already got some strong ideas about State.”

Barry shook his head, “We need to have a conservative handling diplomacy to showcase to the world conservatism’s successes as they come.”

“Then how about Defense, Treasury and UN Ambassador?”

“Deal!”

We sealed the promise with a good ol’-fashioned classic handshake.

“You sure you don’t want to patch things up with Rocky?” I inquired.

Goldwater dismissively replied, “Hell, I don’t want to talk to that son-of-a-bitch.” [13]

Just minutes after he departed, there was another knock on the door.

“Oh, Nelson Rockefeller! How do?” [14] I remember exclaiming.

It turned out that Rockefeller was becoming more willing to “hand over” the nomination to me after one of my supporters told him about my past volunteering for President Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration – a cornerstone of the New Deal effort to put Americans back to work after the Great Depression – which is where I learned that a lot of men in the area working on the roads had pregnant wives but no money for doctors, leading to my time working as a midwife [15]. This connection to a liberal program gave Rockefeller hope that I would be more open to similar policies than Goldwater would be.

The Governor also got right to the point, that he believed that I was “less willing to make Indochina glow in the dark in the name of liberty” than Goldwater, but disagreed with my smaller-government proposals. I feared he was going to ask to have influence in my cabinet, so I cut him off with, “You want to pick my running mate for me, Nelson?”

Rockefeller saw it as a sign of compromise, and we shook on it. That’s where me and Goldwater differed; we were both temperamental fellas, but I knew from my experience as governor that compromise was necessary in practice. In order to win in the general, where only more liberals and conservatives would be voting, I needed to yolk at least some liberal Republicans into backing a “Sanders for President” campaign!

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



“In these times we cannot allow bickering to stand in the way of victory. Our party’s principles are more important whoever carries out those principles. That is why I am withdrawing my candidacy for President and am endorsing Colonel Harland Sanders for President. I swore when I started this campaign six-and-a-half months ago that the man sworn into the office of the Presidency on January 20, 1965, would be a Republican, and with my fellow conservatives making their voices heard, that man will be Colonel Harland Sanders!”

– Barry Goldwater at the RNC, 7/15/1964



GOP NOMINATES KFC FOUNDER FOR U.S. PRESIDENT: Col. Sanders Is Picked As A “Compromise Candidate” At The R.N.C.

Cow Palace, CA – Colonel Harland Sanders, a chef and wealthy businessman famous for founding the Kentucky Fried Chicken food franchise, clinched the nomination on the fifth ballot after his primary opponent, Senator Barry Goldwater, dropped his candidacy, and another candidate, Governor Nelson Rockefeller, ceased activity at the convention. Sanders served as the Governor of Kentucky for four years and received substantial support as an undeclared candidate during the GOP primaries earlier this year.

Prior to the final round of voting, the last unpledged delegates from South Dakota, Maryland and Florida switched from “uncommitted” to “Sanders.” Next, Goldwater released his delegates to Sanders, allowing the Colonel to clinch the nomination with just 5 convention delegates to spare.

R.N.C. Chairman William Miller offered high hopes for the Colonel’s chances in November: “This is a historic moment – not since Eisenhower in 1952 have we seen such excitement over a nominee.”

Conservative political strategist Cliff White praised “the convention’s choice,” telling ABC “Sanders is a gaffe-free alternative to Goldwater who will bring just as much energy to the general election, if not more.”

The nomination comes after a contentious convention and a complicated primary process. Several candidates failed to rise to prominence in a competition dominated by Goldwater and Rockefeller. Walter Judd, the Republican nominee for Vice-President in 1960, failed to win the Wisconsin primary, continued on as an inactive candidate and ultimately released his delegates to Sanders. Margaret Chase Smith won more votes than him but received less delegates. Former Governor Harold Stassen received negligible attention. Ultimately, Sanders won 659 votes; Rockefeller came in second place with 325 vote; Goldwater came in first place in the primaries but in third place at the convention with 321 votes; of the other declared and undeclared candidates, only Scranton (with 2) and Chase Smith (with 1) won any votes.

In his acceptance speech, Col. Sanders touted the Republican Party’s ideals, and vowed to “end the chaos plaguing the lovers of democracy at home and abroad... Like a pressure fryer actin’ up, we’re going to pound at these problems with everything we’ve got.” ...Sanders, whom in the past has praised Johnson's passing of civil rights legislation, focused more on ending warfare overseas, but did mention "continuing the fight to get each other to treat each other equally, so someday soon we will, not because some law tells us to, but because we want to"...

The G.O.P.’s Vice-Presidential candidate will be chosen later tonight...

The New York Times, Extra, 7/15/1964



…The typists wrote up the speech so it could be used on the Teleprompter, and while we didn’t have enough time to give the newsmen an advanced copy, we did let Miller and Dean Burch look it over, and they liked it. “It hits all the points it has to,” he said, “And spoken by you, it’ll be really somethin’.”

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



“This campaign is not just for Republicans. This campaign is for the folks who’ve been done plucked over during the past three-and-a-half years of LBJ & Company. By the strength of our conviction, we will free the White House from the muddled havoc that is the Johnson administration, and correct their wrongs of the past four years. We will reverse the tide of death overseas and end the fighting and rioting overwhelming our streets. We will end the chaos plaguing lovers of democracy at home and abroad. We will stand true to the Constitution and uphold the Jeffersonian decree of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness. The Republican Party has saved this nation from despair many-a-time before, and by the grace of God and the will of the people, we shall save this nation from despair once more! Are you with us?!”

– Colonel Sanders’ acceptance speech, 7/15/1964



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[pic!: imgur.com/ZdW7ZLy.png ]
– Colonel Sanders greets the crowd at the RNC upon formally accepting the nomination for President, 7/15/1964



NOTE(S)
[1] Goldwater used this phrase IOTL, apparently: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_Goldwater_1964_presidential_campaign#cite_ref-65
[2] Goldwater really said the italicized part according to page 411 of “Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus” by Rick Perlstein, which is available on Google Books.
[3] Italicized lines are quotes from OTL!
[4] Another butterfly!: Here, Happy’s baby is late, in that he stays in the womb an additional 3 days (maybe the campaign is less stressful on Happy ITTL or something), meaning Nelson Junior is born after the crucial California primary, not right before it.
[5] Italicized parts are from page 398 of the previously-mentioned “Before the Storm” book.
[6] Goldwater, by the start of the RNC, “was sick of the word” extremism according to page 390 of the “Before the Storm” book.
[7] Both events are according to the Colonel’s LinkedIn account, though other sources give conflicting dates as to when exactly he served as Commerce Secretary.
[8] Quote directly pulled from this site: fgbt.org/testimonies/colonel-sanders-story.html
[9] Ibid.
[10] Ibid.
[11] According to page 390 of the “Before the Storm” book, Goldwater’s personal quarters during the RNC were on the 17th floor.
[12] Italicized parts are from page 410 of the “Before the Storm” book.
[13] At the thought of answering a phone call from Rockefeller IOTL, Goldwater really did say this about Rocky! (Before the Storm, p. 389).
[14] The Colonel says this greeting/phrase in a few KFC commercials!
[15] This italicized bit is from this Buzzfeed Article on the Colonel: https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/venessawong/the-real-colonel-sanders.

3/7/EDIT: added/fixed things in accordance with feedback.
 
Post 12
Post 12: Chapter 20



Chapter 20: July 1964 – November 1964



“What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others.”

– Pericles



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[pic: imgur.com/HVpTwEH ]
– Campaign button from the Kentucky delegation at the 1964 R.N.C.



I invited in Rockefeller, Spencer, and one of Spencer’s interns who brought over some photographs and laid them out on the hotel bed. We stood around the impromptu gallery to discuss who would be my running mate. I liked George Romney of Michigan, but the people of his state wanted him to stay on as Governor; plus, Spencer and his intern mentioned his religion and being born in Mexico to American parents as possible detriments. It wasn’t clear to me exactly why, but as I still remembered then and now the qualification heck of 1955, I decided it was best not to run the risk of experiencing that hooey again. Prior to the meeting, Senator Keating joked “if you want to win over Goldwater’s supporters, maybe you should pick Senator [George] Allott from Colorado – from afar, he and Goldwater look exactly alike!” Not wanting to dismiss a potentially wise pick over a gag, I met with Allott, but he was not too interested. After considering Senators Carl Curtis, Maurice J. Murphy, Norris Cotton, and Everett Dirksen, Senator Margaret Chase Smith was a very tempting choice – a longtime U.S. Senator who openly opposed McCarthyism and I, being seven years older than her, saw her as being fairly young – but to woo-in old-fashioned folks such as myself, I needed to go with a less bold choice. Nixon had passed over Senator Lodge in 1960, and after much consideration, so did I that year.

The final two options ended up being Governor Bill Scranton of Pennsylvania and Senator Jacob Javits of New York. Rockefeller favored Javits, so we quickly met with him. To our surprise, he declined, believing he would be more helpful to a Sanders administration if he stayed in the Senate. He also believed that his Jewish religion, and his recorded early support for the War in Cuba, would cause controversy that would only bog down the ticket. His wife wasn’t keen on the idea, either.

That left Scranton, who I thought fit the criteria just fine. His connections to donors would benefit the ticket financially. His connections to the rust belt would balance out my rural image despite my own history of urban development endeavors. At 47 years old, Scranton balanced out my much-higher number of years on this Earth, and he had developed leadership skills and experience by quelling protests in his state over the past year-and-a-half. But I wanted to make sure that we could work together. Spencer’s intern got Scranton up to the room, and we talked for about half an hour. The man, just a few years younger than my son, was convivial, courteous and optimistic that great things would come from us working together, whether it be for four or eight years, or even just for the remaining 14 weeks of the race. He seemed like a fine choice to serve as my running mate, and within hours “Sanders-Scranton” posters and pins could be found all over the place!

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



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[pic: imgur.com/AJE8CsP ]
– clickipedia.co.usa



With the Presidential nominee finally chosen, a cascade of balloons were released from the top, filling the huge interior in a lighter-than-air flood of red, white and blue. The banners, signs and hullabaloo brought the idea of Daddy Warbucks’ birthday party to mind. Even with the Colonel on the premises – or maybe because of his support for Civil Rights – I would not have been able to get into the convention center had I not met Jackie Robinson outside because some of the more, ahem, “conservative” members of the party were hardly okay with letting me, or even Jackie, join their political circus…

[snip]

…Deafening boos and jeers enthralled the room as the South Dakota delegation vocally confirmed Scranton for the Vice-Presidential nomination. The cacophony grew in even greater intensity as both Sanders and Scranton approached the main podium. I heard a man, still wearing a Goldwater pin, shout “Get that joke out of here.” I even saw a man ready a tomato in a slingshot, though honestly, it was not the weirdest thing I had seen that day. But still, it looked like a riot would break out, and I was genuinely frightened; Jackie leaned over from his seat behind mine and warned “if we have to get out of here, don’t let go of my hand.”

But then Colonel Sanders caught the attention of the enraged political fanatics. And he calmed their blood by calling for party unity: “Democrat fat-cats would be happier than pigs in mud if they saw us tear ourselves apart before the real race even started… Remember the words of Abraham Lincoln – ‘a house divided against itself cannot stand’! Right now, his Grand Old Party is in danger of falling apart at the seams. But we must stay united as a party in order to bring America closer to being truly a land of justice and freedom! In the words of a wise writer named Publilius Syrus, ‘Where there is unity there is always victory.’ And with your support, we will unite this party to be the strongest messenger of democracy that it can be, and that shall lead us all victory in November!”

– Belva Davis’ The Ultimate Gamble: The Election That Changed The Nation, 1984



After hours of on-the-floor negotiations, a “soft-c” conservative platform was finalized on the 16th, calling for a vague “change in the execution of America’s foreign policies” and what would later be described as a libertarian stance on social issues, with the biggest and most notable plank being a call to “keep government bureaucracy out of all American businesses, big and small.”

…With the convention finally behind them, Republican operatives shifted to the general election. Selling the idea that a businessman with government experience could use his organization skills to rein in the chaos seemingly run amok in D.C. over issues at home and abroad required canvassing swing states and reaching the undecided voters that lied within them. Additional focus was placed on the notion that a Sanders administration would be beneficial to everyone, which explains Sanders ’64 memorabilia having tags such as “vote for efficiency, not ideology,” which were most likely meant to lure in traditionally Democratic-favoring voters. …Most of the campaign’s focus was on the northern and southern states, as Sanders’ backstory as a railroad man and his get-the-government-out-of-your-business positions were sure to win over the west. Meanwhile, Sanders utilized local television and talk radio stations and other forms of free media to dispense in campaign messages for minimal costs. A Zenith-number (the precursor to the toll-free telephone number) included on some campaign material allowed people to call their regional campaign headquarters to receive additional information…

…It should also be noted that upon starting his campaign travels, Sanders experienced territorial crowds of both the welcoming and hostile variety in both the South and Midwest. This was because most Americans in the north and out west consider Kentucky to be part of the South, but Americans in the South do not (especially the people of the Deep South, an area which is, essentially, Mississippi clean through to South Carolina). To them, Kentucky was too far north to be part of the ‘real’ south, as they call it. But the biggest differentiation they make is the fact that Kentucky did not join the Confederacy during the Civil War...

– Josh Ozersky’s Sanders in 1964: An American Discovering America, University of Texas Press, 2012



Remembering the controversies of his 1955 campaign, Sanders immediately began the process of divesting his interests in K.F.C. to a temporary trust fund. Additionally, upon discussing the matter with Pete Harman and Dave Thomas, Sanders sought to make his company’s advertising a non-issue from the start. The FCC’s Fairness doctrine policy required radio stations to present contrasting viewpoints, and so Sanders instructed that only the company’s “Colonel-free” commercials – which instead focused on customers and celebrities praising the company – would air until November 4, the day after the election.

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



“Harland Sanders ain’t a southerner at all! Not only was he born in Indiana, but he once served as the Secretary to the Chamber of Commerce of Columbus, Indiana! If you believe Sanders isn’t just faking being a Southerner, then I’ve got some beachfront property in Idaho to sell ya.”

– Farris Bryant at a rally in Greenville, SC, 7/17/1964



“The Colonel has worked all over the country, so he is not just a Kentuckian. He’s lived in Alabama, worked in Tennessee, and has extensively invested into the economies of Utah, Florida, and all the 50 states – he’s an all-round American.”

– Senator Barry Goldwater, KAZM 780-AM radio, 7/18/1964 broadcast



“Now I don’t hate Governor Bryant, we both oppose many of President Johnson’s policies and believe in this country and that this country needs to be driven in a new and better direction. But I find it very ironic that I was born in the nineteenth century and live in the twentieth, while Farris was born in the twentieth century but lives in the nineteenth.”

– Colonel Sanders, Meet the Press interview, 7/18/1964



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[pic: imgur.com/qdxNxAl ]
– Congressman Gerald Ford and Senatorial candidate/former Vice-President Richard Nixon campaigning for Colonel Sanders, Lansing, MI, 7/19/1964



COLONEL CAMPAIGN CROWD CLIMBS TO 15,000 IN BETHESDA

The Baltimore Sun, 7/20/1964



CHICKEN KING TOUTS JOB CREATION, HISTORY OF WORKPLACE EQUALITY FOR WOMEN

…The Colonel’s company employs breeders, hatchers, growers, slaughterers, processers, packagers, distributors and deliverers, and storage facilitators across 4 continents, 27 countries, and all 50 states, not to mention his advertising staff… However, the credit for KFC leading the way in equal pay for men and women should really go to his daughters Mildred Sanders-Ruggles and Margaret Sanders, whom have been at the helm of several responsibilities in the company since 1955...

Newsday, 7/21/1964



DOZENS OF U.S. TROOPS IN ANOTHER VIET-KONG ATTACK NEAR INDO-CHINA BORDER

– The Sacramento Union (Ted Kennedy’s newspaper), 7/21/1964



The lack of progress in Cuba and Laos-Vietnam during the spring and summer of 1964 troubled Johnson’s campaign staff. Many voters showed they were still upset that not only did Johnson fail to delivery on his now-broken promise of ending military activities on the island by Christmas 1963, but many were now doubting the Christmas 1964 mark would be reached either. Senator Goldwater successfully branded the nickname “Lying Lyndon” to Johnson by repeatedly using it in conservative circles, followed by it becoming better associated with the Bryant/Patterson campaign, where it would occasionally arise at rallies in chant form…

– Theodore H. White’s The Making of the President: 1964, Atheneum Publishers, 1965


A three-day protesting of American warfare in both Cuba and Indochina in Chicago turned deadly today when police sprayed the protestors with hoses; two of the protestors are in critical condition at Cook County hospital, reportedly from falling down marble stairs after being blasted with the water… The protests came about after another attack along the Laos-Vietnam border lead to the deaths of more American troops…

– NBC news report, 7/22/1964 broadcast



“Don’t put down a salt lick and say you ain’t got cows. There is a crisis growing at the Laos-Vietnam border and the President knows it!”

– Colonel Sanders at a rally in Arlington, VA, 7/22/1964



On July 23, Sanders went on Face the Nation and expressed dissatisfaction with Cuba and more so with Laos-Vietnam. Cronkite also essentially condemned the actions of Mayor Daley, which ultimately led to the deaths to two young activists, calling it a “deplorable and violent response to the call for peace abroad.” When asked why he disagreed with the event when he had defended a very similar incident four years prior, Sanders remarked “My daughter convinced me that tumbling’ folks down staircases is fine in some cases, but not when a policeman is tumblin’ young students for demonstrating peacefully, because that kind of violence ain’t needed, and it ends the respect people have for officers of the law.”

– Theodore H. White’s The Making of the President: 1964, Atheneum Publishers, 1965



“Walter we have to run a tight ship around here! Walls can have ears, Walter – there could be Republican spies anywhere, listening to everything we say!” [1]

– President Johnson to aide Walter Jenkins on a White House phone, 7/25/1964; segment from phone conversation courtesy of the FBI public A-V library, declassified 4/15/2005




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[pic: imgur.com/Tq2Ys5c ]
– President Lyndon B. Johnson speaking at a U.S. Army base in Florida, 7/27/1964



LATEST CAM BOMB KILLS 17

The town of Boyeros, Cuba was shaken this morning when a bomb, planted in a parked car, threw debris and flames onto three buildings in the city’s financial district, killing 17 people and wounding “as many as 35,” according an administrator at the hospital, where the current Minister of Health was recuperating following a bout of fatigue and dehydration. …This is the largest assault on innocent Cuban civilians this year, and its scale, spectacle and magnitude demonstrate the level of disregard the Communists have for the citizens they claim they seek to liberate…

– The Free Cuba Press (translated), 7/30/1964



GALLUP: ELDERLY VOTE COULD DETERMINE ELECTION

…Historically, citizens over the age of 65 vote much more frequently than younger voters… As this latest poll suggests, Colonel Sanders is winning over WW2 veterans who disapprove of the shoutniks, though the elderly population overall is split over President Johnson’s healthcare programs. Only roughly 5% of elderly voters polls voiced support for Governor Bryant…

The Sacramento Union, 8/1/1964



The campaign heavily focused on jobs: “This campaign is for the factory workers, assemblymen, welders, bus and truck drivers, beauticians, firemen, police officers, steel workers, plumbers, bakers, receptionists, typists, oilmen, butchers, meatpackers, and of course the small business owners.” Unemployment was still shaky in the aftermath of the 1963-1964 recession, and Father’s background gave hope to people that if anyone could protect their jobs, it was The Colonel. Father’s campaign appealed to young and old alike; when reviewing his gubernatorial experience, he was rightfully seen as a man of honor that always kept his promises. …Mags enjoyed life on the campaign trail with her mother-in-law; the two loved to travel, and I think the trips made things better between the two of them... “His folksy charm is infectious,” Goldwater once told me when we were stumping in Phoenix. For example, during that trip, Father went on a brief tangent during a speech on water sanitation to comment, “Did y’all know ‘water fountains’ are called ‘bubblers’ in eastern Wisconsin? That’s still amazing to me!” Father did not like to micromanage but he did have trust issues, and so he was sure to put people he could rely on to oversee the major sections of the campaign. …At a campaign stop in the deeply anti-Johnson city of Dallas, Texas, Father serenaded an enthusiastic crowd with the declaration that the President’s foreign policy was “out of control,” but then received jeers for promising to protect the lives and rights of African-Americans. While other politicians may have backtracked or left early, father held his ground and finished his speech, winning enough of the crowd back for him to end up spending several minutes shaking hands on his way out.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



Sanders was still privately insecure about his academic shortcomings. “Many of us, especially the Colonel, thought Johnson would spend most of the campaign trying to hammer into the voters like crazy that his sixth grade education disqualified him,” deputy campaign manager James Reston later explained. In an interview on CBS on August 2, Sanders was pressed to defend his light academic background, leading him hollering a famous soundbite: “I never made it to middle school and yet I still created a global food business and did a heck of a job as Governor. So just imagine how successful I’d be if I had made it through to high school!”

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



NARRATOR: The worse the situation becomes along the Laos-Vietnam border, and the more that soldiers return to their families in boxes, the more the young people fresh out of high school and planning to enter college next month take to the streets to protest “the bureaucratic killing of our peers.” The rise in the numbers of protesting youths can be attributed to the rise of Hitler, says one expert:

CLIP: “The protestors turning 18 this year are the children born during the Baby Boom that immediately followed soldiers returning from fighting in World War Two; over 3,200,000 children were born in 1946 alone… Quite simply, these young people don’t want to be forced into fighting in an unofficial war with an already-high casualty count that’s happening halfway across the world, and many of them go further, and see little reason for the war even existing in the first place, whether because of war fatigue or because of their principles. …We are seeing a younger America transform here, and it is more liberal and more anti-war than the nation’s past forms.”

– NBC News report, 8/2/1964



“The youth rebellion is a worldwide phenomenon that has not been seen before in history. I do not believe they will calm down and be ad execs at 30, as the establishment would like us to believe.”

– William Burroughs, American writer and beatnik leader, c. August 1964 [2]



His travels in ’64 contrasted sharply with his 1955 business journeys, in that this time he was joined by an entourage – the inner circle of the Colonel’s “War Room People,” a combination of longtime allies, veteran party workers, and personal friends and family: strategists, organizers, managers, volunteers, phone operators, and speechwriters. Whether by plane, train, or the Colonel’s preferred method of bus, a group ranging in size from 20 to just four always tagged along... Harry Jaffa, a speechwriter from the Goldwater primary campaign, thought to invoke Lincoln, while fellow speechwriter Bill Baroody focused on foreign policy, coming up with the oft-quoted line “Yesterday it was Cuba, now it’s Vietnam. What country do you want to send our boys to die in next, Mr. President?” The Chief of Staff was Gene Pulliam, while the campaign spokesman was the spritely 25-year-old Ronald Ziegler.

…Throughout the campaign, Sanders repeatedly met with military policy experts to better familiarize himself with the modern army, with the wall of one room in the campaign headquarters becoming completely covered with maps of Southeast Asia and Cuba. The Colonel was also given tours of various Army bases with his campaign’s foreign policy advisers...

– Theodore H. White’s The Making of the President: 1964, Atheneum Publishers, 1965



Bryant took his campaign north to try to win over blue-collar workers in a sort of coalition endeavor between southern and northern populists that seemingly dug more into Sanders’ numbers than Johnson’s. An August 2 speech in Chicago, the sight of “the Democratic party’s rejection of Patterson’s common sense policies” saw a turnout of 5,000 supporters and roughly 3,000 hecklers and protestors. The event lead to a violent confrontation between beatniks and hippies that saw several injuries before Bryant’s security whisked him away. Further speeches in Indiana, Ohio, and New York saw further bellicose hubbub. It was this very “riotous discord” as Bryant put it that led to him finally choosing a running mate. “Until then, we did not know if we should double down or try to win over some more moderates,” former aide Asa Carter described in his memoirs, “but after seeing how much clamor and hatred there was for us in the north, Bryant decided that focusing on winning over the South was more realistic. If he won enough of those states, he could deadlock the election and play kingmaker at the least. Of course, beating Sanders for second place in the Electoral College and then becoming President through the E.C. was Plan A from the start. Bryant was in it for the win.” To reaffirm his dedication to the concerns of the region, Bryant convinced former Governor Patterson to be his running mate, matching anger towards refugees with anger towards desegregation…

– Dan T. Carter’s Politics of Rage: The Political Actions, Philosophies and Ramifications of Thurmond, Bryant, and Beyond, Louisiana State University Press, 1995 (Second Edition 2001, Third Edition 2009)



California U.S. Senate Primaries, 8/3/1964:

Republican Primary Results (13.2% Total Population):
Richard Nixon – 1,120,925 (54.1%)
George L. Murphy – 654,737 (31.6%)
Leland M. Kaiser – 190,619 (9.2%)
Fred Hall – 105,669 (5.1%)
Total votes cast: 2,071,950

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



…It is ironic then that back in 1964, was Colonel Sanders was the Republican nominee for President, Reagan refused to actively campaign for the Colonel in California, going so far as to even decline being in any television ads. …According to his son Ron, Reagan “saw there was already enough ‘Hollywood spectacle’ to his [the Colonel’s] campaign, what with Jerry Lewis and Elvis Presley voicing support for him, and so he believed the campaign wouldn’t be taken seriously no matter how grave the subject matter.” Instead, Reagan appeared in several more short television spots promoting conservative talking points. Ron further explained that “Dad wanted to run for public office someday, and to him that meant separating himself from his acting career to prove such a run was sincere. He thought he’d fail to do that hanging around Elvis.” This distance from the Colonel may explain the events of 1966, where…

– SacramentoUnion.co.usa/archived_articles/2004



…Johnson and the Colonel separately agreed that the most appropriate number of hours worked in a week should be determined on an industry-by-industry balance in order to strike the right balance between costs and inflation rising from too little work and “consistently excessive use of overtime caus[ing] increased unemployment.” [3] …Johnson won endorsements from all the prominent unions despite the President voting for the Taft-Hartley Act. His support among union embers was nevertheless challenged by Sanders’ appeal to voters of the working class, not to mention the groundswell of support the Colonel received from low-educated voters (those without a college diploma, and others without even a high school diploma)…

– Theodore H. White’s The Making of the President: 1964, Atheneum Publishers, 1965



In August, Johnson’s latest Great Society proposals were shelved amid the melee of juggling the two foreign policy fronts, the election, and economy recovery efforts, with Johnson telling Jenkins, “They’ll be introduced right after the election if not sooner.”

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



SANDERS & BRYANT AGREE TO 1 DEBATE

The Washington Post, 8/10/1964



“The free market allows people to choose. Giving a business your money for a good or service you want is like voting for the politician you want. It’s the freedom of choice that makes a Democracy. And to ignore two of the three choices for President that exist in this race is a disservice to the customers of our democratic process. President Johnson may have refused Bryant’s offer, but I will not.”

– Colonel Sanders explaining to reporters why he agreed to debate Bryant, Lexington, KY, 8/10/1964



HEAVY CASUALTIES REPORTED IN FAILED TRY AT RETAKING CITY

…The battalion bravely gave it everything they got – tanks, grenades, machine guns – but in the end the Communists outnumbered them. After the fighting moved out of the streets and into the neighboring foliage, Sergeant Lee gave the order of retreat, realizing that they would be unable to recapture the city from Communist forces that day… The city had fallen back into Communist hands in November 1963…

– reporter Tad Szulc, The New York Times, 8/11/1964 special report



Boston’s, better known as Boston Pizza in the states and once known as Pizza House, was founded on August 12, 1964, when a Greek immigrant named Gus Agioritis opened Boston Pizza and Spaghetti House in Edmonton, Alberta.

– www.pizzahalloffame.co.can/boston’s



L.B.J. DECLINES TO DEBATE SANDERS, BRYANT

The University of Tennessee in Knoxville, TN, is preparing to host the first-ever televised debate between general-election Presidential candidates, but in this three-person race, the stage will only feature two podiums. After Bryant suggested that he, Republican nominee Colonel Sanders, and President Johnson all meet together for a debate on foreign and domestic policy, the White House Press Secretary announced that the President was too busy running the country, and would not consider a debate. “This administration’s goals are perfectly clear to the average voter, and any information or details are obtainable at local campaign headquarters, from press releases, and from other forms of public documentation.” While Bryant had earlier suggest that he would not debate the Colonel without Johnson also in attendance, he has since backtracked that notion with the public statement “I look forward to my chat with the Colonel this Monday.” The University was chosen as “neutral ground” between the three candidates…

– The Chicago Tribune, 8/13/1964



SANDERS: Immigrant folks are just like us lifelong Americans – they’re studious, industrious, ambitious and hard-working dreamers and democracy-lovers.

BRYANT: That is a very naïve thing to say, Colonel. The immigrants seeking refuge from Cuba in my state are lazy loafers who are stealing American jobs.

[Snip]

SANDERS: I think we need to rethink our strategy in Indochina. It’s obvious the fightin’ is of the war kind, not the protectin' kind, so if we’re going to end up with another war on our hands – and I really hope we don’t – but if we do, I say give it three years. We defeated the Japs in less time, '42 to '45, and they had more firepower than these Viet Congo fellas. I think if there is no absolute path to peace or victory by January 1968, then we should perform an admirable withdrawal by January 1969.

BRYANT: that is not the kind of thinking we need in the White House. Rome wasn’t built in a day; you cannot put defending democracy on timetable. We do need to rethink our strategy in Indochina, and in the lingering issues facing our involvement in Cuba, but we cannot withdraw our troops from either because withdrawing is the same as surrendering. Democracy can never surrender to the evil forces of communism and oppression. Not in Cuba, not in Indochina, not anywhere!

SANDERS: Then when should we stop killing people overseas?

BRYANT: When those people are free!

SANDERS: Dead but free isn’t a good deal, Farris!

MODERATOR: Gentlemen –

SANDERS: I might have the goatee, but Byrant’s the stubborn ol’ goat in this race!”

MODERATOR: Gentlemen, please. So for the record, do both of you agree on withdrawing from Indochina as being conceivable or not?

SANDERS: If the war is not winnable, then yes, absolutely.

BRYANT: If the people want to be free, which they do, then no, absolutely not.

MODERATOR: And Cuba?

SANDERS: Four words, sonny: bring our boys home.

BRYANT: I agree with the Colonel that we must preserve America’s history of strength and victory, but not at the cost of an entire generation of American lives. However, Cuba’s proximity to our borders means that we cannot in good conscience leave the island without absolute assurance that it is clear of any remaining threatening elements.

SANDERS: Bryant, if I may, but in light of how the conflict in Cuba has descended into “acre-by-acre” guerilla warfare, I just have to say that if you become President and go through with your notions of warfare, you’re gonna need a whole truckload of Ajax to get the blood off your hands.

– Transcript of the Bryant-Sanders debate in Knoxville, TN, 8/17/1964



By mid-1964, Indonesia’s leader, Sukarno, had become too reliant on the Soviet Union for the comfort of the US’s national security personnel. The CIA soon devised, organized, and executed the August 17 [1964] “Independence Day” coup that overthrew Sukarno and replaced him with the pro-American General Suharto. Suharto used Indonesia’s war with the neighboring nation of Malaysia and the political entity of East Timor since January 1963 (which had gone largely ignored by the US as it tackled issues in Cuba and Vietnam) as excuses for the need for “a temporary emergency government.” Sukarno had privately planned to expand the warfare to mainland Malaysia on August 17, but instead of visions of conquest Sukarno met the day with a violent removal from power. Naturally, Communists loyal to Sukarno took to arms, and quickly the Indonesian Civil War had begun.

– Michael Richard Beschloss’ At the Highest Levels: The Cold War At Play In Southeast Asia, Crown Publishing, 1997



GALLUP: COLONEL SEEN AS WINNER IN LAST NIGHT’S DEBATE

…millions of Americans watched and listened to last night’s riveting exchanges…

– The Hollywood Review, 8/18/1964



The Colonel was friendly to reporters much more so than L.B.J., who was having trouble balancing governing with campaigning. Johnson, while visiting a veteran’s hospital in California on the 23rd, sparked rumors concerning the Colonel’s physical and even mental health, and complained that his rhetoric has been “uncouth and tactless in the most polite of ways.” …Johnson seemed to have virtually no support among young voters, and hoped that promises to expand Medicare/Medicaid benefits would boost support among older voters in several battleground states…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Five: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc. New York, 2012



“…We did our best to stay impartial, but that was not always successful. I remember, on the one side of the political aisle, there were two restaurants that sold our chicken, both of them being up north a ways, were both owned by very passionate L.B.J. supporters, and while they openly disapproved of the Colonel’s run, they didn’t sever business ties with us. They’d be getting rid of their best-selling product if they did that. On the flip side, though, some of our business partners were avid Sanders supporters. Both sides were problematic due to legal issues with the FEC, so I had to ask them to limit how much they supported The Colonel’s campaign to just banners. By September, though, we, uh, the company, had firmly established rules to separate The Colonel the Chicken King from The Colonel the Candidate. We made it so managers could promote the Colonel’s chicken on properties selling it, but could only promote his campaign off of said properties…”

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, 1999



ANTI-COMMUNIST PURGES PLAGUING CIVIL-WAR-TORN INDONESIA

The Guardian, UK newspaper, 8/28/1964



MORSE DECLINES TO MAKE “A FOUR-MAN RACE”

Portland, OR – The Beaver State’s more famous U.S. Senator has spent most of the past several weeks contemplating whether or not to run an independent campaign in the fall. …Two days ago, Morse met with President Johnson. Today’s announcement will come as a disappointment to his more ardent supporters; however, Morse assured the assembled crowed “I will criticize whoever is sworn in next January, however they are, if they fail to protect the American people.” Morse also discouraged a proposed write-in campaign already underway in some states, and added “He’s not perfect, but I believe Johnson is the best man for the job out of the three men in the ring.”

– The Washington Post, 8/29/1964



EXTRA! SANDERS FIGHTS OFF WOULD-BE ASSASSIN!

Dothan, AL – Sanders campaigning in certain parts of the South had been hostile for him. At a campaign stop in southern Virginia last week, for instance, an empty beer can struck the Colonel in the back of the head, and while leaving a rally in Louisiana last month, young activists tried to throw cans of paint on the Colonel, but missed the surprisingly sprite septuagenarian. This incident however, was much more severe. Sanders was in the particularly hostile territory of Alabama, where the state’s current moderate Governor, George Wallace, urged for those passionate for politics to treat Sanders with dignity. The FKC magnate was shaking hands in the conservative city of Dothan, shortly after finishing a speech, when a man pushed his way through the crowd on the side opposite the Colonel and charged for Sanders with a knife. Turning and seeing his assailant’s weapon, Sanders reacted swiftly, waving forward his cane to knock the knife out of the assailant’s hand and striking the would-be harmer square in the jaw – all with one effective gesticulation of his cane!

– The New York Times, 9/1/1964



The assailant was taken into custody and identified as Jerry Ray James of Austin, Texas [4]. James claimed he wanted to kill Sanders “for betraying the South,” later clarifying that he disapproved of the Colonel’s stance on Civil Rights. …James believed his actions would make him a martyr or even a hero to the “true American patriots” of the nation. Instead, all of the glory and praise went to Colonel Sanders for demonstrating quick thinking and bravery in the face of such an assault… The incident also neutralized claims that the 74-year-old man was far too old and frail to be President.

– Josh Ozersky’s Sanders in 1964: An American Discovering America, University of Texas Press, 2012



“Bat Masterson would be proud.”

– Actor Gene Barry, referring to a historical character he played on TV in the 1950s, 9/3/1964



SANDERS LEADING JOHNSON BY 10% IN LATEST POLLS

– The Washington Post, 9/7/1964



“When I deliver the South to Johnson, he will owe big time for it. Hell, maybe I can get a cabinet position out of it! I think Secretary of State Wallace has a nice ring to it…”

– George Wallace to speechwriter Asa Earl Carter, 9/10/1964 (allegedly)



“Under a Colonel Presidency, we can kiss Civil Rights goodbye! I am a Kentuckian through and through, and I know for a fact – and you can go ahead and look into this if you don’t believe me – that Sanders’ home town of Corbin, Kentucky, where Colonel Sanders got his start, is strife with racial prejudice. Why in 1919 nearly every n****r – sorry, I mean Negro – was kicked out of that town. Forced onto a freight train, they were [5]! And Sanders was not an opponent of this kind of violent behavior, not at all. For Sanders, it’s business before people. Hell, Sanders once shot a man over business! Can any of you all really see yourselves voting for a man like that? I hope not. I hope instead that you all will vote for President Lyndon Johnson!”

– Happy Chandler (D-KY), introducing President Johnson at a rally in St. Louis, MO, 9/12/1964



“Oh, he’s still sore from when I whooped his rear end back in ’55. To clarify the record, I didn’t live in Corbin at the time of the 1919 incident, and I would never support such an act no matter where I live. While Corbin has had a less-than-glamorous racial past, I’ve always treated my fellow man equally. …It don’t matter what color you are – if you have the money, or are good for it, meaning you can be trusted to pay when you can, you’re a welcomed customer, and if you can do the work, you’re a welcomed employee… [Snip] I don’t see what that’s got to do with anything but to answer the question I don’t know if I’d have voted for or against the Civil Rights Act because I haven’t read it, but once I get into office, I’ll take a good look at it. And if any part of it does more harm than good – wham! – off it’ll go!”

– Colonel Sanders, answering questions at a press conference, 9/12/1964



“We can’t afford to toy with the idea of havin’ a poultry-pluckin’ President. I’m voting for Bryant/Patterson and so should all the people of South Carolina.”

– US Senator Strom Thurmond (R-SC), 9/15/1964



BOB DYLAN ENDORSES COLONEL, PERFORMS AT FUNDRAISER FOR NOMINEE [6]

– The Los Angeles Times, 9/16/1964




DYLAN: Traitor To The Movement?

– Tumbleweed Magazine, 9/19/1964



…Sanders, the most active of the candidates, is still picking up steam, with the latest polls showing the former Governor defeating President Johnson in November by a margin of 13%...

– NBC broadcast, 9/19/1964



“That move to Little Rock was a milestone in my life. I was there for three years studying law, reading the material La Salle U sent me, and reading up whatever I could in the office of Judge Iscreed. When any of my cases had to go to a higher court, a court above the Justice of the Peace Court, if I didn’t win in the J.P. Court, I turned them over to the judge. He’d take them from there on in and we’d split the fee. It was a slim living, but I was getting by. Then, after my, heh, slipup in front of a judge that landed me in hot water, I decided I didn’t want to be a lawyer anymore. I may have moved out of it, but I still love this city and I don’t think I’ll ever not stop this city.” …Sanders may be gaining approval in parts of the Deep South, where the GOP nominee is stressing his time living in the states of Arkansas and Alabama both in his rallies and in informal campaign advertisements on radio and TV…

– Colonel Sanders at a rally in Little Rock, Arkansas, 9/20/1964



www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUlTClC800c

– Part of an informal video short concerning Colonel Sanders’ work ethic, c. September 1964



www.youtube.com/watch?v=vDMhC6z5IGs

– Part of an informal video short concerning Colonel Sanders’ connections to Alabama, c. September 1964



In mid-September, Sanders took a tour abroad to demonstrate his geopolitical prowess: the Colonel met with Dutch, French and West German officials to discuss a multitude of issues. Ultimately, actions taken during the 1961-1963 “Chicken War,” a tariffs-and-trade confrontation that ended the selling of U.S. chickens in Europe and European trucks in the U.S., were brought up. In 1963, Senator J. William Fulbright, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and Democratic Senator from Arkansas – a chief U.S. poultry-producing state – had interrupted a NATO debate on nuclear armament to protest trade sanctions on U.S. chicken, going so far as to threaten cutting U.S. troops in NATO. Sanders remarked that the move was “valiant.” In response, Fulbright reiterated his endorsement for Johnson but nevertheless publicly thanked the Colonel for the compliment. Politicos in Arkansas were not exactly ignorant of the warm exchange as the Colonel’s approval ratings in the state continued to rise…

– Josh Ozersky’s Sanders in 1964: An American Discovering America, University of Texas Press, 2012



“That autumn was wonderful series of zigzags around the country… But there were unpleasant times, for sure. The most famous, or infamous, was the time when that Tennessee cad went to one of those tabloid papers to claim on the 21st of September that Harland had stolen the 11-Herbs-and-Spices formula from him in 1949. Oh, and it was soon all over the news! Harland was privately outraged, of course. When he realized some were taking the accusation seriously, I remember him tossing over a table and pounding his cane on any surface he could, calling him a “lying scoundrel with no honor.” Immediately, our lawyers drew up papers to charge the man with slander. Gene [Pulliam] soon publicly made the claim that the cad was being put up to it by supports of either Johnson or Bryant. Nelson [Rockefeller] and Barry [Goldwater] also came to my husband’s defense, but if I recall correctly, Goldwater had to stop himself from directly accusing President Johnson of sabotage. Us and Sanders’ manager worked magic. We organized a petition and radio interview after radio interview to get the truth heard. Within a few days, hundreds of people stepped forward to attest that KFC tasted the same then as it did when Harland made it in the early 1940s, when he created the formula. Soon the negativity and suspicion toward my husband simmered down and the press began depicting Harland in a more sympathetic light. The pressure then shifted to that awful man from Tennessee, and, well, he felt the walls closing in and that was too much for him.”

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



…The latest breaking news: …now admits that he did not really create Kentucky Fried Chicken’s 11-herbs-and-spices secret recipe… Sanders’ campaign spokeman Ronald Ziegler says that Sanders will now withdraw charges for slander as a showing of letting bygones be bygones…

– NBC News, 10/3/1964 broadcast



We never did find out if he was just desperate for fame or money, or if somebody did put him up to it…

– Claudia Price Sanders, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



CHARLENE JUNE HARGIS, WIFE OF EX-CONGRESSMAN, KILLED IN CAR CRASH

…the wife of former U.S. Congressman Denver Hargis (D-KS) drove off the road when attempted to avoid hitting a deer on the road, according to witnesses… Hargis is survived by her husband and their four young children, three daughters and a son…

– The Fort Scott Tribune, obituary section, 10/7/1964



….The Bryant/Patterson campaign is becoming embroiled in even further controversy and is facing widespread condemnation by many politicians over reports of African-Americans being harassed by Bryant supporters… reports that attendees of his rallies openly exclaim racist and anti-Semitic slurs have persisted for weeks… These controversies may be behind his slip in the polls in the northern states, though his numbers have not suffered in the Deep South, according to Gallup polling…

– ABC news report, 10/10/1964



“I’m kind of proud of how good I am at organizing things. In the 1920s, I established a Young Businessmen’s Club in Jeffersonville, Indiana, a town very much like the towns around these here parts. Yes sir, I got the local businesses to close up for a large picnic in the park, even a few folks who didn’t want to close up shop ended up there. And like how my presidency will be, those picnics were the ‘daggonest’ [7] that Jeffersonville ever saw.”

– Colonel Sanders at a rally in Des Moines, Iowa, 10/12/1964



DOUGLAS-HOME WINS ELECTION BUT ONLY NARROWLY

London – Prime Minister Alec Douglas-Home led the Conservative party to victory in today’s parliamentary elections. Labour made large gains but failed to win enough seats to place their leader, Harold Wilson, in charge; Douglas-Home held onto power with 326 seats, just ten more seats than needed to hold a majority. Fear over democratic collapse in France and support for returning capitalism and peace to Cuba (such as supporting the US Navy using the Bahamas for military purposes in 1961 and 1962) swung the election into Sir Douglas-Home’s favor.

– The Daily Telegraph, UK newspaper, 10/15/1964



“I would like to take this moment to congratulate Prime Minister Douglas-Home… The British know to keep their man in office. I might be biased in this opinion, but I really think we all would benefit from remembering that on November 3rd. …Well, let’s face it, Sanders would do a terrible job as President!”

– Lyndon B. Johnson at a televised White House function, 10/16/1964



“(chuckles) Oh, I couldn’t possibly do a worse job than you, Mr. President. …A nation can’t be strong overseas without first being strong at home, and right now the American people are still feeling the effects of the Salad Oil Recession. We need to spend our nation’s fortune helping them get back up on their feet first and foremost, Mr. President.”

– Sanders at a rally in Milwaukee, WI, 10/16/1964



“Yeah, yeah, yeah, this is the President. What is it?”

“Mister President, this is the pentagon. It’s the Chinese, sir.”

“The Chinese? I thought you just said this is the pentagon.”

“No, sir, I mean… it’s me, Director Dulles.”

“Oh. Allen. Hey. …Christ, it’s two in the morning, what’s wrong?”

“…We have reason to believe the Chinese have successfully tested a nuclear bomb.”

“What?!”

“The U-2 planes and subs are picking up the info. They finally detonated that atomic weapon they’ve been working on.”

“How powerful?”

“Not too powerful, but the rest of the men here are a bit worried.”

“Well of course they are, Allen. This is a really big game-changer. If China’s gone nuclear, we’re going to have to really show ’em who’s boss over there…”

– telephone conversation between President Johnson and CIA Director Allen Dulles, 10/17/1964, nature of recording classified until 2029



CAM BOMB STRIKES U.S. EMBASSY IN HAVANA: US Ambassador “Seriously Wounded”

– The Washington Post, 10/19/1964



EXPLOSIVE REPORT!: EVIDENCE OF US TROOPS MASSACRING UNARMED VIET-NAM CIVILIANS UNCOVERED

“Believed To Be Communist” Order Leads To At Least 90 Dead

The Los Angeles Times, 10/21/1964



General Westmoreland: “We Need to Know What Went On Over There!”

– The San Diego Tribune, 10/23/1964



POLL: WAR, LBJ APPROVAL RATINGS DROP AFTER BRIEF RISE

…The most recent Gallup survey results indicate that the President’s boost in approval ratings following the attack on the American Embassy in Cuba last Monday is already dissipating… This was a busy week for the President as he travelled to Miami to meet with the U.S. Ambassador severely injured in the bombing… Sympathy for the administration was quickly truncated by an expose on civilian murders being printed only two days later. Rallies once again are popping up across the country... In light of the recent “acts of horror” on what is technically American soil, President Johnson has reaffirmed his notion that “routing out the remaining Communists in integral to our nation’s security” However, the lack of a longer-lasting “rally-around-the-flag” is likely due to the attack being viewed as only furthering the notion that it is unwise for American troops to still be in Cuba, according to the latest polling... Colonel Sanders has been more critical of the situation abroad in recent weeks, most recently declaring at a campaign event in North Carolina, “I understand the need to defend our borders, but not at the sake of an entire generation of our own people; that’s not defense, that’s murder.”

– The Wall Street Journal, 10/24/1964



“I believe it is best to follow in the wise words of Abraham Lincoln: it is best to not switch horses in mid-stream.”

– Lyndon B. Johnson in televised address in Washington, D.C., 10/25/1964



“You do if your horse is drowning!”

– Colonel Sanders at a rally in Dayton, OH, in response to Johnson’s comments made earlier the same day, 10/25/1964



Guest of former Presidential candidate Frank LAUSCHE (D-OH): “The Colonel is a sacrificial lamb of a candidate. He’s simply being offered up by the GOP party bosses so the Republican leaders can focus on winning in 1968, when incumbency fatigue will make the Democrats more vulnerable to losing the White House.”

Guest and former U.S. Senate candidate George L. MURPHY (R-CA): “Incumbency fatigue is already here, Frank. Between riots stemming from Civil Rights, protests sprouting up over the Cuba War, and turbulence arising everywhere in response to the Salad Oil Recession, Lyndon Johnson has been a disaster for the country. If The Colonel is a lamb, then he’s a lamb with sharp claws and teeth, because poll after poll shows the Colonel narrowly winning this race.”

LAUSCHE: “But there are also polls, if not more polls, showing Johnson winning.”

Host Roger MUDD: “Well all the polls together indicate that the race is going to be very close. But I’d like to ask you both right now, do you think control of the Senate and House hinges on who wins?”

MURPHY: “No.”

LAUSCHE: “No.”

MUDD: “Alright, um, George, how about you explain why first, and Frank can add to it if he wants.”

MURPHY: “Roger, given how lopsided control of both chambers are, even if The Colonel wins in a landslide, it will not be enough for the Republican Party to take back majority control. That will take another, two, maybe three more biennial election cycles of continuous seat gains –”

LAUSCHE: “Yes, you can thank FDR for that.”

MURPHY: “– But Republicans could significantly diminish the Democratic majorities.”

MUDD: “Alright, so let’s talk for a moment about the upcoming downballot races in this biennial election cycle. The closest races, such as the one being held your home state, George. In California, former Vice President and former Senator Richard Nixon is running to return to that chamber. Nixon sat out a bid for Governor in 1962 to better focus on a potential Presidential bid earlier this year, but failed to gather any momentum heading into the primaries or the convention. He is challenging incumbent appointee Alan Cranston. Do you think he can win, George.”

MURPHY: “Yes. He’s a very experienced and well-spoken man.”

LAUSCHE: “Yes, but Nixon has hitched his wagon to the Colonel’s, so how well the Colonel does could influence or be reflected in how that Senate race unfolds.”

MUDD: “Indeed.”

LAUSCHE: “Similarly, in Arizona, Barry Goldwater is running for a third term against Roy Elson, and in that state’s governor’s race, Goldwater ally incumbent Paul Fannin is being challenged by Democrat Art Brock. Both Fannin and Goldwater could feasibly lose their respective elections if Johnson wins that state.”

MUDD: “Yes, and a third state out west worthy of watching is Nevada’s US Senate race between Republican challenger Paul Laxalt and incumbent Democrat Howard Cannon, as polling suggests that that race is dead-even. The same can be said for Ohio’s race between Republican Bob Taft and incumbent Democrat Stephen Young, for Oklahoma’s race between Republican Bud Wilkinson and incumbent Democrat J. Howard Edmondson, for Tennessee’s race between Republican Howard Baker and incumbent Democrat Ross Bass, and Wyoming’s race between Republican John Wold and incumbent Democrat Gale McGee.”

LAUSCHE: “Another interesting Senate race that I think is worth watching is the one between incumbent Republican Hugh Scott and his Democratic challenger, Genevieve Blatt, who would be Pennsylvania’s first female Senator if she can unseat the better-funded Scott.”

– CBS Roundtable discussion, 10/27/1964 broadcast



“Folks, I, like many Americans right now, including the people here, am unsatisfied with the current state of this great nation. But I’m more than unsatisfied, I am grossly disappointed. Disappointed that President Johnson refuses to confront the difficult situations facing our great country. Perhaps he has fallen to fear. Perhaps he has fallen victim to the military-industrial complex that President Eisenhower warned us about in 1959. Regardless, we are losing men every day in foreign theaters due to a complete lack in organization of our forces and a lack of a basic understanding of the enemy. With such poor execution of operations in Cuba and the Indochina Border, we are embarrassing ourselves on the world stage, in front of our allies and our enemies. Our defense has become a shadow of its former self. Four years ago, no one dared to even challenge the power of the United States. Now, America is repeatedly ransacked by Cam bombs sent by Communist forces only 90 miles from our shores. The carnage of these conflicts has our younger generations in an uproar. They have lost the respect and dignity for the United States government that had been in surplus before Johnson entered office. But this is not just how I alone see these issues. These are the same opinions thought by millions of Americans across the country. This all is not how America should be! And so I must say to you, my fellow Americans, that with your help, we will bring America back from the edge of insanity and instability, and defeat its decline into destruction and despair.”

– Colonel Sanders at a campaign event in Fort Lauderdale, FL, 10/29/1964



“With two days left to go, all three candidates are heavily campaigning across the country, visiting several states that could swing into either the Republican, Democratic, or “HIP” column come this Tuesday… Colonel Sanders is currently leading in the polls, but only by under 5%, meaning President Johnson could still squeeze out a victory, while Governor Bryant, focusing heavily on the Southern states, could possibly win enough states to throw the election to the House of Representatives…”

– Walter Cronkite, CBS, 11/1/1964 broadcast



ANNOUNCER: Direct From CBS News Election Headquarters in New York, this is the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite!

CRONKITE: Good evening… Across this nation of ours it appears that the populace has gone to the polls in record numbers, perhaps more than 71 million of us have trooped to our polling places today… With the polls still open
, [8] we can say that Colonel Sanders is the winner in Kentucky, the first state called tonight and the former Governor’s home state. Our system of selected precincts suggests we can give him the state with roughly 70% of the vote there… We’ll be back in a moment, right after this message… Now we have the popular vote, and so far Colonel Sanders is in the lead by 5,000 votes. We will keep you updated in what should be an interesting and dare I say fun evening and night, and if necessary the early hours of tomorrow…

[snip]

Lisa Howard is watching the Senate elections, Roger Mudd is covering the Congressional bids and Mike Wallace the governor races… Whatever the popular vote will be, it won’t be popular with everybody… It is now 7:30 PM, and the polls have just closed in Ohio, West Virginia, and North Carolina. As of this moment, the Bryant/Patterson ticket has won zero states… Here’s another bulletin now, and it seems a win has just been called: Johnson is projected to win Illinois with around 55% of the vote…

[snip]

The probable winner of the usually Democratic state of Virginia will be the Republican nominee this year. Virginia previously voted for the G.O.P. candidate in 1952 and 1956 but voted for President Johnson in 1960. …The IBM machine will likely make less mistakes than us, but the machine and the lot of us here rely on the BPA analysis and the county results being sent in from across the country… It is now 8:30 PM, and while New Hampshire still too close to call, precincts are calling Pennsylvania for Colonel Sanders, likely due to the presence of Governor Scranton on the Republican ticket...

[snip]

It is now 9:00 PM, which means that the polls are now closing in several western states. The West has a history of voting for conservative candidates, and Sanders is expected to sweep the central states of Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas… The margins of victory in the early states such and Pennsylvania imply that Sanders has a strong chance of winning. Farmers in the west are favoring Sanders but rural counties in the south seem to be preferring Governor Bryant, especially in the rural parts of Florida… We’ve just received another projection, this one from Indiana, which has gone to the Colonel over the President… Johnson is leading Sanders by 10,000 votes in Texas… Paper ballots are being used in South Carolina after the breakdown of several ballot machines…

[snip]

WALLACE: …Former Governor Collins will return to the Governorship despite the large volume of people voting for Bryant for the Presidency. Governor Bryant is calling his more active supporters “the front lines of the quiet and resentful Americans who want what is best for their families only for their voices to be drowned out by the oppressive nature of liberal interest groups.”

CRONKITE: Thank you, Michael. We take you now to Dan Rather, who’s with the presidential party headquarters in Johnson City, Texas…

[snip]

MICHAEL SHUMACHER: Colonel Sanders, having already voted in Corbin, Kentucky, a town very excited about his presence, is now working the phones with other members of his campaign team…

SHUMACHER: Here in South Carolina, public servicemen are working to repair further machine breakdowns. In a statement that has been scrutinized by several Democrats, Senator Goldwater warned yesterday that, quote, “events that could discourage certain voters could be intentional in some areas,” unquote. The comment came in light of early voting suggesting an unprecedented number of Negro voters would cast their ballots tonight. Indeed, despite claims of voter intimidation in many southern precincts, long lines of Black people like the kind behind me show that they are adamant, um, and are persevering to exercise their right to vote, most of them for the very first time.

CRONKITE: Thank you, and we have another bulletin, we are reporting to you now that the Colonel has won the state of West Virginia, a state the Johnson was expected to win... The indicated winner of Missouri, commonly seen as a bellwether state, is now leaning to the Republican column. Johnson, meanwhile, is doing well in the industrious areas of the Midwest and in Maryland, a state he lost in the primaries, though it is still too early to tell if the current numbers are indicative of the final results… How are things in your area, Dan?

RATHER: The question here, Walter, is whether or not Governor Bryant can block out the major party candidates in what seems like a three-person free-for-all. Many Southerners here are bitter at Johnson’s actions on Civil Rights, while many others are enthusiastic for him for the exact same reasons… In Arkansas, the vote is split almost exactly into three parts…

[snip]

Now a brief break for this message: “Try Marlboro Country.”

[snip]

CRONKITE: It is now 11:30 PM… this just in, the state of Arkansas is being called for Colonel Sanders. The state was very narrow, but we finally can confirm whom has won it. The Colonel had campaigned on his connection to the state, as he lived there for a number of years before moving to Kentucky. Bryant was hoping to win the state, as with this calling, it seems Bryant’s window for more statewide victories is closing. …Michael, how are the gubernatorial races going?

WALLACE: Walter, we can confirm that in Illinois, a state that has voted for President Johnson, has narrowly chosen Republican Charles Percy over incumbent Democrat Otto Kerner Jr. for the Governorship. Another call just made was for the state of Indiana, where Republican Richard Ristine has won over Democrat Roger Branigin.

CRONKITE: And Lisa Howard, how about the Senate?

HOWARD: Walter, the Democrats are defending two-thirds of their seats this year, meaning tonight’s map heavily favors the Republicans. Already, early precinct results are hinting at a Republican victory for Richard Nixon in his bid for California’s Class 1 Senate seat, albeit by a margin much narrower than expected…

– CBS Evening News, 11/3-4/1964 broadcast



bfOpzuT.png


– Lyndon Johnson impatiently awaiting the election results, 11/4/1964 broadcast



CRONKITE: ...It is now 3:47 AM, and with that state result, its victory has passed the number of electoral votes needed to win. Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a winner!

– CBS Evening News, 11/4/1964 broadcast



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S):
[1] Johnson’s paranoia is inspired by the OTL details found in this interesting read: https://www.nytimes.com/1988/08/21/magazine/president-lyndon-johnson-the-war-within.html
[2] Famous Burroughs quote from OTL (albeit about the youth activities of 1968 OTL)!
[3] A bit from LBJ’s OTL 1/8/1964 State of the Union address
[4] This guy: https://www.statesman.com/news/20180209/after-snitching-ex-austin-gangster-collected-reward-money-vanished
[5] Real event!: https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7772527
[6] Bob Dylan was a Goldwater supporter in 1964 IOTL!
[7] Phrase and story found here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (page 9 when printed out)
[8] Opening lines taken from CBS’s OTL 1964 election night coverage (found via YouTube)
 
Post 13
Post 13: Chapter 21



Chapter 21: November 1964 – January 1965



“Many a true word is spoken in jest”

– Geoffrey Chaucer, 1390



OvZyYup.png


[pic: imgur.com/OvZyYup.png ]
All other votes: 290,186 (0.4%)
Total votes: 72,546,545

– clickipedia.usa.org



SANDERS BEATS JOHNSON; GOP GAINS SEATS IN HOUSE, SENATE: With Turnout Heavy, Sanders Projected to Win Plurality of Pop. Vote

The New York Times, 11/4/1964



“Well if that don’t beat all…we did it. Ha-ha! We did it!”

– Colonel Sanders reacting to the election results, 11/4/1964



“Hello?”

“[sigh] Congratulations, Colonel.”

“Oh, uh, thanks, um, how do?”

“I’ve had better days.”

“Well, uh, gee, Mr. President, I really don’t know what you’re supposed to say in a situation like this. Um…I’m sorry you lose your job.”

“Heh. Well, it’s not entirely your fault.”

“I just wanted to fix – ”

“It’s alright, I get it. You know, maybe if I’d loosened up some of the red tape, you’d be spending your time right now opening up that airport in Corbin.”

“No, that was only a tiny little piece of what got me to run. No bigger than a duckling’s eye.”

“I probably would have won it anyway if it hadn’t been for Bryant and his damn state-splittin’. And all the people in my party stirring up divisiveness. I didn’t have their support this time.”

“Well, Mr. President, there’s no use lookin’ behind you when your horse always walks forward. You just got to figure out what you’re going to do next.”

“Yeah, you’re right, crying – uh, crying out about it, uh, it won’t change it. Besides, those are probably the same people that’ll now come to blamin’ you whenever something like don’t like happens. Remember that.”

“Don’t worry about me none, Mr. President.”

“Oh, trust me Colonel, you don’t know what you’ve signed up for. The Presidency changes you. It wears you down.”

“Ah, you’re just trying to wig me out is all.”

“Don’t say I didn’t warn you, Colonel, because I’m telling you, if you don’t want to be on this end on this kind of phone call in four years, you’ll learn fast, because the Presidency, well, it’s the most consequential on-the-job training there is.”

“Well thank you, Mr. President for the heads-up, and while I have your ear let me tell you that I commend you for all the great things you did do for this country during your many decades of national service. It’s quite a legacy, sir.”

“Yeah, thanks, Colonel.”

– Sanders and Johnson in a recorded telephone conversation, 11/4/1964 [1]



And I remember, I looked over as he slammed the phone down and he muttered, “my legacy is not over yet, Colonel” and before I knew it he was pushing everyone out the door, even me. Asked him “What’s going on?” He glanced at me, then the windows, then me again: “We’re going all in.”

– Bobby Baker, RNN interview, 1979



Will? It’s Lyndon! …Okay, okay, save your condolences for when I’m dead, but for now, shut up and listen. How’s the search for Cienfuegos coming?... That’s exactly what I’m calling about. I’m right now making it official: I’m increasing the flow of troops into Cuba for you… Double… Yes, that’s right. … Yeah, that’s correct… because-well… Listen, Westmoreland, I’m still the President until the twentieth of January, and I’m not going out without a bang. I’m also ordering an increase in ammo… Yeah, whatever you need to wrap things up down there before I leave office, I’ll get ya… okay… eh–hey just shut up and find and kill the bastard! Burn all their jungles to the ground if you have to! The Colonel might have stolen my job, but I’ll be damned if I let him steal this victory from me, too! [2]

– Transcript of Johnson’s dialogue from a secured telephone conversation with General Westmoreland, 11/5/1965, declassified and disclosed in 1991




United States Senate election results, 1964

Date: November 3, 1964
Seats: 36 of 100
Seats needed for majority: 51
Senate majority leader: Mike Mansfield (D-MT)
Senate minority leader: Everett Dirksen (R-IL)
Seats before election: 62 (D), 38 (R)
Seats after election: 55 (D), 45 (R)
Seat change: D v 7, R ^ 7

Full list:
Arizona: incumbent Barry Goldwater (R) over Roy Elson (D)
California: Richard Nixon (R) over incumbent Alan Cranston (D)
Connecticut: incumbent Thomas J. Dodd (D) over John Davis Lodge (R)
Delaware: incumbent John J. Williams (R) over Elbert N. Carvel (D)
Florida: incumbent Spessard Holland (D) over Claude R. Kirk Jr. (R)
Hawaii: incumbent Hiram L. Fong (R) over Thomas Ponce Gill (D)
Idaho (special): Len Jordan (R) over Vernon K. Smith (D)
Indiana: incumbent Vance Hartke (D) over D. Russell Bontrager (R)
Maine: incumbent Edmund S. Muskie (D) over Clifford McIntire (R)
Maryland: incumbent James Glenn Beall (R) over Joseph D. Tydings (D)
Massachusetts: incumbent Eunice Kennedy Shriver (D) over Howard Whitmore Jr. (R)
Michigan: incumbent Philip A. Hart (D) over Elly M. Peterson (R)
Minnesota: incumbent Eugene McCarthy (D) over Wheelock Whitney (R)
Mississippi: incumbent John C. Stennis (D) unopposed
Missouri: incumbent Stuart Symington (D) over Jean P. Bradshaw (R)
Montana: incumbent Mike Mansfield (D) over Alex Blewett (R)
Nebraska: incumbent Roman L. Hruska (R) over Raymond W. Arndt (D)
Nevada: Paul Laxalt (R) over incumbent Howard W. Cannon (D)
New Jersey: incumbent Harrison A. Williams Jr. (D) over Bernard M. Shanley (R)
New Mexico (special): Joseph Montoya (D) over incumbent Edwin L. Mechem (R)
New York: incumbent Kenneth B. Keating (R) over Samuel S. Stratton (D)
North Dakota: Thomas S. Kleppe (R) over incumbent Quentin N. Burdick (D)
Ohio: Robert A. Taft Jr. (R) over incumbent Stephen M. Young (D)
Oklahoma (special): Bud Wilkinson (R) over incumbent J. Howard Edmondson (D)
Pennsylvania: incumbent Hugh Scott (R) over Genevieve Blatt (D)
Rhode Island: incumbent John O. Pastore (D) over Ronald R. Lageux (R)
Tennessee: incumbent Albert Gore Sr. (D) over Dan H. Kuykendall (R)
Tennessee (special): Howard H. Baker Jr. (R) over Ross Bass (D)
Texas: incumbent Ralph Yarborough (D) over George H. W. Bush (R) and Bruce Alger (HIP)
Utah: incumbent Frank E. Moss (D) over Ernest L. Wilkinson (R)
Vermont: incumbent Winston L. Prouty (R) over Frederick J. Fayette (D)
Virginia: incumbent Harry F. Byrd (D) over Richard A. May (R) and James W. Respess (Independent)
Washington: incumbent Henry M. Jackson (D) over Lloyd J. Andrews (R)
West Virginia: incumbent Robert C. Byrd (D) over Cooper P. Benedict (R)
Wisconsin: incumbent William Proxmire (D) over Wilbur N. Renk (R)
Wyoming: John S. Wold (R) over incumbent Gale McGee (D)

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa [3]



Walter CRONKITE: “So which victors in tonight’s Senate races do you think are going to significantly impact and effect things on Capitol Hill starting in January 1965?”

Roger MUDD: “Well, Walter, the night was really good for Republicans, so there are several incoming Senators from that party that could certainly shake things up with either new ideas, fresh perspectives and experience, or with their presence and prestige. For example, Richard Nixon, the former Vice President of the United States, has been elected back to the US Senate, marking the first time that such a thing has happened since former Vice President Alben Barkley was elected back to the US Senate in 1954. The elections of Republicans Len Jordan of Idaho, John Wold of Wyoming, and Paul Laxalt of Nevada could signal that the party is rising in popularity out west, while the sole incoming Democratic freshman, Joseph Montoya of New Mexico, was elected thanks to high voter turnout among Hispanic voters in his home state. That could suggest a rise in Hispanic voter influence in the southwest. Now, Republicans Thomas S. Kleppe of North Dakota and Robert A. Taft Jr. of Ohio – a relative of President Taft, mind you – they narrowly won their respective races, and that could be because of the presence of Hubert Humphrey on tonight’s Presidential ticket. Humphrey campaigned hard for President Johnson across the Midwest, and this could have inhibited Taft and Kleppe’s margins of support. One rising star in the GOP that I think we might want to keep our eyes on is Bud Wilkinson of Oklahoma, who is a former professional football quarterback. Another Republican I think we should watch is Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee…”

– CBS Evening News, 11/3/1964 broadcast



United States House of Representatives results, 1964

Date: November 3, 1964
Seats: All 437
Seats needed for majority: 218
House majority leader: John McCormack (D-MA)
House minority leader: Charles Halleck (R-IN)
Last election: 254 (D), 183 (R)
Seats won: 224 (D), 213 (R)
Seat change: D v 30, R ^ 30

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa [4]



...Bryant's poor performance, demonstrating a public rejection of his rhetoric and policies, was reflected in races beyond his stronghold in the South. For instance, in the state of New Jersey, Robert John Morris was running for the Garden State's 1st U.S. Congressional District on the American Values Party, a state affiliate of the national Heritage and Independence Party. Our correspondents over in that state have confirmed that Morris just conceded that race, after receiving less than half of one percent despite being one of the better-known and better-funded Bryant allies on a ballot somewhere tonight...

– NBC News, 11/3/1964 broadcast



FROM COP TO LAWYER TO CONGRESSMAN IN JUST FOUR YEARS: MARIO BIAGGI AND HIS SUDDEN RISE TO FAME

NYC, NY – Mario Biaggi knows a thing or two about law and order. A police officer for more than twenty years, Biaggi, a Detective Lieutenant, joined the NYPD in 1942, and has in the line of duty been wounded 11 times and received dozens of citations for valor, making him one of the department’s most decorated officers. He has a permanent limp from an incident in which he saved a woman from a runaway horse, which he reflects on as “a sort of battle scar, a sign of the kind of work I’m in.” Biaggi, 47, was inspired by the war efforts in Cuba to become politically active – working with local Democratic organizations to the point that he was convinced to run for Congress in late 1963 – while also seeking to compliment his resume with a law degree. Starting in 1962, he attended the New York Law School, taking classes on nights and weekends, and he completed the three-year law degree program in only two-and-a-half years; demonstrating his ability to multitask, Biaggi was admitted to the New York Bar just weeks before winning the Democratic primary for a U.S. House seat. Biaggi defeated liberal incumbent Democrat John M. Murphy of the 16th district in the primary in an upset and then defeated David D. Smith in the general by a 10% margin, in a night not too kind to the Democratic Party. “Only in America could I go from where I was to where I’m now heading so quickly,” Biaggi notes as he hands in his letter of resignation at the station. His coworkers celebrate his job change with a simple cake and good-luck cards.

The New York Post, side article, 11/3/1964



United States Governor election results, 1964

Date: November 3, 1964
State governorship elections held: 25
Seats before: 36 (D), 14 (R)
Seats after: 29 (D), 21 (R)
Seat change: D v 7, R ^ 7

Full List:
Arizona: incumbent Paul Fannin (R) over Art Brock (D)
Arkansas: Winthrop Rockefeller (R) over incumbent Orval Faubus (D)
Delaware: David P. Buckson (R) over Charles L. Terry Jr. (D)
Florida: LeRoy Collins (D) over Charles R. Holley (R)
Illinois: Charles Percy (R) over incumbent Otto Kerner Jr. (D)
Indiana: Richard O. Ristine (R) over Roger D. Branigin (D)
Iowa: incumbent Harold Hughes (D) over Evan L. “Curly” Hultman (R) and Robert Dilley (HIP)
Kansas: William H. Avery (R) over Harry G. Wiles (D) and Kenneth L. Myers (HIP)
Massachusetts: John A. Volpe (R) over incumbent Endicott Peabody (D) and Francis X. Bellotti (Independent)
Michigan: incumbent George W. Romney (R) over Neil O. Staebler (D)
Missouri: Ethan Shipley (R) over Warren E. Hearnes (D)
Montana: Tim M. Babcock (R) over Roland Renne (D)
Nebraska: incumbent Frank B. Morrison (D) over Dwight W. Burney (R)
New Hampshire: incumbent John W. King (D) over John Pillsbury (R)
New Mexico: incumbent Jack M. Campbell (D) over Merle H. Tucker (R)
North Carolina: Dan K. Moore (D) over Robert L. Gavin (R)
North Dakota: incumbent William L. Guy (D-NPL) over Donald M. Halcrow (R)
Rhode Island: John Chafee (R) over incumbent John A. Norte Jr. (D) (rematch)
South Dakota: incumbent Ralph Herseth (D) over Nils Boe (R) and john F. Lindley (Independent)
Texas: incumbent Price Daniel (D) over Jack Crichton (R) and John C. Williams (HIP)
Utah: Mitchell Melich (R) over Calvin L. Rampton (D)
Vermont: incumbent Philip H. Hoff (D) over Ralph A. Foote (R)
Washington: Daniel J. Evans (R) over incumbent Albert Rossellini (D)
West Virginia: Cecil Underwood (R) over Hulett C. Smith (D)
Wisconsin: Warren P. Knowles (R) over incumbent John W. Reynolds (D)

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa



…Several notable Governors rode The Colonel’s coattails into office. …Winthrop Rockefeller became the first Republican elected Governor of Arkansas since the Reconstruction Era, winning on a platform calling for the complete racial integration of the state’s schools and addressing low-income issues with deregulation and creating jobs. …Republicans David P. Buckson of Delaware, John Chafee of Rhode Island, John A. Volpe of Massachusetts, and Charles Percy of Illinois were elected on platforms to the left of The Colonel, while Republicans Richard Ristine of Indiana, Ethan Shipley of Missouri, and William H. Avery of Kansas were elected on platforms to the right of The Colonel; all seven of them had strongly endorsed their party’s unexpected national standard-bearer. Meanwhile, Republicans Tim Babcock of Montana and Mitchell Melich of Utah had embraced The Colonel’s populist talking points and had added them to their respective campaigns... Even Republican gubernatorial candidates who were not very much affiliated with Sanders, such as Daniel J. Evans of Washington, Cecil J. Underwood of West Virginia, and Warren P. Knowles of Wisconsin, won their respective races due to the “R” next to their names on the ballot in what turned out to be a very good night for the Grand Old Party…

– Josh Ozersky’s Sanders in 1964: An American Discovering America, University of Texas Press, 2012



“Now, I just want to remind everyone that the President is President of all of us, of each and every citizen of the U.S.A., not just the ones that voted for him. That’s why my administration will work with Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, and everyone in between to ensure the security and prosperity of each and every American. …I can’t thank y’all enough for giving me your votes, because your vote is a symbol of your trust and faith in my abilities, in the idea that I will be an excellent President. I will keep my end of it; I’ll prove y’all were right in voting for me! I will not let you down!”

– excerpt from Colonel Sanders’ victory speech, Florence, KY, 11/4/1964



HOWARD: Walter, this election cycle saw an unprecedented number of African-Americans run for public office, in both the north and the south… City Councilman-elect Edwin King of Jackson, Mississippi, has stated he is not surprised by the state Democratic Party challenges the election results… The rise in African-American political involvement could be compared it to the number of African-Americans serving public offices after the Civil War, and Reverend Martin Luther King warned earlier tonight that a drop in vigilance of rights can lead to this ending in the same way that the post-Civil War Reconstruction Era ended, with one form of injustice being replaced by another.

FILM CLIP: “We must not let history repeat itself and allow anyone to suppress anyone else’s civil rights if we are to move forward and beyond racism in this country.”

[snip]

CRONKITE: After a swell in participation in the Presidential primaries, young voters either stayed at home in protest, or voted for Sanders or wrote in Senator Morse to protest President Johnson… The Colonel won more counties in the South and more of the Black vote than anticipated.

HOWARD: Yes, he also possibly won over Arkansas despite it bordering President Johnson’s home state thanks to a televised speech he gave at Little Rock a week before the election, where he pointed out his connection to the state. Here is some footage from it:

SANDERS IN CLIP: “At age 21, I began a law correspondence course, and I studied in a judge’s office in Little Rock. I eventually found work in the justice of the peace court, hoping to bring some justice to the long-abused poor of the region. I’m particularly proud of the time I was able to negotiate better settlements for the mostly-black victims of a train wreck, and my efforts to stop courts from pressuring defendants into settlements.” [5]

HOWARD: …While Republicans narrowed the gap in both chambers of congress, many G.O.P. leaders such as House Minority Leader Charles Halleck are blaming the presence of many “H.I.P.py” candidates spoiling several races where the Republican candidate was more not more liberal than the Democratic opponent… The Heritage-Independence Party failed in its endeavor to win any Seats in the House…

– CBS Evening News, 11/4/1964 broadcast



The next several hours of that busy Wednesday saw Sanders receive congratulations from heads of state around the world. President de Gaulle of France seemed to be the most enthusiastic for the upcoming Sanders administration, expressing interest in working with the Colonel on resolving international conflicts in Southeast Asia during a private phone call to The Colonel and in a public statement de Gaulle gave in Paris the next day. The leaders of Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, and the Philippines also expressed similar sentiments in regard to US involvement in the region.

In the rest of western Europe, the PM of the UK was surprised by the results, as he had expected Lyndon Johnson to narrowly prevail and had been looking forward to working with him on future international issues such a trade and NATO defense. Nevertheless, the PM was cordial to Sanders, as were the leaders of Italy, West Germany, and even Spain and Portugal.

Canada, Mexico, and most of Latin America had mixed views on Sanders’ election victory. Because of Johnson’s work on immigration reform, many feared the more conservative Sanders would reverse many of Johnson’s policies and program. Still, the leaders of these countries congratulates Sanders, almost as a type of common courtesy.

Behind the iron curtain, Communist leaders looked on with confusion and hatred – confusion over not being sure how aggressive The Colonel would be against them, but hating him blindly nevertheless…

...Amid the press coverage and everyone wanting to chat away into the Colonel's ear and shake his hand, The Colonel became overwhelmed and had to sneak off to the ticket for a glass of water. "Whoo-wee!" He exclaimed, before taking a deep breath and happily walking - almost skipping - back to his adoring public...

– Josh Ozersky’s Sanders in 1964: An American Discovering America, University of Texas Press, 2012



…It seemed that all of our family members were both shocked and elated by how Father had gone from a businessman to President-Elect in just a decade of time. I was ecstatic, as were Mags and Millie. Our stepsiblings Billie and Elvis were delighted that their mother hadn’t gotten remarried to, to use Billie’s words from when Claudia and Father got engaged, “a hick” after all. Father’s siblings, Uncle Clarence and Aunt Violet, were more elated than shocked. Ma, on the other hand, was more shocked than elated that her ex-husband was moving into the White House.

“I don’t think he’ll accept it,” I remember her telling me over the phone when I informed her from the summer convention that Father was being considered as a compromise candidate, someone with Nelson’s grace and Barry’s commitment to conservative ideals. “He’ll chicken out like he chickened out of his lawyering career. He won’t commit to a commitment as big as the Presidency.”

Of course, Ma denied such uncertainty come the November results, instead coolly congratulating Father over the phone; but according to Father, she was just hiding anger and outrage. “I can tell when something’s eatin’ away at her,” he told me, “And right now, she’s real jealous – more sour than a lemon patch!” According to Elvis, his and Billie’s father, Charles Howard Price, was in a similar mood after realizing that his ex-wife would soon become the next First Lady of the United States.

Each time Father became more famous, more relatives – distant cousins and nieces and nephews and many, many in-laws – came out of the woodwork, with many asking for favors. The first “wave” of these relatives showed up after Father was elected to the governorship. The second “wave” arrived more gradually after he was nominated for President. The third “wave,” though, hit like a tsunami. All five of Claudia’s siblings, two of whom were younger than Margaret and I, started to drop in all the time, sometimes even wanting to spend the night. Same went for the three half-siblings of Mildred’s husband [John F. Rugged Jr.]. While Margaret’s husband [James Trigg Adams] had been involved in the company since the 1940s, his two siblings had not been, and yet, they soon showed up out of the blue, too. And don’t even get me started on the members of my ex-wife’s family!

Mother’s side of the family, though, saw many stick to their guns that continue to believe that Father was still “no good.” Only some of them swallowed the bitterness and grinned warmly to lie and tell Father, “I always knew you had it in you.” A more honest statement would have had “…somewhere” at the end of the sentiment. Ma’s Aunt, Mary Alice Alventine Ables (1878-1966), and her own kids and their families, were the biggest committers of this shallow attitude-changing. And, unsurprisingly, it came before so many requests – for help with businesses or paying for things or making connections to people; it was really quite shameless, if I do say so.

Mother’s three siblings, Uncles James Clyde King and John Preston King, and Aunt Grace Olivia King Poole, and their adult children, and those children’s spouses, and those in-laws, and our nephews (who were our father’s grandnephew) practically overwhelmed central northern Kentucky. At one point, Margaret spend an entire evening telephoning political allies to warn them of relatives coming around to congressional and senatorial offices in Frankfort and DC trying to work their way in to positions and bank loans or out of parking and speeding tickets through unsanctioned nepotism. Father acted soon after by meeting with many of these more opportunistic relatives and “setting them straight.” I think it is safe to say that, due to these preventative actions, Margaret and Father avoided any sort of scandal regarding nepotism allegations from occurring, showing off both of their skills at damage control before Father had even entered office.

In the business side of things, Uncle Clarence’s sons James and Chuck, who were in their 40s at the time, suddenly showed up expressing interested in getting involved in KFC, with James even going so far as to begin to dress in white suits [6]. At first, I was offended by this, as I felt that it was a shallow and somewhat desperate attempt to win over Father in order to get some sort of favor done for him. As I just said, lots of relatives were doing that; when “The Godfather” came out in the 1970s, people discussing the opening scene gave me a sense of déjà vu. However, years later, James became an actual Kentucky Colonel because of his success in entrepreneurial work and business achievements. Looking back on Father’s time as President-Elect, I now see that James was donning the getup as his way of showing how Father had truly become an inspiration for him.

Other relatives became legitimately involved in the company, and more directly, too. For example, Aunt Violet’s son Aaron married Jean Starnes, whose younger sister Mary Lolita Starnes Hannon, currently works for KFC. [7] Furthermore, Aunt Violet’s daughter, Violet Lou, married Harold Kenneth Omer, who also ended up working at several high-ranking positions with KFC [8] and its parent company…

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



7 November 1964: On this day in history, at an annual parade for new weapons held in Moscow’s Red Square, the USSR’s military displays the first anti-ballistic missile, referred to as the ABM-1 Galosh by NATO and the A-350 by the Soviet military; the new weapon is 18m (60 feet) long, 2.4m (8 feet) in diameter, and driven by four motors; described as being capable of destroying incoming missiles at great distances, the unveiled was an unexpected surprise to American and Western intelligence analysts; the unveiling influenced how President-Elect Sanders viewed US-Soviet relations ahead of him entering office in January 1965…

– onthisday.co.uk



SANDERS MEETS WITH GOVERNORS IN POSSIBLE CABINET DISCUSSIONS

…the outgoing Governor of Utah was today seen walking into Sanders campaign headquarters in Kentucky… According to trusted sources, Walter Judd is being considered for a position concerning foreign policy or international diplomacy… “The President-Elect was to build coalition that reaches across all internal party factions to united the GOP like he did in this election.” While it has not been confirmed that a Democrat will serve in the administration, Sanders has reportedly met with Governor Wallace of Alabama, a Democrat that Sanders has held in high regard in the past, more than once since Sanders was officially declared to be the President-Elect. …“The Colonel seems to be relying heavily on the thoughts and opinions of Senator Goldwater,” Senator Thurmond alleges, “Sanders has met with him at Barry’s office several times, and they apparently spend a lot of time talking to each other over the phone,”…

The Washington Post, 11/12/1964



…A French student was killed by police earlier today when an anti-de Gaulle protest turns violent. After months of tension between student workers, leftist organizations and unions over President De Gaulle’s unwavering support for French funds being used to support the States’ Involvement in Cuba, this deadly incident has led to infuriated protestors taking to the streets once more. Even with the upcoming changing of the guard in the United States as American voters elect Harland Sanders to the Presidency on an anti-war platform, riots are still escalating across the French countryside…

– BBC broadcast, 11/14/1964



The French activist group “Les Jeunes Pour la Justice,” or “Youth For Justice,” has the anti-de Gaulle movement on the warpath: students are occupying buildings, and production has come to an abrupt halt across the nation, with further investigative reports suggesting that “at least” 2-and-a-half million workers, or roughly 5% of the total population of France, are currently on strike over “misuse” of their taxpayer money. …a French university administrator is facing pressure to resign for saying “they should bring back the guillotine,” while police officers beating a student in Paris in front of a tourist couple from Manchester highlights the threats of the student-worker actions on the nation’s tourism industry... French President Charles De Gaulle has yet to openly respond to these recent developments…

– BBC special report, 11/16/1964



…Kentucky Fried Chicken opened up another outlet in Australia on 17 November 1964. This one opened in Guildford, in Sydney’s western suburbs, with a staff of 25. It was operated at first by a Canadian KFC manager named Bob Lapointe. The advertising line at the launching was the classic “Finger-Lickin’ Good,” and the launch commercial, which was shot at the Guildford store, featured marching girls and all the fun of the fair. KFC-Australia outlets were controlled by franchise holders. Mildred Sanders and John Y. Brown Jr. of the parent company, FLG Inc., were at the time enthusiastic about the idea of Kentucky Fried Chicken becoming the very first billion-dollar food organization in the world by the start of the 1970s.

The offerings on the Kentucky Fried Chicken menu in Australia ranged from one “piece” of chicken and chips (they were not called fries at this point) or a “barrel” of 21 pieces of chicken. Today’s menu is considerably more diverse. Back then there were no sliders or burgers – just fried chicken, chips, and, a bit later, apple pie and coleslaw. …Not too long after, Canadian-born Jack Cowin bought the right to open ten KFC franchises in Western Australia. His business, Competitive Foods Australia, went on to own around 50 KFC outlets in Western Australia and the Northern Territory… [9]
– AustralianKFC.co.au/history




21 November 1964: On this day in history, the Verrazano Narrows Bridge opens to traffic in New York City, NY, US; at 4,200 meters (13,700 feet), it is the world's longest suspension bridge at the time, crossing over "The Narrows" (the tidal strait separating the boroughs of Staten Island and Brooklyn in New York City) between the Upper and Lower sections of the New York Bay, the bridge directly links Staten Island and Brooklyn for the first time (more specifically, at Fort Wadsworth on Staten Island and at Fort Hamilton in Brooklyn); prior to the bridge opening, direct access between the two boroughs was on the 69th Street Ferry; over 100,000 cars cross the bridge during the first 24 hours of it being open...

– onthisday.co.uk



…On November 22, the People's Republic of China proposed a "no first use" agreement to the United States government. However, at the time, the two superpowers had no diplomatic relations. In order to maneuver around this, discussions were held in Warsaw, Poland between the two nations' ambassadors to Poland, with John M. Cabot representing the U.S. and Wang Guoquan making the proposal on behalf of China. US President Lyndon Johnson enthusiastically supported the secret, behind-the-scenes agreement due to him seeking to salvage his Presidential legacy before leaving office on January 20th…

– Yafeng Xia’s Negotiating With Enemies: U.S.-China Talks During The Cold War Part I: 1949–1968, Indiana University Press, 2006, p. 124 [10]



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[pic: imgur.com/HW7rgfu.png ]
“This isn’t from K.F.C., is it?”
– Outgoing President Johnson attending a public function, 11/25/1964 (the day before Thanksgiving)



1,000 SERENADE WINSTON AT 90

…Sir Winston Churchill celebrated his 90th birthday today…the festivities honoring the occasion including “at least” one thousand well-wishers standing outside his home in Hyde Park, London to sing “Happy Birthday to You" and "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow” to the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom…

The Chicago Tribune, 11/30/1964



1 December 1964: On this day in history, Gustavo Díaz Ordaz entered office as the 49th president of Mexico, succeeding the term-limited incumbent President, Adolfo López Mateos; having been elected to, and being limited to serving, a single six-year term, Díaz Ordaz serves until December 1, 1970…

– onthisday.co.uk



POLICE BRUTALITY “MAKING THINGS WORSE” IN FRANCE

The Guardian, UK newspaper, 12/2/1964



EARL WARREN: WHY HE TRIED TO RETIRE AHEAD OF SANDERS INAUGURATION

…Following the clearly politically-oriented move shunned by Republicans and even several Democrats, Chief Justice Earl Warren rescinded his letter of resignation on December the third…

– The National Review, early December 1964 issue



Warren feared that Colonel Sanders would appoint a conservative successor if the Chief Justice vacated the seat during his administration. In mid-November, Warren submitted a letter of resignation to President Johnson, which stated it would become effective upon the confirmation of his successor. Upon the letter becoming public information, Senate Republicans derided the act as a last-minute power grab – as the Senate was in its winter recess, a successor could be confirmed without Senate approval. Such a successor would then have to face confirmation hearing during the next Senate session, which would allow for the successor to have at the very least several weeks or even months to participate in any rulings that came before the court. Under bipartisan political pressure, in which Republicans threatened “retribution,” i.e. opposition to laws passed under Johnson, Warren withdrew his letter after realizing that it would prove his resignation was politically-motivated.

– Ed Cray’s Chief Justice: A Biography on Earl Warren, University of South Carolina Press, 1997



In mid-December, de Gaulle appeared to flee the capital, which in retrospect was a poor move – it made him seem cowardly, and de Gaulle claiming the “trip” to Nice was an early Christmas vacation made the situation worse, as it made it seem like he was enjoying himself while France’s people took to the streets in what had started as an anti-war protest but had evolved into something more. Ultimately de Gaulle returned to Paris 15 days later, on the 28th of December. The fact that his leadership was so unpopular that he had to flee in the night led to comparisons to King Louis XVI, an image that lingered in the French peoples’ minds…

– Jean-Pierre Rioux’s De Gaulle’s Republic, 1989 (English translation edition)



11 December 1964: On this day in history, 33-year-old African-American singer-songwriter Sam Cooke is arrested at the Hacienda Motel in Los Angeles, California; the motel’s manager called police claiming Cooke had tried to kick in her office door in attempt to assault her in response to her accusing him of hiding a prostitute in his motel room, but was stopped by a lock on the door that the manager had installed after a Cuban refugee had been arrested for attempt theft at the motel just three months earlier; the manager also confessed to firing a gun at Cooke through her door, but “I missed him twice”; at the subsequent trial in 1965, the jury acquitted Cooke due to the lack of forced entry (which was due to the motel’s non-English-speaking cleaning staff cleaning the crime scene before police could study it, for which the staff received a fine for accidently destroying evidence); the court case sullied Cooke’s reputation and effectively killed his career; Cooke would die from the effects of alcohol poising 31 years later, in 1995, at the age of 64.

– onthisday.co.uk



“France is falling to fate.”

– American historian Samuel Flagg Bemis, 12/13/1964



…Take the case of another victim of the civil conflict here in Indonesia. Lolo Soetoro, a recent graduate from the States’ University of Hawaii, was summoned home in September upon the outbreak of the war. His family sided with new regime and for that Lolo was killed later that month for helping his family reach the American embassy. Here was a man whom gave his life for his family’s safety in a situation that has only arisen due to the lack of the UN doing its intended purpose of maintaining peace via mediation…

– The Guardian, opinion article written by Asia correspondent, 12/14/1964



BURNHAM TAKES OVER AS GUIANA PREMIER: Queen Approves Change in Law; Jagan Out

…Forbes Burnham has been sworn in as the new Premier of British Guiana after the British colonial government was forced to remove his predecessor, Cheddi Jagan, from office following the December 7 assembly elections. Jagan, who had held office for 11 years, had refused to resign, charging that the election was fraudulent. Queen Elizabeth II signed a parliamentary order amending British Guiana's constitution to allow the colonial governor to remove the premier. The new law provided that "if any time before the House of Assembly meets the Governor informs the Premier that he is about to reappoint him or to appoint another person as Premier, then the Premier, and all other ministers and parliamentary secretaries, are forthwith to vacate their offices." The Governor, Sir Richard Luyt, then informed Jagan that Burnham would be appointed as the new Premier, and Burnham was sworn into the office a few hours later that same day…

The Daily Telegraph, UK newspaper, side article, 15/12/1964 [11]



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[pic: imgur.com/TcR11M0.png ]

– President-Elect Colonel Sanders (R) meets with Alabama Governor George Wallace (D) in the latter’s office in Birmingham, Alabama, c. December 15, 1964; the two discussed the possibility of Wallace vacating the Governor’s seat to serve somewhere in Sanders’ cabinet; Wallace, seated in a wheelchair due to him recovering from back surgery after falling in his home several weeks earlier, declined interest in serving in any “lower level” position, considering his gubernatorial seat to be more powerful and influential (he also may have wanted to stay politically relevant, and was concerned that he would lose political momentum in a cabinet role that had “low visibility”); however, Wallace was “enthusiastic” about working with The Colonel on policies to promote racial reconciliation



Before The Colonel even entered office, his election had a positive effect on the economy. With his touting of pro-businesses policies, Wall Street reported Stock Market conditions improving in the days that immediately followed his victory being declared and confirmed. The business community was excited to welcome the next President, as they expected him to pass laws that would greatly benefit his fellow “captains of industry,” as Nelson Rockefeller’s brother David called him during one friendly visit to The Colonel’s homestead in December 1964. …Even KFC’s rivals such as McDonald’s looked forward to the new administration, albeit for a different reason – they privately hoped that the competition that was KFC would fall apart with The Colonel at the helm of a different ship…

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



On December 22, some drama unfolded in the Electoral College count when faithless electors in Georgia and Louisiana defected to Bryant, narrowing Sanders’ lead by seven votes, dropping his count to 279 – just ten votes away from a deadlocked college. Sanders supporters immediately sought contact with the remaining states, particularly North Carolina and Virginia. Fortunately, the chaos and trepidation was momentary, as the only other electors to defect were two of Lyndon Johnson’s votes from the state of Oregon, whom voted for Senator Morse.

– Josh Ozersky’s Sanders in 1964: An American Discovering America, University of Texas Press, 2012



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– President-Elect Colonel Sanders visiting the White House Grounds, c. late 1964



On January 1, for the second time in his life, Colonel Sanders divested his investments and personal business from KFC, and returned operations to Mildred. The Colonel, remember his son’s job performance as his right-hand man from 1957 to 1959, asked Harley to join him in the White House as his Chief of Staff. According to Lee Cummings, a relative of the Colonel in charge of KFC’s Midwestern franchises, Harley accepted despite knowing it would lead to accusations of nepotism.

– Josh Ozersky’s Sanders in 1964: An American Discovering America, University of Texas Press, 2012



2 January 1965: On this day in history, American footballer Joe Namath, quarterback for the University of Alabama, signs a three-year contract with the New York Jets of the American Football League (AFL) for an unprecedented $400,000 – the highest amount ever paid to a professional football player at the time; Namath signs the contract at a hotel in Miami, the day after completing his college football career in the Orange Bowl; the deal proves to be a breakthrough for the AFL in its attempt to compete with the established NFL, and would be a major reason for a major contract offer by the NBC television network for the rights to broadcast the newer league's games. [12]

– onthisday.co.uk




“The U.S. executive branch is organized much better than Kentucky’s is. My home state has so many commissions and departments it was almost overwhelming a times. This, though, I can work with so much better.”

“Colonel Sanders, can you tell us how you are going about picking people for your cabinet.”

“Well, when I sold my chicken to franchisees it was with a handshake instead of a contract. The fact that I was never once swindled by any of them proves that I am an excellent judge of character. So I’m meeting with many fine folks and pretty soon y’all will get to see which character’s will be choosin’ to work with.”

– President-Elect Sanders and a reporter at a press briefing at KFC headquarters, Florence, KY, 1/3/1965



JOHNSON GIVES HOPEFUL FAREWELL IN FINAL STATE-OF-THE-UNION ADDRESS

The Washington Post, 1/4/1965



Throughout this past year Cam has survived multiple assassination attempts; so I couldn’t see why see was so nervous.

“Are you blind?!” he shouted to me, “Look at all those helicopters circling around us like vultures!” he remarked as he gestured to the makeshift window. “And you’ve seen the reports – they’re closing in!”

I approached him, “Camilo, what are you saying?”

He sat down and sighed, “I am afraid that we have run out of options.”

“Don’t think like that! We can still repel them.”

Cam looked at me, the way a teacher looks at a student trying and failing to prove wrong the instructor, “Care to explain how?”

I thought for a second, “We could sneak past them and regroup – ”

“With who? Everyone’s gone. Apart from a few uncaptured operatives, there’s only you, me, Vilma and Rafael [del Pino]. From millions to 200 or so.”

Recruiting had been slow; most people are stuck, too afraid to resume the warfare, resigned to defeat at the hands of the American pigs and the traitorous collaborators. They have killed the island. “Well, then we can sneak away and continue the fight from abroad. Go to Haiti or Russia or – ”

Padre… supplies are low. We’re surrounded, and nobody is coming for us.”

“This…this can’t be the end, spending our last meals holed up in this mountainside…”

He sat closer to me, “Don’t feel bad; you’ve been a most loyal compatriot,” and then he called me by my first name. Finally. “We gave a noble stand and it was the reluctance of the Russians to help more that has led us to this place. You could not have done more, dear friend.”

It’s now or never, then, I thought. Just as I was turning to lean closer to him, a blinding roar threw us down.

“This is it!” Vilma ran past us from her post, “Grab a gun! They’ll never take us alive!” Then a second grenade killed her.

A swarm of Americans invaded our location. Grabbing an automatic, I crawled to the nearest exit. I charged down the south tunnel with Cam right behind me, and we tried to make it out but the bastards kept coming, like cockroaches in the night. At the clearing at the mountain’s edge, one of them got me twice in the shoulder.

But they didn’t pay attention to me once they recognized the man behind me.

I screamed in horror as Cam – oh, my dear Cam – he was cut down by the bastards.

In the chaos of their sadistic destruction I slipped away into the underbrush. I could hear the gunfire being replaced with faint cheers as I made my escape.

I am now by a river and I think the bullet wounds are infected. It is getting dark.

I am alone.

– 5 January 1965, final entry of The Diary of the Unknown Fighter (1958-1965), published 1996



Johnson was sure to have all the major news sources cover the announcement that the last of the Communist Cubans had been “found, trialed and executed by firing squad” over the weekend. …Johnson would continually mentions this during the 1966 midterms, attempting to salvage his legacy by crediting himself for “ending” The Cuban War.

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Four: The Power of the Presidency, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



“Charles Halleck was a moderate who in his many years as House party leader had failed to lead the party back to majority rule. Prior to the election, I planned on running against him to his right. But when we gained all those seats in 1964 – though we still lost, it was an amazing increase in seats – Halleck was untouchable. Still, the fact remains that I had not exactly been quiet over my discontent with Halleck, and that came back to bite me. The party bosses hadn’t appreciate it and they didn’t forget about it. Soon enough, I sensed that my time in public service would be of better use to the American people elsewhere.”

– retired politician Gerald Ford speaking at Conservatism Calls, a political think tank, 1993



HOUSE RE-AFFIRMS RULE TO PREVENT COMMITTEE BLOCKADE

Washington, D.C. – The United States House of Representatives voted on bipartisan lines, from 221 to 204, to preserve a 1963 Democratic-led change to its legislation-reviewing rules. The alteration in question prevents the House Rules Committee from blocking legislation that the committee opposes. Under the revised system, in place for the past two years, bills must be either cleared or rejected by the Rules Committee within 21 legislative days of it being introduced to the committee. If neither event happens, the Speaker of the House is then authorized to bring the legislation directly before the House for a direct vote to either pass or reject the bill…

The Chicago Tribune, 1/8/1965



9 January 1965: On this day in history, the “Hope Slide,” the largest landslide in Canada's history, occurred in the Cascade Mountains near Hope, British Columbia, killing free people; the landslide buried British Columbia’s Highway 3 under 47 million cubic meters (1.66 billion cubic feet) of rock at 7:00 in the morning; the four people who died were driving their vehicles, a convertible car and a pickup truck, along the highway and were unable to avoid being buried in the debris; when the landslide enveloped that portion of the highway, a Greyhound bus driver was able to back up quickly before he and his passengers were caught in the avalanche; the driver, David Hughes, put the bus into reverse at full speed for 1 1/2 miles, driving the vehicle backwards along the twisting, dark highway until they were out of danger, all while most of his passengers slept. [13]

– onthisday.co.uk




COLONEL SANDERS REVEALS POSSIBLE CABINET PICKS: Rocky, Civil Rights Leaders, Many More Weighed

Washington, D.C. – With their boss’s permission, Colonel Sanders’ transition team today released a short “incomplete” list of prominent politicians that he and the team are considering for his Presidential cabinet. The most prominent person on the list is Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York, whom is written down as a possible pick for Secretary of Labor, Commerce, or Health, Education and Welfare [14]. Other prominent politicians included are Senator Carl Curtis and former National Security Advisor Gordon Gray for Secretary of State and former US Congressman Eugene Siler of Kentucky – a “fiscal watchdog” and early opponent of US military actions along the Laos-Vietnam border – for Secretary of the Treasury; Siler, a fiercely conservative politician from Sanders' home state, ran for Governor of Kentucky in 1951 on an anti-corruption campaign. …George Dewey Clyde, the outgoing Governor of Utah, is written down as a possible pick for Secretary of Interior (likely due to his work improving his home state's infrastructure and preservations of natural resources during his two terms), and Senator Hickenlooper is being eyed for Secretary of Agriculture (possibly due to his work on the US Senate Agricultural Committee)… In step with the President-Elect’s style, the list features several less conventional potential nominees as well. State Senator Philip Willkie of Indiana, for instance, is under down under “diplomat.” …In step with his socially liberal strides, US Congresswoman Florence Dwyer is listed under Health, Education and Welfare. Two African-Americans are listed, too – Air Force General Benjamin O. Davis Jr. of DC is written down under “foreign policy,” and civil rights activist and employment reform advocate Whitney Young of Kentucky is written down under “domestic policy”. …while Arleigh Burke is suggested to lead the Navy, the position of Secretary of Defense is noticeably vacant. Nevertheless, the releasing of this list suggests that the upcoming Sanders administration may be more open to the public in regards to the bureaucratic goings-on in the nation’s capital.

– The Washington Post, 1/11/1965



…While Alfred Gruenther declined [the role of Secretary of Defense], he did point us in the direction of US Army General Chuck Bonesteel of Virginia… …After a looking over his reports on American health, a continuation of his predecessor’s 1957 report, I asked US Surgeon General Luther Terry to stay on in that role under my administration – “my administration,” a phrase I was still getting used to if you can believe it – because Terry, like myself, was very critical of all vices, and called for an increase in people understanding the dangerous effects of smoking…

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



…Meanwhile in France, de Gaulle’s attempts to talk to protest “leaders” are reportedly failing while attempts to scale back the police hostility are only emboldens the protestor’s spirits. The nation’s industry is continuing to suffer…

– BBC broadcast, 1/12/1965



On January 1, 1965, Malcolm X survived a jail bombing while serving awaiting his trial verdict. Twelve days later, X was acquitted. …Even today, the “self-defense-in-advance” plea is met with either ridicule or understanding, pending which neighborhood you visit…

– Herb Boyd and Ilyasah Shabazz’s Malcolm vs. Martin: Violence and Peace After the End of Segregation, Chicago Third World Press, 2013



DE GAULLE STEPS DOWN!

Paris, France – In a surprising turn of events, Charles de Gaulle, the President of France, has agreed to step down as President in a deal struck with labor leaders. As per the rules of their constitution, the vacancy of the Presidency automatically leads to the implementation of a new Presidential election. De Gaulle will be eligible to run in this election in what is being seen as a test of his political popularity and strength. In exchange, the protest leaders are urging all protestors to return to their classrooms and workplaces as plans for a candidate to oppose de Gaulle are formed. The exact date of this new election has yet to be officially determined…

– The Observer, 1/16/1965



“We have yet to declare war on poverty, illiteracy, and the worst of Earth’s diseases, and are yet to end the threat of nuclear war. But in the past four years we have created programs like Medicare, Medicaid, and Head Start, to move America into becoming a truly greater society… I must once again thank all who worked towards making these dreams become realities. Presiding over them has been the greatest honor.”

– Excerpt from President Lyndon B. Johnson’s farewell address, 1/20/1965



And that is how Sanders, a foulmouthed mountain man, a hot-tempered old coot whom once had “an insatiable libido” in his younger years, a sixth-grade dropout who worked as a farmhand, army mule-tender, fireman, railroad hand, lawyer, insurance salesman, ferryboat operator, Chamber of Commerce secretary, tire salesman, midwife, gas station owner, motel owner, and restauranteur because he couldn’t hold down a job, ended up becoming President of the United States.

– narration from political activist Cris Ericson in her allegedly unbiased documentary Feathers and Blood: The Myth of Colonel Sanders, 2016



The Five Best and Five Worst Aspects of the Lyndon Johnson Presidency

The Best Aspects

1 The Civil Rights Act of 1962 – As a master of legislative ways, his Administration ended up doing more for Civil Rights than any Presidency since Lincoln.
2 Gender Wage Gap Narrowed
3 Education Programs Expanded
4 Medicare/Medicaid – The popular expansion of government involvement in healthcare to ensure insurance to the nation’s seniors, disabled, and low-income contributed to the improvement of the quality of life in the United States.
5 The Space Program – Johnson’s passion and generous funding for NASA culminated in the American Moon Landing and launched the U.S. ahead of all other nations in the fields of METS (math-electricity-technology-science) research for years.

The Worst Aspects
1 The Salad Oil Recession – Failure to detect Tino De Angelis’ fraud snowballed into the US entering a recession that contributed to Johnson losing re-election.
2 Rise in Involvement in Indochina – After recovering from warfare in Cuba, Americans were divided over increasing hostilities along the Laos-Vietnam border, and fear another war contributed to Lyndon being a one-term President as well.
3 US Tariffs on European Products – Meant to support the American auto industry, the 1963 “Chicken Tax” instead limited trade between the US and its political allies in Western Europe, which did not exactly help when the Salad Oil Recession occurred
4 Raising the National Debt – While the social programs of his term have remained popular, they came at the cost of adding almost $39 billion, or roughly 12%, to the national budget, creating a dangerous precedent for future administrations.
5 The Cuba War – the most divisive part of his Presidency, Johnson’s decision to oust a Communist dictatorship headed by Fidel Castro (and later, Che Guevara, and later still, Camilo Cienfuegos) led to a war that took much longer than anyone expected it too, and left tens of thousands of Americans dead. Even after the war unofficially ended in 1963, deadly Communist bombings plagued the island, and the US military remaining there ultimately proved too unpopular to too many people.

Overall: Johnson’s legacy is mixed and polarizing; scholars consider him an above-average leader due to domestic achievements, while public opinion is divided over those and his foreign policy. With these consideration combined, Johnson is often placed him in the top and (more-often) middle tier of best US Presidents.

– The President Lyndon B. Johnson National Historic Site website, c. 2025



“Ladies and Gentlemen, I am more than humbled. …We are gathered here to celebrate the peaceful transition of power that is a starling example of the democratic process that we in America relish and enjoy. That same privilege, though, is not shared by our fellow members of mankind the world over, and as the greatest nation on earth, and a testament to democratic ideals, we owe it to ourselves and the earth to fix this injustice and support foreign fights for freedom... Strengthening our allies will strengthen ourselves, and ensure that our free way of life will never disappear... As we start this new administration, we will all remember throughout the next four or even eight years that our strength and unity and love for one another is what makes the United States of America one great big country and not fifty little ones.”

– Sanders inaugural speech, 1/20/1965



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Colonel Harland David Sanders, the 36th President of the United States of America



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S):
[1] This interaction was written after listening to how Humphrey talked to Johnson after conceding to Nixon IOTL: ( youtube video: YttmffiWyjA ) Of course, the situation here is different, but it gave me an idea of how Johnson conceding to Sanders would go in terms of what they would possibly say to each other.
[2] Johnson’s unruliness here is based on the testimony on his OTL behavior found here: https://www.nytimes.com/1988/08/21/magazine/president-lyndon-johnson-the-war-within.html
[3] 8 new Republican senators minus 1 new Democratic Senator = a net gain of 7 seats for the GOP. Possibly notable altered results: Conn.: 54%-45%; IN: 50.1%-49.5%; MD: 50.3%-49.7%; Mich.: 54.4%-45.3% as Elly Peterson’s down-to-earth personality was similar to the Colonel’s; MN: 55.3%-44.3%; PA: 57.6%-42.1%; TN: 50.4%-49.6%; TX: Alger split the conservative vote (Yarborough 49.8%, Bush 41.5%, Alger 8.7%); UT: the Colonel’s connections to the state boosted Wilkinson enough for him to win 50.5%-49.5%; Wisc.: 52.2%-47.7%.
[4] Changes from OTL: Due to the Colonel’s rising popularity, the following 61 Republicans won their respective elections: Robert French (AL-5), Lowell Thomas Jr. (Alaska at-large), Sam Steiger (AZ-3), J. E. Hinshaw (Ark.-3), Robert C. Cline (CA-22), Jerry L. Pettis (CA-33), Patrick M. Martin (over John V. Tunney!) (CA-38), Donald G. Brotzman (CO-2), John Chenoweth (CO-3), incumbent Abner W. Sibal (Conn.-4), Roscoe Pickett (GA-4), Edward Y. Chapin (GA-7), John Mattmiller (ID-1), Roger H. Zion (Indiana-8), incumbent Earl Wilson (over Lee H. Hamilton!) (Indiana-9), Don A. Tabbert (Indiana-11), incumbent Fred Schwengel (Iowa-1), incumbent John Henry Kyl (Iowa-4), incumbent Ben F. Jensen (Iowa-7), incumbent Gene Snyder (over HIP candidate Louie Nunn!) (Kentucky-3), Clyde Middleton (KY-4), Walter Clay Vaan Hoose (KY-7), David C. Treen (LA-2), Floyd O. Crawford (LA-6) (after a recount due to narrowness), William S. Walker (LA-8), George Meader (Michigan-2), incumbent August E. Johansen (Michigan-3), incumbent Victor A. Knox (Michigan-11), Richard D. Kuhn (Michigan-19), Robert J. Odegard (MN-6), incumbent Ralph F. Beermann (Neb.-1), incumbent Louis C. Wyman (NH-1), incumbent Milton W. Glenn (NJ-2), Marcus Daly (NJ-3), incumbent Frank C. Osmers Jr. (NJ-9), incumbent Steven Boghos Derounian (NY-3), Luigi R. Marano (NY-15), incumbent Robert R. Barry (NY-25), incumbent Katharine St. George (NY-27), incumbent J. Ernest Wharton (NY-28), incumbent R. Walter Riehlman (NY-34), incumbent John R. Pillion (NY-39), James C. Gardner (NC-4), W. A. Armfield (NC-5), incumbent Don L. Short (ND-2), incumbent Carl W. Rich (OH-1), incumbent Paul F. Schenck (OH-3), incumbent Homer E. Abele (OH-10), Oliver P. Bolton (OH-at large), Bayard C. Auchincloss (OK-6), incumbent George Atlee Goodling (PA-19), incumbent James D. Weaver (PA-24), incumbent Irene Baker (TN-2), Robert B. James (TN-9), Ed Foreman (TX-16), Robert Price (TX-18), incumbent Walt Horan (WA-5), incumbent Thor C. Tollefson (WA-6), incumbent K. William Stinson (WA-7), incumbent Henry C. Schadeberg (Wisc.-1), incumbent William Van Pelt (WA-6), and incumbent "legacy" politician William H. Harrison (WY at-large). 31 incumbents defend their seats, plus 30 more win seats. The presence of H.I.P. candidates on some ballots siphoned off votes from conservative/populist candidates here and there.
[5] This “clip” is a paraphrase of a snippet found here: https://www.damninteresting.com/colonels-of-truth/ (page 8 when printed out)
[6] Seriously! His tombstone has his face on it and he looks like a stunt double for his famous Uncle Harland!: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/60614535/james-wilbur-sanders
[7] Family connection discovered on findagrave
[8] Ibid.
[9] Much of this section is based on or directly pulled from the OTL information, data, and statistics found here: https://australianfoodtimeline.com.au/kentucky-fried-chicken-opens/
[10] OTL, and found/pulled from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/December_1964
[11] Most of this was pulled from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/December_1964#cite_note-62
[12] Pulled from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/January_1965#January_2,_1965_(Saturday)
[13] And this was pulled from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/January_1965#January_9,_1965_(Saturday)
[14] I'm actually uncertain if Rockefeller would go for a cabinet spot or not. Anyone have any thoughts on the matter?
 
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Post 14
Post 14: Chapter 22



Chapter 22: January 1965 – July 1965



“You are who you choose to be”

– Hogarth Hughes



COLONEL SANDERS’ ADMINISTRATION AT THE BEGINNING OF 1965

Cabinet:
Secretary of State: US Senator Carl Curtis of Nebraska
Undersecretary of State: former National Security Advisor Gordon Gray of Maryland
Secretary of the Treasury: former US Congressman Eugene Siler of Kentucky
Undersecretary of the Treasury: Former state Treasurer and state Secretary of State Thelma Stovall of Kentucky
Secretary of Defense: US Army General Charles H. Bonesteel III of Virginia
Undersecretary of Defense: former Cumberland County Sheriff and former US War Claims Commission Chair Pearl Carter Pace of Kentucky
Attorney General: former Deputy Attorney General Lawrence Edward Walsh of New York
Postmaster General: former State Supreme Court Justice Leif Erickson of Minnesota
Secretary of the Interior: outgoing Governor George Dewey Clyde of Utah
Secretary of Agriculture: US Senator Bourke Hickenlooper of Iowa
Administrator of the Farmers Home Administration: former Governor Archie Gubbrud of South Dakota
Secretary of Commerce: economist and University of Chicago professor Milton Friedman of Illinois [1]
Secretary of Labor: former Deputy Secretary of Labor and former USIA Director Arthur Larson of South Dakota
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare: Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York
Undersecretary of Health: retiring Chief of Cardiovascular Surgery at the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children William Thornton Mustard of Michigan
Chairman of the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Wellness: former Governor and AFL Commissioner Joe Foss of South Dakota
Secretary of Transportation (created February 1965): businessman and railroad executive John C. Coolidge III of Massachusetts

Cabinet-Level Positions:
Director of the Central Intelligence Agency: incumbent Director Allen W. Dulles of New York
Director of the Federal Bureau of Information: incumbent Director J. Edgar Hoover of Washington, D.C.
US Trade Representative: US Congresswoman Florence Dwyer of New Jersey

The President’s Executive Office:
White House Chief of Staff: former Secretary of Defense Neil H. McElroy of Ohio
White House Deputy Chief of Staff: campaign deputy registrar Mary Dent Crisp of Pennsylvania
White House Counsel: political strategist and campaign co-manager F. Clifton “Cliff” White of New York
Counselor to the President: congressional staff member and advisor Bryce Harlow of Oklahoma
Chief Domestic Policy Advisor: civil rights activist and employment reform advocate Whitney Young of Kentucky
Chief Economic Policy Advisor: economist and financial advisor Sylvia Porter of New York
Chief Foreign Policy Advisor: publisher on the political economics of national security and atomic energy economist professor J. R. Schlesinger of New York
Chief National Security Advisor: former W.A.C. Lieutenant Colonel Ruth Briggs of Rhode Island
Director of the Office of Management and Budget: Continental Illinois Bank Vice President Robert Mayo of Illinois
Other Counselors and Advisors: civil rights attorney Wayne M. Collins of California, African-American speechwriter Andrew Hatcher of New Jersey, intern and assistant speechwriter Jennifer Salt of California, others
White House Communications Director: campaign information director Lee Edwards of Illinois
White House Appointments Secretary: outgoing Deputy Assistant to the President Liddy Hanford of Washington, D.C.
White House Press Secretary: campaign press secretary Ronald Ziegler of California
Administrator of the Small Business Administration: State Senator and small business owner Marshall Parker of South Carolina
President Sanders’ personal secretary: incumbent personal secretary Wanda Boner of Kentucky [2]

Other Notable Members:
Surgeon General: incumbent Luther Leonidas Terry of Alabama
Solicitor General (representative of the Federal Government before the Supreme Court): columnist and former US Senator Joseph H. Ball of Minnesota
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff: technician and former Assistant Secretary of the Navy William B. Franke of New York
Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff: US Air Force Lieutenant General Benjamin O. Davis Jr. of Washington, D.C.
Secretary of the Army: West Virginia University President Elvis Jacob Stahr Jr. of West Virginia
Secretary of the Navy: Admiral Arleigh Albert Burke of Maryland
Federal Reserve Chairman: incumbent William McChesney Martin of Missouri
NASA Director: incumbent James Edwin Webb of North Carolina

Notable US Ambassadors (in alphabetical order):
To Argentina: engineer and industrialist Edgar Kaiser Sr. of California
To Belgium: journalist for the National Review John Rensselaer Chamberlain of Connecticut
To Cambodia: US Air Force Major General William R. “Killer” Kane of California
To Canada: former Governor and former US Senator Lawrence Wetherby of Kentucky
To Cuba: former Ambassador to Spain John Davis Lodge of Connecticut
To France: former White House Assistant Staff Secretary John Sheldon Doud Eisenhower of Maryland
To India: incumbent diplomat Dalip Singh Saund of California
To Italy: oil tycoon, art collector, and social programs promoter Algur H. Meadows of Georgia
To Japan: incumbent diplomat G. Mennen “Soapy” Williams of Michigan
To Laos: businesswoman, aviation pioneer, WAAC co-founder, and WASP co-founder Lieutenant Colonel Jacqueline Cochran of California
To Mexico: lawyer and Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy Edward Hidalgo of New York
To Saudi Arabia: oil industrialist and 1964 gubernatorial nominee Jack Crichton of Texas
To South Africa: mining engineer Allan H. Hoover of Iowa
To South Vietnam: diplomat and former US Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts
To Taiwan: businessman, banker, former State Representative and State Senator Philip Willkie of Indiana
To the U.K.: former Undersecretary of State Herbert Clark Hoover Jr. of Iowa
To the U.N.: former Ambassador to Japan, former Ambassador to Indonesia, and former Ambassador to Czechoslovakia John Moore Allison of Nebraska
To the U.S.S.R.: former Secretary of State Christian A. Herter Sr. of Massachusetts
To West Germany: businessman Malcolm Forbes of New Jersey

– ColonelSandersPresidentialLibrary.org.usa/cabinet_members/1965



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[pic: imgur.com/esRtcUd.png ]
The Cuban War, as it is known in the United States, also known as the Cuban Civil War in Cuba and as the Cuban-American War in Europe and elsewhere, was a military conflict on the island nation of Cuba. While it officially lasted from 1961 to 1963, it had its roots in the 1950s and saw American forces remain in Cuba until 1965. The conflict began as a Civil War between the Communist Cubans (led by the Cuban “Gang of Four” and supported by the Soviet Union and other communist allies) and the nationalist Cuban Democratic Revolutionary Front (led by the Cuban Revolutionary Council leader Dr. Jose Miro Cardona and supported by the United States, France, the U.K., and other anti-communist allies).

After several events in early 1961 increased hostilities between the U.S. and Communist Cuba, the U.S. invaded Cuba with the intent of replacing the Communist government with a democratic one. Despite military successes, heavy casualties caused the war to become unpopular within the United States by early 1963.

The composition of the conflict changed when the U.S. military informally declared the War a success in June 1963, shortly before U.S. Defense Secretary Homer Litzenburg’s passing. Military activities in the months that followed, however, suggested the war was still ongoing, just being approach with a different strategy, as the U.S. began treating the Communist Cubans as guerillas and insurgents. As 1963 turned into 1964, the increase in domestic terrorist “Cam” bombs made the US military presence unpopular among nationalist Cubans. The 1961-1964 rise in Cuban refugees contributed to further rise in disapproval of the war back in the United States, which culminated in the rejection of US President Lyndon Johnson in the US Presidential election of November 1964.

The war came to a sudden conclusion when the final remnants of the Communist Cuban Front were defeated in January 1965, right before Johnson left office. With the last communist stronghold collapsed, remaining Communists diehards fled the country.

The Cuban people slowly likened to capitalist leadership due to humanitarian efforts by the Peace Corps, the WHO, and the UN (concerning food, medicine, and first aid for those burned in scorched earth policies and bombings) from 1964 to 1966. A January 1965 Bill passed in the U.S. Congress to fund programs to send farming experts from the US to Cuba to teach locals the latest techniques, and develop mechanical equipment and industrial skills, proved immensely popular on the island.

The war had major ramifications on the societies of Cuba and the United States, as anti-war activism sparked the “shoutnik” movement and contributed to American music, art, film and pop culture. The war is considered a Cold War-era proxy war from some perspectives.

– clickopedia.co.usa



“Well I think the fact that he abandoned his customers for the White House shows where his priorities lie. I’d never give up the good customers of McDonald’s for some other job, that’s for sure!”

– Ray Kroc to a reporter, 1/20/1965



On January 22, John Y. Brown Jr., then 31, joins the KFC as a junior board member. After getting a law degree in 1960, Brown had entered his father’s law practice while also serving in the US Army Reserve from 1959 to late 1964, getting out of Cuba with a doctor referral. After leaving his father’s law firm in 1963 to pursue a career in business, he campaigned for Father in Kentucky despite being a registered Democrat. His hiring process had been overseen by Millie, and while she saw him as an energetic go-getter reminiscent of our father, I was unsure of his character. Brown was interested in operating company’s chain of barbeque restaurants and production facilities. When I first met with him, he was convivial and accommodating – in other words, he acted like a real brown-noser. So I, together with Dave [Thomas] and other, kept a collective eye on him.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



I’ve only had two rules: Do all you can & do it the best you can. It’s the only way you ever get that feeling of accomplishing something.” [3] The Colonel started his first meeting in the White House with this proclamation. With the official cabinet not fully assembled, as it would be for another month, the meeting consisted of his inner circle for a discussion on the planned agendas of each cabinet. Laying out a 12-point plan for domestic issues, it became very evident that the rumors of his management style were true – It was a signature part of his character that he thrust himself into wherever the action was hottest.” [4] …In his autobiography, Sanders explained that “Like a woodpecker in a lumberyard, I was busy and I liked it! The first thing I did was read everything. Even if I didn’t fully understand all the fancy phrases, reading it as best as you can is still better than not reading it at all!” …When it came time to discuss foreign policy, the new President remarked “Lady and Gentlemen, I have here a memorandum that Hubert Humphrey presented to me just as he was leaving the office of Vice President. In it, he says, and I quote, ‘these may be the most fateful decisions of your Administration…whatever you decide, we will be taking historic gambles and we won’t know for sure whether they were right until months or perhaps years afterwards. Your Administration has a heavy investment in policies which can be jeopardized by an escalation in Vietnam: the President’s image, the development of the Sino-Soviet rift, progress on détente and arms control…reordering relations with our European allies, progress at the United Nations, stabilizing defense expenditures,’ [5], the list goes on and on. Folks, I agree with Mr. Humphrey, that essentially, we can’t let this Indo-Chinese hootenanny snowball into another Cuban hoedown!” Sanders soon enough would meet with the Joint Chiefs and CIA to discuss how to “maintain order” – to limit the spread of Communism without resorting to bloodshed – in southeast Asia.

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



…Keeping true to his background in business, President Sanders today signed an executive order eliminating tariffs from several industries in order to promote trade. Upon signing the order, Sanders proclaimed “businesses can’t be productive if they’re bound by things that are counterproductive.”

– NBC News, 1/29/1965 broadcast



In late January 1965, Patricia, uh, Mo’s wife, was severely injured in a bus accident. She already suffered from arthritis, so with this new tragedy, Mo decided he had to spend more time with her. He decided to stay in Congress but also step down from some committees in the face of the family emergency. Our friends on the hill were accommodating, though Speaker McCormack believed it was unwise to maintain any committee work at all. The incident may have been a blessing in disguise for them, though, as it made their marriage and love for each other even stronger than it was before the accident, it seems.

– Stewart Lee Udall (D-AZ), 1999 NBC interview



COLONEL SANDERS TO FRANCE: “VIVE LES VIEUX!”

Paris, FRANCE – During his first trip overseas as President of the United States, Colonel Sanders met with France’s Interim President Alain Poher, and later spoke at a rally in Paris supporting former President Charles De Gaulle ahead of the upcoming French Presidential election. …The Colonel confessed to the crowd “I’ve tried to learn French, but the lessons never took,” before giving his prepared speech, with which he made many positive comments to De Gaulle. Noting that the two men are the same age, Sanders said “De Gaulle has done an amazing job as President, and I hope I myself will do so well a job as President,” and added “we [old people] have been around long enough to know how to govern!”

– The Calgary Herald, 2/4/1965



...Back in Washington, D.C., President Sanders has announced his support of Reverend Martin Luther King and others in the promotion of founding “Citizen Oversight Commissions” in several states and cities with high crime rates…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS News, 2/9/1965 broadcast



Sanders loved the back-and-forth with people, citizens, press, even some politicians... In February, Sanders worked with lawmakers on the hill to double the tax credit for small businesses, and promoted the use of cost-benefit analyses when reviewing all bills. Sanders also increased funding for the Small Business Administration by 40%. Ironic as it sounded, it was true that Sanders had a distrust for corporations [6]; from his experience working for the Shell Oil company during the 1920s, he knew that if government agency rejected supporting small, growing enterprises, they would always be vulnerable to larger competitors. Other major parts of the Colonel’s 1965 tax plans were the 1965 Tax Reduction Act, cutting tax rates unilaterally at 10%, and finally, introducing a minimum standard reduction – an idea tossed around during the busy LBJ administration.

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



On February 12, 1965, Sanders invited Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R-KY) to the White House for a talk in the Oval Office; Sherman supported opening negotiations with the North Vietnamese. Upon further talks with several other, more hawkish politicians, Sanders quietly made an agreement with the leaders of Cambodia, Thailand, the U.K.’s Douglas-Home (due to their ports of Hong Kong and Singapore in the region) and Burma to provide intel on regional Communist activities in exchange for protection from communist insurgents within their own respective borders. This came with a boost in the military and CIA’s budget, much to their delight, but that boost came with a micromanaging President whom demanded to be kept in the loop on all military and CIA activities…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



…On Sunday, the voters of France went to the polls in the first of two rounds of voting to determine who will be their President for the next seven years. Francois Mitterrand of the Convention of Republican Institutions, or CIR, edged out second-place finisher Charles de Gaulle (of the UNR); the other candidates of the ballots were Jean Lecanuet (of Popular Republican Movement (or MRP)), Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour of the Miscellaneous Far Right (or DVED)), Pierre Marcilhacy of the European Liberal Party (or PLE) and Marcel Barbu of the Miscellaneous Left (or DVG). De Gaulle and Mitterrand will proceed to the final round on the 28th of the month…

– BBC News, 2/14/1965 broadcast



SANDERS ORDERS STEEL PRICES PROBE

…In the process of organizing a budget, President Sanders today ordered a probe into the determining factors of steel prices nationwide... US Steel production has been in decline since 1959, and dipped even further following the Salad Oil Recession…

– The Chicago Tribune, 2/15/1965



I was among the slim number of Democrats to support the Essential Education Bill, one of the first works of legislature that the Colonel had a say over in regards to what was actually in it. The law would decentralize school funding and connect it further to the federal government without giving the federal and statewide governments too much control over certain aspects. I remember explaining it to a reporter as “a checks-and-balance system similar to our very government – everyone must work together and no one has absolute power.” The Colonel was enthusiastic to see the legislative system work at the Federal level. And his energy was really quite infectious! The bill was introduced in February and was passed on bipartisan lines just months later…

– Coya Knutson’s Coya’s Story: A Life in Legislation, Simon & Schuster Incorporated, 1991



COLONEL VISITS TROOPS IN INODCHINA

Luange Prabang, LAOS – In his second Presidential trip abroad, the Colonel flew to Laos to meet with our boys fighting for freedom along that nation’s border, and to meet with Laos’s monarchial ruler, Sisavang Vatthana, to review the new administration’s war strategy against the subcontinent’s dual scourges – the Pathet Lao and the Viet-Kong, two branches of Communism that will undoubtedly be defeated like the Communist Cuban Front was two months ago…

Stars and Stripes, 2/25/1965



FRANCE ELECTS A SOCIALIST PRESIDENT!

Paris, FRANCE – In a stunning turn of events, Charles De Gaulle has lost an election bid for another Presidential term despite months of attempted damage control. Many pundits believes this to be the cause of De Gaulle’s prior support of the War in Cuba despite vocal opposition to this position by many in the country whom preferred focus to be on domestic issues... The 48-year-old independent Francois Mitterrand will be sworn in as France’s new President on March 7… Already, the results are frightening conservatives in the U.K. and the states, as Mitterrand had support from several socialist political parties. "Will he uphold the country's democratic processes or will he become the latest puppet of the Soviet regime? The latter is what we are concerned about," says the Home Secretary...

– The Financial Times, UK newspaper, 28/2/1965



…In response to the 1963-64 anti-war movements abroad, and the 1965 election of Francois Mitterrand in France, Biko, then just 18 and beginning to study medicine, began becoming more involved in the political anti-Apartheid activism environment found in South Africa…

– clickopedia.co.usa/Steve_Biko



Sanders made 58 appoints to the US Court of Appeals in the first two years of his presidency alone. The very first two nominations – both announced on March 1 – demonstrated the Colonel’s understanding of compromise; two seats were vacant in the D.C. Circuit, and Sanders paired a liberal judge with a conservative judge to pacify politicians of respective allegiance. The conservative nominee was George Edwards MacKinnon (1906-1995) former US Congressman and former US Attorney for the District of Minnesota. A conservative so far right he makes Goldwater look like George McGovern, [7] MacKinnon “always aimed to get his way, and, yet, who always enjoyed his colleagues and fostered collegiality on the court….loved by Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, and sought the approval of neither to find his own sense of worth,” according to his obituary [8]. MacKinnon was paired with Sylvia A. Bacon (b. 1931), the very first woman ever nominated to the D.C. Circuit. After serving as a judicial law clerk and several position within the U.S. Justice Department since 1956, concerns over her judicial inexperience were cut short by her impressive performance during confirmation hearings over the next two months, leading to her narrow confirmation on April 26 (for comparison, MacKinnon was confirmed only 23 days after being nominated).

[snip]

…Purple Heart-winning WWII veteran Col. Howard Ravenscroft Johnson (1903-1990) [9] was nominated for the Eighth Circuit on May 18, 1965…

[snip]

On July 27, 1965, Sanders nominated civil rights attorney Benjamin Franklin Shobe (b. 1920) of Kentucky for a vacated seat on the Sixth Circuit. The Colonel’s African-American judicial appointee, the choice of Shobe was applauded by African-American Judge William Henry Hastie Jr. (b. 1904) of the Third Circuit… Sanders’ second judicial appointment of an African-American judge came on January 19, 1966, when Thomas Russell Jones Jr. (b. 1913) of New York was nominated for a seat on the Second Circuit. The choice was lauded by civil rights supporter and Chief Judge of the Fifth Court of Appeals Circuit John Robert Brown (b. 1909), whom, was seen even in 1965, was viewed a frontrunner for a US Supreme Court seat should one become vacant during Sanders’ term (along with fellow Fifth Circuit judge John Minor Wisdom).

[snip]

As the prosecuting attorney of Yakima County from 1952 to 1961, and a state Supreme Court judge since 1961, Sanders’ November 6, 1967 nomination of Alan Angus McDonald (b. 1927) for a seat on the Ninth Circuit was met with some partisan opposition, but nevertheless was successful

– Linda Greenhouse and Morton J. Horwitz’s The Warren Court and the Pursuit of Justice (Third Edition), Sunrise Publishing, 2010



YOUTH PROTEST OUTSIDE WHITE HOUSE REACHES 250

…“We want the Colonel to pull troops out of Indochina. He’s been in office for over a month – get to it already, Colonel!” expressed one of the activists…

– The New York Post, 3/2/1965



“Hello?”

“Oh, Director Hoover! How Do?!”

“Um, just fine, how do you do?”

“Dandy. Ah, please, take a seat, sir.”

“Thank you.”

“You know, I’ve just got to hand it to you, Hoover – for the most part you’ve sure done a real bang-up job keeping America safe from Communists and the like.”

“Uh, thank you. Uh I was told you wanted to see me about something important.”

“Yes, I wanted to get your opinion on this Mitterin’ fella they got over in France now and if we’re going to see such riots erupt over here.”

“Oh him! The new man in Paris is bad news, sir, Communist sympathizer through and through. Already we’re receiving reports of representatives of Romania – a part of Russia’s Warsaw Pact, sir – reaching out to Mitterrand’s government. How do you plan to handle him, Mr. President? Because I think we should continue keeping an eye on him. We can’t have him getting too sympathetic to the Soviets, now can we?”

“Hmm…”

“Sir?”

“It’s a difficult moral question, for sure. I mean, this Mitterin’ fella was the people’s choice over there. But at the same time he could pose a threat to us. But that’s just it – there’s nothing clearly threatenin’ us.”

“Clearly, sir – now that’s important. Nothing clearly. For all we know, hidden Soviet operatives were behind the riots that led to his rise, the same kind of operatives I suspect can be found in the NAACP.”

“…Come again, Hoover?”

“You know, Mr. President, those Commie-Negroes – King, Abernathy, the Evers Brothers – I’m certain they’re all working to bring this country to its knees.”

“King, a Commie? Heh heh! Sir, Martin Luther King is a dear friend of mine. He’s not communist – the man just wants fairness and equal treatment for all. How is that Communist?”

“Sir…um, we’ve been monitoring their activities for quite a while now and, well, what I mean to say, Colonel, is that the man’s okay with communism seeping into the minds of our youth. His talk is dangerous.”

“With all due respect, Director, I think you’re confusing Martin with Malcolm. That Mr. X fella is the one rootin’ for hatred. King’s rootin’ for peace.”

“Uurghhh…I think we’re getting off-topic here. Um, I believe you mentioned something about riots?”

“Oh, yes, I’m thinking about how young people have been stirring things up these past four years. I’m worried they’re now turnin’ to attackin’ me. Two days ago there was a demonstration right outside, over there-a-ways. It’s like…They’re impatient, to put it straight. I’m addressing their concerns – shoot, I’m meetin’ with some Senators later today in fact – but politickin’ at the national federal level is a lot more difficult than you’d think. It’s a lot slower. So much slower…”

“Uh, yeah, well then just say the word and we’ll crack down on them real good!”

“What? No, no, I don’t want that!”

“Uhhh…Colonel, you’re the President, right? Alright, that means, you’re the leader. That means you have to show the people that the federal government cannot be pushed around.”

“But bustin’ the skulls of people exercising their right to assembly is what dictatorships do, Hoover. You only do that sort of thing if they’re known criminals or pinko spies. I’m surprised you didn’t learn that after that whole San Francisco incident.”

“Beg pardon?”

“You know, that whole thing that happened back in 1960, when some students protested a H.U.A.C. meetin’. You messed that up bad.”

“What.”

“You had youngin’s fallin’ and gettin’ dragged down steep marble stairs, Hoover. That stuff must have hurt.”

“Colonel, if I remember correctly – and I believe I am because I came across it after your election – you sent me a letter congratulating me on a job well done for that. Those students were Communist sympathizers and disturbing the peace – we made a whole documentary on it!”

“Well, Yes, but I’ve thought more about it since then, and I – ”

“Those punk were the same kind of shoutnik pinkos that are now a threat to you and to the country. If you want the protests and the criticisms to cease, you have to show the traitors who’s in charge!”

“I’ve been told this line is called a cliché, but… fear just leads to rebellion, not respect.”

“Oh, that’s a platitude spun by the east coast university snobs too detached from reality to understand that America has an infection, and its name is Communism.”

“Hoover, I appreciate your passionate patriotism, but if we throw out the Bill of Rights it’s, well it’s like throwing the baby out with the tub water! The freedoms found in this country is what makes it worth protecting in the first place. Without them, we’re no better than the Soviets! So…Director Hoover, from now on, I want you to lighten up on the crackdowns. Understand?”

“Sure – I mean…of course, Mr. President.”

“Wonderful! This was a good talk. Very production. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to get ready to meet with uh, Senators Dirksen and Mansfield.”

“Good day.”

– Transcript of a discussion between President Sanders and Director Hoover in the Oval Office, nature of recording device classified until 2029; disclosed by the FBI in 2012 alongside numerous other files from the 1960s, 3/4/1965



…Despite the Colonel President’s admiration for him, Hoover greatly disliked Sanders, firstly due to his criminal record [10] (Hoover once told Tolson he considered “The Criminal Colonel [was] unworthy of the Presidency”) and secondly due to his perceived naïveté in regards to the Colonel’s optimistic worldview. Hoover gave the Colonel lip service, and would reportedly even lie right to the President’s face…

– Ronald Kessler’s Clyde Tolson and the Cult of J. Edgar Hoover, Resistance E-Publishing, 2016



“In, oh, about around early March of ’65, I’d say, The Colonel, after seeing all the pictures of American flags being burned, um, on TV back in ’63, uh, he decided to do something about it. Now he could have outlawed the practice and gotten himself accused of suppressing freedom, but instead he push for textile regulations on flammable materials in order to ensure that all American flags sold in the, uh, the United States were, in his words ‘incredibly resistant to fire,’ in order to hamper any more burn-flagging. I thought that was a very clever and ingenious move!”

– Barry Goldwater, informal 1990 interview



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[pic: imgur.com/YBNIux5.png ]
Left to Right: Harley Sanders of Kentucky (guest attending function), Carl Curtis of Nebraska (Secretary of State), William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania (Vice President), Colonel Sanders of Kentucky (President), Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York (Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare), Whitney Young of Kentucky (Chief Domestic Policy Advisor), Sylvia Porter of Illinois (Chief Economic Policy Advisor), George Dewey Clyde of Utah (Secretary of the Interior), and Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts (US Ambassador to Vietnam).

– Captioned photograph of the Colonel with members of his administration at a political function in Washington, D.C., Life Magazine e-archives, 3/5/1965



SANDERS’ FIRST MEETING WITH FULL CABINET GOES SMOOTHLY: Social Programs, Economics Discussed

… “The three most important things for my department to handle over the next four years will be inflation, inflation, and inflation,” said Treasury Secretary Siler. Siler then unveiled a proposed budget for his department, explaining its goal is to save the Federal government money during the upcoming fiscal year of 1965 without cutting social security or raising taxes on the poor and middles classes. “For sections getting their budgets slashed, the focus is on wasteful spending,” the President added. “if a section is pouring money into something with little results, it needs to figure out an entirely new approach!” President Sanders also called for a continuation and expansion of the road work programs established during the Eisenhower administration. “Throughout my careers and my campaigns, I’ve driven up and down more roads and rails than the average four-wheeled explorer, and I can say that we need to continue on the movement to improve and monitor the maintenance of America’s modern transportation networks.”

The Washington Post, 3/7/1965



This year’s St. Patrick’s Day profiles of famous Irish-Americans takes us to the White House, home to several Irish-American Presidents since 1829.

Today's Irish-American being celebrated is Harland David "Colonel" Sanders. Sanders was America’s 15th President of Irish ancestry. Andrew Jackson (Scotch-Irish and English) was our first Irish President, and Harry Truman was the last before Sanders. The other Presidents with Irish ancestry were the following (in order of their administrations): James Knox Polk (Scotch-Irish), James Buchanan (Scotch-Irish), Andrew Johnson (Irish and English), Ulysses S. Grant (Scotch-Irish, English and Scottish), Chester A. Arthur (Scotch-Irish and English), S. Grover Cleveland (Irish and Anglo-Irish), Benjamin Harrison (Scotch-Irish and English), William McKinley (Irish and English), Theodore Roosevelt (Irish, Scotch-Irish, Dutch, Scotch, English and French), William Howard Taft (Irish and English), Woodrow Wilson (Scotch-Irish), and Warren G. Harding (Scotch-Irish and English).

The Colonel’s mother, Margaret Dunleavy (1865-1935) of Indiana, was the daughter of Thomas Dunleavy (1834-1910) of Pennsylvania, who was the son of Joseph Dunleavy (1798-1864) of Pennsylvania, who was the son of Anthony Dunleavy (1763-1804), who was born in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland to Northern Irish parents and immigrated to Pennsylvania as an adult. Additionally, the Colonel’s maternal grandmother Catherine Clegg Dunleavy (1836-1891) of Indiana was the daughter of pioneer lawyer Matthew Simpson Clegg (1810-1892), who was the son of Richard Clegg (1776-1853), who was born in Ireland and later immigrated to Indiana. Another ancestor’s maiden name was McBride, an Irish surname, suggesting that at least three Irish families are in the Colonel’s ancestry.

...Bonus Fun Fact: the Colonel’s earliest known ancestor to bear the Sanders surname was Stephen Sanders Sr., a farmer born in New Jersey in 1750 and “was among the first to enter land in Morris Township, Pennsylvania” [11].

– stpatricksday.blog.usa/history/profiles/2010



In 1965, Romania’s head of state since 1961, President of the State Council Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej (George Georgeeoo-Dedge) was increasingly troubled by the events of the west – the 1963 “overthrowing” of Khrushchev, “the Colonel replacing the Johnson” in 1964, and most noticeably, the failure to spread Communism to the Americas through Cuba. These rebellious events had made Gheorghiu-Dej only more jumpy with trepidation in the face of his inevitable demise from lung cancer, as the ruler was uncertain as to whom would succeed him. Gheorghiu-Dej was distrusting of Khrushchev and Shelepin, and in recent years had sought to increase trade relations with Western countries. This position made the recent rise of Mitterand in France become a sliver of hope for Gheorghiu-Dej, as Mitterand, while not a communist, was still better than the capitalist de Gaulle. However, Gheorghiu-Dej knew that his former protégé Nicolae Ceausescu was making moves to succeed him, even though Gehorghiu-Dej did not want him to have it – Ceausescu was too pro-Soviet, opposed reaching out to France, and likely would welcome American aggression regardless of its cost. Gheorghiu-Dej sought to protect his legacy, and that meant eliminating Ceausescu from initiating a post-mortem struggle for power. On March 9, Ceausescu was killed in a mugging on his way to work. Ten days later, Gheorghe-Dej died in his sleep from the cancer. Upon his death, Gheorghiu-Dej’s preferred successor Gheorghe Apostol took over despite opposition from Prime Minister Ion Gheorghe Maurer. According to their former secretaries, Nicolae Ceausescu’s widow, Elena Ceausescu, repeatedly met with Maurer during the next several months and years of Apostol’s State Council Presidency, planning on exacting vengeance when the timing was optimal…

– Vladimir Tismaneanu’s Stalinism For All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism, University of California Press, Third Edition, 2023



“Allen, we’ve got a problem.”

“Yes, sir?”

“I’ve been talking more and more with our allies in Indochina. I keep talking to Diem about all these reports I keep getting about corruption and police brutality in Saigon and elsewhere in his country. And he keeping telling me bulls#!t right into my ear. I can’t stand a bulls#!ter, Allen.”

“Then good luck on the Hill, sir. What do you think we should do about it?”

“I think you and your boys had the right idea. Diem is one hell of a corrupt and incompetent son of a b!#ch. I want you to begin the search for a more competent leader in their military for us to work with.”

“But wouldn’t whoever we find still be under the command of Diem?”

“Yes, but I think it’s important to find people we can work with, and Diem’s too unreliable.”

“Maybe we can…talk with Diem and convince him to step aside for the sake of his countrymen.”

“If not, then we’ll just try to work around him.”

“Yes…but let’s…talk with Diem. See if we can’t get him to, uh, retire.”

“Sure, sure, sure. Just let me know what sensible men are over there.”

“Do we have an E.T.A.?”

“A.S.A.P. Top priority.”

“Well, Mr. President.”

– Leaked transcript of Pentagon conversation between President Sanders and CIA Director Dulles, 3/16/1965; released to the public in 2005



HOST: “Did you see this? Apparently, some dinner in D.C. was catered by KFC the other day, and the President Colonel didn’t personally attend, it was still an official White House function.”

CO-HOST: “Yeah, it was a charity event for – ”

HOST: “How can the President get away with this kind of promotion? It’s a violation of one of the rules that when you’re president you can’t advertise – ”

CO-HOST: “Whoa, whoa, buddy, the Colonel broke all ties to KFC so he’s not personally gaining from anything connected to it. Only if he was receiving royalty checks for openly telling people to each his chicken would he in trouble – and, no, actually, I think KFC would be in bigger trouble, because hey, why would they do that?”

HOST: “Regardless, the President is treading on thin ice if more incidents like this happens.”

CO-HOST: “Oh come on, the man spent decades making chicken his career, and now he’s expected to never even mention it? That’s ridiculous!”

HOST: “Harry Truman once sold shirts for a living. Did you hear of him selling turtlenecks at the White House?”

CO-HOST: “Again, if he’s not financially benefiting in any way from it, it’s not a problem!”

–Transcript of exchange between the Host and Co-Host of WHCV-AM, news/talk radio, 3/17/1965 broadcast



Our glorious comrade, Cosmonaut Alexey Leonov, has been bestowed upon the Soviet Union a great honor. Leonov has today become the first person to walk in space…

Pavda, the USSR’s state newspaper, 3/18/1965



Alright, I’ll increase funding, but you guys have to speed it up down there! America’s reputation abroad is already hanging by a thread as it is due to Cuba; we cannot lose the race to the moon!

– President Colonel Sanders in a telephone conversation to NASA’s James Webb, 3/19/1965



DOUGLAS-HOME WINS SNAP ELECTION, BUT SET FOR NARROW MAJORITY

London – Prime Minister Douglas-Home won his second general election tonight, again defeating Labour party leader Harold Wilson, only this time by a much wider margin. …Most pundits surmise that the deflation of the Wilson campaign was caused by fears over French President Mitterrand’s “radical policies…being a harbinger of what may lie ahead in the event of a Labour victory,” according to Conservative parliament member Quinton Hogg… Of the 630 seats in the House of Commons, only 316 are needed for majority; however, the more seats, the stronger and more stable is the government. Conservatives acquired 328 seats, whereas Wilson’s Labour party acquired merely 291 seats. Jo Grimond led the Liberal party, which obtained a total of 11 seats.

The Daily Express, 28/3/1965



SANDERS GETS PRO-NATURE BILL THROUGH CONGRESS

Washington, DC – In the first major piece of legislation passed under President Sanders, the Clean Water and Air Act was approved by the Senate on Tuesday and will likely be signed by the President within the week. “It’s very obvious that what we eat, drink and breathe affects the quality of our lives, so it only makes sense that the air and water of our country is protected from dangerous chemicals and the like,” President Sanders remarked earlier today. Sanders reportedly became concerned over the nation’s waterways after learning of the 1962 best-seller “Silent Spring” by Rachel Carson, a science book covering the effects of pesticides and other chemical elements on nature, which spurred talk on regulations of the pesticide industry. “It may seem hypocritical of me to limit what a business can and can’t do,” Sanders remarked yesterday, “But some regulations – like the ones that protect people from harm – are just plain common sense, if not good for business. The only businesses who complain about those kind of regulations are the kinds that are, well, that have criminal intentions!”

The Sacramento Union, 3/31/1965



Describing Claudia Sanders in just one sentence or even one paragraph would be insufficient and an injustice, for Claudia was a complex hostess – cold but welcoming, outspoken but reserved, adventurous but easily sated. The first 1st First Lady to have previously been a divorcée since Florence Harding, whom ran this house from 1921 to 1923. In many ways, Claudia reminded me of Ike’s Mamie – in spite of her independence and having an air of the modern feminist wave, Claudia was very much old-fashioned, firmly rooted in her traditions and ways of thinking. However, Claudia greatly differed in other ways; she did not smile nearly as often as her jovial spouse or the always-grinning Mamie, but she was quick to turn on the charm whenever she needed to. …Claudia ran a tight ship. If didn’t like an employee, would have him or her reassigned. …While they shared the same first name (Ladybird’s real first name was Claudia), Claudia Sanders did not attempt to be better than her predecessor, and was less involved with her husband’s work outside of anything involving food, business, transportation and the arts. Claudia pushed for laws pertaining to such issues, and hosted functions celebrating them as well. …During “slow days” upstairs, Claudia would enjoy tickling the ivories.

PliQsz1.png


[pic: imgur.com/PliQsz1.png ]
Pictured: Claudia plays a soothing piece while Harland listens.

…Claudia enjoyed travel as much as her husband did. Over the course of their time in the White House, Claudia amassed a large collection of memorabilia from across the country and the globe. This actually helped to distract visitors, as a means of redirecting unwanted attention from herself to the paraphernalia filling otherwise-empty spaces in the mansion… Guests “prattling on to me for too long” was another peeve of First Lady Claudia, she later confessed to me. During one event hosted at the White House in early April 1965, Claudia managed to get the wives of some diplomats to be so attentive to a new object de art she successfully snuck away without the group even noticing.

– White House Chief Usher James Bernard West’s Upstairs at the White House: My Life with the First Ladies, Open Road Media, 1973



“He looks like the best man for the job,” Bonesteel handed Sanders the folder. “Nguyen (pronounced “win”) Khanh, age 37. Major General and ARVN Chief of Staff, which is, basically, Commander of the Republic of the South Vietnam Air Force. He’s a fast learner, Colonel – he took to the skies in a plane after just 11 hours of instruction – and he has many allies such as Marine Corps head Le Nguyen Khanh. Intel confirms he’s been an effective force against the VC over the past two years.”

“He’s also a pragmatist,” Ambassador Lodge added, “After the failed coups against Diem in ’63 and ’64, he was recorded complaining about Diem’s lack of activity. Said, and I quote ‘There’s too much relaxation around here, too much wining and dining, and little prosecution of the war effort.’ [12] He reportedly wants the nation’s intelligence infrastructure to be built up but Diem isn’t listening.”

The Colonel pondered, “So all the other folks here,” perusing the pile of printed profiles present to the President, “we’re certain they’re all, ehm, less qualified or, oh what’s the word I’m looking for here, viable for the job?”

Bonesteel reviewed the rejected candidates once more. “General Van Minh is popular but inadequate. He tried to overthrow Diem back in 1963 and failed spectacularly. General Do Mau, former head of military security for Diem, has a deep understanding of most of the senior officers and their weaknesses and strengths but lacks the coordination skills needed for top-of-command. That’s why he’s in the ‘potential allies’ pile, as are Mau’s allies, General Tran Thien Khiem, and General Duong Van Duc, who recently returned from exile in Paris. Colonel Nguyen Chanh Thi, who led the 1960 coup against Diem, is too unpopular in the military. General Mai Huu Xuan is competent, but not known well enough for the military to fall behind. The country’s chief of national police Nguyen Ngoc Loan is 34 and inexperienced but is still a being supporter of Khanh and could be very useful to us.”

“Oh and the Harvard fella, he was interesting!”

“Uh, yes, the final candidate was Nguyen Xuan Oanh, banker trained at Harvard, economist charged with managing country’s economy and finances. Great for the country, but has very little military experience.”

“Shame. He could make for a could member of Khanh’s cabinet, and maybe even President after the war!”

“Then there was Phan Huy Quat, the former Prime Minister who’s been sort of out of the nation’s political loop for a while now, and Air Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky. Well, that’s all of them. Do you agree with our analysis?”

“Yessir, Khanh’s the right man for the job. He’ll take the offer, but if things don’t work out, I think we should fall back on the banker, Ky and Quat. Now, we just have to figure out how to get Diem to step down. We gotta cook him into submission…”

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



Mother and Father married on Sunday, April 4, 1965 in an informal outdoor ceremony. At the time, I was three years and eight months old, and while I do not remember the ceremony, photographs taken of it show me sitting in the front row, a big smile spread across my face… Father formally adopted me a few days later, legally changing my name from “Barack Hussein Obama II” to “Barack Hussein McCain.” He wanted me to keep my heritage, but gave me the nickname “Rocky” nonetheless…

I had always known John McCain to be my father, and so never called him anything else. The fact that my parents looked nothing like me – I as dark as cocoa, they as white as milk – barely registered in my mind [12].

I recall many stories and incidents dealing explicitly with the subject of my family’s racial composition. But no matter how many opposed us, there were always more who supported us...

– Barack McCain’s Lessons From my Fathers, Sunrise Publishers, 1993



OTTAWA LOWERS PENSION AGE!

…At the start of the next month, the eligibility age for pensions will be lowered from 70 to 65…

The Toronto Star, Canadian newspaper, 4/4/1965



OSCAR WINS RAISE EYEBROWS

…In a surprise move, the award for Best Film went to the controversial vanguard ant-war MGM film “The Americanization of Emily” starring Julie Andrews of Mary Poppins fame. Premiering in the United States on October 27, the eyebrow-raising film is based on the novel of the same name penned by William Bradford Huie in 1959…

– The Hollywood Reporter, 4/5/1965



SANDERS SHAKES UP CHICKEN INDUSTRY

Washington, DC – With the stroke of a pen, President Sanders today eliminated the “Chicken Tax,” a tariff imposed on European chicken imports. Additionally, under direction from President Sanders, the US’s FDA is seeking to raise health standards for domestic chicken production and chicken product imports. The move is another attempt by the administration to improve the economy. “Removing monetary restrictions on trade,” Commerce Secretary Friedman deduces, “will promote consumer purchasing and expand money stock,” or the total value of monetary assets available in the economy, “in the immediate future.”

The Wall Street Journal, 4/7/1965



CLAIM: Sanders ran for President to reverse LBJ’s “Chicken Tax” because it was hurting the KFC Corporation.

VERDICT: False.

EXPLANATION: Sanders did not run for President to reverse the chicken tax; Sanders reversed the Chicken Tax to promote trade with and amend relations with European nations, as he knew he would need their support in the fight against Communism (link). The Chicken Tax was for chicken from Europe, and KFC acquired its chicken from local (within each country or state) chicken farms, not from overseas; the company was not financially hurt by the tax (link). KFC’s sales were not even affected by the chicken tax, as seen in the lack of any decrease in sales of chicken in KFC locations in Europe after the tax was announced (link).

– factorfiction.co.can, 2013 entry



HOSTAGE CRISIS IN MONTREAL!: City, Province On Edge!

Alaska Highway News, BC Canada newspaper, 4/10/1965



After winning re-election in 1963, Prime Minister Diefenbaker only increased the national government’s monitoring of FLQ activities, and more terrorism activity led to more FLQ members being arrested. In the early hours of March 10, “extremist” members of the FLQ took Conservative foreign delegates from the UK hostage at their hotel in Montreal... After negotiations failed, Diefenbaker enacted the War Measures Act, which declared martial law in the province of Quebec. …Special Forces stormed the hotel… By the end of the shootout, half of the FLQ members and 3 of the 18 hostages were dead. …Considered to be the bloodiest incident in mid-20th-century Canadian history, the Quebec Hotel Hostage Crisis caused Quebec politicians to quickly backpedal their position on how to address the “Quebec Quandary,” as Liberal leader Paul Hellyer famously labelled it. While the incident initially boosted Diefenbaker’s approval ratings, questions concerning police and military conduct during the storming of the hotel, and the lost lives of three Britons, slowly ate away at the Prime Minister’s standing in the polls…

– clickopedia.co.usa



eWxGrM8.png


[ pic: imgur.com/eWxGrM8.png ]
– President Colonel Sanders visiting a trailer park hit during the Palm Sunday Tornado Outbreak (4/11/1965), 4/12/1965



TORNADO DEATH TOLL REACHES 135: Sanders Orders Relief, Rescue Efforts, Calls For Stronger State-by-State “Disaster Prep”

The Indianapolis Star, reporting on the Palm Sunday Tornado Outbreak (4/11/1965), 4/13/1965



Sanders sat at his spot at the end of the table, listening impatiently as his advisors held a shouting match.

Joint Chiefs Chairman Franke bawled “We need to cut the serpent’s head off! The Pathet Lao are dependent the on supplies and ammo they get from the Viet Cong, and the Viet Cong are being supplied by the North Vietnamese – ”

Vice Chairman Davis interjected with the rebuttal, “If we invade the North, the Chinese will intervene and that’ll lead to the Russians intervening in Berlin and before long, World War Three will break out!”

“The Chinese know that, and that’s why they won’t intervene! Their hatred of democracy is no match for their instinct for self-preservation!”

General Mark Clark interjected with his own observations contrasting with Franks’ theory, “I don’t think it’s necessary to have an invasion of North Vietnam, as it’s exactly what the enemy wants. We put down a 1,000 in a field, he puts down 1,000, he’s willing to lose half those men, we aren’t. I wouldn’t trade one dead American for 50 dead Chinamen.” [13]

As they prattled on, Sanders’ impatient eyes danced around the room until they ultimately rested on a large map of southern China hugging the wall. As he stood up and walked over to it, the upstart Foreign Policy Advisor James R. Schlesinger followed. “Jim,” the President pointed with his cane to the wide swath of farmland above North Vietnam, “what’s around these parts of China here?”

“Um, nothing much, sir. Mostly just farms.”

“So there aren’t any major cities or industry hubs in southern China at all?”

“Uh, no, sir, not really. It’s pretty undeveloped.”

“ – a sneak attack would never work!” Davis continued.

Lodge added “Well Khanh’s fully on board for this so – ”

“Enough!” The President bellowed, turning around and striking the table top with his cane to get their attention. He paused for a quick moment, “Two things. First, I think we should analyze the layout of southern China and gather intelligence on Chinese leadership. If we declare war on Vietnam, we could feasibly reach Hanoi before the fellas in Peking can send down troops from Nanning and Kunming, uh, here and here.” The Colonel pointed to the map.

“Second. To unite Vietnam, we need to destroy not the Communists’ ways of life so much as their ways around – we have to go after their bridges, trails, any modes of transportation, any fuel and energy, any forms and methods of communication. That way, we’ll be killing their plans instead of killing Vietnam folk, many of them with family on the other side of the conflict. You can’t unite a country if half of the families are gone. It’ll just leave resentment for years and years. I know. I once lived in Alabama.”

Davis was the first to comment with the bold remark, “So are we really developing this into an official war?”

The Colonel wasn’t sure how to answer. “I don’t want to put the cart before the horse, but if we can feasibly invade the North and defeat it very quickly, before the Chinese can even respond, we’ll do that because that would benefit everyone in the long run. Unite Vietnam, keep further deaths from happening, put the Chinese in their place. We’d use American and South Vietnam troops so our boys don’t bear all the brunt of it. I mean this is basically their civil conflict; we’re just helping out. So Franke, before we try your idea, we need to prep for it – get together as much info as you can on the north, and southern China hear, and then get back to me ASAP.”

“Very good, sir,” Franke answered.

“And Clark, run the numbers on the manpower an invasion would need. I’m not willing to send a bunch of men to fight when half of them will do the job just fine.”

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



SANDERS DONATES FIRST QUARTER SALARY TO SMALL BUSINESS ADMIN, W.H. SAYS

At a press briefing earlier today, Press Secretary Ziegler announced that President Sanders has donated his first quarterly salary to the Federal Government’s Small Business Administration, with Ziegler explaining “the money will be put to good use funding key programs there.” …In his last year in office, President Johnson raised the U.S. President’s salary from $150,000 a year to $165,000 a year, adjusting it for inflation... President Sanders announced that he will donate the full amount of each fiscal quarter of his Presidency to various charities and enterprises such as the March of Dimes, Junior Achievement, the Boy Scouts, [14] and several other groups....

– The Washington Post, 4/22/1965



On April 24, the Dominican Republic’s President Juan Bosch defeated paramilitary coup attempt. With a majority of the military and political leaders such as Pena Taveras and Francisco Caamano – along with an overwhelming majority of the people and the Catholic Church – being on Juan’s side as well, the revolt led by a cabal of major generals was put down. In light of its light casualty count (the military’s loss of just 12 officers and 15 volunteers, as opposed to the paramilitary’s loss of roughly 200 regulars), Bosch’s popularity skyrocketed. Still, the experience troubled Bosch; soon after, he signed an official pledge to leave office if he was “legitimately defeated” in the pre-planned 1967 Presidential election.

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000



27 April 1965: On this day in history, Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies announces that an Australian combat force will be sent to South Vietnam; the action is in response to the South Vietnam government requesting military aid from the United States as well as several other nations, including Canada and the UK.

– onthisday.co.uk


“I don’t think the Australian government has any business getting itself involved in the conflict developing in Indochina, at least not any more than the United States should be involved.”

– US Senator Wayne Morse (D-OR), 4/28/1965


29 April 1965: On this day in history, the 6.7 Mw Puget Sound earthquake rocks the western, coastal side of the U.S. state of Washington, with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe); the earthquake causes seven deaths and between $12.5 million and $28 million in financial losses around the Puget Sound region. Washington state’s Governor and US President Colonel Sanders are eventually praised for immediately responding to the damage, with the Governor overseeing rescue and recovery operations with the help of federal assistance.

– onthisday.co.uk



SANDERS COMPLETES 100 DAYS IN OFFICE

…The Administration touts several accomplishments: economic overhauls, Foreign Policy official state visits, approval of transportation expansion programs, eliminating tariffs such as the Chicken Tax, passing the Essential Education Bill, and more. …President Sanders began to shore up support for further laws later in his term, enforced social programs, and bolstered the stock market by regulating large and small businesses. …Critics, though, point to the lack of any major landmark legislation of his own and his perceived inactivity over American troops overseas as the biggest failure of his first 100 days in office. Some analysts, on the other hand, argue that this is in step with libertarian governance, as The Colonel has made legislative action to “return certain powers back” to the state level… The President’s ratings currently stand at 59% approved, 34% disapproved, and 7% uncertain. For the sake of referencing, President Lyndon Johnson’s polling at this point in his presidency was 71% approved, though Johnson felt the rally-around-the-flag effect of the Cuban War at the time...

– The Washington Post, 4/30/1965



YOUNG IMMIGRANT JOCKEY RIDES TO VICTORY: Sirhan Sirhan Wins 91st Running of The Kentucky Derby.

…Standing 5-ft-5 and weighing 120 lbs at the age of 20, Sirhan Sirhan (b. 3/19/1944) moved to Corona, CA, to train to be a jockey while working as a stable boy [15] …While not the youngest-ever Kentucky Derby winner, Sirhan’s win at the age of just 21 makes him younger than most.

– The Lexington Herald-Leader, Kentucky newspaper, 5/1/1965



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[pic: imgur.com/cq06LyX.png ]
– President Sanders and Sirhan Sirhan, after missing the derby and but managing to squeeze a trip to Sirhan’s home into his schedule, 5/2/1965



Upon seeing the iconic chicken bucket in The Sirhan Photo, Senator Richard Russell openly called for investigation into any remaining business ties the Colonel may have still had with KFC. The Sanders White House countered with the claim that Russell was violating Freedom of Speech, “there’s nothing illegal about eating something with your own face on it,” agued Press Secretary Ron Ziegler. …The Senate subcommittee hearing led to a US Constitutional law Supreme Court case ruling on campaign finance in 1967 that favored the Colonel. The limits of disclosure provisions led to a 1971 case citing precedence ahead of a ruling on the F.E.C.’s power to limit election spending. Justice White wrote that unlimited election spending is “a mortal danger against which effective preventive and curative steps must be taken” [16] …The ruling, effective January 1972, determined that corporations may not spend from their general treasuries for political purposes any more than the funds spent by individuals towards the same political purpose, but also ruled that aggregate limits on political actions by individual people is unconstitutional. The ruling was controversial and immediately challenged…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



SANDERS SIGNS IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY ACT

…The new law, first introduced in the House last year by Congressman Emmanuel Celler (D-NY), dismantles the selection of immigrants based on countries of origin. …President Sanders commented on the selection process last year with “we cannot pick and choose where America receives its best and brightest. They do not come from one or two specific geographical or political regions; they come from everywhere. The selection of immigrants based on their place of origin is a violation of basic rights as it is biased and prejudiced. …I want to be very clear – there will be no infringement of anybody’s rights during and under a Colonel Sanders administration.” After opposition from Southern Democrats, the bill was narrowly approved for a vote on the House floor on February 3, advancing it to the Senate where the process was repeated in April… The new immigration system introduces visa categories based on skills and familial relations already in the U.S., and sets visa restrictions at 200,000 per year…

– The Washington Post, 5/7/1965



…And from Cape Canaveral, the National Air and Space Agency has just announced that American astronaut Edward Higgins White has become the first American astronaut to perform what they are calling a “spacewalk”…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS News, 5/9/1965 broadcast



RICHARD NIXON: “Ladies and gentlemen, I know I’m supposed to make big, funny speech before introducing the President, but with Hollywood’s best hanging around here, stealing all my jokes (light laughter), I’ve run out of gags. Well, good ones, anyway. So I’m just going to keep this short. (pauses, clears throat). The other day, Jerry Lewis and Colonel Sanders and I all walked into a bar, and the bartender said, ‘what is this, some kind of joke?’ (pauses for laughter) And now, the President.”

COLONEL SANDERS: “Thanks, Nixon. It’s great to be here. You know, folks, I really am planning on running this government like it’s a business. Congress gets time-and-a-half overtime pay, but other benefits will have to be talked out in a C.B.A., when they finally get around to forming a union. Don’t worry, Barry, it’ll be the opt-in kind. (pauses for laughter) As you all know, I’m making several steps to reign in the fed’s excess spending. But y’all may not know all the details. For example, I find wearin’ only one suit really shortens the White House laundry bill. (pauses for laughter) To lower our cooking budget, I’m personally doing all the catering for all D.C. functions, and I’ve replaced the White House electric generators with a bunch of rabbits in these big ol’ hamster wheels. (pauses for laughter) That’s why extra carrots with tonight’s salads are not available, so for that I must apologize. (pauses for laughter) That’s also why I’m not allowing any hound dogs or foxes on the White House grounds – I can’t have the lights goin’ out just because Rover wants to cause a ruckus. (pauses for laughter) Yeah, hehe, uh, you know I was talking to Senator Fulbright of Arkansas the other day. They got a lot of produce in that state. Yeah, Arkansas’ got fruit from lots of trees – the peach tree, the cherry tree, the poultry – lots of fruit trees down there. (light laughter) So many trees, each Arkansas beaver has its own little mansion. The folks in D.C. are workin’ on a trade deal with them right now in fact. (light laughter) Yes, sir, Washington D.C. is a marvelous city – you got marvel columns, and marvel statues, just marvel everywhere. (pause for laughter) And it’s full of great people, and many of them are in this very room (cheering) if only I could make them out – they’re hiding among all these politicians (laughter). Now – ”

JERY LEWIS (in audience, part of the act): “Hey, what’s the deal, Colonel?!”

SANDERS: “What’s the matter, Jerry?”

LEWIS: “What do you mean, what’s the matter? You just insulted half the people here!”

SANDERS: “Oh, yeah, politicians are people”

LEWIS: “There you go again with the insults! That’s not how you do comedy! Here (proceeds in elaborate stumble routine, walking on top of and tumbling over dinner tables on way to front stage, pretends to punch unconscious a Secret Serviceman in on the gag, then makes way onto stage) (laughter, applause) Man, whew, I thought you secret service guys were like those British body guards with the fuzzy black raccoons on their heads, the ones outside with the gate and the standing and Queen Elizabeth the very nice royal lady! (laughter) Here, Colonel, let me show you a how to get the laughs! (pause for applause)”

SANDERS: “Alright. Ah, now tell me, Jerry, tell me, do you always stand when you do stand-up, Jerry?”

LEWIS: “Well I can’t stand to stand down!”

SANDERS: “Well then I’ll just leave ya to it!” (leaves stage to applause)

LEWIS: “Hit it!” (New music begins to play from band behind side curtain) (grabs guitar from behind curtain, beats it like it’s a drum, begins to sing informal song). “Apples and peaches and pears are fruit of the loom. With too many fruits, they’ll be not enough room on the loom.” (Hidden band plays trumpet in sync with Lewis opening and closing mouth to make it seem he’s making trumpets sounds with mouth). “Ohhh, Give me a home where the buffalo roam and I’ll show you a dirty house.” [17] [snip] (end of song) Thank you! (hands back guitar) (applause). [snip] “I see Senator Nixon is here with us today but only made one joke. How come, Nixon?!”

NIXON: (in audience, part of act) “I’m not that funny.”

LEWIS: “Oh, well, you know what the problem is, don’t you? You’re too tall! Yeah, see, tall people aren’t funny. You have to be short like me and the Colonel to make it in show biz. Rock Hudson, John Wayne, Jimmy Stewart – they’re all under 5-foot-7! (laughter) Watch this: I’ll be as tall as you” (stands on step ladder) (in very deep voice) “Hey nice lady – Ah, I just scared myself (feigns almost falling off stepladder) See that, scary, not funny! Not watch this: I’ll be as short as Peter Lorre (sits down on stage to appear very short) (in high-pitch voice) Hey nice lady! (laughter) See, that’s funny! (applause) but don’t worry, Nixon, you can still get laughs. After all, you’re a politician – just end any sentence with the four magic words ‘and that’s the truth’ and people will laugh!” [snip] “My son Gary, last name Lewis (laughter), he just turned 19 and his next birthday’s in two months (laughter). I wanted him to go to college but he wanted to continue playing the drums with his band, I think it’s a music band. So I tried to compromise, right, I told him to go to music college, but he says he wants to try The Colonel Sanders kind of education – the kind that’s useful!” (laughter) “But no, really, the Colonel is one of the most wonderful men I’ve ever known, and a really smart and smart-alecky salesmen. Why, just the other day he sold me an Edsel. Not really, though. He gave it away free with my KFC dinner! (pause for laughter) But in all seriousness, folks, I have to commend the President for all the work he’s done in the fight against muscular dystrophy and for that and then some he forever has my respect and loyalty. Thank you, Colonel Sanders, thank you! (applause)” (leaves comically, pretending to not know how to leave stage, walks into curtain, moves hands around looking for an exit through the curtain, then starting patting down the wall, before Secret Servicemen escort him away) “So long gentlemen and each and every very nice lady!...” (laughter, applause)

SANDERS: (returns to podium) “What a character, eh, folks? If my current one steps down, I’m thinking of picking Lewis to be our Ambassador to France. How’s that sound? (laughter, cheers)”

– Transcript (annotated) from the 1965 White House Correspondents’ Dinner, Saturday, 5/15/1965



The Beatles first came to the U.S. in May 1965, and quickly their music became the latest craze for American teenagers and a new outlet for teen angst. While they were a bit late to the party, seeing as other British musicians were already well into establishing themselves in the U.S., the Fab Four believed it was “better late than never,” as the stoic Lennon would state...

Tumbleweed Magazine article, 1971 commemorative issue



In May [1965], [John Y.] Brown, um, I don’t want to say weaseled, but um, he found his way into purchasing Church’s Chicken from the son of its late founder. Millie approved of the takeover while Harley was, um, less involved in the project. …While Brown lacked skills needed to motivate people that served under him, he was shrewd with finances, and those results really showed early on…

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, early 1992



WAR ENDS IN INDONESIA: Remaining Sukarno Backers Captured As Suharto Takes Over

…General Suharto has defeated military opponents and has ended a civil conflict that has ravaged the archipelagic nation since August of last year. …Suharto reportedly received a congratulatory phone call from American President Sanders and Prime Minister Douglas-Home… The celebratory atmosphere in the capital of Jakarta was plagued, though, by concern over the lingering attacks on left-wing Indonesians, with one anonymous Jakarta schoolteacher telling us “I fear Suharto will only continue his purges, and expand them from just Sukarno supporters to anyone who is not fiercely loyal to him”…

The Times, UK newspaper, 5/30/1965



New Jersey Gubernatorial Primary Election Results, 6/1/1965:

Democratic Primary:
Richard J. Hughes – 234,854 (89.85%)
William H. Clark – 26,531 (10.15%)
Total votes cast: 261,385 (100.00%)

Republican Primary:
Wayne Dumont Jr. – 166,611 (50.11%)
Charles W. Sandman Jr. – 156,470 (47.06%)
Harold P. Poeschel – 9,409 (2.83%)
Total votes cast: 332,491 (100.00%)

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



SANJAY GANDHI, 18, DIES IN CAR CRASH

…the son of Minister of Information and Broadcasting Indira Gandhi has died in a car crash... …Claims that the car was stolen are currently unsubstantiated. The police have declined to comment as to whether or not an investigation will commence to look into the claims…

Rajasthan Patrika, Indian newspaper, 6/2/1965



…On June 6, 1965, California’s Stanford School of Business presented Sanders with an honorary degree, one of a total of 26 honorary degrees Sanders would receive in his lifetime, first he got in May 1959 for his academic contributions to Kentucky while Governor…

Why Grad Schools Are Suffering In Our Changing Economy, KNN e-article, 6/2/2012



GREEK PRIME MINISTER ASSASSINATED!

Athens, GREECE – Georgios Papandreou, the Prime Minister of Greece since 1963, was today shot by a right-wing extremist while leaving the nation’s capital building for lunch. According to officials, Papandreou was shot “at least three times” in the back before his attacker could be subdued by officers. Officials state that the Prime Minister died while on route to hospital. The assassin is being held by police for interrogation. The killer’s name is currently unreleased, but his current motive is believed to be his apparent “outrage” at Papandreou’s allegedly pro-communist administration. Papandreou was 77.

– The La Croix, French newspaper, 6/10/1965



TROOPS PUMMEL OUTRAGED GREEKS

Athens, GREECE – Violence occurring in the streets of the capital over Papandreou’s assassination for the second day in a row, with students protesting and calling for retribution, justice, and reform… Greece’s King Constantine II has cautiously sent in the military to quell the riots. Some fear the riots could grow into a revolution if left unchecked…

The Daily Telegraph, UK newspaper, 6/12/1965



NEW PRIME MINISTER CHOSEN!

Athens – After a heated debate in our nation’s capital, Grigoris Lambrakis has been chosen to become the new Prime Minister of Greece. Lambrakis, 53, was elected to Parliament in 1961 as an EDA-leaning Independent before defecting to Papandreou's EK over infighting in the EDA during the 1965 election. Lambrakis quickly rose in popularity within the party after surviving a politically-motivated attack on his life… Analysts hope the young and charismatic Lambrakis, a former doctor, athlete, and anti-war activist, can calm the rising political climate and remedy the issues facing this great but troubled country.

– The Ethnos (The Nation), left-wing Greek newspaper (affiliated with PASOK), 6/22/1965



Another example of Colonel Sanders being a “loony old fool” happened on June 23, 1965, when he appeared at a ceremony in Chicago to receive an award for improving environmental protection laws in the U.S., and walked off the stage without the award. He quickly circled back to receive it, but the moment was nevertheless caught on camera [18]. …A part of his popularity was his charm. “He came off as this lovable old guy, like this friendly grandfather-like fella,” describes one senior citizen in Madison, Wisconsin who voted for the Colonel in 1964...

Why The Colonel’s Legacy Endures, 2015 e-article



…In Washington, the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Civil rights Oversight is reviewing the progress of ensuring integration implementation in all 50 years, per a President request. Also on the Hill, Senator Eunice Kennedy-Smith has signed on to co-sponsored a major Fair Employment Bill meant to bolster similar legislation passed under President Johnson…

– Walter Cronkite on CBS, 7/1/1965



The new Constitution of Cuba, backed by Sanders administration, was finally ratified on July 5, 1965, after months of negotiations between several political factions on the island. The constitution appealed to the poorer rural classes in Cuba, but interim President Miro Cardona still demanded it reach unanimous approval from all factions for the sake of national unity. The most vocal holdout among political leaders was then 41-year-old Stability party leader Manuel Ray Rivero [19], an engineer by trade whom had served as Fidel Castro’s Minister of Public Works in 1959 before founding the Revolutionary Movement of the People, an organization which backed Castro’s nationalization of all public utilities. Contradictorily, though, Rivero opposed Communist ideology, and eventually broke with Castro to join the Cuban Revolutionary Council (CRC) in 1961 and help American forces mobilize discontented Cubans in 1963 and 1964. Upon Rivero ultimately voicing approval of the Constitution alongside the leader of the Conservative party, Manuel Artime, the last faction left was Felipe Rivero Diaz, the leader of the Nationalist party. Critical of both Americans and Communists during the war despite participating in crucial early military actions in it, Diaz finally “gave [it] is blessing” on July 3rd, after determining that “it contains no hidden ties to America or Russia – The Cuban people will be in charge of their own destiny!”

– clickopedia.co.usa



SECOND LADY MARY SCRANTON CALLS FOR HOUSING REFORM

Washington, D.C. – ...Taking an unusually active role is not a surprise to those who know her; Second Lady Scranton is much more active than the reportedly “old-school” Claudia Sanders. At a formal event, Mary Scranton announced her advocacy for a federal program to develop and improve low-income urban communities. "These are American families working hard and doing their best. It would be unpatriotic and immoral for their government to turn its back on them." …A passionate fighter for fair housing and community safety while First Lady of our states, Mary Scranton started out as a research analyst for the US Army and also as a Red Cross aide during World War II. She continued her advocacy for humanitarian issues during her time as the First Lady of Pennsylvania. Upon her husband being selected to serve as Colonel Sanders' running mate, Mary appeared often on the ’64 campaign trail, even speaking at that year’s RNC to praise both members of the GOP ticket for the dedication to improving the lives of American families...

The Philadelphia Enquirer, 7/9/1965



DIEM REPLACED IN BLOODLES COUP, EXILED FROM COUNTRY; New Leader, Win Khan, Takes Helm

The New York Post’s 7/11/1965 headline with Nguyen Khanh’s name misspelled



Had Diem been overthrown sooner, maybe things would have turned out different. Instead, the people were so desperate for a change of leadership that they quickly embraced Khanh. The thing about it, though, was that Khanh was a highly complex character of the era. As a socially conservative man, Khanh retained Diem’s ban on the dance “The Twist.” However, Khanh sometimes conflicted with the US by not at all acting like the grateful Miro Cardona – Khanh wanted to run his country his way! Paradoxically, Khanh often listened to the advice of Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., whom advised Khanh pursue a policy of uniting social groups. As such, upon his ascension to the Presidency, Khanh went on a “Colonel-style” tour of the country, making himself better known to as many members of the populace as possible – the urban and rural, the coastal and interior, the rich and poor. In the national domestic issue of Catholics versus Buddhists, Diem had favored Catholics. Khanh quickly found friends in both communities to unite to two against the Communists. As a fairly politically astute man, Khanh announced village that had been elections abolished under Diem would be held “within a year.” Privately, Khanh was wary of democracy possibility, and said in an early 1966 conversation with Lodge “we [the Vietnamese] cannot achieve full democracy for some time, perhaps for another generation or two.” [20] Such a mindset explains his refusal to hold a presidential election “until we are absolutely certain that attacks from the North have ceased.” Fortunately for Khanh, with each military success, the people of South Vietnam tolerated their limitations on individual rights for the sake of community security (it was a time of war, after all).

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



NOTE(S)/SOUCRE(S)
[1] I think Colonel Sanders would agree with his free market theories as well as his advocacy for volunteer military and the abolition of medical licenses (due to the Colonel’s own history in that area), but disagree with him on other topics.
[2] Real person, according to the letter found here http://tea-and-skeletons.tumblr.com/post/29422516178/colonel-sanders-admired-j-edgar-hoover-and
[3] This quote is from OTL.
[4] Pulled from the OTL version of the Josh Ozersky book Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, Page 9: https://books.google.com/books/about/Colonel_Sanders_and_the_American_Dream.html?id=dkVNCgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false
[5] Italicized lines pulled from OTL memo from Hubert Humphrey to Lyndon Johnson written in the same time period (1965): https://www.nytimes.com/1976/05/09/archives/humphrey-in-memo-to-johnson-in-1965-warned-of-vietnam.html
[6] According to this article: www.buzzfeed.com/venessawong/the-real-colonel-sanders
[7] Description taken from MacKinnon’s wiki page.
[8] Ibid.
[9] IOTL, Colonel Howard Ravenscroft Johnson died in World War Two in 1944. But in Chapter 1, I established that after the POD of Harland Sanders Jr. not dying in 1932, he went on to serve in WWII. I like to think that the addition of one more soldier could lead to Johnson surviving the war in a for-want-of-a-nail type of minor butterfly effect, and later going on to establish a career in law.
[10] According to the site http://tea-and-skeletons.tumblr.com/post/29422516178/colonel-sanders-admired-j-edgar-hoover-and, Hoover declined to attend the Colonel’s 80th birthday party “[a]fter searching the Colonel’s criminal record,” suggesting Hoover did not want to be connected in any way to people with such pasts, even if it was someone like the Colonel! Additionally, the Colonel writing in the letter “I do believe that us [old] folk can show those young people what celebrating’s all about” demonstrates the complexity of him, as he was in youth-oriented films such as Blast-Off Girls (1967) and (despite the Colonel being a very religious sort) Hell’s Bloody Devils (1970) in OTL!
[11] All genealogy details are from their respective pages on findagrave.com
[12] A paraphrase of a famous line from Obama’s OTL autobiography.
[13] Quote directly pulled from the 53:50 mark of the Documentary “In the Year of the Pig” (available on YouTube, albeit in parts now…)
[14] Charities, along with "hospitals, medical research, education," mentioned on page 796 of the John Kessler book “The Kentucky Encyclopedia”: https://books.google.com/books?id=CcceBgAAQBAJ&lpg=PA796&pg=PA796#v=onepage&q&f=false
[15] IOTL, Sirhan “at 20 years old, Sirhan moved to Corona [southern California, near L.A.] to train to be a jockey while working at a stable, but lost his job and abandoned the pursuit after suffering a head injury in a racing accident” at some point in the 1960s (https://books.google.com/books?id=nLrLavNCQpUC). Due to butterflies, no such accident occurs, and instead, to turn a phrase Sirhan shoots to the head of the pack in the jockey world.
[16] This is a quote from OTL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckley_v._Valeo#cite_note-1
[17] Italicized snippet taken from this Jerry Lewis youtube video: /watch?v=GOUer2rdWHc
[18] Happened in OTL, as seen from 7:42 to 7:58 in this clearly OTL youtube video: /watch?v=Gk2HaAIqS3g
[19] Who? This guy!: http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/rivero.htm
[20] This quote, along with other information about Khanh described here, were found on his Wikipedia article.

4/4/2019 Edit: Fixed "Nyugen/Nguyen" typo. Good eye, @The_Southeast !
 
Post 15
Post 15: Chapter 23



Chapter 23: July 1965 – December 1965



“An eagle cannot fly with two right wings.”

– Henry Howell (OTL)



“The war, and make no mistake that this is a war whether we’ve declared it so or not, will lead to the ruination of American morality right on the World Stage if we do not end the conflict. It is, and for some time has been, obvious that the most important issue facing our nation is to get out of the war in Southeast Asia. All our other issues and problems are slighted, impaired, and unresolved until we halt the fighting, stop the…continuing drain of blood and treasure, and turn to the long-neglected and pressing needs at home.” [1]

– U.S. Senator Ernest Gruening (D-AK)’s open letter to the U.S. President, 7/14/1965




Hoover relished in his ability to “convince” (i.e., threaten to response to a dismissal with reprisals, and during an election year, no less [2]) Lyndon Johnson to exempt him from the retire-at-70 rule in January 1964 (publicly arguing the shoutnik movement was “a threat to the nation’s internal well-being” in February of that year). President Sanders, being 5 years older than Hoover, seemed to have no qualms with Hoover staying on at the start of his administration. In July 1965, Hoover told then-Head of the Inspection Division Mark Felt that he was “going to keep eyes on everything for as long as I can.” There is ambiguity over the extent of which President Sanders knew of Hoover’s actions, as phone and paper records (and lack thereof) all point to the notion of Hoover running the bureau with even more autonomy from and much less communication with the White House than under LBJ. …This largely explains future events…

– Ronald Kessler’s Clyde Tolson and the Cult of J. Edgar Hoover, Resistance E-Publishing, 2016



“What the hellfire is this horse-crap?”

“Sir?”

“I just got this file sent to me, possibly by accident since my name’s not on it, and I’m mortified! Here.”

“Mm-hmm (pause) Oh, uh, sir this is the proposed Phoenix Program, just a simple neutralization endeavor. I was going to discuss this with you next – ”

“‘Neutralization’? Boy, that there paper calls for is systematic murder!”

“It’s a way of ending the conflict overseas by taking out the VC leaders – gather intel, destroy their leadership infrastructure – it may well defeat them without putting our boys at risk.”

“That sounds good, but I actually read the file – you wouldn’t just be targeting the leaders, would ya? That file recommended going after village leaders, too – small groups that can turn to backing our side when the tide turns in our favor.”

“Well leadership voids don’t stay voids, a village leader can easily climb the ladder, or pass information along to the leaders. So some would need to be taken cared of to – ”

“This would be a glorified death squad of goons torturing and terrifying the people we’re trying to win over. Khanh made himself clear that we can’t win the war if we don’t win the trust of the Vietnam people. Having our men stalking the jungles at night sniperin’ and kidnappin’ won’t help.”

“Mr. President, they’re doing worse than this to our boys over there!”

“Exactly my point – we have to be better than the enemy to maintain the moral high ground and be on the right side of history here. Allen, I want to get ’em pinkos out of those jungles, too, but this is…well this is just plain evil and underhanded.”

“Nobody ever said war wasn’t evil – um, Mr. President.”

“Allen, listen good. There will be no glorified torture gangs on our side of this here war. We are going to win, and we are not going to get down in gutter with the V.C. folk and be as evil as them to do so. I’m pulling the plug on this possible program. Understand?!”

“Um (sigh) Yes, Mr. President.”

– Transcript of discussion between President Sanders and CIA Director Dulles, nature of recording device classified until 2029; declassified and released to public in 2000; 7/15/1965



In the Summer of 1965, A. Philip Randolph, Dr. Martin Luther King, Ralph Abernathy, Bayard Rustin, and several prominent economists, labor allies and civil rights activists made several visits to the Oval Office to sit down with the President and discuss what Randolph called “A Freedom Budget for All Americans,” a proposed federal program meant to eliminate poverty and guarantee “full employment for all ready and willing to work, fair prices for farmers and fair wages that will better cover the needs of working families [3]. King called it the centerpiece of a new, post-Civil Rights Act social movement he was in the process of forming – the Poor People’s Campaign. King told his friend and ally Colonel Sanders “The goal of racial justice is tied to economic justice.” For his part, The Colonel remembered his early years of job hopping and knew that while there were poor Caucasian-Americans, there “seems to be even more Black men and women” in poverty, The Colonel observed.

The collective effort was not well organized, with Bayard Rustin opposing continual civil disobedience in light of what he considered to be the “surprisingly successful” Bryant/Patterson campaign hinting at a dormant undercurrent of hatred “edging closer to maintain political currents”. The Freedom Budget itself was opposed by some Civil Rights leaders such as the Evers brothers, with Charles instead calling for a national “workfare” program. Charles Evers coined neither the term nor the concept, pulling both from the legislative efforts of former City Manager of Newburgh, NY Joseph Mitchell. HEW Secretary Rockefeller was on the fence, believing the idea came “from a good place,” but that the nation was “not yet ready” for such a “radical social experiment on a scale greater than Prohibition, as this would change the dynamics in every household, dry and wet.”

Nevertheless, The Colonel took kindly to the idea of a “monetary safety net” that “streamlined” the welfare process due to what he saw as “the federal government…becoming too big for its britches.” Sanders reportedly wanted to dismantle much of Johnson’s Great Society and its accompanying federal bureaucracy without removing assistance programs “for those people who really need them,” and in doing so would devolve power to state and local political entities.

WZztyw3.png


[pic: imgur.com/WZztyw3.png ]
Above: King and the Chicken King converse in the White House, c. July 1965

– John A. Nichols’s article “The Federal Freedom Fund: A Brief History,” The Nation, 2019 issue



…Welcome back. In Savannah, Georgia, a local school club resisting the enforcement of racial integration was the site of a violent confrontation that ended in five people in the local hospital. …School boards in Georgia, South Carolina and Mississippi are taking integration to court, and we will have to wait and see how the judicial system addresses their claims of “First Amendment Infringement”...In other news, the White House today announced that President Sanders’ official visit to Birmingham, Alabama has been postponed indefinitely. They have not announced an official reason…

– NBC News broadcast, 7/16/1965



HOST: Well first I’d like to thank you for being on the show, but before we begin, for our listeners who don’t know, could you quickly explain why you joined the Navy?

SCRANTON: Well, uh, on July 20, 1965, I turned 18, and, um, I had already gotten into Yale, so I planned to be there come September. But that summer, The Colonel Administration had this big plan forming for how to get rid of the Communists in Vietnam, and so they needed to boost the administration’s approval ratings, especially after this on guy, Green-something, a Senator from Alaska, I believe, went on TV and ranted about how people should never send other people’s kids to a war zone if they aren’t willing to send their own. So the idea of sending me or one of the Colonel’s older grandkids to the war started to pick up speed. They were originally going to send Harland Sanders the Third, but uh, his wife had a, uh, a difficult pregnancy or something like that, and by the end of the summer, I agreed to serve one tour of duty in Vietnam. A short term, no more than a year, preferably just a few months, and then I’d come right back to attend Yale.

HOST: And The Colonel was okay with all this.

SCRANTON: No, he had his reservations, but because I agreed to it, I wasn’t coerced into it, he kind of went along. If anything, he was more worried about my well-being than my dad, who was really, eh, really anxious about the idea. So yeah, I enlisted in the Navy and found myself on a battleship by the end of the year. To be honest, I thought it was going to be easy. It wasn’t.

– William Scranton III and host, WYBC (1340 AM) college radio station for Yale University, 2/12/1996 broadcast



…We have breaking news for you… just moments ago, George Lincoln Rockwell, the leader of the American Nazi Party, was arrested at his home in Virginia… the openly racist author is a suspect in what we now know was the discovery of a bomb found last week on President Sanders’ planned motorcade route through Birmingham, Alabama... Rockwell, whom was mounting a bid for Governor of Virginia as an independent, has previously called Sanders, quote, “a Traitor to the South” and a surfeit of slurs since last summer… This is a developing story. We will keep you updated as more of the fact come to light...

– Walter Cronkite, CBS News broadcast, 7/22/1965



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[pic: imgur.com/Bzw3Tr4.png ]
– Lester Maddox protesting outside the White House to little fanfare, 8/2/1965



DOW JUMPS 150 POINTS AFTER STRONG JOB REPORTS

The Wall Street Journal, 8/3/1965



REPORT: ECONOMY RETURNS TO PRE-SALAD OIL CONDITIONS: New Phenomenon “Stagflation” Already Over?

The Financial Times, 8/5/1965



COLONEL PROPOSES NEW “F.A.D.” TO HELP WORKERS, FAMILIES

– A The Chicago Tribune, 8/7/1965



“Folks, I have always believed that by workin’ hard, you can make it to wherever you want to go. I prefer work to welfare; always have, always win. But sometimes hard work just isn’t enough, especially when you are in an unfair position like being born in poverty. I was a grade school dropout, when I was just starting seventh grade, but the more I’ve looked things over with my education advisors, the more I know that now I wouldn’t advise anybody to drop out that young today because times changed. Even if you work hard you can’t always make it the way I did with no education at all. [4] Figures from the 1960 census, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. Commerce Department, and the Federal Reserve all estimate that anywhere from 40 to 60 million Americans – or 22 to 33 percent of this great nation’s population – live below the poverty line. That is not acceptable. And so after talks with my dozens and dozens of experts, I’ve decided something must be done do promote economic justice that still promotes hard work above laziness. And the answer is not in social programs. Them programs have been growing out of control for years now. They are promoting dependency instead of dignity, and their rising costs may bring financial ruin. The lack of diversity of the programs has led to income inequality across the states, the cities and the countrysides of America. I propose replacing all of it with a new system, streamlined and simple. I’m calling it the Federal Aid Dividend. A Thank-You from Uncle Sam. Under the Federal Aid Dividend Act, every family with children would receive $125 every month [5]. Now this wouldn’t be a handout; it’d be your tax dollars coming back to you. And you can’t get this unconditionally. If you’re a family with children and you want this here dividend, you must work, be training for work, or prove you cannot work. This would not be a guaranteed income because that would discourage work, but it is instead a safety net and would give folks an incentive to find good work for themselves, would discourage those who can work but don’t want to from being lazy fed-leeches, and I even think it could create workplace equality, too.” [6]

– President Colonel Sanders in a special address to the nation, 8/7/1965




The Poor People’s Campaign conflicted with The Colonel’s long-held pro-business beliefs. Early into his first year in office, he backed a significant individual tax cut proposal with the belief that cutting tax rates would stimulate investment and spending, with overall beneficial effects including replenishment some lost tax revenues from the 1963-1964 period. The spurring of economic growth would increase tax revenue to cover government spending, with Sanders insisting on “never putting the fed in the red.”

…Within the White House, two pools of thought floated about that summer: “people should have what they need to survive” versus “people should earn what they need to survive.” The Colonel sought out a compromise: people should have what they need to survive when they try and fail to earn it. “No race – Asian, white, African, Hispanic, or Native American – exempts anyone from the possibility of poverty, nor should it,” advisor Whitney young explained in a 1999 interview. In August, the Colonel began to prioritize helping the lowest rungs of society, the foundation of the nation… Soon after announcing the F.A.D. bill, the President called for the implementation of an “economic bill of rights” of sorts in the form of a $11 billion anti-poverty package from congress to cover employment programs until the Colonel’s FAD could replace them, along with programs for improving low-income housing until the FAD “makes people invest in fixing up their own neighborhoods on their own” as the Colonel explained. One program introduced by Democrats with the Colonel’s support would fund local education classes that would teach low-income citizens how to maintain homes and neighborhoods and, in some place, how to avoid the “white flight” experienced in some places after the Xenia Riots of 1963. The Colonel's FAD also failed to take inflation into account, how often the amount would be changed to adjust for inflation, and how to prevent now-deregulated businesses from raising prices and lowering salaries in reaction to the dividend...

…“MLK is seeking to unite the poor, more specifically, to broaden his supporters beyond just Black people. Classic labor move. You develop a base, then you reach out to those around that base, and then those around them. Like an infection or something,” FBI Director Hoover wrote in his private journal in 1965 (and discovered years after his death due to a filing error).

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



…It is disheartening and disconcerting to hear the President espouse such rhetoric that edges on the verge of betraying his conservative roots and the conservative voice in his party and the nation, both of which sent him to the White House… While I will still support the Sanders White House, I urge all conservatives to write to the President and tell him what they think of this ridiculous proposal…

– William F. Buckley Jr., National Review opinion article, 8/10/1965



It was becoming increasingly obvious that the “US military presence” was in reality an unofficial war against two communist groups in Southeast Asia. Starting in April, the Colonel moved to suppress the Pathet Lao in order to minimize American casualties and stabilize the Laotian government. …Before a proposed invasion of North Vietnam could proceed, a major development unfolded on the southern end of the Laos-Vietnam Border. The Battle at Chu Pong Massif of August 1965 was fought around the base of a mountain of complex terrain near the border of Laos, South Vietnam, and Cambodia, in an effort to create a physical barrier between the VNPA and the South Vietnamese. Khanh called for a massive frontal assault on a collection of enemy forces routing supplies through the region, first sending in snipers on the 13th before sending in SV and American ground troops…

– Ellen Joy Hammer’s Indochina and The Wrath of Khanh, E. P. Dutton, 1969



According to a 1975 report, the US Army considered using Agent Orange on areas held tightly by the Pathet Lao during the Battle at Chu Pong Massif, only for Sanders to oppose the use of such a destructive element so close to American troops and allied Laotians. Instead, Napalm B was deployed. After three days and two nights of firepower, the mountain was declared secured on August 16, but at the cost of a combined total of 52 American troops out of 700 American and Laotian soldiers. While a fairly low casualty count, the Colonel reported was “wracked with guilt,” and “couldn’t sleep for days” according to First Lady Claudia in 1977: “The men were volunteers, they knew the risks, but Harland felt it could have been avoided and took all the blame for it. He would walk around the upstairs hallways, wondering aloud how other Presidents dealt with such things. …Harland sough to personally attend the funerals of each and every one of the brave fallen American heroes.” The President’s mood only improved as the situation in Laos did. …Another vital element in the securing of the mountain and further locations as the months progressed was The Green Berets winning over ethnic minorities persecuted in North Vietnam, who helped them infiltrate “The Trail,” a.k.a. the passages running along eastern Laos into North and South Vietnam. The Green Berets became unsung heroes of the war by developing these connections with these informative locals…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



MITTERAND’S MOMENT: Is Liberalism On The Rise In Europe?

– The New Yorker, 8/19/1965



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[pic: imgur.com/eIDayN5.png ]
– A butler reminds President Sanders of the etiquette levels expected when visiting Buckingham Palace during a Presidential visit to London, UK, 8/22/1965



Needing a distraction from the blood of foreign policy and the tediousness of diplomacy, The Colonel turned to his next legislative idea. “I understand the difference between a malicious no-gooder and a man who made a mistake. I went to jail once. When I was a lawyer in Arkansas, I got into a fistfight with my own client right in front of the judge; I was arrested, spent the night in jail, got charged with battery, and was barred from further practicin’. So I know what it’s like to let your weaknesses get the better of you. That’s why we need to change the way we treat certain prisoners in this country,” the Colonel told Senator Morton in a letter dated August 20, 1965.

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



…On Capitol Hill, Democrats and Republicans are teaming up to voice opposition to President Sanders’ recent wave of legislative proposals. His latest, an “ex-con workers bill,” would, quote, “take away jobs from decent, clean-record Americans,” according to Congressman J. B. Utt of California. …The Colonel’s most ambitious proposal, to give every family with children $123 a month in lieu of several social program, is being challenged by D.C. lawmakers on both the left and the right sides of the aisle…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS News, 8/29/1965 broadcast



It was Labor Day [September 2, 1965]. The staff had the day off, and it was quiet in the big ol’ house. I couldn’t sleep, though, I was restless. I can’t tossing and turning and rolling about like a sailor without any sea legs. Finally I got up and headed down to the kitchen. I decided to make some light bread. Lots of people have never heard of light bread. Homemade light bread is kind of hard to explain. First of all, it’s kneaded bread. You start with yeast. Then you make that yeast into a sponge of very thin dough. You work that dough into your flour. Then you proof it and you punch it down once and let it come back up again. On the second come back you make it into a loaf and let it rise in the pan. After that you bake it. The length of time it takes that uncooked loaf to rise depends on the temperature of your room. In winter, we would put it behind the kitchen stove. Even with the aid of that warmth it might take half a day to rise. Usually we started the dough first thing in the morning. We were ready to bake it by nightfall. I’ve sat up many a night until 11 or 11:30 so I could get the heel of loaf for my share. To me, that was my favorite part of the loaf. I’ve smelled a lot of fancy smells since, many a memorable aroma, but the smell of homemade light bread while it’s being baked is still tops in my memory. Mama would cut the heel off the loaf and butter it. When I had nice buttered hot bread – well, that was living. [7] It was certainly better than seeing the faces of the men lost taking a mountain half-way around the world every time I tried to sleep. It was harder, but simpler. Tougher, but easier.

After putting the bread in the oven, I decided I was hungry and wanted I midnight snack. So I started making my chicken. I got a bird from the freezer, thawed it out, got the breading, the spices, and I got to work. Then Claudia came downstairs too.

“I thought I heard your kind of commotion down here.”

“Couldn’t sleep, honey,” I told her. “I keep thinking about those men we lost.”

Claudia came over to comfort me with the line, “You did what you had to. And every mother and wife you spoke to told you that.”

“But I still can’t shake the guilt, Claudia. I feel like a murder of sorts.”

“Harland, you listen to me,” she turned to look at me right in the eye. “You told that if they hadn’t taken that mountain, South Vietnam would have stayed vulnerable to attack, right?”

“Yes.”

“Then with their defense of democracy with their lives, they may well have saved the lives of countless more that would have been killed by them V.C.s. You are not a killer, Harland Sanders. You’re a saver. Remember that.”

“Heh. The way you liven me up. It’s just another reason why I love ya!”

“I know. So, since we’re having chicken right before the rooster crows, where’s the coffee?” Claudia asked.

“Oh, I have to make it.”

“Nah, I’ll get it.”

“Make some farm coffee,” I asked her. She did; she went and crushed an egg, shell and all, right into the grounds and poured a cup of cold water into the brewed coffee to settle the grounds at the bottom before serving. That was how we had it on the farm. [8]. Then, after putting on an apron and getting out a second bird but just before I finally got to taking the first chicken apart, my wife went and got her new fancy camera and took a picture:

6GMrqHm.png


[pic: imgur.com/6GMrqHm.png ]
It’s a real good picture of me, that’s what I think.

After that we just talked, about nothing and everything, if you get what I mean. We talked until the cook came in, and practically chased us out of the kitchen. That room was his territory, not ours.

…I knew that with this office I could do great things so long as I got down pat the how of it all. But I just never did get the hang of justifying deaths. That’s why I know that, no matter how much good I continue to do, the souls lost under my Presidency will haunt me for the rest of my days, and maybe for even longer after that.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



CONSERVATISM HAS A VOICE IN “FIRING LINE”

New York City, NY – William F. Buckley’s new talk show program, “Firing Line,” premiered on Tuesday, September 6, with Reverend Billy Graham as his first guest…

– The National Review, early September 1965 issue



…While Billy Graham did not approve of the Colonel’s swearing, their mutual friend, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., reportedly did not seem to mind… Concerns of Democratic Party influence over the Colonel’s moral decisions were muted when Graham, whom had been a close advisor the Lyndon Johnson, explained in a September 1965 interview, “Jesus didn’t have a political party, and nor do I.” If Graham advocated anything political at the start of the Colonel Presidency, it was for humanitarian, bipartisan endeavors such as the creation of a US Senate Subcommittee on Nutritional Necessities, which ultimately worked to improve US health standards in the long run. Graham and Sanders shared an understanding of the importance of maintaining a healthy diet…

– Mark Pendergrast’s “For God, Country, and Kentucky Fried Chicken,” Perfect Formula Publishing, 2000



TONIGHT’S PRIMARIES: PERICONI, O’DWYER, EDISON PREP FOR 3-MAN RACE

By Arthur Mulligan – One of the biggest upsets in the city appeared in the making on the basis of early returns last night as O’Dwyer, Democrat, takes an early lead in his party’s primary. The Democratic party’s primary pitted Controller Abe Beame, City Council President Paul R. Screvane, US Representative William F. Ryan, US Representative Mario Biaggi, and City Councilman Paul O’Dwyer against each other. O’Dwyer came from polling in fourth place two weeks ago to achieving a plurality victory with roughly 35% of the primary vote in a major upset. Incumbent Robert F. Wagner Jr., whom has declined to run for a fourth term, chose to endorse O’Dwyer, the brother of a former mayor, which contributed to O’Dwyer receive the support of wealthy donors and likely helped him secure the win. Congressman Biaggi, whom ran to the right of all the other Democratic candidates, has claimed “I was jilted by the party establishment, but you know what? I’m going to take what I learned worked and didn’t in this election and applied those lessons to my next ‘public job application’.”

Meanwhile, the GOP primary saw Borough President Joey Periconi, US Representative John V. Lindsay and State Senator Elmer Odgen Bush run against each other. Periconi seems to have won over Lindsay by a 5% margin. As the tally of yesterday’s election moved late into its final stages, Periconi came surging from behind around midnight to overtake a lead built up by Lindsay. Periconi had won the endorsement of Governor Wilson, leading to further endorsements from Senators Keating and Javits. Puerto-Rican Herman Badillo, who is running to succeed retiring Burough President, endorsed Periconi as well. Periconi, 55, was state senator from 1953 to 1954 and again from 1957 to 1960, a member of the Board of the New York City Transit Authority from 1960 to 1962, and Borough President of the Bronx since 1962. A moderate-liberal, his most notable action has been seeking to preserve landmark buildings such as Bronx Borough Hall.

The Conservative Party of New York, meanwhile, opted to not hold a primary and instead nominate a candidate. Tonight, they chose former Democrat New Jersey Governor and party co-founder Charles Edison, the son of lightbulb inventor Thomas Alva Edison. In his acceptance speech, the 75-year-old Edison claimed to be most experienced candidate in the election. Edison, whom reportedly became inspired to seek the party nomination after seeing the political success of fellow septuagenarian Colonel Sanders, will likely pull more votes from Periconi than from O’Dwyer.

– The New York Daily News, 9/14/1965



…[In September], after months of R&D and Millie and Harley’s approval, we added a new breakfast item to menus at select KFC locations – “The Colonel’s Kentucky-Fried Chicken and Waffles,” our take on meal popular in northern and more urban communities ever since its introduction in Harlem in ’38…

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



After much deliberation, the Colonel decided to replace 50% of American troops in Indochina with advisors meant to build up South Vietnam forces. He explained, “I can’t support the idea of putting any more American lives at risk than absolutely necessary.” While some in his inner circle saw this as an unnecessary about-face, Secretary Bonesteel, to the surprise of some, supported the Colonel on the matter. “Give a man a gun and some bullets and he might defend himself; give a man a gun, some bullets, and shooting lessons, and he will defend himself,” Bonesteel argued. “Tools alone are not enough; understanding how to wield the tools is also needed.” The Joints Chiefs ultimately convinced the Colonel to replace only 25% of American troops in Indochina in order to keep the region stable and prevent Russia and China from interpreting the movement as a withdrawal from the region. The war hawks of the administration believed they had “the situation” with the President’s increasingly dovish tendencies “under control,” according to Franke.

Just a week later, though the Colonel formed a special Senate Subcommittee to determine whether or not the military could maintain its then-current strength through an all-volunteer army, a concept endorsed by Secretary Friedman. In 1967, the subcommittee’s finding were handed in…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



BROWN BESTS DOUGLAS-HOME IN LARGE SWING; Labour to Return to Power for 1st Time Since 1951

London – Just six months after a resounding re-election, Prime Minister Alec Douglas-Home lost tonight’s general election, bested by the young and energetic George Brown of Belper, whom led his Labour party to victory tonight. Labour acquired 339 seats, whereas Douglas-Home’s Conservative party strength was diminished to 277 seats. Jo Grimond increased the Liberal party’s number of seats to a total of 14. At age 50, Brown is set to become the youngest Prime Minister in decades. Fittingly, Brown was carried to victory by a surge in youth activism… …Due to his obtainment of a 12-seat majority in the last election, Douglas-Home had difficulty sustaining a full Parliament, leading to him calling for another election in May. …Brown had served as deputy party leader from 1960 until January of this year, when he successfully challenged party leader Harold Wilson for the Labour’s top spot in June in a vote of no confidence. Wilson’s loss of party leadership was largely due to his failure to defeat Douglas-Home in two consecutive elections. In said June vote, Brown ran to the left of Wilson, who is considered to be on the party’s centre-left. …Renewed fear of a nationalization of the country’s banks “to stop unfair banking practices,” according to Labour, has shaken the nation’s stock market…

The Guardian, 27/8/1965



On September 29, Tim [Leary] invited down to his place for a “major announcement.” …he kept the pad, the center of his campaign launch, simple and informal, the antithesis of the pachyderms and jackasses roaming about the California landscape. He just sat there on the floor Indian-style and rang a little gong until the room was quiet enough for him to finally say, “My friends, it’s high time – that we advance the shoutnik movement further into the political specter. With your love and support, I am announcing my bid for Governor of the Golden State.” He unveiled the new political party: “Natural Mind.” Its slogan: “Power to the People, a Happier Society, a Better World.” A bit wordy, so I told him to change it, and soon he got out some paint and a wooden board and made the slogan “Let’s Be Good To Each Other.” It was vague, but better than the first one. I was just happy to see at least somebody in this community finally grow the cojones to make such a commitment…

– Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear, Loathing, and Mary Jane on the Campaign Trail ’66, Tumbleweed Books, 1967



In December 1960, the Labor department issued on its own a set of mandatory safety and health standards under the Walsh-Healey Act. The department had previously issued most of these standards in a "Green Book" of informal guidelines to aid Federal and State inspectors. States had been encouraged to inspect Federal contractors and enforce their own rules. Now they were barred from applying their standards and had to enforce the Federal rules instead. For the first time, the Federal occupational safety and health requirements were applied to the whole range of industry. The new rules were not popular. Because there had been no hearings or prior announcement, labor and industry were caught by surprise and miffed that they had not been consulted. Business protested strongly to the Labor Department against making the rules mandatory. The powerful wave of criticism reached its peak in 1963 congressional hearings that prodded the Department of Labor with a serious examination of all its safety programs… A study by an outside consultant found in the department a fragmented collection of safety programs and laws. It recommended consolidation of all these safety programs under a single agency. [9]

Outside of D.C. bureaucracy, among the shoutnik generation, a movement to protect the natural environment from the ravages of mankind and technology began growing while the Labor Department was seeking to improve and expand its protection of workers' safety and health. Large-scale Federal air and water pollution control programs were developed, helping to increase awareness and concern about the occupational environment. [9]

Spurred by this movement, in 1965 the Public Health Service produced a report, "Protecting the Health of Eighty Million Americans," which outlined some of the recently found technological dangers. It noted that a new chemical entered the workplace every 20 minutes, that evidence now showed a strong link between cancer and the workplace, and that old problems were far from being eliminated. The report called for a major national occupational health effort centered in the Public Health Service. [9]

In September 1965, a federal government report begun under the Johnson administration revealed that almost a hundred uranium miners, an abnormally high number, had died of lung cancer since the 1940's. Up to a thousand more such deaths were expected. In 1947, when large-scale uranium mining was getting underway, the Atomic Energy Commission discovered that radiation levels in these mines were dangerously high. The Commission, in cooperation with the Public Health Service, began a long-term health study of the miners. A number of Federal agencies had limited jurisdiction over uranium mines, but none had clear responsibility for them, and there was very little enforcement. [9]

The lack of action took on tragic overtones with the revelations…and public attention focused on the Federal Radiation Council. Created in 1959 to advise the President on protective measures to take against all types of radiation hazards, the council was composed of representatives from concerned agencies. The nation’s unions, realizing a healthy environment was connected to healthy workplaces and healthy workers, urged President Sanders to support the report's recommendations and call for federal oversight.

…These events had a decisive impact on the shaping of a national job safety and health program… [9]

By the end of 1965, the Democrats were indebted to the labor vote, but since they had been upsetting the unions via failed labor reform for 20 years, and in light of an interior belief that the drop in labor voters in 1964 contributed to Johnson’s election loss that year, the party decided to spend 1965 pushing for a federal agency to enforce workplace safety laws. The new proposal to cover work safety, the Laborer Occupational Safety and Health Act, or LOSHA, gathered enough momentum in the House to proceed to the Senate and ultimately land on the President’s desk. Despite Sanders maintaining pro-management rhetoric and suggesting business-run oversight, he ultimately yielded to popular demand and made the bill an act on September 30. Many Congressional Republicans had ended up supporting the law because they also wanted to win over labor votes. “The millionaire and the homeless man have equal power in the voting booth, and there’s more poor people than rich people,” HEW Secretary Rockefeller famously opined in an October 1965 WSJ article.

The fight for all this, however, was overshadowed by the support of labor being rattled after a noted member of that community was revealed to be a less-than-perfect public figure…

– losha.gov.usa/general/aboutlosha/history



HOUSE REPUBLICANS REJECTS $11 BILLION ANTI-POVERTY PACKAGE, KILL VOTE

The Federal Assistance Dividend proposal has been rejected on bipartisan lines…

The Washington Post, 10/1/1965



“Slip-ups are just opportunities to improve,” Claudia told the press [10]. …The Colonel was a quick learner, figuring out that in order to have laws passed and immediately implemented, promising political support to other people’s ideas was “the cleanest way to go about it”…

– Ted White’s The Making of the President: 1968, Atheneum Publishers, 1969



The South China Reports were codenamed “Project White Bird,” with Joint Chiefs Chairman Franke overseeing the report on the conditions of southern China in relation to North Vietnam (“The Blue Bird Report”) and General Mark Clark, as Chief of the Army, overseeing the report on the specifics – timetables, manpower, resources, enemy reply – of what an invasion of North Vietnam would require (“The Red Bird Report”).

[snip]

In October, Franke finally revealed his department’s finished report, while Clark’s team continued the work on theirs.

Sanders was ebullient when Blue Bird’s conclusion matched his hunch – the region was indeed lacking in infrastructure and communication links to Beijing. Sanders soon called to the Oval Office Senators Richard Nixon, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, and Barry Goldwater, head of the committee’s subcommittee on Asian Affairs, for a meeting on the next steps to be taken. While Goldwater and military leaders urged for a quick and decisive invasion to be executed “within the year,” Nixon was more hesitant. “Cool your jets, Barry” he said, “If we go in there guns a-blazing and we end up with egg on our face – no offense, Colonel – we’ll never live it down, politically, diplomatically, or militarily. I think we should wait until we know what Clark’s team finds out. An invasion like this… Colonel, you only get one shot at this. So you’ve got to make it count for something.”

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



TEAMSTERS UNION JIMMY HOFFA ARRESTED FOR ALLEGED SECURITIES FRAUD

…Hoffa has been accused of orchestrating an elaborate scheme to capitalize from the financial fallout of the Salad Oil Recession. The scheme allegedly “began in 1963 and may or may not have had something to do with union pensions, too,” according to an anonymous member of the Detroit police force…

The Washington Post, 10/2/1965



…A simple car ride ended in tragedy just an hour ago, when a car driven by famous Hollywood actress Elizabeth Taylor drove off a road and into a forested area close to her California home. Ms. Taylor was found dead at the scene. Police are not disclosing further details at this time. Ms. Taylor, who was the star of several MGM films such as Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Cleopatra, was 33, and she leaves behind a husband and six children. We’ll bring you more information on this tragic event as it develops…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS News, 10/4/1965 broadcast



REPORT: Expansion of Infrastructure Projects Chipping Away At Unemployment Rate

The Washington Post, side article, 10/4/1965



FANS WORLDWIDE PAY THEIR RESPECTS AS LIZ TAYLOR BURIED TODAY: Marilyn Monroe, Kim Novak, Other Starlets Share Their Thoughts

Variety, 10/9/1965



KENNEDY: “I do not believe in Sanders’ claim that American troops in Laos will leave ‘soon.’ For oven ten year now, I have been very wary of the belief that Indochina can be permanently kept Communist-free. In 1954, I penned an open letter to President Eisenhower entitled ‘The Truth About Indochina’ in which I wrote, eh… (clears throat) ‘to pour money, material, and men into the jungles of Indochina without at least a remote prospect of victory would be dangerously futile and self-destructive’ [11] . I have not changed my mind on this. In fact, the experience I gained at the State Department has many me even more certain that keeping our troops over there will be detrimental in a multitude of ways.”

INTERVIEWER: “Did you make these opinions known to President Johnson?”

KENNEDY: “Well yes, but I could not change his own opinions on the subject. He was determined to protect democratic interests overseas no matter the costly difficulty.”

– Former Secretary of State Jack Kennedy and interviewer, NBC Interview, 10/10/1965



BLACKOUT LEAVES MILLIONS WITHOUT POWER IN PA, NJ, NYC, SURROUNDING AREAS

Last night at 11:13 PM EST, electrical power grids went dark across six northeastern states… The power failure trapped thousands in NYC subways and dead traffic lights caused several minor car accidents, according to the New York City Police Department. …Thankfully, a bright full moon in the night’s sky [12] served as a light source for those in the dark until morning…

The Florida Times-Union, 10/11/1965



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[pic: imgur.com/CgR3bKF.png ]
– Collage concerning the Great Blackout of 1965



“Only one person died in the Great Blackout of 1965 – our dad. He was at the foot of our basement when the lights went out – he fell and broke his neck. We were going to move to California when I was four, but the War in Cuba lead to our dad getting a better job offer here in Sayreville at the last minute. He was 41. We don’t really remember him – I was only six, my older brother and my sister don’t really remember him either – but our mother always said that, though she does miss him, he was a dark and violent man that we wouldn’t have looked up to. For Christs’ sake, Ma swears he was a member of the American Nazi Party! And because there’s no reason to not believe her, we fully do, yeah. But we still wonder, you know, how things would have worked out if we had grown up with our actual Dad around instead of our stepdad...”

– Electrician Kevin S. Fowler of Sayreville, NJ; part of an American Broadcasting Network (ABN) video marking the 50th anniversary of the Great Power Outage of 1965, 10/10/2015 [13]



GOV. HUGHES IN HOTTER AND HOTTER WATER FOR SLOW RESPONSE TO BLACKOUT

Trenton, NJ – While power was restored within hours in most counties in Pennsylvania, Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, millions were without electricity – “the bloodline that makes modern civilization possible,” one Republican assemblyman noted – for days on end. Even now, some communities in the Pine Barrens are trying to make do without modern amenities such as refrigeration and light bulbs… Yesterday, President Sanders ordered an FBI investigation into the cause of the blackout, which state governments are working with to learn how to prevent a repeat of such an event. Hughes, who has repeatedly stated that New Jersey was the worst state hit, says emergency services “are working as fast as possible” to remedy lingering situations and assist the FBI in their investigation… Hughes’ challenger in next week’s gubernatorial election, Republican nominee Wayne Dumont, has been calling Hughes’ response to the blackout “a clear sign of his poor leadership skills”…

The Star-Ledger, 10/26/2015



John Emerson Moss, a 50-year-old Utah-born WWII-veteran lawyer and Democratic Congressman from California since 1953 and the head of House Subcommittees concerning Government Information and Consumer Protection (Chairman of the Government Information Subcommittee), sat down with the Colonel to discuss the Freedom of Information Act, a work Moss had pushed for ever since his first term. His open admonishing on the federal government’s alleged abuse of federal power was unpopular on the hill, and Moss even butted heads with fellow Democrats over passage of the FOIA.

“The misuse of the nation’s government’s document classification and confidentiality policy system needs to be reformed. The government’s keeping too many secrets, Mr. President.” He said.

Colonel Sanders replied, “I’m sure the government has its reasons.”

“Sir, you’re the head of the government. You really should know said reasons.”

“Oh what am I saying? You’re right! I really should have this checked out.”

“No need, sir,” moss assured the Colonel, pulling out a thick stack of papers from his briefcase, “here’s copies of our research, concluding the excessive use of the phrase ‘classified’ over the past three Presidencies.”

“Whoo-wee, that’s a lot of tree flakes! Are you sure these all don’t need to be classified, because if I was a Soviet spy, this is exactly the kind of thing I’d try to do.”

“Sir, I assure you that by changing the way we treat this sort of information, you can clear away even more unnecessary government bureaucracy.”

“Well, I do like runnin’ a clean and mess-less ship.”

– C.J. Ciaramella, One-Man Crusade: John Moss And The Freedom of Information Act, Pacific Standard Magazine, 7/13/2016



The United States Information Agency was a federal agency founded in 1953 and devoted to “public diplomacy” concerning foreign viewers of American radio programs, motion pictures and literature. The idea behind it was to promote dialogue between American and other cultures. At its height, the USIA was the biggest PR organization in the world, with over $2 billion spent each year to promote American views and oppose Soviet views in over 100 nations worldwide. …The USIA’s foreign press centers in several major US cities aimed to “assist resident and visiting foreign journalists”… …The USIA was accused of being propagandistic in nature, presenting a false image of what life was like in America. It was then ironic, given political allegiances, that decades later, anti-immigration activists would point the finger at the USIA for “planting into the minds of immigrants the image of the US as the best place to live in for anyone not born and raised there,” according to American political strategist Jet Wilders (who was, in another strike of irony, was born in the Netherlands and immigrated to the US as a young adult). The USIA’s use of alleged “updated yellow journalism” during the Cuban War contradicted the negative portrayal of America that was sometimes depicted in some Hollywood motion pictures during that time. The USIA even resorted to making their own pro-America documentaries when Hollywood became too much against them in 1964, at the height of the anti-war movement. …The USIA kept the President and its relative government collaborators up-to-date on foreign views with public opinion polls. Through these polls, President Sanders kept his pulse on America’s approval among the people of South Vietnam and Laos during the Indochina Wars…

– Nancy Snow’s Propaganda, Inc: Selling America’s Culture to the World, ISBN 1-888363-74-6



Colonel Sanders was a man of contradictions. He celebrated mainstream media, which in turn celebrated him, but discouraged other venues of expression for our First Amendment rights. In October 1965, Sanders met with Congressman Moss to discuss freedom of speech. Just later that same month, the Colonel increased funding or the USIA and permitted further efforts by the FBI to censor America – to crack down on pornography, obscenity, and other venues of what he saw intolerable demonstrations of human indecency... The Colonel’s aversion to such temptations of the flesh stemming from his strict conservative Advent Christian upbringing is no excuse for his actions… The Colonel quickly became an enemy of underground comic creators, adult cartoonists, and art house filmmakers nationwide. For much of the Sanders administration, Andy Warhol was frequently followed and at times even directly confronted by government agents, according to Paul America’s 2006 autobiography. Things came to a head in November 1965 when Yoko Ono arrested for indecent exposure during a reprise of her famous performance art work “Cut Piece.” In the work, Ono sits still and invites audience members to cut off pieces of the suit she’s wearing while she sits in silence. Critics saw it as an interactive look at social relationships, and the relationship between artist and art object. But news of one lewd audience member cutting away the front of her suit to expose a nipple led to police interrupting the exhibit run. Underground artists blamed the unfair arrest on Mayor Wagner, President Sanders, and Director Hoover… The incident culminated in a NY state court ruling in 1966 on the distinction between public art and indecent exposure, which ruled Ono could not be held responsible for unintentional obscenity, which was met with controversy even among alleged progressive and forward-thinking politicians of the time…

– Socialist Workers Party radical activist Stephanie Coontz’s A Strange Stirring: The Feminine Mystique and American Women at the Dawn of the 1960s, New York: Basic Books, 2011



Respecting his predecessor’s passion for space exploration, Colonel Sanders maintained our [NASA’s] budget. …Meanwhile, partially influenced by Tereshkova’s 1963 accomplishments and a January 1965 court case that declared that refusing to enroll women into the astronaut program (despite studies showing that they were better suited for space travel) was unconstitutional, a special subcommittee of the House Committee on Science and Astronautics was established in early 1965. After meeting with a multitude of NASA officials throughout the year, they released their reports on the manner on November 1. Two weeks later, NASA announced that they would begin vetting women candidates, with Webb declaring “with the next five years, an American woman will travel in space.”

– NASA scientist Farouk El-Baz’s Up and Away: How The Cold War Competition Pushed Us Into The Stars, MacFarland & Company, 1994



HUGHES BY A HAIR AND HOLTON BY A HEAP

Trenton, NJ – Tonight, two states held elections for governor – New Jersey and Virginia, both of which felt much GOP strength in their respective elections in the wake of national and state-based developments. …In the Garden State, incumbent Governor Hughes bested Wayne Dumont Jr. by only 1%... most pundits believe the last month’s historic blackout to be behind the election’s narrowness, as Hughes leadership during the emergency was scrutinized – thousands of New Jersey residents went days without power (or even weeks in some of the more remote parts of the state)… In Virginia, Linwood Holton became the state’s first Republican Governor since 1869… His defeat of Lieutenant Governor Mills Godwin demonstrates the influence of President Sanders, as the Colonel gave Holton a rousing endorsement on October 27…

The Philadelphia Inquirer, 11/2/1965



PERICONI ELECTED MAYOR

…After last month’s the power outage, Periconi was hailed for his response as Bronx Borough President to minimize the effects, maintain order, and restore power to his borough …Periconi was also likely helped by Governor Wilson, a fellow Republican who has also been praised for his response to last month’s power grid failure…

The New York Daily News, 11/8/1965



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[ imgur.com/IEZSje0.png ]
– clickopedia.co.usa



New York City Mayoral General Election Results, 11/2/1965:
Joey Periconi (Republican-Liberal alliance) – 1,146,215 (44.84%)
Paul O’Dwyer (Democratic-Civil Service alliance) – 978,271 (38.27%)
Charles Edison (Conservative) – 388,902 (15.21%)
Clifton DeBerry (Socialist Workers) – 29,298 (1.15%)
Vito P. Battista (United Taxpayers) – 11,247 (0.44%)
Eric Hass (Socialist Labor) – 2,301 (0.09%)
John E. Smith (Heritage and Independence) – 217 (0.00%)
Total votes cast: 2,556,451
Turnout: 32.89% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



HELLYER BEATS DIEF IN TONIGHT’S GENERAL ELECTION

…In tonight’s election, Ontario’s Paul Hellyer (Liberal), age 42, defeated incumbent John Diefenbaker (Conservative) as well as Tommy Douglas (New Democracy), Réal Caouette (Ralliement créditiste), and Robert N. Thompson (Social Credit)… The Conservatives lost all of their seats from Quebec, most likely due to Diefenbaker’s unpopular crackdowns on separatists in the province that began three summer ago, in 1963. Another factor was criticism of Diefenbaker’s “slow” response to last month’s power outage that left most of the population of Ontario in the dark for hours…

– The Kimberley Daily Bulletin, Canadian newspaper, 11/8/1965



…The MLB soon became deadlocked over who should succeed the retiring Ford Frick, with the pro-business/outsider faction’s strength remaining equal to the pro-internal-promotion faction. On the 14th, former U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Curtis LeMay recommended 4-Star U.S. Air Force General William Eckert be given the job. However, due to a poor phone line connection and a clerical error, the military man instead contacted was former U.S. Air Force Secretary Eugene M. Zuckert. By the time club owners had learned of the error, Eckert had already replied back accepting the offer. After some hesitance, the club owners reviewed Zuckert’s term as Secretary, were impressed by his citations for “outstanding management performance” under President Johnson, and agreed to the selection, making it official with unanimous – all 20 major club owners voted Zuckert. The former Secretary quickly signed a six-year contract and with earnest began his time as the 4th Commissioner of Baseball on November 17.

– John Helyar’s Lords of the Realm: The Real History of Baseball, Ballantine Books, 1994



HELLYER PREMIERSHIP BEGINS TODAY: Governor-General Swears In Politically Diverse Cabinet

– The Nanaimo Daily News, Canadian newspaper, 11/18/1965



ARIZONA REPUBLICANS MAKE KFC THE OFFICIAL FOOD OF STATE PARTY

– The Sacramento Bee, 11/20/1965



Father never kept recordings of things – much of what he wrote in his 1974 autobiography was compiled from memory! He was always too busy to record things, or even set up a taping system like the kind Johnson had installed for his time in office, though he did keep some notes that he saved and stored away here and there, and marginally strewn together with the recollections of those around him as well to make the book more complete.

[snip]

…It’s funny how things look big when you’re small – by which I mean to say that sometimes spending time away from something will lead to you looking at it differently... By November, my father was overextending himself again, trying to micromanage every part of the executive branch. After ten months in the Oval Office, my father was starting to seem a bit overwhelmed. On the 21st of November, he invited me to the White House for “an official discussion.” …I always have and always will be impressed by the work that does into the Presidential property, and the exertion Claudia put into it was no exception. She redesigned the interior to make the upstairs quarters more cozy and informal, while the rooms downstairs were more modern to better separate the “work areas” from the “home areas.” …Father sat down with me in the Lincoln Room. “Son,” he began Looked concerned. “I have a problem. Bryce Harlow has resigned. He’s been my, eh, ‘Counselor to the President’ guy, this position Nixon convinced me to make up so I could have more people to work with. Well, Bryce just went up and quit on me yesterday because he thinks I’m ‘too soft and too willing to cave to leftists.’ His words, not mine.”

“Father, what are you thinking?”

“I’m thinking of who would be the best person to fill the spot. Someone I trust, and have worked with before in politics.” He finally got to the question: “Son, will you do your old man a real big favor and join the White House staff?”

He looked like he was truly starting to feel the weight of the Presidency on him, that the complications of politics were trying him as he sought to maintain his ideals. In my opinion, innocence and intelligence cannot coexist in D.C. any more than foxes and rabbits can coexist in the wild. Father refused to believe in such a philosophy – he believed that good men always win in the end. So in that moment, I figured, if someone is to prop Father up when reality is throwing him curveballs, it might as well be me.

…With Millie agreeing to replace me as Co-CEO with Dave Thomas, Father announce my appointment on the 23rd.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr.’s In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



HOST: “Now this is just a blatant act of nepotism.”

CO-HOST: “I agree, and it makes sense why the Colonel would do this – he’s worked with his son for years and likely trusts his opinion. And in Harley Sanders’s defense, it’s not like he’s unqualified. He’s college-educated, a leader in his own right, helped with his father’s 1955 and 1964 campaigns, and even served as, let me check my notes here, ‘Assistant to the Governor’ from ’57 to ’59, which basically is the state-level version of the job he’s applying for now. With that on his resume, I think he’ll get security clearance and all that jazz.”

HOST: “If he does, it’ll be a slippery slope. Has any other president been so open with something like this?”

CO-HOST: “Well, actually, there is precedence for this sort of thing.”

HOST: “How?”

CO-HOST: “Two recent examples: FDR got his son to officially serve as ‘Secretary to the President’ for over a year, and Jack Kennedy – um, LBJ’s Secretary of State – got his brother to serve as Undersecretary of State.”

HOST: “Oh. Well…even still, the idea is unethical!”

–Transcript of exchange between the Host and Co-Host of WHCV-AM, news/talk radio, 11/24/1965 broadcast



EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY BILL PASSES HOUSE, WILL BE SIGNED INTO LAW “DAYS FROM NOW”

Washington, D.C. – With Congress preparing to adjourn for Winter Recess, President Sanders convinced a majority of members of the House to pass the Equal Employment Opportunity Bill. The bill, an “addition” to the 1962 Civil Rights Act, would, if passed, specify the definition of workplace discrimination and document discriminatory employment practices. US Labor Secretary Art Larson lauded its passage as “a promoter and protector of African-American and women workers”… …The Colonel’s second major policy change, a Prison Reform Bill, scheduled for a vote in January...

– The Washington Post, 12/1/1965



IRA BOMBING IN BELLANALECK KILLS PROTESTANT BARTENDER

Belfast, NORTHERN IRELAND – Members of the paramilitary group I.R.A. have turned to radical efforts to make their grievances known. …While these radical members of the Irish Republican Army had increased their violence over the British government’s involvement in the Cuba War, other members of the group, inspired by the recent political events in France, are seeking election to local positions to create change democratically… The two groups are seemingly increasing hostilities between themselves and their shared enemies…

– The Daily Mirror, UK newspaper, 12/2/1965



“The military needs to be properly built when combatting an enemy, but the issue is not the amount of the money it has but how its money is used. For example, uh, we have, um, a couple thousand or so of our men over in Laos and Southern Vietnam right now. But the Vietnamese should have to learn to fight for themselves so they can fight for themselves. …Instead of using our resources and funding to end American lives, we should be giving the Vietnamese financial support. Equipment and training. I do not believe we are training the South Vietnamese in anything at this point, and that is a, uh, big waste of time and materials there.”

– Former US Secretary of State Jack Kennedy on Meet the Press, 12/10/1965



QUEEN FREDERICA OF HANOVER, CONSORT OF THE HELLENES, DIES IN HELICOPTER CRASH!

The Edmonton Journal, Canadian newspaper, 12/11/1965



In December, I sat down with Audie Murphy in the Oval Office. I wanted his perspective on the situation in Southeast Asia.

Audie Leon Murphy is a very commendable young man. Like me, he grew up livin’ the country farm life and served in the military despite being too young to serve. But unlike me, he stayed in the armed forces for more than a few months, and went above and beyond the call of duty – enough to become the most decorated combat soldier in WWII.

At 40, he’d become a charismatic horse breeder and horse racer, and had also gotten himself into show business; he was planning on making a movie called “Trunk to Cairo” in Israel the next year [1966].

…After going over horses and movies, though, I finally I asked him “What’s your take on the fightin’ in Indochina?”

His reply was “We’re already fighting for freedom there, so let’s finish the job. I think you should find the best men you have. Find the next Pattons. Find the future generals. And avoid the mistakes made there in the past. Look at the French, Colonel – What caused the French to leave? They mistreated the locals and they underestimated them. When they were surrounded at Dien Bien Phu, they thought air supply would aid them. It didn’t. They were forced out because they abused the locals enough to turn their weapons on them. Never underestimate the will to kill, Colonel. Never.”

…Before leaving, Murphy talked to me greatly about improving rehabilitation programs for our soldiers. I took his words to heart and got right on it…

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



NOTE(S)/SOUCRE(S)
[1] Italicized passage from Ernest Gruening in The Nation, 5/5/1969 issue, IOTL (source found on his wiki article)
[2] Reprisal idea stems from how Nixon feared reprisals IOTL: https://www.nytimes.com/1991/06/05/us/tape-shows-nixon-feared-hoover.html
[3] From here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poor_People%27s_Campaign
[4] Page 15 of the Colonel’s OTL 1966 autobiography “The Original Celebrity Chef” (PDF of full text found on his wiki article! (Source #6))
[5] $125 in 1965 is the equivalent of $1,006.54 in 2019 according to this site: https://www.saving.org/inflation/inflation.php?amount=123&year=1965
[6] Rhetoric taken from Nixon’s own on it: youtube.com/watch?v=6vHYFzYvCak
[7] Extended Italicized Passage taken from the Introduction of the Colonel’s OTL 1966 autobiography “The Original Celebrity Chef”
[8] Ibid., Page 113
[9] Italicized quotes found here: https://www.dol.gov/general/aboutdol/history/osha
[10] Actually, this is the motto of the great Ms. Lawrence of New Brunswick, NJ, a former teacher of mine.
[11] Full letter here: https://www.jfklibrary.org/archives/other-resources/john-f-kennedy-speeches/united-states-senate-indochina-19540406
[12] According to the information found here: https://www.fullmoon.info/en/fullmoon-calendar/1965.html
[13] Butterflies lead to Spacey's father not relocating the family to California in 1963/1964. IOTL, Spacey was negatively shaped by years of sexual and physical abuse from his father (https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-father-Nazi-child-rapist-brother-says.html); here, Spacey is too young to remember enough of it for it to mentally/emotionally scar him, allowing him (and his OTL victims) to live a relatively better life.
 
Post 16
Post 16: Chapter 24



Chapter 24: December 1965 – June 1966



“Far too many people are looking for the right person, instead of trying to be the right person.”

– Gloria Steinem



“He is a loud and outspoken fellow who cannot be criticized for supporting his rhetoric with actual action.”

– UK PM George Brown, when asked by a reporter for his opinion on Colonel Sanders, 12/13/1965



MITTERAND STICKS TO CAMPAIGN PLEDGE, REFUSES TO SEND TROOPS TO AID U.S. FORCES IN INDOCHINA

...the French President added, "This is a Colonel who does not have to fight. I will enjoy working with him on projects that promote peace and avoid deaths."

– The Los Angeles Times, 12/13/1965



AMERICAN BIRD SELLER DECEIVES WESTERN FOOLS!

…“Colonel” Harland Sanders, by trade a businessman (the epitome of capitalism), exploited the labor of his workers to become elected Head Oppressor of the United Slaves of America in November 1964. …Elderly and infirm (American propaganda fail to hide his cane from view), Sanders would make you think that he is a superior leader because he takes advantage of people regardless of skin color – because he forces people into modern slavery indiscriminately – but he is just as much an oppressor as his predecessor, Lyndon Johnson… As the Colonel seeks to undermine the will of our equality-loving comrades in Southeast Asia, our noble Soviet leaders stand in solidarity with Ho Chi Minh and the men and women of North Vietnam...

Pravda, Soviet newspaper, “opinion article,” 12/14/1965



“Will everything be ready for this evening, Julia?”

Ms. Child answered, “Oh, do not worry, Mr. President, everything will be just divine.”

The Colonel looked over the long table being prepared for the main guest’s arrival, noting “It’s imperative that we win over the Cambodians to get some more solidarity over there.”

“Rest assured, the Prince will experience only the best.”

“Yeah. You know, I wasn’t entirely sure about hiring you since you mostly do French cooking.”

“But sir, the French owned Indochina for nearly a century, and heavily influenced the region’s cuisine during that time – for instance, baguettes with paté, called ‘nom pang’ over there, I believe, is a common Cambodian staple.”

“We havin’ that here?” The Colonel inquired.

“Well, not just that. Cambodian meals always have at least four dishes. We’ll start off with a nice fish amok – a creamy curry seen as the nation’s signature dish – and some kuy teav, before moving on to Kampot pepper crab with rice, and then we’ll finally serve the main dish, a refreshing helping of Chicken and Banana Flower Salad.”

“Chicken and banana?! Now I’ve heard everything!”

“Oh, Mr. President, of all the politicians about, you should know that when it comes to chicken, the possibilities are endless!”

Likely thinking about his pressure-fried birds, he replied, “Yeah, but after havin’ the best of ’em, you don’t care about the rest of ’em…”

“I really hope this works, Pop,” I interpolated my concern into the conversation.

Father answered with “It better be – it’s going to be nationally televised!”

yVv31cJ.png


[pic: imgur.com/yVv31cJ.png ]
Pictured: Father tasting a dish Ms. Child is preparing while I (far left and out of frame; only my arm is visible) review the day’s schedule

Julia Child’s landmark home cooking TV series, The French Chef, first premiered in 1963 and was an immediate hit. The beloved statuesque chef introduced French cooking to millions of American households across the country, leading to her receiving a Peabody Award in 1964 (and in May 1966, her show won a Primetime Emmy Award for Achievements in Educational Television – Individuals). By 1965, nearly 100 stations were airing The French Chef.

But in August 1964, PBL approached her [1] about doing a newsy half-hour special in 1965 while she was on hiatus from her cooking show [2]. The final project, 1965’s TV special “White House Red Carpet with Julia Child,” was the result of Child’s failed first pitch to the Public Broadcasting Library (PBL). She initially hoped to document Paris’s legendary Les Halles food market, but PBL deemed the project too expensive. So she proposed a behind-the-scenes look at a White House State Dinner instead. When PBL passed again, National Educational Television (NET), which had produced her show since the first episode aired in February 1963, agreed to air the special. No camera crew had ever been permitted to film a state dinner before, [2] but Ms. Child managed to get White House via letters, telegrams, and phone calls from herself and her producers at WGBH, her “home” station in Boston.

Father had never watched her show, explaining “I don’t really go for fancy French cookin’. Besides, I’m too busy politickin’.”

“Oh, but that’s what’s great about her show, Pop,” I remember hearing Margaret interject, “she simplifies it all so anybody can make the fancy foods she presents.”

Father ultimately agreed to the idea just after convincing the Prince of Cambodia to meet with him at the White House.

During the early 1960s, Prince Norodom Sihanouk kept his nation neutral as tension rose to Cambodia’s north, but as 1964 turned to 1965, CIA reports confirm rumors that Sihanouk was heavily considering severing western ties and turning to the Soviets and P.R. Chinese for economic aid. Father had to convince the Prince that either remaining neutral or siding with the west were the more preferable options, and figured a face-to-face meeting over a well-cooked meal was the best setting for the task of strengthening connections and trust between our two countries.

The date was set for December 14, and Ms. Child immediately sought out what to serve. She spent several days interviewing presidential staffs – including the White House executive chef, [2] a former KFC franchisee.

When the day finally arrived, and I was more nervous and jumpy than a cornered squirrel. It was my first major task since taking the job and I could not let anything go wrong. The dinner’s guest of honor was joined at the dinner table by 110 guests. These included Laotian Prime Minister Souvanna Phouma, Vice President Scranton, Secretary of State Carl Curtis, and Ambassador Lodge, plus many other politicians and foreign dignitaries. Following White House tradition, the Colonel and the Prince exchanged gifts. Then we started eating.

[snip]

After the first course, the conversation became more serious… Prince Sihanouk said in impressively unbroken English, “Colonel, I like you. I like how you are, how you would say, a straight-talker. And I like how you eat amok like a native Cambodian. But I still need to know for certain that Indochina will fall into an American sphere of influence and not a Chinese one when the fighting stops. I have just one job: to defend the independence, integrity and dignity of my country and my people [3].” Of course, the Prince would admit to his fear of loving power and dying in obscurity many years later, but at the time, he had us convinced otherwise. “I need to look out for my country and obtain for it the best terms that I can with the side that will ultimately win. How can I know for certain that siding with you is what is best for my country?”

Father replied shortly with, “Historically, we’ve never lost a war. Militarily, we have superior firepower and resources, and are getting more and more information every day on how the Viet Congo and Pathet Lao think and work. And diplomatically, I’m aware that a country is no good to anyone if it’s radioactive, so know I will never let it get to that point. Now, nothing’s ever set in stone, but I tell you what – I can promise to help out your country if you help out ours.”

Secretary Curtis took the moment to add, “The Khmer Rouge is the name of that communist guerilla group causing all the trouble in your country’s northern provinces, yes? If they ally with the Viet Cong, they could attack Laos from two fronts.”

“Impossible,” the Prince disagreed, “they are too small and disunited.”

“We should keep an eye on them anyway,” Curtis continued, “The British thought their American colonies were too disunited to stir up trouble in 1775. You know how that turned out?”

“Exactly,” the Prince went on the offense, “your country has a history of death and conquest. The American Indians, the Philippines, Korea, and now Cuba. Is Indochina to experience their woes, too?”

Without raising his voice, Curtis uttered with a hint of outrage “We liberated those places from tyranny and oppression – ”

“Carl,” Father interrupted, “Prince Sihanouk, I’m telling you the truth: it sickens me to see innocent people suffer because I care about my fellow man. Chairman Mao doesn’t. He doesn’t care about the Vietnamese or the Laotians or even about you. He only cares about power, his people be damned. You side with him, and he’ll get rid of you as soon as he no longer needs you. But side with us, and we’ll work together for the betterment of both our lots. That’s promise. And ask around – I always keep my promises.”

The Prince became less aggressive as the evening continued on.

For dessert, Father insisted on personally making an Upside Down Peach Cobbler, using his own recipe [4] to provide the Prince a taste of American cuisine, and to show the Prince “we Americans care more about making food than making war,” as Father put it. The Prince found it delicious.

After then enjoying a slice of Khmer Layer Cake with Coconut Cream, Prince Sihanouk’s attitude became much more convivial, commending Father for his transparency and sincerity. Soon, a consensus was reached that Cambodia and its Prince would be better off allying with us, the leader agreeing to support our efforts in Laos and Cambodia in exchange for military aid and advisors aimed at quelling the Khmer Rouge. Father and the Prince shook hands on it, and celebrated the productive dinner with a round of iced tea.

The telecast of the dinner aired five days later, on December 19, 1965. Reviews praised Child for “her usual ebullience” and my father for “showcasing his diplomatic prowess.”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



SPACE RACE TRAGEDY!: ASTRONAUT WALLY SCHIRRA KILLED IN TEST FAILURE!: Burns From Explosion “Too Severe To Recover From”

The Houston Post, 12/17/1965



The loss of Wally completely shook [his wife] Jo and their two children, Walt and Sue. Walt was 15, and Sue was 8. Them and Jo never recovered from the shock. I mean, well, yes, Jo did ultimately remarry twice, but both marriages were brief. She was trying and failing to recreate what she had had with Wally and she couldn’t. She died of broken heart syndrome… I was proud of the immediate actions of Senator Mondale at the time, who called for an investigation into what went wrong during the test…

– Trudy Cooper, in an interview for Mother Jones magazine, 2001



In 1957, Jack Kennedy had Profiles of Courage. In 1962, Richard Nixon had Six Crises. And in 1965, I had Unsafe at Any Speed; that was the book that started it all. Upon its release on December 21st of that year, it was an instant success, and I became a household name practically overnight. More importantly, it did the job it had to do: it exposed to the American people the elements they never realized endangered their well-being, and unveiled the irresponsibility of the car manufacturing industry.

At the time, the government was still reeling from debate over the extent of government overview of industries, with President Sanders’ Federal Assistance Dividend only adding to the chaos that created in me a weary sense that very little legislative change could actually come about from Unsafe at Any Speed. But I was proven wrong by my own work’s sheer impact. All who read it were impressed, including President Sanders himself. And with his help, that book sent my career down a path I had never anticipated.

This is not my life’s story. It is the story of the millions of lives saved over the past forty years, and it is the story of the millions of people that worked together to make America – and the world – a stronger, safer, smarter, and overall better place to live.

– Ralph Nader in the introduction of his autobiography All For The People: A Life’s Journey, 2019



PRESIDENT SANDERS VISITS CHILDREN HOSPITALS OVER CHRISTMAS WEEKEND

– The Chicago Tribune, 12/27/1965



THE CONFLICTED COLONEL: A Lover of Free Enterprise, A Conservative In Name Only, Or Somehow Both?

– Conservative magazine “Modern Age,” December 1965 issue



It was not uncommon for The Colonel’s great-grandchildren to visit the White House unannounced. The Colonel permitted it, even insisting on security “not spoiling the surprise.” Two or three of them would join their parents in a visit and immediately bolt across the premises in search of the man that Harland the Fourth would call “Grampa Sr.”. On more than one occasion, they would come running up to the President mid-meeting, to which he would exclaim “Hey, there’s my little Havana bananas” or some similar assonance, putting policy on hold for a few minutes for the great-grandfather-in-chief to regale the little ones with his “daily adventures” before sending them off to the kitchen for snacks.

– Clinton J. Hill’s Five Presidents: My Extraordinary Journal with the Secret Service, Simon & Schuster, 2016



DE GAULLE URGES US TO STAY OUT OF ASIA “AFTER MAKING PEACE” THERE

…changing noticeably from the war-supporting policies that caused De Gaulle to fall from power in 1965, De Gaulle declared that “The independence of all nations of southeast Asia must be guaranteed by the nonintervention of any outside powers”… [5]

– The Washington Post, 1/7/1966




The Colonel continued to expand Lyndon Johnson’s censorship policies by expanding funding for the FCC. While becoming controversial decades later for increasing the power of the propagandistic/now-defunct USIA throughout his presidency, believing children must be protected from the vices of adulthood until old enough to understand, handle, and properly respond to exposure to them, conservatives praised his calls for “human decency” at the time. “It was understandable,” former U.S. Congressman Edwin Denney (R-KY) defended the Colonel’s actions in a 1981 interview; “His grandson, Harland III, was about seven years old, he had younger grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and he wanted to see them grow up in a world less dark than the one he saw around him.” On this front, Congressman John Moss repeatedly confronted the Colonel, claiming it was hypocritical of Sanders to support equal rights but not freedom of speech for freedom of certain kinds of press. Moss is known for famously declaring “the right to speak and the right to print, without the right to know, are pretty empty” in 1967 [6]. But in early 1966, Moss decided that if the President’s actions were based on his religious beliefs, than that was a violation of the USA’s long-held belief in the separation of church and state; as such, by the end of the year, Moss publicly threatened five times to call for a congressional investigation into the President’s actions should such “assault on alternative press” continued.

– C.J. Ciaramella, One-Man Crusade: John Moss And The Freedom of Information Act, Pacific Standard Magazine, 2016



“Pop, you’re going to burn a ring into the carpeting if you keep pacing like that.”

“I’m just wonderin’ when Clark will get here, son,” checking his watch again, Father again noted, “I told every one of ’em to be here 20 minutes ago!”

General Mark Clark, the Chief of the Army, was due to hand in his division’s report on the manpower, resources, and likely V.C. response that a successful invasion of North Vietnam would entail.

It was the first foreign policy meeting I had ever sat in on, and most of the faces and names were unfamiliar to me, their personalities and motivations (and for some, motives) even less so. Many seemed uneasy of my presence and security clearance, but I paid them no mind.

When the Red Bird Report finally arrived, it demonstrated how no less that 15,000 troops would be required for the invasion of the north, unofficially dubbed “Operation Pressure Cooker” at the time.

“Due to these mountains, troops will head east from Xam Nua and head along this mountain pass and when south of Hoa Binh, a village on the Black River, turn north and follow this mountain road directly to the capitol. It’s a 210-mile route from our Lao outpost in Xam Nua. At least 2,000 South Vietnam troops will need to join us, and guide us through it on the ground,” Clark explained the game plan.

“And the Chinese?” Father asked.

“China’s closest military port is Zhanjiang on the opposite side of this peninsula above Hainan Island. Hanoi is inland, and our experts believe the Chinese navy’s vessels would perform poorly if they sought to travel up the Red River Delta to Hanoi.”

“So they might not do that.”

William Franke of the Joint Chiefs supported the numbers, and reaffirmed his notion that, “We’re closer to Hanoi than the Chinese and can get there faster. If all goes according to plan, and we act proficiently enough, an American flag will be flying above the city before Mao even knows it!”

“Plus, while their relationship has improved since this conflict began, there’s been enmity between the Chinese and Vietnamese for 2,000 years, and due to Mao being distrustful of Russia’s involvement – Mao and Shelepin don’t exactly have a rapport, according to our spies overseas – Mao may not even risk a counterattack,” Abrams noted.

“But before we execute this massive operation, we need to keep the VCs off the game.” Clark continued with “We need to draw their fire with a credible diversion. An increase in mobilization along the frontlines in Laos of the Annamite Mountain Range, to make Viet Cong come to the defense of the Pathet Lao, would be the best one.”

Franke added, “A bombing campaign along the border could also work to lure more Charlie’s to the nation’s south, away from the capitol.”

Westmoreland, an Army General involved in combating Pathet Lao, sat across from Abrams, the General in charge of combating the Viet Cong. Westmoreland declared that “Johnson’s attempts at attrition did not meet expectations, so with that in mind, I advise going with a full-on assault.”

He then added, “There’s also the dams.”

“Vietnam has dams?” I wondered aloud.

Westmoreland gave me a glance that screamed shut it, outsider, and continued with “these dams here and here hold back millions of cubic feet of these rivers. We take them out, it’ll cripple their food supplies, water supplies, and take out their transportation lines here, here and here.”

Father and I looked at one another and knew what the other was thinking – the Floods of ’57. The heavy blow our home state took to its infrastructure. The deaths of farm animals and abandoned pets. The damaged homes, businesses and factories. The displaced and homeless Kentuckians who needed immediate help in the aftermath.

Father spoke, “Franke, Morley… Bombing the dams would be too catastrophic. Too many innocents would be killed. There’d be no way for the press to sugarcoat it no matter how much you ass-kiss ’em.”

“It would be a tactical victory – ”

“You tell the people ‘tactical victory,’ and they won’t hear – all they’ll see is the blood of people we said we wanted to help.” I finally spoke up.

“You’re absolutely right, there, Harley,” Father replied.

After another look from Westmoreland, and a glare from Franke, Westmoreland suggested, “Then we won’t let the press into the area.”

“General, something I’ve learned from Congressman Moss and from LBJ is that when it comes to journalist, there is nothing they won’t do to get their hands on a story. And setting up roadblocks along their way only feeds their fire. Blocking the press would only make it all even worse.”

“Well we’ve got to bomb something!” Westmoreland proclaimed.

“Don’t bomb the dams! Instead, bomb their military targets; bomb their trails, bomb their roads, bomb their weapon hubs. But don’t bomb any place where there’s more civilians than military, do you hear what I say?!”

As they agreed, the men looked at each other.

“Alright, now then, when can this all happen? I’m getting’ antsy just talkin’ about it instead of doin’ it. We’ve been at this for months and we need to get these commies out of there yesterday!”

Westmoreland suggested, “The best moment to strike will be in either April because of the region’s weather. April is the time just between the monsoon winds doing their switch from blowing from the northeast – and right into our troops’ faces – to the blowing from the southwest – which would carry our scent right into VC camps ahead of us. [7]. Basically, April is between a dry and wet seasons.”

“That’s now enough time, Mr. President,” General Abrams interjected, “Tours of duty are for only one year. That’s not enough time for soldiers to get used to fighting in this terrain, so if we need 15,000 men, we’ll need to train more than the sappers and specialists on hand. We’ll need the time to coordinate and organize with the South Vietnamese, and further train South Vietnamese troops on the ground. I think we should attack in June. It’ll be monsoon season, but Morley, I think that’ll work to our advantage – I think Ho Chi Minh would be expecting us to launch a campaign when the crap weather breaks!”

Father commented, “While I really would like to get this war over and done with, I do prefer the idea of sending careerists instead of draftsmen to the frontlines. I’m also interested in using special forces like the Green Berets to do a lot of the dirty work here. I also agree with Abrams over the element of surprise. Let’s aim for June. Also, em, what are the Russians doing at the moment?”

“Reported sightings of tanks, APCs, artillery guns, and missile launchers of the kind made by the Russians are still coming in from the Border, but publicly, they are still flat-out denying any involvement,” the UN Ambassador explained.

“Eh, give me a minute alone with Shelepin and I’ll get him to tell the truth,” Father grumbled.

“Violent threats aside, I advice beefing up our security around our B-52 bases in Loas and South Vietnam ahead of this operation.”

“Of course, of course!”

With some smaller details then being ironed out, Father concluded the meeting optimistically. “Very good, gentlemen.”

Leaving the meeting, I asked General Benjamin O. Davis Jr. about the looks around the room. He motioned to follow him to another room, where he explained, “With all due respect, sir, the Colonel lacks a basic understanding of how warfare works.”

“How so?” I was taken aback.

“Well, he keeps thinking that only people in uniform are fighting us, but the truth is, every single person in North Vietnam is convinced that we are the bad guys. They are not innocent prisoners you will immediately welcome us into their country. Brainwashed or not, they are loyal to Ho Chi Minh above everything, even their own lives. And it is a bit flustering to mount an invasion when the Commander in Chief refuses to believe that the North Vietnamese people – village farmers, mothers, even children – will without hesitance sacrifice their lives for their ideology, that they would rather die than side with us.”

“It’s because father believes people can change, sir. He thinks if we show them mercy, we will change their minds.”

“That sort of idealism could be very dangerous to our men.”

“Yeah, that is a problem.”

“Mr. Sanders – ”

“Please, call me Harley.”

“ – Harley, your father’s duty is to his own countrymen first.”

“Yes, first, but not exclusively. He wants to spread American democracy, not destroy those that don’t have it.”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



PRISON REFORM BILL PASSES SENATE, SANDERS EXPECTED TO SIGN IT INTO LAW “SOON”

– The Washington Post, side article, 1/10/1966



“It is finally time to bring responsibility and reason to how we conduct ourselves on the world stage; to bring assistance to the impoverished, poor and unrepresented members of this great society; and to bring justice to those who go unpunished for their misdeeds.”

“We will bring order and stability to our overseas allies, and we will respond to any incidents in Europe or Asia or South America or anywhere else in the world with swift action to ensure that peace and freedom reign supreme not just from sea to shining sea, but from ocean to ocean and from pole to pole.”

“We must convert our good words into good deeds in order for our good words to have actual meaning and to have any effects on our present and our future.”

– Excerpts from President Sanders’ 1966 State of the Union address, 1/12/1966



Latest Reports: Sales Increasing Overall, But Sales Decreasing In Northern, Heavily-Democrat Counties.

…This is possibly in response to perceived partisan bias. …Suggestions on how to address such concerns are welcomed…

– KFC internal memo on Annual KFC beginning-of-year sales report, KFC headquarters in Florence, KY, 1/14/1966



5 INJURED IN DUNDALK ATTACK: I.R.A. Factions Resort to Cam Bombs

…With violence across the north half of Ireland on the rise for the last two years, Prime Minister Brown has condemned the attacks and has called for an inquiry into how to quell these disruptive and worrisome inconvenience to daily life in Northern Ireland and the rest of the Emerald Isle.

The Daily Mail, UK newspaper, 1/17/1966



…Hellyer began his term by forming alliances with politicians with whom he had had experience during his 17 years in parliament, but did not reach out to Progressive Conservatives… In January, Hellyer called for a major report on the government’s housing and urban renewal programs. His subsequent calls for urban development reform was criticized on the left and the right, with Howard Gaffney (a left-leaning P.C. member of parliament) calling it “not bold enough.” In February, Hellyer called for report on the effectiveness of demolishing older buildings over renovating them.

…Hellyer was to the right of his fellow Liberals on multiple issues but nevertheless supported government involvement in the economy, and so clashed with his cabinet and several PMs on the federal budget. Fiscally, he supported corporate pension funds and investing more money into housing programs and other certain national programs, and greater flexibility in Canada’s mortgage loan system. Overall, he supported the philosophy of the government being more involved in the direction of the economy and thus sought to gradually reduce the creation of private money and increase the creation of public money in order to return it to a 50%-50% split. This was also a controversial and unpopular idea…

Hellyer, a dove in regards to foreign policy against all wars, orders a reorganizing of the Canadian military to determine “any excessive and unnecessary spending.” Hellyer was considerably more anti-globalist then U.S. President Colonel Sanders, whom saw war a means of establishing peace in troubled regions. Hellyer refused to support American troops in Indochina throughout the entirety of the conflict, but nevertheless did agree with Sanders on “the basic idea that diplomacy should take priority over war.”

jEv9zev.png


[pic: imgur.com/jEv9zev.png ]
Hellyer (the tall man in the center, flanked by security guards) visiting a housing project in 1966

– clickopedia.co.usa/Paul Hellyer



Ray Kroc: “I Might Run For Governor”!

– The Sacramento Bee, 1/30/1966



“Ray was approached with the idea by some businessman who said he was a major supporter of McDonald’s and thought that even if unsuccessful, McDonald’s would financially benefit from the publicity. He presented Kroc with a series of charts and data sets to back up the idea. It was a fairly quick meeting, but it lead to huge ramifications, both for Kroc and for McDonald’s.”

– Former McDonald’s CEO June Martino, KNN interview, 1983



UPDATE: NEW SURVEY CONFIRM NOTION THAT CUSTOMERS VIEWING THE CHAIN AS PARTISAN

…many of those surveyed believe KFC is politically biased, but to what is polarizing: those polled in the south believe KFC is biased in favor of liberal Democrats and liberal Republicans, while those polled in the north believe KFC is biased in favor of conservative Republicans. Some in the latter group cite Arizona Republicans making KFC the official food of the state party late last year as “proof.”…

Suggestion: address concerns in new batch of commercials

– KFC internal memo (update on drop in sales in certain locations), KFC headquarters in Florence, KY, 2/2/1966



“Now I do not support Ho Chi Minh when I say this, but our military and out government has to understand this: Mr. Ho Chi Minh’s government was established by the Vietnamese people, not by Chinese agents. The peasants in Vietnam want his government because for them it means real land reform, an important need in their lives. That is their choice and we must respect each other to overcome that which divides us; we must accept our responsibility to the world and learn to respect Ho Chi Min and the voice of the Vietnamese people if it truly is what will bring peace to the region.”

– Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on WTLC (AM)’s 2/5/1966 radio broadcast



IS KING PRO-MINH?: Civil Rights Leader In Hot Water Over Controversial Statements

MORE CALLS MADE FOR REV. KING EXPLANATION; Senator Scoop Jackson: King “Should Be Ashamed of Himself”

REVERAND KING APOLOGIZES: After White House Talks With Sanders, Claims "I Misspoke My Thoughts”

The New York Times’ Article headlines, 2/6/1966, 2/7/1966, and 2/8/1966



BORDER DEVELOPMENT: US Army Advances Into Pathet Lao Territory Near Saravan

– Stars and Stripes, 2/16/1966



“After you have been bombing villagers…it’s going to be very difficult to persuade people that you are their friend.” [8]

– Ernest Gruening in an op-ed in Newsday, US daily newspaper, 2/25/1966




…After almost four years of anti-integration cases being brought to several state courts, today’s ruling in the federal Supreme Court case of “Rodgers versus the County School Board of Quitman County” is meant to determine the legality of state-level attempts to circumvent federal laws on racial integration. The court today ruled 7-2 that Mississippi’s Quitman County public schools admissions system was racially-based, and thus unconstitutional. …The decision means that it is illegal for racial segregation to exist in schools through the admissions process…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News, 2/28/1966 broadcast



ENOCH POWELL WINS CONSERVATIVE IN LEADERSHIP ELECTION

…the controversial politician prevailed over early frontrunner Iain Macleod, the more moderate but somewhat lackluster campaign of Reginald Maudling, and Quinton Hogg, who surprise pundits by advancing to face Powell on the final ballot. Powell bested Hogg by a narrow margin…

The Daily Telegraph, UK newspaper, 3/3/1966



OPINION POLL: US APPROVAL OF VIETNAM HANDLING DROPS

A new polling study on the approval of America’s presence in Indochina, a presence that has been ongoing since the mid-to-late 1950s… the rising number of casualties seems to be affecting how Americans view the situation abroad...

Now: Conducted between January 10 and January 17:
Well: 71%
Poorly: 15%
Unsure: 14%

Then: Conducted between March 2 and March 9:
Well: 62%
Poorly: 17%
Unsure: 21%

[snip]

…the analyst further explained, “the Cuban War has negatively affected Americans’ outlook on how, where, and most importantly why we fight the conflicts we fight. They are now a little more critical and a little more curious about how our military forces act and how we as a whole conduct and behave ourselves on the world stage”…

– In a newspaper article by George Gallup, Director of the American Institute of Public Opinion, 3/14/1966



KROC ANNOUNCES GUBERNATORIAL BID

– The Los Angeles Times, 3/15/1966



March 18 was a bad day for the US Army in the Laos-SV border war zone. A regiment of recon battalions were forced to fall back from their holding of a Xo Kong River crossing when they VC snipers got the jump on them, followed by grenade launchers and heavy fire. The number of dead, dying and wounded was in the dozens.

One benefit at Father’s disposal was in the technological development, as the Laos-Vietnam War was the first US conflict where our troops had secure voice communication equipment at the tactical level, with initial problems such as voice quality, range, time delays and other logistical issues improving over time. With a secure radio line, Father contacted the CO, a Brigadier directly in the field. In the War Room, we gathered around to listen. He believed the VCs knew exactly where officer were due to noise: “The helicopters make a roar they can hear from their underground tunnel, they can feel the vibrations has they approach, and because a chopper isn’t exactly fast, the time to take to arrive and drop the men off is enough time to set up a plan of attack.”

From this, Father suggested, “Abrams, can we use less helicopters in this fight?”

Abrams responded with, “I don’t think we can come up with a quicker way to get troops there, sir.”

After a pause, Father spoke, “Then we’ll fight fire with fire.”

A month later, the river crossing was recaptured after American snipers and South Vietnam soldiers who knew the land were dropped off five miles away. The platoon in question carefully travelled through the jungle and ultimately did what snipers do – and they cleared the area of its VC snipers.

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



Then in March, Millie decided to try to do some damage control with new commercials highlighting bipartisan values, tying KFC to universally loved individuals, symbols and concepts such a family, friendship, and the like; “chicken is for everyone” was the company’s primary phrase for a while. The new commercials’ success was only partial, as that summer’s boost in sales was only slight.

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



GOLDWATER SUPPORTS, VOTES FOR PRO-LABOR BILL – YES, REALLY!

Washington D.C. – Barry Goldwater, the senior Republican Senator from Arizona, surprised pundits, supporters and opponents today when he voted “yea” on the Occupational Unsafe Conditions and Hazards bill. The bill, meant to protect laborers by requiring employers to provide employees with adequate protection from “avoidable harm” during working hours. For instance, employees must provide proper training for workers handling hazardous materials at places such as nuclear power plants; proper protection against excessive noise levels if noise levels cannot be lowered; and require heating and cooling for cold and hot working conditions. The bill also strengthens to capabilities of sanitation inspectors.

When asked about the break from his conservative, pro-management voting streak, Goldwater explained, “We Arizonans understand the need for environmental regulation, and the need to highlight the distinctions between decent businessmen, and those that abuse the good graces of minimal government.” He then assured reporters that he was not permanently shifting his opinions, saying “I am working with the Sanders administration to get the congressional approval needed for deregulation of the airline, railroad, and trucking industries. I want businesses and companies to grow and expand, but I voted for this bill because I don’t want any of the morally compromised businesses and companies out there to take advantage of the good graces of conservatism!”

Having passed both chambers by comfortable margins, President Sanders is expected to sign the bill – soon to be the Occupational Unsafe Conditions and Hazards Act, or OUCHA – into law later this week.

– The Sacramento Union (Ted Kennedy’s newspaper), 3/21/1966



Finally, on March 29, Sanders issued an Executive Order terminating the use of Agent Orange in Vietnam altogether. Johnson had first used the chemical in Indochina in 1961 to spray and destroy enemy crops.

“According to every fella I’ve talked to who’s on the ground over there, that funky stuff also kills civilians, if not more civilians than soldiers,” Sanders complained to [Foreign Policy Advisor J. R.] Schlesinger.

Schlesinger attempted to justify its use with the fact that the British had used such herbicides during the Malayan Emergency back in the ’50s. “Its purpose is to destroy the ability of peasants to support themselves in the countryside; that will force them to look for food and work in the pro-west urban areas while also depriving the VC and PL of rural support.”

“But that’ll just lead to resentment,” the Colonel counters, “The villagers would just voice their opposition to the west in the cities instead of in the country, where more people can hear it – and their outrage would be justified! We’re supposed to help this country, not destroy it! Do you really think we will have the people’s hearts if we’ve poisoned their water supplies and burned their crops? No; they’ll hate us for years! I know I’d sure be plum-ticked if some country from half-way ’round blew up my home! Besides, if our boys are over there, aren’t we endangering our own men by doing this?! Nah, hah, J.R., this dull-headedness ends now.”

While the Pentagon seethed, D.C. doves lauded the Colonel…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



PUBLIC SMOKING AND PUBLIC HEALTH ACT INTRODUCED IN CONGRESS

…if passed, the bill would require all packages of products comprised primarily of tobacco to feature warning labels meant to make purchasers aware of the newly-confirms “health risks” of smoking. The unofficial warning would be “Warning: the US Surgeon General has conclusively linked smoking tobacco to lung cancer diagnoses, and from this that cigar/cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health.” The bill would also require the warning to be put on all radio and TV advertisements with heavy fines for companies that do not comply. …Already, spokespersons from the tobacco industry are deriding the bill as “a baseless attack on free enterprise.” …The office of the Presidency has yet to be reached for comment…

– The Chicago Tribune, 4/2/1966



On April 7, 1966, Colonel Sanders became the first sitting U.S. President to visit Japan since WWII. Arriving in Tokyo to meet with Prime Minister Eisaku Sato to discuss military geopolitics, Sanders reportedly got along well with Sato due to them “sharing a high sense of honor.” Sanders did not meet with Emperor Hirohito due to a scheduling conflict. Nevertheless, historians consider the visit to have been a major contribution to the easing of tensions between the two former enemy nations.

The 1960s: A History, Scholastic, 2007



Lyndon spent much of 1965 resting. He got his weight down from 220 to a stable 190; his heart rate returned to healthy levels; he eventually stopped smoking and drinking as reasons for doing so ceased. Overall, his appearance had improved from the somber and defeated canvass that was his face in November 1964. [snip] In early 1966, Lyndon met with Texas Democrat leaders about becoming more involved in the midterm elections. “Why not?” he argued. While he still believed that, because the men in his family died young, he himself was not long for this world, he was well aware of the fact that he was only 57. “I’m not just going to wait around for Mr. Reaper to arrive,” he told Walt Jenkins. Instead Lyndon would try to protect his legacy.

“Walter, I’ve been looking over Texas’s Senate and Congressional races. I like the lineup for the House, but the Senate seat, now, that’s a problem,” he informed Jenkins during the latter’s visit to the former’s ranch in March 1966.

“I think Carr,” referring to the presumptive Democratic nominee, state Attorney General Waggoner Carr, “will unseat Tower. He’s high-profile, well-connected – ”

“I don’t like the cut of his jib. He can’t woo a crowd. He’s also been snooping into Billie’s affairs too much,” [referring to his close friend and ally, businessman Billie Sol Estes].

“You want to find someone to challenge him.”

Lyndon explained his woes “We need someone in the Senate who actually knows how to work in it. Someone experienced enough to keep that idiot in the White House in check. So I’ve been looking. Congressman Pickle thinks he’d lose, and Homer Thornberry’s not interested. The other congressmen I’ve approached had no backbone, and the rest were no low profile. I even went and thought outside the box and considered getting Ladybird to run, but there’s no chance in trying to give her the Johnson Treatment!”

“So, what do you want to do about it, then? The primary’s two months away!”

“I’ve got an idea.”

“What is it?”

“You’ll see.”

On April 15, a windy Texas day in his home town, Lyndon gathered a collection of reporters and congregated them onto his property. Speaking from his front porch to the attentive mass, Lyndon proclaimed, “After much consideration, and upon reviewing the current crop of prospective and declared candidates in the race, I have determined that I am the only Texas Democrat that can beat Senator Tower and protect America’s social programs in 1967 and onward. Ladies and gentleman, I am running for my old Senate seat.” [9]

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Five: The Plans of a Presidential Politician, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018




TWO OFF-DUTY COPS KILLED, 10 INJURED IN I.R.A. BOMB BLAST!

…PM Brown declared “such blatant disregard for the lives of innocent civilians will not be tolerated”…

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[pic: imgur.com/G5rID5S.png ]
Above: the extent of the damage made to the pub in question

– The Sun, conservative UK newspaper, 4/17/1966



I was surprised by how nervous I felt the first time I met President Sanders. It was March 29, 1966, and I had been personally summoned to Washington, D.C. by the President himself to discuss road safety initiatives with him in the Oval Office. [snip] The Colonel congratulated me for my report on Corvelle’s problems, and said he was impressed by my leadership and determination. He seemed to be relieved to be talking about something positive. The old man almost seemed haunted in some way. “Must be the pressures of this office,” I remember thinking, “If that’s the case, I don’t think I’ll ever run for it.”

“Do you know why I asked you meet with me?” the President asked.

I answered candidly and with uncertainty, “Because you liked my book?”

He grinned, “Well, I haven’t had the time to read all of your book myself, but I have seen the attention and the praise it’s gettin’. I have skimmed some of it, though, and I have to say, I am very impressed, Mr. Nader. So much so, that it has been one of the many driving forces behind a piece of legislation.”

“Really?”

“Yeah. The National Traffic and Road Safety Bill. It was introduced about a week ago, or so. I think it’ll get through by the end of the year.”

“So is that why you sent for me? To try to help get it passed?”

“Yes, but not entirely,” he clarified, “See, when it was introduced, I promised I would form a national agency to review the conditions of America’s highways. Now I really meant that. You, of all people, Mr. Nader, understand that America’s roads work like America’s life vessels. And when a blood vessel becomes crowded or weak, it can hurt the body. My buddy Nixon had something like that not too long ago, it’s called pleb-eye-ticks, or something like that. But anyway, my point, Mr. Nader, is that you seem to understand exactly what can be done about the roads.”

“Me?”

“Yes,” he concluded, “That is why I came with the Department of Transportation last year. It’s still getting itself together, figuring out how it should be organized and all that jazz. But Nader, I would like you to be the Administrator of an agency that’s part of this department. We’re thinking of calling it the National Roadways Safety Administration.”

I was taken aback.

“So, Mr. Nader, what do you say?”

“Um…” I had no time for pause. The President was looking at me, waiting for a reply. Quickly, I had to think, analyze, and weigh my options. I already was living in DC, serving on the faculty at the nearby American University Washington Law College, and I had had political experience as a political aide to Assistant Secretary of Labor Daniel Moynihan during the previous administration. This new position would give me an unprecedented ability to protect people’s lives. On the other hand, it could limit my advocacy as I would be tied to the administration, potentially binding what I could and couldn’t advocate and criticize. It was a risk and a gamble, but I’m glad I took it. “When can I begin?”

Colonel Sanders smiled widely and enthusiastically shook my hand, “I’m really looking forward to working with you …Ralph.”

Sanders also sought to improve urban infrastructure more directly with the NRSA and its fleet of civil engineers through budgeting. At the end of 1966, the White House released a budget proposal for the next fiscal year, which proposed increasing infrastructure spending by several million dollars to support investment in infrastructure by federal, state and local governments and the private sector…

– Ralph Nader in his autobiography All For The People: A Life’s Journey, 2019



PRESIDENT SANDERS BACKS MEDICINE AFFORDABILITY BILL FOR THE INFIRM

…Sanders explained, “It’s the Christian thing, the morally right thing, and the American thing to do, to lend a helping hand to those who do the best they can with the hand they’ve been dealt – who are weak-bodied but strong in spirit – but still need someone to give ’em a hand that’ll help ’em get by.”

– The Chicago Tribune, 4/30/1966



On May 3, just a month before the planned invasion of the North, Viet Cong troops assaulted an American garrison at Muang Xepon, Laos, near the Laos-Vietnam border. As the Colonel was being awakened by a phone call at 4:00, about an hour before his usual wake-up time, American ground forces were preparing a counterattack. As the Colonel was being escorted to the War Room, the fighting increased in intensity. The Colonel approved the order to send in B-52 bombers from ships station off the coast of South Vietnam. After several minutes of demanding what was happening, the radio relayed that the CO had ordered a withdrawal from the village due to heavy losses.

The Colonel could hear the extent of the destruction over the radio as the CO’s shouts into the receiver failed to block out sounds of explosions and people screaming in the background. He was then informed that civilians allied with the US had been killed. Sanders understood that in war, civilian casualties were never unavoidable, but the audial description of the carnage was too much for him. The Colonel would consider himself blessed to not fight a modern war, where footage of the devastation would be brought to the monitors directly, instead of days later, if at all.

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



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[pic: imgur.com/m9Vftad.png ]
Daniel Overmyer shaking hands with Mims Thomason of UPI

The Overmyer Network, sometimes just called Overmyer or “T.O.N.” for short, is an American English-language commercial telecommunications network conglomerate headquartered in Toledo, Ohio. It is the fifth-largest broadcasting television company in the U.S. by revenue and the tenth-largest such company in the world, with service provided in over 50 countries.
[snip]
History
Overmyer was founded in Ohio on May 3, 1966. It was the brainchild of warehouse mogul and self-made millionaire Daniel H. Overmyer (1924-2012) …Under President Colonel Sanders, it became easier for businessmen to create and develop companies and businesses, which was of great benefit to Overmyer, both the man and the station. Overmyer was originally set to be formally launched on May 1, 1967, but this date was determined to be too close to the end of the traditional broadcast season, and so it was delayed until start of the next season later in the year… In its first year, Overmyer showcased 12 hours of programming per day, seven days per week, United Press International provided the news. In January 1968, Mutual Broadcasting System agreed to merge with Overmyer, which renamed the company Overmyer-Mutual Company (O.M.C.). In 1969, O.M.C. separated itself from CBS (where the plurality of their content came from) in favor of original programming, after finally managing to get clearance in major West Coast cities such as San Francisco due to offering cheaper air time to sponsors when compared to air time costs on the major networks. …After these additional mergers, O.M.C.’s name reverted back to The Overmyer network in 1971…

– clickopedia.co.usa



EXTRA! GOVERNOR SMITH DIES AT 53!

Boise, ID – Vernon K. Smith (D), our governor since 1963, passed away last night from an apparent heart attack… Our state’s Lieutenant Governor, 76-year-old William Edward Drevlow (D), has automatically succeeded him to the office of governor, but will be sworn into the office in a more formal ceremony later today…

The Idaho Press-Tribune, 5/3/1966



As the primary neared, Congressman James B. Utt began circulating pamphlets featuring a photograph of Reagan with Truman in 1948:

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[pic: imgur.com/BptXkfV.png ]
The pamphlet read “Reagan: A Democrat in Sheep’s Clothing.” It was a blatant attempt to win over conservative voters that made little sense – Democrats and Republicans can vote in each other’s primaries, and highlighting his opponent’s ties to both parties was initially seen as increasing his chances of winning the nomination thanks to Democratic voters. It seemed the only detriment to Reagan’s campaign was him running on a platform much more conservative than the one run by President Sanders in 1964. Reagan supporting the President’s actions in Indochina but complained “he isn’t going far enough. He’s too soft. This is a war, and he wants everybody to play nice.” If anything, comments such as these were what weighed down his campaign.

…Utt ran to Reagan’s right, while Kroc continued to run on a vague moderate-to-conservative platform focusing on local issues such as prices and wages, and increasing energy and utilities, without explaining how he would help low income voters...

[snip]

Meanwhile, Colonel Sanders met with environmental activists and members of the US military overseeing nuclear testing in the Pacific. The Colonel came to the idea of address the former’s concerns while at the same time offering the chance to personally sit down with Shelepin…

– Anne Meagher Northup’s Chicken and Politickin’: the Rise of Colonel Sanders and Rational Conservatism in the Republican Party, 2015



“Wind and water, soil and sea, they can take radiation to every corner of the globe, and it is irresponsible to spend money on such threats to humanity. They can only destroy; they do not assure peace. The nations of the planet must prioritize: if we continue down this path, the consequences could be dire. That is why I have ordered a one-year moratorium on nuclear testing, and why I am calling for a series of talks to be held between myself and Premier Shelepin to discuss the possibility of limiting the buildup of nuclear weapons in both our nations and the world for the sake of this planet and the health of its people.

– President Sanders in an official Presidential address, 5/17/1966



“It is dangerous to even consider exposing the U.S. to the delusion that peace and compromise can be made with the Soviets. They will take this as a sign of weakness and it will embolden them to attempt to get away with further assaults on our democracy-loving foreign allies worldwide.”

– Excerpt from opinion article by ret. US Air Force Gen. Curtis LeMay, National Review, 5/20/1966 issue



“Mr. President, Ambassador [to Cambodia, William R.] Kane is here to see you.”

[snip]

“It can’t happen that way!”

“Saying it doesn’t make it so.”

“What about the graphs?”

“Graphs don’t make it so, either.”

“How can our troops advance into Hanoi if we’ve destroyed all the roads to Hanoi?”

“We’re not attacking all the roads! Just all but one of the roads, the one nearly south of the city. They’ll be busy running around in the mountains up there from our B-52s bombing their military centers, and while they’re handling that debacle, there’ll only be one road to Hanoi. It meanders around the mountains a ways and by this lake here, see? Charlie will see our men, for sure, and they’ll attack our land forces. But since it’s just one lane – one road, they’ll be all lined up – and with the air support and the tanks protecting our men, it’ll be like shootin’ fish in a barrel.”

“That makes no sense, Mr. President! You’ve shown me no logistics or any sign that you or your staff have actually researched what the terrain up there is like or how the Charlies will operate up there! Warfare doesn’t work that way! Didn’t you see the maps?”

“Maps don’t make it so.”

“Urgh! And you’re planning on this while also calling for a treaty with the Russians?!”

“You can walk and talk at the same time; why not handle Shelepin and Ho Chi Minh at the same time?”

“You know what the problem is with you, Colonel? You’re an idealist. You think that as President anything you want done will get done,” [snaps fingers], “like that! But the world’s too complicated for idealism to work, Colonel. You want the Charlies out, you have to go at it incrementally, or lock horns and not give a s#!t about whatever mud they sling at you. Not this full-on frontal assault bulls#!t.”

“Franke and General Weyand say this’ll work.”

“Franke and Weyand are trigger-happy a$$heads.”

“Says the man nicknamed ‘Killer.’”

“Ugh…Mr. President, this plan is going to fail, and, I’m sorry, but I can’t support you on this. And to be fair, I’ve been disagreeing with you on a lot of things, so, um…”

“So what, Kane?”

“I’m ending this tour of duty of mine early.”

“Oh…oh! And if I don’t accept a resignation letter?”

“I’ll leave anyway.”

“Go A.W.O.L., eh? …Hmm, sure can I change your mind?”

“Only if you change yours.”

“No sale.”

“…Well…it was a pleasure, Colonel Sanders. So long… and good luck. Because trust me, you’re going to need it.”

– Audio accidently recorded by the President’s Personal Secretary Wanda Boner’s Dictaphone, 5/23/1966; discovered in 2005 and released to the public in 2009 under the Freedom of Information Act of 2009



On May 25 [1966], FBI agents arrested Elijah Muhammad for tax fraud and abuse of charity funding, stemming from late 1965 allegations that the 68-year-old long-time leader of the Nation of Islam was using charity money to cover up an extramarital affair. Muhammad was also a suspect in the arson committed on Malcolm X’s home. Controversial even within the African-American community for opposing integration (famously leading to George Lincoln Rockwell, then-still on trial for an alleged assassination attempt against President Sanders, calling Muhammad “the Hitler of the black man”), Muhammad vehemently denied the allegations, but was still held without bail until his case could be reviewed. Malcolm X, meanwhile, doubted that “the white man’s form of justice will do its duty” and continued to worry for his family’s safety…

– Herb Boyd and Ilyasah Shabazz’s Malcolm vs. Martin: Violence and Peace After the End of Segregation, Chicago Third World Press, 2013



May 30, 1966: Surveyor 1 is launched

www.nasa.gov/surveyor_program/timeline



COL. & CONGRESSMAN CALL FOR CRIME CRACK DOWN!

Brooklyn, NYC – President Colonel Sanders visited the Big Apple today to meet with Congressman Mario Biaggi to discuss anti-crime initiatives, hoping to find ways to “clean up the inner cities,” according to a Biaggi spokesman. “Congressman Biaggi’s proposed legislation would promote police departments nationwide, as in recent years they have been vilified by rebel-rousers. Society can’t grow and develop if its people live in fear.”

President Sanders echoed such concern later in the day. “Whatever happened to going to sleep in the summer with the windows wide open, or with your door unlocked? When I was just seven years old, with my five-year-old brother and my little two-year-old sister and no adult supervision at all, we trudged three miles across the fields to a highway to reach Henryville so I could show Mama a wonderful loaf of bread that I’d made. [10] Have city folk ever been able to live like that? To be able to walk the streets with a sense of adventure instead of a sense of fear? I sure hope so – I wouldn’t want ’em missing out on something as great and wonderful as that. And if they really aren’t, then I think it’s time for a change.”

The New York Daily News, 5/31/1966



MCDONALD’S CEO WINS GOP NOMINATION FOR CA GOVERNOR: Edges Out Reagan, Utt In Primary; Democrats Re-Nominate Brown

Sacramento, CA – Tonight, the state’s Republican primary voters, possibly hoping to capitalize off the popularity of President Sanders, another fast-food businessman–turned–politician, narrowly chose Kroc over former SAG President Ronald Reagan, retiring US Congressman James B. Utt, and Mayor George Christopher to be their party’s gubernatorial nominee. Another primary candidate, wealthy businessman William Penn Patrick, received negligible votes. …Kroc achieved a plurality of 45%, while Reagan won 30%, Utt won 14%, and Christopher won 10%; less than 1% went to all other candidates. Analysts believe Utt and Reagan split the conservative vote, allowing the ideologically-fuzzy Kroc to win the nomination by a 5% margin. …Reagan seemingly sought to distance himself from his acting days and ran a very serious campaign some pundits described as “boring,” while others saw him as being too dramatic in his seriousness, which actually helped remind audiences of his performance days. Ideologically, Reagan wavered on showcasing full conservatism on the fear that if would cost him independent voters. This wavering may have caused many to be uncertain of his campaign’s message and theme. …Ironically, another former Hollywood star who received less attention during their own run for public office was successful. Former child star Shirley Temple, now known professionally as Shirley Temple Black, won the GOP nomination for Utt’s seat...

– The Los Angeles Times, 6/7/1966



VP’S SON RETURNS FROM WAR: William Scranton III Returns Home After A 10-Month Tour Of Duty In South Vietnam

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 6/8/1966



Chong explained “So in June [1965], right after our second kid was born, my wife found out about me and Yoko and she kicked me to the curb. I thought the least I could do was pay alimony.” In early 1966, while on tour in Chicago for a short time, the Vancouvers followed the opening act the Jackson 5. Chong later referred to the young Michael Jackson as a “cute little guy” [11]. On June 10, 1966, Tommy Chong married Yoko Ono.

– clickopedia.co.usa/Tommy_Chong



Operation Fried Charlie was initially slated for June, starting with a bombing of the north to be followed immediately by an attack on Muang Xepon, Laos to reclaim it from the Pathet Lao concurrent with the departure of Spec Ops and other troop divisions from Laos into Vietnam.

My fellow aviators and I flew out in an impressive assembly of bombers, and we easily acquired and hit our first set of targets. How much we knew of what we were hitting was not much, but that does not matter as much as what was actually hit. CIA intelligence had identified several towns as weapons storage and manufacturing centers. Regardless of whom was to blame, though, we would later learn just how many more civilians were killed than were expected.

The most unexpected part of the phase was when our B-52s confronted the North Vietnam Air Force’s MiG-17s, an undetected gift from the Chinese. They caught us off-guard and forced us to abandon the rest of the mission as they V.C.s began picking us off one by one. The farthest any of us got was Joey’s bomber – it made it as far as five miles west of Hoa Binh, about the half-way point.

Anti-aircraft missiles on the ground near the Laotian border shot down several Omori f us down. We traced their equipment’s radar waves back to their sources and managed to eliminate some of them, but the damage was done.

Less than half of us made it back.

We had underestimated the weaponry and response time of the North.

William Franke may have labeled it a victory due to the initial targets being taken out, but due to our inability to complete the mission via acquiring the additional targets, Operation Fried Charlie Mock I was a complete failure.

– John J. Polonko Jr.’s All’s Fair: What War Makes Necessary, Hachette Book Group USA, 2007



vqVqDwj.png


[pic: imgur.com/vqVqDwj.png ]
– Simple Map of planned U.S. military Operations in mid-June, 1966



Father was clearly shaken, “I made myself clear – I wanted low civilian casualties on both sides,” he seemed to say more to myself than the William Franke of the Joint Chiefs.

“It’s just a snag, Mr. President. We can still proceed with the Operation on schedule.”

Unfortunately for Franke’s optimism, it was just then that a report came in on the radio, “Sir!” the head radioman rushed over “This just in from Mahaxay, Laos – Pathet Lao forces are attacking the barracks. C.O. reports performing the Muang Xepon counterattack now will lead to Mahaxay falling. He's advising against launching the diversion attack.”

“Oh son of a bitch!” Franken uttered in a huff.

“My God, was Kane right?” I heard Father say to himself.

I asked where Ambassador Henry Lodge had gone to, seeing as how I was certain the media would soon be reporting on a massive aerial bombardment gone awry, and we needed a diplomat’s perceptive on how to spin it.

“Checking his office now, Harley,” said one of the operators.

“How many civilians?” Father ponder aloud to Franke.

Franke defended, “This was an unforeseeable consequence, Colonel. There usually are not civilians in these areas, but likely because of poor crops last year, many local farmers were expanding their fields and working hours – ”

“How many civilians on both sides did we lose?” he said a bit louder

“ – and well, suffice it to say, sir, casualties were higher than expected.”

Father’s shock had now turned to anger, “Consarn it! How many did we lose?”

“A lot.”

“Yes, but how many?”

“Dozens on our sides, over a thousand on their side at the least.”

"Oh, Dang-blast it,” Father’s face as turning red with rage.

“It’s a tactical victory, sir,” William commented.

Father was quick to reply, “Over a thousand, Bill! Have you forgotten what I said already?” Father groaned in frustration and returned to his spot on the couch, the situation weighing down on him like a flour sack on a runt mule. He folded his hands atop his cane as he mulled over his thoughts, venting the anger out through his nostrils until his breathing was calmer. Then he sighed to himself “Lord forgive me” before asking, “Any word on where Henry is?”

“Still waiting for a reply from his office, sir.”

Father sunk a bit in his seat. To me, he had a look that for most of his life he had rarely ever worn, but was wearing the look more and more often every day, it seemed. He looked like he was lost for what to do next.

I took a seat beside him, “Don’t worry, Pop. We’ll figure this out.”

[snip]

…Father replied …“We tried this approach here, and it hasn’t worked. In my opinion, the situation is now worse. They [the Russians] could now be even more reluctant to sit down with us…one thousand, my god…”

After a brief moment of thought, I commented, “we fought fire with fire, but it wasn’t the right fire.” My eye wandered over to the picture of George Washington hanging on the wall nearby, and I commented, “You know, you remind me a lot of him, Father. He swore like a madman and still found glory in the darkest of times through sheer resilience. Crossing the Delaware in the frigid cold and all that.”

Father suddenly lifted in head in revelation, “By gummit, that’s it!”

“What is?”

“Junior, how’d we win the Revolutionary War? By standing in orderly lines? No, that’s what the British did and they lost! Gentlemen!” He now turned his attention to his other advisers, huddled around at the main table.

“Yes sir!” they all barked.

“We have to try a more effective approach. We tried to go in there with our most advanced tools and this was the response,” holding up one of the photos [an aerial image of the target sites]. “No, no, we have to be more clandestine. Gentlemen, I think we need to seriously organize a 'un-criticize-able' response to this mess. We need to tweak our traditional approaches. But not only that! There’s also something else on my mind.”

“You got some ideas, Pop?” I asked curiously, a small grin forming on my face.

“Oh, just wait, Junior,” Father chuckled, “Like my chicken before it’s fried, we ain’t licked yet!”

“Sir,” William interjected, “We’ve been over this before, superior firepower was absolutely necessary.”

“You and your so-called experts have been spoutin’ that line for six years and it’s gotten us nowhere. Now I’m the commander-in-chief here, and I say we finally give Abrams’ idea of a more careful approach a try, and finally lead our Indochinese friends into an invasion of the north. And if you refuse, well, the exit’s right over there!”

William conceded, “Alright, Mr. President, alright.”

“And if it’s obvious we won’t be done in Vietnam a year by this time next year, we’ll try something else. We'll, I dunno, do some more bombing or something. Deal?” putting his hand out like he was back to being a hand-shaking businessman.

“Very well, Mr. President,” William shook, and with the rest of Father’s advisors began to listen to the President on fine-tuning the time-table of the resolution of the conflict.

“Alright. Everyone listen up. Listen, if we have these Kongers firing at us from the bushes, we’ve got to crawl under those bushes. They shoot us down, now we’ve got to sneak up from below – uh, from behind. Back in March, we lost this Muang Xepon place because our giant choppers made ’em know we were comin’ for them, remember? And now we’ve got a hitch in the plans because our planes caught attention – why wouldn’t they? We used a ginormous fleet of bombers for this! I think that we’re going to have to use more discreet and inconspicuous tools – tanks, trucks, even our God-given legs if we have to in order to not get the enemy’s attention. Because that’s what did this – we were too noticeable in the field. We’ve got to be more discreet. We’ve got to fight like how they fight – careful and attentively.”

“So what about the Operation?” Franke inquired.

“It’ll be too obvious now. The North already have their planes in the air and we didn’t take out the secondary targets. It’d be a bloodbath to attack now, when they’re expecting it. No, instead we’re going to put off the direct invasion for a little while, continue to train our troops, and get a better grip on the enemy’s view of things until we know for sure that the invasion can happen without a single hiccup.”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



NOTE(S)/SOUCRE(S)
[1] According to the link given in the second footnote, P.B.L. actually approached her at some point in the year 1966, but the inevitability is sped up here due to there being more interest in French cooking earlier due to the election of the cook known as Colonel Sanders and the political events in France renewing American awareness of French cooking (and butterflies, but just a dash for flavor).
[2] Italicized lines and other information are from here: www.mentalfloss.com/article/87058/how-julia-child-got-white-house-state-dinner-television
[3] Line is a paraphrase of a quote found here: https://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/15/world/asia/norodom-sihanouk-cambodian-leader-through-shifting-allegiances-dies-at-89.html
[4] Here’s the cobbler recipe found in the Colonel’s OTL 1966 autobio: https://imgur.com/ZLrKkYX.png
[5] Source of quote: www.history.com/this-day-in-history/degaulle-offers-to-help-end-vietnam-war
[6] Quote from OTL: https://psmag.com/news/the-freedom-of-information-act-and-the-hero-who-pioneered-it
[7] The Southwest monsoon is from April to September, and the northeast monsoon is from October to March. Source: https://www.travelfish.org/weather/vietnam .
[8] OTL Quote!
[9] I swear that I’m not ripping off Abe Lincoln’s Camelot TL here, as I’m going in a different direction with this!
[10] OTL Quote pulled from Chapter 1, Page 15 of Sanders’ OTL 1966 autobiography.
[11] Source 10 on Chong’s wiki article.

E.T.A. For the next Chapter: May 9

Note: I’m actually very wary about how I wrote this; if anything is confusing or poorly written, please let me know so I can fix/correct/expand upon/improve it. Thanks!
EbolaMan131 said:
So Reagan out for the count?
Or will we see anymore of him?
Oh no, I have ...plans... for The Gipper...
 
Post 17
Post 17: Chapter 25



Chapter 25: June 1966 – December 1966



“It is easy to sit up and take notice. What is difficult is getting up and taking action.”

– Al Batt



HELEN THOMAS (United Press International): “Are the reports true that this was a failed invasion of the North?”

PRESS SECRETARY RON ZIEGLER: “No, those reports are speculative. Let me set the record straight – this was a surprise attack from the North Vietnamese during a routine bombing run near the North Vietnam border. The lopsided casualty count clearly shows we repelled their attempt to attack the Laos capital.”

THOMAS: “But what about the reports of high civilian casualties in North Vietnam?”

ZIEGLER: “Those reports are currently unsubstantiated and lack hard facts. We will release information concerning civilian deaths when they’re available.”

DAN RATHER (CBS News): “When did the President learn of this alleged attack?”

ZIEGLER: “At the usual time.”

DAVID BRODER (Washington Post): “How many of the civilian casualties were women and children?”

ZIEGLER: “David, I just said it, we’ll get that information when more concrete reporting arrives – ”

THOMAS: “So you don’t know what’s going on over there?”

ZIEGLER: “No, the, uh, the proper people are doing their job and the information is being passed along the chain of command. The President is aware of what has happened at the Laotian border, and the details will be released when they are confirmed to be fact and not just speculation.”

RATHER: “What does the President plan to do about this aggression from the North?”

ZIEGLER: “Well Dan, if we gave that away, the Viet Cong would know ahead of time, wouldn’t they?”

THOMAS: “Can you tell us anything about the deaths of American soldiers in this attack?”

ZIEGLER: “They died heroically defending an American ally. And, yep, that’s all the time I have. Thank you for your time, everyone.”

– Transcript of dialogue from White House press briefing between Ron Ziegler and the White House Press Corp, 6/17/1966



The American Press supported the Colonel’s story, but Shelepin knew the true details; American forces instigated a failed bombardment of key military strongholds and were now orchestrating a cover up. Publicly, Shelepin capitalized on the incident’s death toll regardless of its true context to finally publicly respond to the Colonel’s treaty proposal with the statement “The blood spilled in Indochina is proof of American oppression, and I refuse to engage in talks of such a treaty with an entity so uncaring that it kills innocents overseas without so much as a flinch.”

Privately, it seemed Shelepin did not enjoy the very existence of the direct phone line established between the Kremlin and the White House in early 1962, let alone the thought of using it. Nevertheless, he did speak with his American counterpart over the incident; the discussion was “short, cold and unproductive.”

Of course, I learned all this from my predecessors; I was only a 16-year-old secondary school student when all of this was happening…

– Alexander Korzhakov’s autobiography From Dawn to Dusk: A Cutthroat Career, St. Petersburg Press, 1997



I spent the three-day Fourth of July weekend that year back in Corbin. On the night of the fireworks, and the booming had ceased, I looked out to the fields of grass outside my old homestead. I saw the lightning bugs dancing around. Did you know that the lightning bug lights up to tell each other where they are. That’s why whenever one bug lights up, another one does, too. I watched them jump around and see each other, and it was nice to see how light can still be found in even the darkest places.

[snip]

I thought out loud, “The world ain’t gonna change for you. It doesn’t matter if you’re President, you can’t snap your fingers and make things alright in a flash. But you can make things a bit better, especially when you find someone in the darkness. Together you can get things going in the right direction at the very least.”

[snip]

After returning from the break, I resumed work on America’s domestic and foreign problems. First, I headed damage control: I demanded a better hold of equipment, telling the generals “you can’t let equipment be captured by the Charlies. It looks like they’re very resourceful this that kind of stuff.”

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



“Let me be clear. I’m an ass-whooper – not a throat-cutter!”

– Colonel Sanders during an Oval Office meeting with Secretary Carl Curtis, 6/7/1966 (multiple sources)



INDOCHINA BOMBINGS HALTED INDEFINITELY OVER HIGH CIVILIAN DEATHS

The Colonel: “We Are Not Butcherers”

…The President is calling for a “tweeked traditional” approach to the US’s strategy in combating the Pathet Lao. ...According to one source, ground troops are reporting being trained to “fight differently,” those cause this means precisely is currently unclear…

The New York Times, 7/8/1966



The 1966 General elections were held in Cuba on 10 July of that year to determine who would serve as President for the next six years, and to determine who would serve in the Cuba Chamber of Representatives. The Chamber was dominated by three Chamber party leaders, all of which vied for party majority or party plurality in the chamber, which would make the party’s leader the next Prime Minister. Voter turnout was high as voter intimidation was ruled to be a highly criminal offense earlier in the year.

The presidential candidates were the following:
Rufo Lopez-Fresquet of the Conservative Party (heavily pro-American hard-right conservative party)
Carlos Prio Socarras of the New Authentic Party (“third position” party)
Col. Pepe San Roman of the Stability Party (left-leaning centrist party)

Due to lack of funds, the Nationalist Party chose to not run a candidate for Presidency in order to instead focus on gaining seats in the Chamber. …San Roman, 36, was a War Hero with strong ties to the United States… Former President Prio, whom had been overthrown by Fulgencio Batista in 1952, ran for his old position on a campaign that focused on civility, self-enrichment and major public-works projects…

[snip]

Presidential election results:

MpQCMys.png


[pic!: imgur.com/MpQCMys.png ]
The party leaders in the Chamber of Representatives were the following:
Manuel Ray Rivero of the Stability Party (left-leaning centrist party)
Manuel Artime of the Conservative Party (heavily pro-American hard-right conservative party)
Felipe Rivero Diaz of the Nationalist Party (anti-American and anti-Communist right-leaning centrist party)
Capt. Erneido Oliva of the New Authentic Party (“third position” party)

[snip]

Oliva was a brigade commander under the command of San Roman during the War, and fought valiantly in the 1963 Battle of Santa Clara.

…Artime won with a plurality of 43%, with Rivero Diaz coming in second place with 35%, Ray Rivero in third place with 14%, and Oliva in fourth place with 7%. Artime formed a coalition government with Ray Rivero to obtain majority control, making Artime Prime Minister and Ray Rivero Deputy Prime Minister. Despite feeling that he should have received the position of Deputy Prime Minister due to his second-place performance, Rivero Diaz, as a showing of good faith, declined to contest the election results as U.N. personnel closely observed the polling stations on election night of confirmed the results were “fair and unadulterated.” Instead, he held a rally where he congratulated his “good political friend.”

[snip]

Under Cuba’s 1965 constitution, the President can serve for more than just one 6-year term, but cannot succeed himself into office.

– clickopedia.co.cuba/1966_general_election/english_translation



It was a powder keg just waiting to go off at some point, and that point came on August 20, 1966. It was becoming increasingly difficult for us [African-Americans] to even exist in the city of Milwaukee. Oh sure, there was room for a Little Germany area, and a Little Poland community, and “polish flats” neighborhoods and all that, but no room for us Black folk, apparently. You see, many of us at the time were moving on up north to get away from the racists, would-be segregationists and Klansmen that pretty much still controlled the South at the time, no matter what the federal government said about it. But when we got up here, we surprisingly found ourselves in an oppressive and unwelcoming land anyway. Only colder. The city lacked any opportunities for fair jobs and education for its new Black citizens, and soon we went from fields and sweatshops in the south to factories and ghettos in the north.

The anger everyone felt from the predicament came to a head on that day, when 50 Germans, Jews and Poles got fired from a highway construction site off I-94. Some of the men went and got drunk at a bar, blaming their misfortunes on the Blacks. The men then got into their cars and drove to the north side of town, the predominantly Black side of town.

The first Black man they saw, they stopped, got out of their cars and started beating the poor guy. My walk that day led me to the scene just as the riot broke out. Several Black men came to the beaten guy’s defense with violence of their own. The unusually hot weather of that sunny summer day only added to the rage that quickly fanned out into the surrounding area, soon leading to homes ruined, blood spilled, and rocks and Molotov cocktails thrown. And then, well, it wasn’t long before the city made headline news across the country.

– Long-time Milwaukee resident C. T. Jackson, for the Alicia Garza documentary Blacks Still Matter, released 2013



Violent “Race Riot” Overwhelms Milwaukee Police & Residents

– The Wisconsin State Journal, 7/21/1966



VP SCRANTON VISITS MILWAUKEE AMIDST RACE RIOTS, PLEADDS FOR VIOLENCE TO END

…In his speech, the Vice President called for peace and reconciliation between “all members of this richly diverse city.” Arguing the negative attention that follows cities hit by riots, Scranton argued continuing the violence would inhibit the passing of laws that would help the rioters’ cause. …“This riot, as terrible and destructive as it is,” Scranton continued, “highlights the very issues that must end – not just here, but anywhere and everywhere else in these United States where school districts, neighborhoods, and entire communities are divided on race, and where these divisions are strengthened by education and employment inequality. …Any prohibition of any of our fellows American citizens from having a life that is free and equal, solely due to their skin color or any other type of prejudice, is a betrayal of the very foundations and ideals of this republic.” The Vice President then met with police officials and local community leaders in an attempt to deescalate the situation…

– The Milwaukee Journal, 7/23/1966



MILWAUKEE RIOT SIMMERS DOWN AS MAYOR ORDER INVESTIGATION INTO CITY POLICE BRUTALITY

VP Scranton Credited For Contributing to Defusing Debacle

The Chicago Tribune, 7/24/1966



RALPH NADER, PUBLIC SAFETY AUTHOR, SWORN IN TO NEW GOVERNMENT JOB TODAY

Washington, D.C. – Lawyer and safety advocate Ralph Nader, the author of the highly-acclaimed groundbreaking exposé “Unsafe at Any Speed,” has just become the first Administrator of the newly-created National Roadways Safety Administration. The agency, a subsection of the Cabinet-level Department of Transportation founded last year, was established one week ago, and aims to ensure that automobiles on America’s streets, and related public roadwork projects, meet federal safety standards. Nader, age 32, was sworn into office earlier today…

– The Associated Press, 8/7/1966



It was early August, 1966. During that summer, I joined Howard Baker’s run for a full term in the United States Senate. I was campaigning on the campus grounds of Middle Tennessee State University, in the city of Murfreesboro, when I met my future husband. George was earning degrees in music and drama while trying to start his own music career. I met him on the campus quad, where I was passing out fliers for Baker. After a few minutes of conversation, George formally introduced himself with a poor impersonation of James Bond that I, for some strange reason, found to be very charming: “the name’s Clinton, George Stanley Clinton.” [1]

– Hillary Rodham-Clinton (R-TN), in her autobiography The Decisions I Have Made, 2016




EDUCATION COMPROMISE BILL INTRODUCED

…aiming to placate conservative and liberal congressional leaders, the proposed legislation would deregulate school courses and agendas but not deregulate federal funding…

– The Washington Post, 8/12/1966



www.youtube.com/watch?v= nzAQunevOQ
– KFC commercial for KFC’s BBQ chicken (NOT Ribs); the Colonel, busy being President, is noticeably absent from it; first aired 8/14/1966



ANCHOR: …Tragedy struck the affluent Kennedy political family today in the form of another Cam bombing in the Republic of Ireland. Details are not yet in, but it seems that Kennedy in-law Stephen Smith was killed in a car bombing in New Ross, County Wexford. Stephen Edward Smith, financial analyst and political strategist for former Secretary of State Jack Kennedy, and his wife Jean Kennedy Smith, were visiting Jean Kennedy Smith’s ancestral home in nearby Dunganstown when the taxi they were about to travel in detonated. Jean Kennedy Smith received non-serious injuries in the blast, and is being treated at a local hospital. According to the New Ross chief of police, a local politician vocally critical of the nationalist extremist terror organization, the I.R.A., was in the vicinity when bomb detonated. The current working theory is that the bomb was meant for the local politician and not for Mr. Smith… [2]

[snip]

…We have an update on the death of the American citizen in Ireland… The office of John D. J. Moore Jr., the US Ambassador to Ireland, has released a statement condemning the attack as one of, quote, “blatant disregard for human life and safety,” and a spokesperson for the U.S. State Department said this just moments ago:

FOOTAGE: We are speaking with members of Prime Minister Brown’s government to determine the best path forward to bringing to justice the perpetrators in question. Rest assured, these zealot nationalists will pay for the deaths of Mr. Stephen Smith and the several Irish and British citizens killed by their reckless and malicious acts.

ANCHOR: Senator Richard Nixon, a friend of Ambassador Moore, has reportedly contacted Moore to discuss the situation further. Meanwhile, President Sanders and hundreds of others are contacting the Kennedy political family to express their deepest sympathies…

– NBC News, 8/20/1966 broadcast



…George Lincoln Rockwell, the founder of the American Nazi Party who was found guilty of attempted murder earlier this month, has been sentenced to 30 years in federal prison…

– Walter Cronkite, CBS Evening News 8/27/1966 broadcast



1966 was a critical year for the four. In April, Brian Epstein, their young and emotionally fragile manager, was hospitalized for alcohol poisoning following a bender in which he sought to drink away the stress and anxious woes of the band’s meteoric rise to fame. Reeling from nearly dying in that incident, the Beatles thanked him “for making [them] what [they]’ve become” with a mellow song that proved to be surprising therapeutic for Epstein – it was entitled “Breathe” “When Epstein would get stressed, humming it would help. Years of therapy and love and support did wonders for him, too,” Ringo noted in 1969. After “Breathe” was released as a single on June 4, 1966, it became one of the band’s most iconic songs, topping the charts and becoming “The Hit of Summer ’66.”

Tumbleweed Magazine article, 1971 commemorative issue



YOUTH POWER IN THE MIDTERMS

By Hunter S. Thompson

…But Leary is not the only politician with enough uniqueness and energetic rebellion to likely get shoutniks off their asses and actually vote for them in November. Lar Daly of Illinois, the liberal Republican challenging Paul Douglas’s Senate seat, is winning over Chicago-based shoutniks... Up north, Alaskan shoutniks, even any even exist, must be pleased with the dovish rhetoric of the Democratic nominee for their at-large congressional seat, a charismatic state congressman and former real estate developer named Mike Gravel; Gravel criticized our Colonel President on the House floor last month for unofficially dropping calls to sign an anti-nuclear testing treaty with the Soviets, and Gravel has consistently called for the termination of nuclear testing in his home state, in a campaign showing that even the remote Eskimos are affected by the geopolitics of today. …An unlikely ally of the shoutniks in Leary’s home state is John Moss, the antithesis to Gravel in terms of flamboyancy... Mo Udall of Arizona and Don Edwards have embraced shoutnik endorsements concerning environmental and anti-war issues, respectively... But endorsements aren’t votes. If the progressive youngsters behind Morse ’64 want to actually see change happen, they’re going to have to lift up the record player needle and get in line to vote.

Tumbleweed Magazine article, Sept 1966 issue



The Colonel’s day was even busier than usual. First, he met with the main Generals and the Joint Chiefs in the Lincoln room to discuss something called the Red Bird Report and how to apply it to “Plan B.” I don’t have the clearance to know what all that is, but my guess is that it has something to do with that fumble back in the summer. I’ve heard through the grape vine it was not exactly a surprise attack on from North Vietnam, but I don’t buy it. I believe the Colonel; he’s never lied to me before. Besides, I don’t trust Debbie from Interior anyway! Then he met with several Congressmen about some bill…

– Private Journal of President Sanders’ Personal Secretary Wanda Boner, 9/2/1966 entry



CONSERVATIVES KILL BILINGUAL EDUCATION BILL IN COMMITTEE

...the bilingual education bill was rejected by the Senate after conservative opposition while the bill was still in committee. The bill was part of several lingering proposals from President Johnson’s Great Society programs... …Senator Cotton defended his position with the line, “We are already a divided people – divided over war, over liberal and conservative pools of thought, divided over culture and tradition, divided over many things. We can’t as a nation afford to become even more divided by creating language barriers between each other.” …Another Republican, Congressman Gerald Ford of Michigan, commented “Canada’s been doing the bilingual thing for decades, and they are still constantly arguing and debating and fighting over it. Let’s not be like Canada, and instead, let’s maintain unity in the form of everyone being able to understand each other in the easiest way possible – one nation, one language.” …The bill’s defenders pledge to re-introduce the bill next year...

– The Washington Post, 9/5/1966



…While several candidates vied for the Democratic nomination for Mayor of Washington, D.C. tonight, the ultimate winner has surprised everyone, including the winner himself. While the early frontrunner were Walter Fauntroy and Polly Shackleton, both of whom have been members of the city council since early 1962, the winner ended up being an energetic underdog fueled by young voter turnout and heavily supported by members of the Civil Rights movement and the shoutnik subculture – Clifford Leopold Alexander Jr., a 33-year-old African-American lawyer. Alexander is not a political tenderfoot – he was a White House staff member from 1961 to 1964, and has served on the city council since early 1964. Still, his youth may make the general election competitive if it turns out to be a detriment to final home run of this campaign.

– ABC News broadcast, election night news coverage, 9/6/1966



…and in last night’s primary for governor of New York, Congressman Mario Biaggi has edged out city council President Frank O’Connor for the Democratic nomination. A political neophyte, the conservative Biaggi’s victory is an unexpected upset but is likely the result of the left-wing Democratic vote being split between O’Connor and Mr. Howard J. Samuels...

– NBC News, 9/7/1966 broadcast



September 20, 1966: Surveyor 2 is launched

www.nasa.gov/surveyor_program/timeline



G.I.’s Score Big Victory as US Airborne Unit Ousts Vietcong from Key Border Stronghold

…coupled with South Vietnamese ground troops, control of the eastern third of the Thua Thien Hue Province was wrestled away from the V.C. early Monday… When Charlies attempted a ground counterattack, the fighting moved out of the neighboring foliage and into the streets of A-Luoi. The V.C.s gave it everything they got, but in the end their numbers were overwhelmed by superior strategy and US-SV collaboration.

…Colonel Jack L. Hawkins at Headquarters is confident “the zealous lunatics tearing apart this country are doomed to failure.” He explains “The locals are welcoming us; we are liberating the villages and their communities of their oppressors.” South Vietnam troops proved to be capable of holding their own on the battlefield, which is pivotal to the army maintaining peace once this conflict concludes. “They’re getting better at coordinating,” Hawkins confirms, “We’re teaching them to respect rank, to pass along information; and we’re working with President Khanh to root out corruption – um, any alleged corruption, that is”…

Stars and Stripes, 9/21/1966



The Colonel began his administration wanting to settle foreign conflicts quickly, but the summer misstep gave him pause. He determined it was imperative for the CIA and the Pentagon regains credibility. As a result, Sanders met with Director Dulles on several occasions… Sanders was unwilling to announce a new and higher draft call, arguing “the folks who want to fight are the ones already over there. This is a fight for fighters.” The Colonel also decided that the U.S.-S.V. forces possibly needed outside help for the unofficially-dubbed “Operation Fried Charlie 2.0.” In late September, Sanders agreed with South Korea’s President Park Chung-hee to let South Korean volunteer troops participate in activities in Laos and South Vietnam under the Many Flags Program (a military support campaign still in use since its founding in 1963 under the Johnson administration) in return for monetary compensation and military defense support. The Republic of Korea Forces Indochina Field Command landed in the Lao capital of Vientiane in October.

The Colonel sought international support among European allies, but across the pond, Brown was already growing weary of foreign policy woes. Already troubled over Ian Smith’s calls for independence in Rhodesia, increasingly violent racial strife in South Africa, and an increasingly deadly Cam Bomb campaign on the Emerald Isle threatening to cause a refugee crisis as non-Catholic Britons contemplated fleeing Northern Ireland to the rest of the U.K., Prime Minister George Brown was hesitant to give Sanders any support. By September, Sanders convinced Brown to provide intelligence support, some military weapons, and jungle training. Publicly, Brown continued to refuse to help the U.S.; publicly and privately, he refused to send any U.K. troops to the region for fear of political reprisal from the doves in his party.

According to former White House staff member Jennifer Salt, the Colonel sought advice concerning Indochina from Charles de Gaulle instead of President Mitterrand due to political differences and the friendly acquaintanceship previously established between the two septuagenarians in question.

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Bill Passes Senate: Sanders to Sign It “Soon”

– The New York Times, 9/29/1966



VP SCRANTON’S SON: WAR IN INDOCHINA IS “HELLISH”

…In a candid radio interview, freshman student and former army private William W. Scranton III said “I shouldn’t be saying this, because my dad and the Colonel really do want to do what’s right, but in my experience, war is the organized execution of mankind’s worst sins.” …Scranton explained further, “My experience was hellish…” and that “[war is]…only admirable to the sadistic.” …

– The Yale Daily News, college newspaper, 9/30/1966



McDonald’s CEO SAYS “Only the employed should have the right to vote.”

San Diego, CA – …addressing a crowd of immigrant farm workers earlier today, Ray Kroc proclaimed his opinion that “It doesn’t matter if you are here legally or illegally. If you’re getting paid in one way or another to contribute to the economy, then you should be able to vote for who’ll influence and control the economy. If you aren’t working, and helping society, why should you have the right to vote?” The remark was an attempt to win over the state’s Hispanic community, but instead may have backfired spectacularly. …several organizations supporting retirees and homemakers have sided with conservatives critical of immigrants in condemning Kroc’s remarks…

– The Washington Post, reporting on Kroc’s (in)famous gaffe, 10/3/1966



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[pic: imgur.com/lqyah9Q.png ]
– US H.E.W. Secretary Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY), left, discussing with President Harland “Colonel” Sanders (R-KY), right, the monetary benefits and detriments of reforming to process of below-market interest loans for housing development projects in the next fiscal year, H.E.W. Department function, c. 10/5/1966 (autographed photo sold ontech, most likely signed by the President at a campaign event)



BROWN’S LSD CONTROL LAW ENTERS EFFECT; Leary Vows to “Fight” Its Enforcement

Sacramento, CA – On May 31 of this year, Nevada and California became the first states in the nation to outlaw the promsiscuous [sic] use of the dream drug LSD. Nevada Gov. Grant Sawyer and California Gov. Edmund G. Brown signed similar LSD control bills into law. The statutes were generally the same. Each outlaws the manufacture, sale and possession of the drug but permits its use in supervised research projects. The California statute makes possession or knowing use of hallucination- causing drug [sic] a misdemeanor punishable by a maximum fine of $1,000 or a year in jail. …Backers of both bills claimed the illicit use of LSD and similar drugs was reaching epidemic proportions on college campuses…

…Dr. Timothy Leary, a controversial supporter of LSD, said control laws were “hysterical” and “unrealistic.” He suggested that Brown (and presumably Sawyer) should take the drug and “discover first hand why the young people of his state are willing to risk prison to expand their consciousness.”
[3]

The start of the law coincides with another controversy surrounding the gubernatorial campaign of Dr. Leary. Opponents question his connection to the state as has only lived in California since 1963, after being dismissed from the staff of Harvard University for controversial experiments and testing of LSD on student volunteers.

Dr. Richard Alpert of Harvard, a supporter of Dr. Leary, claims the attacks on Leary are “corrupt exaggerations” and that Leary should be given “the same amount of respect that the more established politicians give each – publicly, I mean, the amount of respect they publicly give each other.”

– The San Diego Union-Tribune, 10/6/1966



My friend’s face had more blood than skin on it. But the bridge was worse – just a skeletal frame now. His death was not in vein. I called in the hit. Our CO radio it in, saying “Tell the Colonel we’ve taken out the target.”

– ret. U.S. Army Gen. Ronald Lawrence “Ron” Kovic’s memoirs Born on the Fourth of July, Spirit of Freedom Publishing, 2010



The key bridge at Lanong being destroyed part just a part of the overall campaign to wipe out as many of the Viet Cong’s amenities as possible. The VC were very adaptable and quick builders, “like tropical Amish devils,” General Kovic would once infamously call them. Roads and weapons and underground tunnels were one thing, but bridges were another matter for them. The materials and hours of manpower and labor required to reconnect the relevant trails inhibited their efforts. Subsequently, their attacks became less frequent as supplies took longer to transport. Like the man once said, “It doesn’t take a genius to know you should check if you’re packing for a knife fight or a gun fight,” and the months and months of studying the enemy were finally starting to pay off. Our morale was boosting. Sanders’ idea was working.

…In Saigon, Secretary Bonesteel coined the term “Foreign Americanization” for the process of training SV soldiers with their own knowledge of local terrain and customs…

…Charlies popping out of the ground like prairie dogs continued to be a thorn in our side, though...

Finally, on October 13, some good news came when an airborne unit took out Nguyen Van Coc – a N.V. fighter ace allegedly responsible for six air-to-air combat kills. His skill and precision with his aircraft set him apart from his fellow flyers – which allowed our men to spot him, outflank him, and finally take him down.

– John J. Polonko Jr.’s All’s Fair: What Makes War Necessary & What War Makes Necessary, Hachette Book Group USA, 2007



It was rejuvenating for Lyndon to return to a more active role in the Democratic Party. Of course, many Congressmen and Senators had their reservations about embracing the man they blamed for losing the White House just two years prior. Several former pro-segregation congressmen actively and vocally distanced themselves away from him. But Lyndon focused more on promoting those who embraced his support, believing those who didn’t would lose to primary challengers he backed, like what happened in 1962 over the Civil Rights Act. So in the fall, Lyndon resumed flexing his political muscles, starting with backroom meetings with local unions to promote Democrats in the rust belt to combat the Vice President’s popularity in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. And while Lyndon kept himself busy, Ladybird was relieved he was now, in her words, “too happy being too busy and too happy to smoke.”

– Bobby Baker, RNN interview, 1979



George Brown’s Labour government lodged the UK’s second application to join the European Economic Community (known as the Common Market outside of the U.K.) on 20 October 1966. Without de Gaulle being in power to veto it like he did during the UK’s first application, relations with France warmed upon Mitterrand supporting the move, which allowed Brown to negotiate terms for admission in order for the U.K. to join the Community by the end of 1967.

– William D. Rubinstein’s Twentieth-Century Britain: A Political History, Palgrave Publishers, 2003



MIDTERM MANIA: G.O.P. SUPPORT LESS THAN EXPECTED BY PARTY LEADERS AFTER LATEST POLLING

…Congressman Gerald Ford (R-MI) was caught complaining, “We’ve revived the economy, Pathet Lao is on the run, and small businesses are sprouting up left and right! We should be trouncing the liberals in the polls.” …Senator Dirksen, on the other hand, is more optimistic, saying “The voters are well-informed and will make the right decisions in election night.”

– The Washington Post, 10/27/1966



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– Sanders with Senator Bud Wilkinson (right, adjusting his tie), Harley Sanders (far right, just out of frame) and two unidentified staffers at a campaign stop outside of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, c. late October 1966



SOUTH VIETNAM FORCES FALL BACK TO DEFENSE AS V.C. ADVANCE IN KON TUM PROVINCE

– The Washington Post, 10/30/1966



KIRK’S EX-WIFE: “CLAUDE’S AN OUT-OF-CONTROL ALCOHOLIC”

…With one week left to go until the election for governor, Republican nominee Claude Kirk’s numbers are suffering... Kirk’s counterclaim that the reports “are baseless attempts at character assassination” appears to be failing as his opponent, Mayor Robert King High (D), continues to lead in the polls….

– The Palm Beach Post, 11/1/1966



United States Senate election results, 1966
Date: November 8, 1966
Seats: 36 of 100
Seats needed for majority: 51
Senate majority leader: Mike Mansfield (D-MT)
Senate minority leader: Everett Dirksen (R-IL)
Seats before election: 55 (D), 45 (R)
Seats after election: 58 (D), 42 (R)
Seat change: D ^ 3, R v 3

Full list:
Alabama: incumbent John Sparkman (D) over John Grenier (R)
Alaska: incumbent Bob Bartlett (D) over Lee L. McKinley (R)
Arkansas: incumbent John L. McClellan (D) unopposed
Colorado: incumbent Gordon L. Allott (R) over Byron Johnson (D) and Henry Olshaw (HIP)
Delaware: incumbent J. Caleb Boggs (R) over James M. Tunnell Jr. (D)
Georgia: incumbent Richard Russell Jr. (D) over J. B. Stoner (HIP)
Idaho: incumbent Len Jordan (R) over Ralph Harding (D)
Illinois: incumbent Paul Douglas (D) over Lawrence J. S. “Lar” Daly (R) and Robert Sabonjian (HIP)
Iowa: incumbent Jack Miller (R) over E. B. Smith (D) and Robert D. Dilley (HIP)
Iowa (special): Harold Hughes (D) over incumbent appointee Henry Oscar Talle (R)
Kansas: incumbent James B. Pearson (R) over George W. Snell (HIP), James Floyd Breeding (D) and Earl Dodge (Prohibition)
Kentucky: incumbent John Sherman Cooper (R) over Gaines P. Wilson (D)
Louisiana: incumbent Allen J. Ellender (D) unopposed
Maine: incumbent Margaret Chase Smith (R) over Elmer H. Violette (D)
Massachusetts: incumbent Ed Brooke (R) over Endicott Peabody (D)
Michigan: incumbent appointee Robert P. Griffin (R) over Richard F. Vander Veen (D)
Minnesota: incumbent Walter Mondale (D) over Robert A. Forsythe (R)
Mississippi: incumbent James Eastland (D) over Prentiss Walker (R) and Clifton R. Whitley (I)
Montana: incumbent Lee Metcalf (D) over Tim M. Babcock (R)
Nebraska: incumbent appointee Dwight W. Burney (R) over C. Armstrong Callan (D)
New Hampshire: incumbent Thomas J. McIntyre (D) over Chester Earl Merrow (R)
New Jersey: incumbent Clifford P. Case (R) over Warren W. Wilentz (D)
New Mexico: incumbent Clinton Presba Anderson (D) over Anderson Carter (R)
North Carolina: incumbent B. Everett Jordan (D) over John S. Shallcross (R)
Oklahoma: incumbent Bud Wilkinson (R) over Fred R. Harris (D)
Oregon: Mark Hatfield (R) over Robert B. Duncan (D)
Rhode Island: incumbent Claiborne Pell (D) over Ruth M. Briggs (R)
South Carolina: incumbent Strom Thurmond (R) over Bradley Morrah (D)
South Carolina (special): incumbent appointee Fritz Hollings (D) over Marshall Parker (R) [4]
South Dakota: incumbent Karl Earl Mundt (R) over Donn H. Wright (D)
Tennessee: incumbent Howard Baker (R) over Frank G. Clement (D)
Texas: Lyndon B. Johnson (D) over incumbent John G. Tower (R) and Bruce Alger (HIP)
Virginia: incumbent A. Willis Robertson (D) over James P. Ould Jr. (R) and F. Lee Hawthorne (HIP)
Virginia (special): incumbent appointee Harry F. Byrd Jr. (D) over Lawrence M. Traylor (R) and John W. Carter (I)
West Virginia: incumbent Jennings Randolph (D) over Francis J. Love (R)
Wyoming: Gale W. McGee (D) over Clifford P. Hansen (R)

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa



BROOKE BEATS ODDS IN HISTORIC U.S. SENATE RACE!

…Edward William “Ed” Brooke III (R-MA) is set to become the first Black American to serve in the US Senate since Republican politician Blanche Kelso Bruce represented Mississippi in that chamber from 1875 to 1881. As Senators were elected by state legislatures in Bruce’s day, Brooke’s election tonight marks the very first time that a Black American has won the popular vote in a race for a US Senate seat. “Brooke’s victory tonight demonstrates the diversity of American ideology,” remarked his campaign manager to reporters ahead of Brooke’s victory speech, in which the Senator-elect pledged to pursue policy to aid “all families and all workers,” as Brooke put it. “Tonight has really shown how far we have come as a nation, especially in these past few years,” his manager adds…

The Boston Globe, 11/8/1966



United States House of Representatives results, 1966
Date: November 8, 1966
Seats: All 437
Seats needed for majority: 218
House majority leader: John McCormack (D-MA)
House minority leader: Charles Halleck (R-IN)
Last election: 224 (D), 213 (R)
Seats won: 214 (D), 223 (R)
Seat change: D v 10, R ^ 10

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa [5]



United States Governor election results, 1966
Date: November 8, 1966
State governorship elections held: 35
Seats before: 29 (D), 21 (R)
Seats after: 27 (D), 23 (R)
Seat change: D v 2, R ^ 2

Full List:
Alabama: William Ryan DeGreffenried Sr. (D) over John M. Patterson (HIP) and Arthur Glenn Andrews (R)
Alaska: incumbent Mike Stepovich (R) over Wendall P. Kay (D) and John Grasse (I)
Arizona: incumbent Paul Fannin (R) over Norman Green (D)
Arkansas: incumbent Winthrop Rockefeller (R) over James Douglas Johnson (D)
California: incumbent Pat Brown (D) over Ray Kroc (R) and Timothy Leary (Natural Mind)
Colorado: incumbent John Arthur Love (R) over Robert Lee Knous (D) and Walter R. Plankinton (HIP)
Connecticut: incumbent John N. Dempsey (D) over E. Clayton Gengras (R)
Florida: Robert King High (D) over Claude Kirk (R)
Georgia: Bo Callaway (R) over Jimmy Carter (D) and Lester Maddox (HIP)
Hawaii: incumbent John A. Burns (D) over Randolph Crossley (R)
Idaho: Charles Herndon (D) over Don Samuelson (R), Perry Swisher (I) and Philip Jungert (I)
Iowa: Robert D. Ray (R) over Robert D. Fulton (D) and David B. Quiner (HIP)
Kansas: incumbent William H. Avery (R) over Robert B. Docking (D) and Rolland Ernest Fisher (Prohibition)
Maine: incumbent John H. Reed (R) over Kenneth M. Curtis (D)
Maryland: Spiro T. Agnew (R) over Hyman A. Pressman (D) and George P. Mahoney (HIP)
Massachusetts: incumbent John A. Volpe (R) over Edward J. McCormack Jr. (D)
Michigan: incumbent George W. Romney (R) over Zolton A. Ferency (D)
Minnesota: Coya Knutson (D) over Harold LeVander (R)
Nebraska: incumbent Frank B. Morrison (D) over Philip Hart Weaver (R) and Philip C. Sorensen (Liberal)
Nevada: incumbent Grant Sawyer (D) over Wilford Owen Woodruff (R) and Lloyd E. Gilbert (HIP)
New Hampshire: Harrison Reed Thyng (R) over incumbent John W. King (D)
New Mexico: David F. Cargo (R) over incumbent Jack M. Campbell (D)
New York: Mario Biaggi / Orin D. Lehman (D/C) over incumbent Malcolm Wilson / John O’Leary (R) and Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. / James L. Farmer Jr. (Liberal)
Ohio: incumbent Jim Rhodes (R) over Frazier Reams Jr. (D)
Oklahoma: Dewey F. Bartlett (R) over Preston J. Moore (D)
Oregon: Tom McCall (R) over Robert W. Straub (D)
Pennsylvania: Robert Casey Sr. (D) over Harold Stassen (R)
Rhode Island: incumbent John Chafee (R) over Horace E. Hobbs (D)
South Carolina: Joseph O. Rogers Jr. (R) over incumbent Robert McNair (D) and Alfred William “Red” Bethea (HIP)
South Dakota: Frank Farrar (R) over incumbent Ralph Herseth (D)
Tennessee: Buford Ellington (D) over H. L. Crowder (HIP), Charlie Moffett (I) and Charles Gordon Vick (I)
Texas: John Connally (D) over T. E. Kennerly (R) and Ed Walker (HIP)
Vermont: incumbent Philip H. Hoff (D) over Richard Snelling (R)
Wisconsin: Patrick J. Lucey (D) over incumbent Warren P. Knowles (R)
Wyoming: Teno Roncalio (D) over Stanley K. Hathaway (R)

– knowledgepolitics.co.usa



The 1966 midterms produced lukewarm results.

One the one hand, Republicans lost three seats in the Senate. The night’s “hottest” political fight was in Texas, where former President Lyndon B. Johnson returned to the Senate by defeating incumbent Republican Senator John G. Tower for Johnson’s own former Senate seat. Republican leaders admittedly considered the net loss to be “lackluster,” and some of them blamed Conservative Republicans for the loss, claiming their killing of a promising bill in September upset “just enough” voters.

On the other hand, the GOP finally regained control of the House of Representatives for the first time in 14 years, since the 1952 elections. The victory came amidst an uneasy stagnant conflict continuing in Indochina butting heads with an economic upswing. Democratic voters blamed the party for producing “poor candidates” and others pointed the finger at the return of Lyndon Johnson reminding voters of why they had made him a one-term President in 1964. This claim held only some water, though, as Johnson focused more on the Senate elections than the House elections.

Instead, the reason for the results was more twofold; In the words of Howard K. Smith of ABC News, “A referendum on the country’s posture in Indochina was held in the Senate; a referendum on the country’s economic strength was held in the House.”

Indeed, the “Indochina Imbroglio” and race riots emboldened Democrats while the Colonel’s untangling of the red tape confining small businesses emboldened the Republicans. Additionally, the Democrats sought to reassemble parts of LBJ’s 1960 coalition of voters – union leaders, white ethnic minorities, blacks and immigrants – with underwhelming results; Republicans sought to hold onto businessmen, east-coast intellectuals.

But why the Democratic increase in the Senate and concurrent decrease in the House, then? Because all politics is local, as the oddly-worded phrase goes. US Senators typically pay more attention to foreign policy because they can afford to – every two Senators represent an entire state, while US Representatives must cater more directly to the concerns of their districts. This usually leads to Representatives focusing on issues “closer to home.”

Indeed, local politics was where it was the most intense as most voters pondered one question above all others, if not in these exact words: “which is better, reducing taxes to allow for the citizens themselves to pay for social improvements and allow for better entrepreneurial opportunities, or raising taxes to pay for social improvements through government-run programs?” At the local level, voters appreciated The Colonel’s decentralization of business regulations that had allowed for a 12% increase in businesses being founded in the 1965-1966 period, and that had helped to lower the unemployment level in several states. As such, more financially-conscious voters leaned to The Colonel’s Party, while voters more concerned with foreign policy leaned away.

– David Pietrusza’s The Epic Campaigns of the 1960s, Scholastic, 2008



GRIMSBY: “…Tonight was a historic night for the people of Washington, D.C., as it was their very first direct mayoral election. John Kraft, our political analyst in D.C., joins us now. Can you walk us through tonight’s significance for us, John?”

KRAFT: “Certainly, Roger. From 1878 to 1962, Washington, D.C. was administrated by a three-member bipartisan Board of Commissioners, all of whom were appointed by the U.S. President. But then in 1962, amidst the Cuban War and the Civil Rights movement, Johnson quietly sent to congress a plan to give the residents of Capitol Hill more say in who serves them. The Board was replaced by a Mayor-Commissioner during the reorganization of D.C.’s government, and Johnson, to placate southern congressional leaders, appointed Edward Bennett Williams to be mayor-commissioner until the first election was held tonight. Williams was backed by the Washington Post publisher Katharine Graham, but due to being widely unpopular, Williams did not run in tonight’s election.”

GRIMSBY: “So who did, John?”

KRAFT: “The Democratic nominee, city councilman Cliff Alexander, shared tonight’s election ballot with two independents – Sam Harris and Raymond Ellis – and a Republican named Jackson Champion, who repeated claimed Alexander was too young and inexperienced for the job. This claim apparently didn’t stick, though, as Alexander won with over 70% of the vote. This make Alexander the city’s first African-American head of stat. And at age 33, he is also one of the city’s youngest heads-of-state in decades.”

GRIMBSY: “If that’s the case, then it will be very interesting to see how well he does in office…”

– ABC News broadcast, election night news coverage, 11/8/1966



BROWN TROUNCES KROC!

Sacramento, CA – The Golden State is not a friend to the Golden Arches of McDonald’s tonight, as the people of California have voted for Pat Brown (D) over McDonald’s CEO Ray Kroc (R) by a 10% margin. …If Brown completes this third term, he will become the longest-serving Governor in state history. ...Brown, meanwhile, maintained fairly high approval ratings for his handling of war protestors in 1963-64, leading to him defeating conservative opponent Sam Yorty in the June primary by a wide margin. …Kroc was repeatedly called an opportunist with no political experience unready to handle the responsibilities of the nation’s largest state economy and the most populous state in the union. Kroc making several gaffes and controversial statements, and, to be frank, receiving no love from the White House, likely contributed to his first foray into politics ending in failure…

– The Sacramento Bee, 11/8/1966



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[pic: imgur.com/T5dZto4.png ]
– clickopedia.co.usa



“but the worst part was the massive amount of debt Ray had accumulated during the campaign…”

– Former McDonald’s CEO June Martino, KNN interview, 1983



IT’S MARIO!: Cop-Congressman Elected Governor

Bronx, NY – Mario Biaggi has experienced an unbelievable meteoric rise. Just five years ago, in 1961, Biaggi was a veteran police officer who, inspired by President Johnson’s domestic programs and the war in Cuba, entered law school and a bid for a Congressional seat at roughly the same time. After a single term on Capitol Hill, he gave up his House Seat to successfully run for the Governorship. …While Biaggi’s biggest support came from the more conservative upstate New York, his campaign did also find appeal in the Big Apple. According one survey, Biaggi’s anti-crime stance, and his backing of a successful law-and-order bill earlier this year, resonated with middle-income voters. Another survey credited President Sanders’ support of Biaggi’s congressional activism (though not his candidacy) helped win over some registered Republicans. …“Rockefeller mismanaged and threw the state into spiraling debt and it will take a Democrat to fix it!” said former Mayor Wagner.

The New York Times, 11/8/1966



COYA WINS! Congresswoman Knutson Makes History In Being Elected Minnesota’s First Woman Governor!

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Coya Knutson, now Governor-Elect, during a CBS interview last month in which she replied that, if she won this election, "My focus will not be on making history. My focus will be on making Minnesotan families be well-fed and financially well-off."

…last night, the people of Minnesota took to the polling booths and elected US Rep. Coya Knutson (D) to be the first female Governor of the Land of Ten Thousand Lakes. Knutson bested Republican challenger Harold LeVander by a margin of roughly 4%, in a night that was favorable to Democratic nominee. Knutson’s candidacy was strongly endorsed by the likes of Senator Walter Mondale, former Governor Orville Freeman, and former Vice President Hubert Humphrey. Knutson’s race for the governor’s seat was also possibly benefited from high turnout among woman voters and young voters, who, along with rural voters attracted to the pro-farmer planks of Knutson’s campaign’s platforms, were able to outnumber LeVander's base of supporters, which were found primarily in urban and suburban areas…

The Minneapolis Star, Minnesota newspaper, 11/9/1966



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– US Representative-Elect Mike Gravel (D-AS) tours Washington, D.C. with other Representatives-Elect, c. November 1966



November 1966 marked the conclusion of the two-person Gemini Program and the start of the Apollo missions. Both became the most famous of NASA’s Mission Programs due to their historical feats. Right out the starting gate, we travelled around the moon – astronaut Jim McDivitt (b. 1929) achieved the honor of being the very first to orbit around the moon in the Apollo 1 craft...

– NASA scientist Farouk El-Baz’s Up and Away: How The Cold War Competition Pushed Us Into The Stars, MacFarland & Company, 1994



GREEK GOVERNMENT PASSES “UNPRECEDENTED NUMBER” OF LAWS WITH BIPARTISAN SUPPORT

…Queen Frederica’s death exactly one year ago today may have contributed to the cooling of tensions between the socialist and capitalist factions in the Greek government. The Queen was heavily unpopular among the people of Greece due to her unconstitutional intervention in national politics. …According to one poll, 15% of Greeks believe that the Queen may have been assassinated, but “no political leader would dare murder his boss’s wife,” according to one anonymous member of Greek parliament...

– The Daily Express, conservative UK newspaper, 12/1/1966



On December 2, N.R.S.A. Administrator Ralph Nader met with labor organizer Walter Reuther, the progressive President of the United Automobile Workers labor union, to discuss how to better labor relations concerning safety groups and the automobile manufacturing industry, and ways in which both groups could work together in an effort to repair and maintain America’s infrastructure projects. Nader would call the meeting “pragmatic and enlightening.” Because President Sanders’s trusting of his cabinet and cabinet-level “co-workers” (as he would often call them) to perform their duties “without [his] constant supervision,” this meeting would significantly help shape the way the NRSA approached road safety under Nader’s administration…

– From prize-winning historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed, 2011



HOME SECRETARY CALLS ’66 “THE DEADLIEST IN YEARS” OVER I.R.A. BOMBINGS

London – …The escalating violence in Northern Ireland has claimed 4 lives, destroyed thousands of dollars of property, and led to hundreds of arrests as the Irish Republican Army terror group continues to wreak havoc on Eire. The Brown government is working with American officials to combat hostilities, but it is possible that these activities are not endemic to the death of American citizen Stephen E. Smith. …IRA had first increased its levels of violence over the Macmillan government’s involvement in the Cuba War. According to Home Secretary Roy Jenkins, the group was also inspired by events in France during these past two years to “disrupt the basic functions of British society for their own gain”…

The Daily Mirror, liberal UK newspaper, 12/3/1966



U.S. Citizen Approval of U.S. Operations in Vietnam

Approve: 42%
Disapprove: 41%
Uncertain: 17%

– Gallop poll, published 12/4/1966



December 18, 1966
To: The President
From: General Abrams

Mister President,

The army is in higher spirits in response to the recent capture of a high-ranking Viet Cong leader. Muoi Khang, also known as Hoang Van Thai, was wounded and apprehended by a division of Army troops who were expanding U.S./South Vietnamese control of the Fourth Quadrant to the edge of the Cambodian border. Muoi Khang is a stubborn and wily man, refusing to talk and repeatedly trying to escape regardless of what punishment he receives during the attempts.

However, during the capture, important documents were discovered as well. Our specialist here is certain they are legitimate – a fake set of plans purposeless left out for us would be easier to translate, according to our expert – and they give strong evidence to there being major Viet Cong regional headquarters and recruitment centers in Memot, Cambodia. We sent out a reconnaissance division and it appears they are relocating. We are taking immediate action to meet them at the border to take them out before they can flee to parts unknown. We are currently attempting to inform Cambodia’s leaders of the movement. Even if we are unsuccessful of snuffing them out here, we will nonetheless be giving a crushing blow to them. The vulnerability of their headquarters and the compromising of the Ho Chi Minh trail – as you will recall, their new rerouted routes go farther into Cambodia and Laos – is raising our moral and possibly weakening theirs.

Meanwhile, troops are still maintain ground around Khe Sanh. The fighting is intermittent but intense, but our men are strong and fearless – we will be victorious in pushing them off.

– Private memo, declassified and disclosed alongside other documents by the Pentagon on 1/15/2013 by order of the US President



I was resting with Ho Chi Minh outside of his stilt house on the grounds of the presidential palace when a messenger was permitted to approach us. He came bearing grave news.

“Uncle Ho, if I may be so honored to call you that, sir, uh.”

“What is it, dear comrade?” Ho Chi Minh inquired.

“We’ve intercepted a memo from the Americans. They know of our men in Memot.”

“Oh dear,” he pondered.

After sending the messenger away, I sprang up. “Ho, this confirms what I’ve suspected!” Clutching the report in my hand, I reminded my compatriot, “we’ve been seeing the Americans increasing their focus on southern parts of the Truong Son Road,” which is what we called the Ho Chi Minh Trail, “for months now!”

“Yes, and they’ve also been redirecting troops and increasing attacks on our Pathet Lao brethren.” I though about all we knew about the Great Enemy – the activities of the Americans, the South Vietnamese, and the Lao. But also about all the talks between Khanh, the Lao and Comabodian Kings, and the Chicken Colonel – all deciphered apart from some utterances of ‘something big.’”

“Le Duan,” Ho Chi Minh said, “I think we should dedicate more of our brethren-in-arms to Cambodia immediately.”

“I concur.”

– Le Duan’s A Divided We Fall: The Real History of Vietnam in the Twentieth Century, Freedom Province Books, 2002



As 1966 came to a close, Father still wanted to sign an anti-nuclear testing treaty with the Soviets. But the timing just wasn’t right. Instead, the whole idea was put on hiatus as America’s land, sea, and air resources readied for the leading of Laotian-South Vietnam forces into the “D-Day” of the ’60s – the [January 1967] Invasion of North Vietnam!

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



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– Colonel Sander (left) and Ho Chi Minh (right)



These are the tests that try all leaders
These are the questions that they must answer
Will they bleed, like their soldiers?
Will they cry, like the widows of their soldiers?
Will they be worthy of memory, like all of those who fall in their name?
How strong is their spine, their vanity, their integrity?
Their stubbornness, their pride, their debt to the powers above them?
How much will they sacrifice, and for whom – their countrymen, their country, their puppet-masters, or their selves?
These tests try all leaders – and they also try us all.

– anti-war poet Adrienne Rich, 1966



NOTE(S)/SOUCRE(S)
[1] This guy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_S._Clinton
[2] Similar to what almost happened to Caroline Kennedy IOTL!: https://www.nytimes.com/1975/10/24/archives/bomb-kills-a-doctor-near-london-home-of-caroline-kennedy-a-narrow.html?sq=caroline%2520kennedy&scp=12&st=cse
[3] All these italicized lines are taken from here: https://cdnc.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/cdnc?a=d&d=DS19660531.2.6&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1
[4] While narrow IOTL at 51.3%-to-48.7%, here it’s even narrower, at 50.1%-to-49.9%!
[5] Republicans managed to actually produce a net gain of eight seats by focusing on domestic economic prosperity in the House while Democrats bogged them down in the Senate with the year’s foreign policy slip-ups. The 1962 winners James T. McKinstry (R-DE-AtLarge), Hamer H. Budge (R-ID-2), George O. Chambers (R-IN-5), Coya Knuston (D-MN-9), Robert Bartel (R-MO-11), Hugh L. Carey (D-NY-12), John H. Rousselot (R-CA-25), H. L. Richardson (R-CA-29), John D. Fox (R-MO-4), Carrol M. Barringer (R-NC-10), J. Kenneth Robinson (R-VA-7), Floyd Spence (R-SC-2), John Pritchard (D-IN-9), Frank W. Less (D-IA-2), Harding C. Noblitt (DFL-MN-7), E. Dent Lackey (D-NY-40), Robert E. Cook (D-OH-11), and Wilkes Thrasher (D-TN-3) all won re-election again. Robert French (R-AL-5) was re-elected, Sam Steiger (R-AZ-3) was re-elected, J. E. Hinshaw (R-Ark.-3) won re-election over James Trimble (D), Robert C. Cline (R-CA-22) won re-election, and Shirley Temple Black (CA-35) succeeded James B. Utt (R). Republicans Jerry L. Pettis (CA-33), Patrick M. Martin (CA-38), Donald G. Brotzman (CO-2), John Chenoweth (CO-3), Abner W. Sibal (Conn.-4), Roscoe Pickett (GA-4), Edward Y. Chapin (GA-7), John Mattmiller (ID-1), Roger H. Zion (Indiana-8), incumbent Earl Wilson (Indiana-9), Don A. Tabbert (Indiana-11), incumbent Fred Schwengel (Iowa-1), incumbent John Henry Kyl (Iowa-4), incumbent Ben F. Jensen (Iowa-7), incumbent Gene Snyder (Kentucky-3), incumbent Clyde Middleton (KY-4), incumbent Walter Clay Vaan Hoose (KY-7), David C. Treen (LA-2), Floyd O. Crawford (LA-6) (over John Rarick (D/HIP)), William S. Walker (LA-8), George Meader (Michigan-2), incumbent August E. Johansen (Michigan-3), incumbent Victor A. Knox (Michigan-11), Richard D. Kuhn (Michigan-19), Robert J. Odegard (MN-6), incumbent Ralph F. Beermann (Neb.-1), incumbent Louis C. Wyman (NH-1), incumbent Milton W. Glenn (NJ-2), Marcus Daly (NJ-3), incumbent Frank C. Osmers Jr. (NJ-9), incumbent Steven Boghos Derounian (NY-3), Luigi R. Marano (NY-15), incumbent Robert R. Barry (NY-25), incumbent Katharine St. George (NY-27), incumbent J. Ernest Wharton (NY-28), incumbent R. Walter Riehlman (NY-34), incumbent John R. Pillion (NY-39), incumbent Don L. Short (ND-2), incumbent Carl W. Rich (OH-1), incumbent Paul F. Schenck (OH-3), incumbent Homer E. Abele (OH-10), Oliver P. Bolton (OH-at large), incumbent Irene Baker (TN-2), Robert B. James (TN-9), Bayard C. Auchincloss (OK-6), incumbent George Atlee Goodling (PA-19), James C. Gardner (NC-4), incumbent Walt Horan (WA-5), incumbent K. William Stinson (WA-7), incumbent Henry C. Schadeberg (Wisc.-1), incumbent William Van Pelt (WA-6), incumbent William H. Harrison (WY at-large) and incumbent James D. Weaver (PA-24) all won their respective bids for election or re-election. Dorothy R. Powers (R-WA-6) primaried incumbent Thor C. Tollefson (WA-6) and won in the election over Alice Franklin Bryant (D). Concerning Republican gains, Mike Thompson (R-FL-12) won over incumbent Dante Fascell (D). M. Blaine Peterson (D-UT-1) lost to Laurence J. Burton (R). Fletcher Thompson (R-GA-5) won over Archie L. Lindsey (D) after the incumbent Democrat retired. John J. Hoellen (R-IL-11) won over an incumbent Democrat, as did Tom Railsback (R-IL-19). R. Douglas Ford (R-KY-2) won over incumbent William Huston Natcher (D) by a hair. Incumbent Democrat John C. Mackie (D-MI-7) lost re-election to Donald Riegle Jr. (R). John E. Hunt (R-NJ-1) won over Michael J. Piarulli (D). Robert C. Davidson (R-NM at-large #1) bested incumbent E. S. J. Walker (D) in New Mexico. Dniel E. Button (R-NY-29) won over Richard J. Connors (D) and John Muller (Conservative). Richard B. Barnwell (R-NC-6) won over incumbent Horace Korngay (D); W. Scott Harvey (R-NC-11) won over incumbent Roy A. Taylor (D); Chalmers P. Wylie (R-OH-15) won the seat of the 15th district; Donald E. Lukens (R-OH-24) won over J. H. Pelley (D); Lawrence G. Williams (R-PA-7) won over John J. Logue (D); Robert Bear Cohen (R-PA-4) won the election after the incumbent Democrat retired; Albert Watson (R-SC-4) won over incumbent Robert T. Ashmore in an upset. George H. W. Bush (R-TX-7) won over Frank Briscoe (D) by a 7% margin despite LBJ campaigning for Briscoe. However, Incumbent Hastings Keith (R-MA-12) lost re-election to Edward F. Harrington (D). Walter Judd (R-MN-5) lost re-election to Donald M. Fraser (D) due to Judd’s foreign policy experience being criticized. W. A. Armfield (R-NC-5) lost re-election to Nick Galifianakis (D), Ed Foreman (R-TX-16), lost to Richard C. White (D) thanks to LBJ campaigning for White; similarly, Robert Price (R-TX-18) lost to Dee Miller (D). Democrats Howard W. Smith (VA-8) and William Pat Jennings (VA-9) both won re-election thanks to support from LBJ. And finally, the incumbent Lowell Thomas Jr. (R-Alaska at-large) lost re-election to Mike Gravel! 18 Republican wins – 8 Democratic wins = 10 Republican wins (if the math doesn't add up (if I forgot a name or miscounted, or left out an important election or something), please let me know).

Ogrebear said:
That was a huge chapter!

Kroc in government will have a huge effect on McD’s.

Sanders going for the clandestine approach was a novel way of avoiding civilian casualties. Wonder if he’ll call in any French expertise on the area?

Oko didn’t marry John. Good.

Has Jacko found a mentor there I wonder?
Click to expand...

Good idea!

Gentleman Biaggi said:
more mentions of my boi
Good

Thanks; he really is an interesting character!

Stretch said:
Is no one gonna mention Ms Wanda Boner? Reminds me of an old ad I saw reviewed by Nostalgia Critic.
She's a real person; her name's on that letter Sanders sent to Hoover (the link was in a recent chapter, I believe)

Unknown said:
I just realized something--we're where the Prologue started, IIRC...

Wonder what happens from here, and waiting for more...

Next Update E.T.A.: May 23!
 
Post 18
Post 18: Chapter 26



Chapter 26: January 1967 – June 1967



Through his life
He had dreamt the dream of peace
The hope that war will finally cease
And the prayer of new found goals
To find love in our souls

– part of an untitled and undated poem by Teresa Jane McGovern (OTL)



Halleck Calls For “Compromise” Legislation On His First Day As House Speaker

...Charles Halleck, whom served as House Majority leader from 1947 to 1949 and again from 1953 to 1955, and as the House Minority leader for the last eight years, may be attempting party unity amid ‘concerns’ over the growing conservative wing of the Republican Party, according to our sources on The Hill. …“He wants to find common ground among moderate, liberal and conservative Republicans and build up some meaningful legislation on that base,” explains Congressman Leslie Arends (R-IL), the new House Majority Leader…

The Washington Post, 1/3/1967



“Freedom is a God-given right, but in some places it is not a birthright, but a right that must be earned, not given or received straight out. The Laotian and South Vietnam men in Southeast Asia are fighting valiantly for the right to have this freedom for their people. They are fighting for all freedom-loving people in Southeast Asia and the world, and with our supervision they will be victorious.”

– President Harland Sanders, The State of the Union address, 1/10/1967



“The mosquitoes here aren’t as bad as the ones down South,” the more seasoned men would say. But I guess a stab wound is nothing compared to a bullet wound… Passing through those steep valleys gave us all a sense of trepidation, especially when the fog rolled in. Cloaked and reliant on the signals of the men ahead of us, we became a caravan of silence – the entire platoon of 30-to-40 men, led by a lieutenant colonel better known for barking than clamming up. The hot jungle terrain gave our legs quite the workout, and the humidity made us sweat profusely. …Repeatedly, we would come to a halt and wait for the platoon ahead of us to signal that it was clear for us to advance another half-klick [1], and continue the slow and meticulous march alongside the mountain’s edge. When scaling the higher parts of the path, we were advised not to look down, but at one point, curiosity got the best of me. The distance to the jungle floor was unnerving, I will admit, but more because of the fear that a slip would alert Charlies to us, rather than the fear of the slip itself.

– ret. US Army Gen. Eldon A. Bargewell’s memoirs The Games We Play For Freedom, Spirit of Freedom Publishing, 2010



sHOLOhQ.png


[ pic: https://imgur.com/sHOLOhQ.png ]
– A valley in the Moc Chau District, roughly 30 miles from Hoa Binh, (North) Vietnam



Cuba was a wake-up call for us. From that conflict, we realized that we could not always charge into an enemies’ territory like a bull in a China shop, blind to the conditions that make each foreign territory unique from each other and from our own terrain. “Knowledge will remain a crucial tool of any battle,” Johnson advisor Harold Keith Johnson once said, “and if anything came out of the Fried Charlie fiasco in Vietnam, it was that air power couldn’t do the job[2]. Indeed, the Vietnamese only adapted their war strategies to circumvent our superior bombing capabilities.

[snip]

The President reiterated his view of the military – as a branch of politics, meant to enforce order in order for peace to be maintained. Sanders wanted absolute assurance that Operation Spicy Strychnine (but more often called Operation Fried Charlie 2.0) would succeed, and that the military could assist in him reaching political goals.

“What about air power?” The Colonel replied, “We can’t have the men on the ground exposed.”

“We’ve reached your requested number of jets; the south division will shoot down enemy aircraft and lead a distraction seven klicks north of the DMV to give the idea of an offense playing out there. The north division will shoot down any enemy jets not sent to the diversion, and they are not to drop their payloads until they’ve reached the capital.”

Toward the end of the last-minute discussion, I confided in the President, “I cannot promise an easy victory; blood is always spilled. But at the current rate, our forces are just outside of Hoa Binh and the border, and so far more blood of the enemy is being spilled than the blood of our own. And I cannot promise a quick victory; success cannot be rushed. But the force of the American Army, Navy, Marines and Air Force are stronger than they have ever been before. We’ve done the recon; we now know the land, we know the people, and most importantly, we know the enemy. We are determined and united behind the ideals of the freed world and as such, no American soldier or allied soldier that dies in this conflict will do so in vain. For I can promise this – this campaign will end the war in a great and glorious victory for freedom and Democracy.”

The Colonel thanked me, and I said, “Thank you, Mr. President.”

– General Creighton Abrams in his personal memoirs, 1974



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[pic: https://imgur.com/jEjLE5m.png ]
– Smoke rises from a building hit by US & SV tanks rolling into the city of Qui Chau, two provinces south of Hanoi, 1/23/1967



The Americans and their Lao and South allies invaded the North in a three pronged strike – tanks rolled past the North-South border while stealth ops and guerillas snuck into the North’s western provinces from their hub near Xam Nua, Laos, followed by the US Navy landing along the coast to besiege the cities of Thanh Pho Vinh and other spots. After getting past the border valleys, the land troops took control of several villages and settlements in Son La Province, then shot straight for Hoa Binh, a pivotal city just 20 miles west of Hanoi.

We learned of that location’s fall as SV/US jets continued to hammer the city prior to their ground counterparts arriving.

“I really was not expecting them to get past Hoa Binh,” I remember saying.

Ho Chi Minh was more incensed: “I was not expecting them to even get near the border! Those messages, they were purposely send out for us to detect and decipher; they were all a ruse to move our [Viet Cong] leaders away from here!”

After another bomb shook the ground, I reiterated “Ho Chi Minh, we must relocate!”

“No! We must stay here to join our comrades when they repel these invaders.”

“But what if they don’t?”

“They will! They’ll be helped by the men sent to the South returning in time. It must happen!”

“Ho Chi Minh, you are too valuable to us for us to risk your life on the chance, no matter how small, that this may end poorly for us.”

Ho Chi Minh stood up and looked out onto Hanoi’s skyline, burning, as red as the blood being spilled.

“My city...”

...Naturally, we travelled lightly...

– Le Duan’s Divided We Fall: The Real History of Vietnam in the Twentieth Century, Freedom Province Books, 2002



geUIdrj.png


[ pic: https://imgur.com/geUIdrj.png ]
– ARVN Rangers advancing on VC ground forces 5 miles from the Presidential palace, 1/24/1967



URBAN WARFARE HAS COME TO HANOI

…a school building has become a makeshift emergency center as local hospitals are overwhelmed with wounded citizens and soldiers. I was visiting one medical center when SV men raided the building, holding everyone at gunpoint. Wounded VC troops were handcuffed to their beds, and several gunshots came from the rooms of the most rebellious patients. …I was allowed to leave after presenting one of the COs with my press pass and other papers. After wishing my new cohorts “good luck” in their tongue (“chuc may man”), I “borrowed” a motorcycle to follow the caravan of tanks rumbling passed, heading north, to the heart of the city…

– Journalist and VC sympathizer Wilfred Burchett, reporting for The Morning Star (British communist daily), 1/24/1967



The blood is still rolling off my flak jacket from the hole in my shoulder and there are bullets cracking into the area all around me. I scream at Jim “keeping going!” but then I realize he can’t feel his legs anymore, let alone use them. The wind blows to us the smoke from the building burning behind us, making breathing difficult. ‘I have to get out of this place,’ I remember thinking, ‘I have to make it out of here somehow.’

Fire, run, crouch, fire, wait, turn, fie; repeat on and on. We have lost many good men in the slow capture of each street and building. We were like fumigators, eliminating commie cockroaches from treacherous dens of delusions. But now it looked like a sniper, or maybe a weapons bin, had us pinned.

Someone shouts an order but a barrage of bullets drown him out. A Southern ’Nam ranger runs by with his back on fire. Another crack and he falls motionless to the ground. A voice calls for orders from the Sargent. But this time I fail to hear it; the only thing I can think of, the only thing that crosses my mind, is living. There seems to be nothing in the world more important than that.

Hundreds of rounds begin to crash in now
. I return fire from my cover, popping up like a prairie dog and dipping back down. And repeat. Then a fellow soldier runs past me, screaming like a maniac without regard for his life, firing almost blindly into the street. I carefully suck the air to remain calm, to not get too excited, to not think too hard and subsequently panic. ‘Now is the time to be brave, or else all of this is for nothing,’ I tell myself. I block out myself, my memories, thoughts, dreams, and focus only on this moment.

Some other soldiers and I leave our spots to follow him in this makeshift and unplanned assault. The maniac gets shot down first. I feel one of the bullets speed past my ear. Another rips through my pant leg but misses the skin. We run across the wide open city street with all our might, diving and sliding face-first into any cover we can find – mostly the remains of cars and the corners of buildings. But the sniper’s nest gets taken out. [3]

The attack is lifted. They carry Jim past me, his legs dangling off the sides of the stretcher. As they carry him into away I fail to find the right words to say; I don’t think such words exist.

[snip]

At long last, we reached the seat of the communist government, the National Assembly building, the unicameral legislative workplace of the Communist Party of Vietnam. [snip] Granted, it wasn’t the most glamorous of the key assets apprehended – the party that raided the mango-tree-covered Presidential Palace in the Ba Dinh District got the most attention instead. [snip] Almost immediately after the invasion I heard that Ho Chi Minh’s tea in his garden overlooking his carp pond was still warm, reminding me of something I once read about Dolly Madison and, I want to say, porridge.

– ret. U.S. Army Gen. Ronald Lawrence “Ron” Kovic’s memoirs Born on the Fourth of July, Spirit of Freedom Publishing, 2010



…We can now report with certainty that early this morning, the city of Hanoi, the Capitol of North Vietnam, was been successfully occupied by U.S. and South Vietnam forces. The North Vietnam flag of red and blue with a red star has been lowered, and now the flag of South Vietnam – uh, yellow with three red lines – is now flying over the Flag Tower of Hanoi, a 33-foot-high monument and symbol of the city [4]

– Mary McCarthy, reporting for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1/25/1967



…as our vessel departed from the shores, we look back at the city.

“So… What is our next move?” I humbly asked.

“We lay low. Once we reach our destination, we’ll make our way back to the interior and re-organize our brethren.” After a moment of silence, he added “Damn you, Mao.”

“Beg pardon?”

“How dare he abandon us like this? I know Beijing received our calls requesting they intervene. But instead of choosing involvement, they chose abandonment.”

The rapport between Mao and Ho Chi Minh was waning at the time of America’s “Operation Fried Charlie 2.0” in light of our military preferring Soviet weapons (guns, artillery, bullets, artillery shells, radio transmitters, telephones, tanks, planes) to Chinese weapons. With this in mind, Ho was certain Mao would not let us fall in order to upstage the Russians and demonstrate the Chinese military’s abilities. But instead, China’s forces failed to arrive in time, and upon word of Hanoi’s captured, Mao had cancelled the reinforcements.

“Damn you, Mao,” Ho bitterly sighed, “Damn you.”

– Le Duan’s Divided We Fall: The Real History of Vietnam in the Twentieth Century, Freedom Province Books, 2002



Glasses clinked as the White House celebrated the news of the decisive victory overseas.

“Hey Colonel, come on over here already!” Secretary Curtis jovially hollered over to the commander in chief, still nursing the phone with his ear.

“And your certain of those casualty numbers?” He uttered before thanking the party on the other end and heading over to Curtis an company near the center of the room.

“Come on, Colonel, smile! Yeah, Ho Chi Minh got away, but the North’s capitulated! We kicked Charlie’s ass today!”

“You know how many of our boys died doing so?”

“Oh, you can’t enjoy your omelet if you’re busy mourning the broken eggs. Here – have a drink,” the Secretary offered the Colonel a glass.

“You know I don’t drink. My mother taught me not to as soon as I was old enough to hear.[5]

Despite later claims that on special occasions the Colonel would divulge in a bit of champagne [6], the Colonel declined the glass and ultimately resumed reviewing the aftermath of the operation.

Soon he would send in relief aid, coining the phrase “build and pacify” in the process. This was the precursor to the “Building Brotherhood” Initiative that began execution in July 1967.

[snip]

After the fall of Hanoi, the Viet Cong were disorganized and decentralized. Under the Colonel’s orders, General Abrams shifted to overseeing smaller operations to “win over the rebels denying their defeat,” and was reportedly “happy” that the operation had happened in “such a copacetic way.” …However, as Abrams disagreed with the “Building Brotherhood” Program, he placed many of its responsibilities in the hands of the Lieutenant Generals and other subordinates operating in Vietnam while he continued to focus on eliminating the remaining communist groups from Laos and Cambodia...

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



“Good evening, my fellow Americans.

Just a few hours ago, the United States military, under my order and command, completed the launching of a massive operation to liberate the people of North Vietnam from the chains of Communist dictatorship. Our land, sea and air forces worked with local insurgents, Laotian allies, and South Vietnam’s northern brothers to enter the nation and lift its people out from the oppression under which they had suffered for far too long. Ho Chi Minh has fled the country, and his top generals have been either killed or captured. The Viet Cong is not destroyed, but is now decentralized. Like a headless chicken, the Viet Cong will now be directionless, but also more desperate to disrupt the peace that can now finally come to the Vietnamese people. Vigilance will be maintained as the last of the Viet Cong are apprehended and the nation of Vietnam becomes whole once again.

The liberation of the North Vietnam capital of Hanoi was carried out with precision, quickness and bravery not seen since the Invasion of Normandy. We have the United States Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines, and the South Vietnam military and America’s other allies, to thank for its absolute success.

However, we did not execute this operation, nor have we spent so many years in Indochina, without the spilling of blood. Every time I, as Commander-in-Chief, write to a parent that their child will not be returning home, or meet with the soldiers permanently scarred by the horrors of war, the atrocities of warfare weigh on me heavily. Because too often, America feels to burden of war.

That is why I believe that a military’s purpose should be to defeat and then pacify aggressive enemies, to bring hope and life to the shell-shocked cities. To replace the blood-soaked fields of battle with green fields of peace and prosperity. As such, the time has now come for the people of Vietnam to come together and rebuild their country. The transition from a divided nation to a united one will not be quick, a concept Abraham Lincoln clearly understood when he warned that “a house divided against itself cannot stand.” In light of this, our advisory troops will remain in the area until the Vietnamese are securely back on their feet.

But after serving their country, the several thousand American heroes who changed history today are set to return home to their loved ones. To those defenders of liberty, I say this: ‘Your nation welcomes you home, and we salute you.’

The number of people to thank for the actions that have transpired today measures in the millions. Thanks must be given to all who’ve served and supported, who’ve worked for peace over terror, love over hate, liberation over oppression. To those who’ve lost loved ones in this endeavor, to those forever changed by what they’ve experienced in this operation, to the Vietnam people who must now continue the job. Thank y’all for being part of the greatest aspect of humanity – our ability to right what has been made wrong.

Thank you, God bless you, and God Bless the United States of America.”

– Colonel Sanders’ 2/5/1967 televised Presidential Address to the Nation



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[ pic: https://imgur.com/4MfTK91.png ]
– A couple watching President Colonel Sanders’ Address to the Nation, 2/5/1967



AFTERMATH: How Will We Handle An Occupied Hanoi?

…The soldiers’ celebrations of a decisive victory was cut short when Molotov cocktails were thrown at their barracks by local civilians who were promptly arrested. The incident is reflective of a lingering issue – the North Vietnam people clearly resent American and South Vietnamese presence, and attacks will likely continue to occur as long as they view these soldiers as invaders instead of liberators. …Some Northerners are fleeing into the country’s northern mountains and into China, Laos and even Cambodia according to one local merchant hoping to profit from “all these uniformed American tourists,” as he calls them… The one family I stayed in Hanoi’s southern district told me their son had fled south, hoping to join the Viet Cong along the Ho Chi Minh Trail and “continue the fight for Uncle Ho.”

– Harrison Salisbury, The New York Times, 2/6/1967



Viet Cong counterattacks on targets in South Vietnam’s interior in the days and weeks that followed the Operation all failed as the SV army stepped up its infiltration of the ranks of the Viet Cong. Along the Ho Chi Minh trail, many soldiers would recollect on feeling the ground rumble as VC tunnels caved in thanks to the sabotage conducted by SV spies and double agents…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



...Nurses recruited to serve in Indochina were sometimes assigned to combat zones, but they were never allowed onto an actual battlefield. This did nothing to shield them from the plethora of other issues facing them – insufficient supplies, abysmal sanitation, and sexual harassment…

Vietnamese nurses, on the other hand, consisted of all-female units that participated in the war effort more directly by engaging in battle with the enemy whenever they were attacked. This book covers the lives and experiences of such women, beginning with North Vietnamese nurse Dang Thuy Tram (1942-20170, whose bestselling book “Last Night I Dreamed Of Peace,” based on her experience serving in Vietnam, led to an award-winning film in 1999. This informative treatise then moves on to Texan twin sisters Eleanor Vietti (1927-2008) and Teresa Vietti (b. 1927). Eleanor worked in a leper colony before heading to post-VC Hanoi to aid the wounded. Eleanor still operates a cleft-palate repair center in Missouri and remains a leader in religion-based humanitarian movements alongside Rev. Jerry Brown. Teresa became “the mother of pediatric cancer therapy.” …Let this book inspire a new generation to understand the importance of peace and to value all lives the world over…

– forward of First Lieutenant Sharon Ann Lane (1943-2017)’s War Nurses: The Forgotten Veterans of the Cuba and Indochina Conflicts, Phoenix Press, 2009



“I have already told this piece of advice to the Colonel – the best thing to make out of an enemy is a friend, but that cannot happen without love persevering. Without love for one another, the Vietnamese will remain separated and at war with each other in spirit. Continuing resent of the north in the former Confederate states of the American South is proof positive of the lasting effects of unity without proper reconciliation. But the Colonel has proven himself to be an absolutely excellent leader, and I am confident that under his supervision, the US military will do a commendable letting the Vietnamese govern themselves, and that under his supervision, fraternal love will return to the people of Vietnam”

– Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., 2/7/1967



MLK PRAISES US MILITARY DESPITE PAST CRITICISMS

The Post and Courier, South Carolina newspaper, 2/7/1967



Shelepin and Mao Tse-Tung were taken aback by the swiftness of America’s invasion of Hanoi. Both Moscow and Beijing had been competing for dominance and influence over North Vietnam, and had spent their time on match each other’s military support instead of on gathering intelligence on America’s pre-invasion maneuvers.

Shelepin was outraged at being blindsided. Privately, he considered launching a pre-emptive nuclear strike in response to America’s “re-enactment of Hitler’s invasion of Poland.” However, less trigger-happy members of Shelepin’s inner circle managed to blame Russia’s intelligence slip-up on party members who had rightly feared a return to Stalinist practices under Shelepin (Shelepin pushed for the further centralization of the Union, and strict disciplined oversight of all domestic officials). While potential successors such as Brezhnev paid attention to Shelepin’s lack of absolute party loyalty, Shelepin himself sought to achieve “better loyalty” with a good old-fashioned inner-party purge of the politicians Shelepin blamed for the fall of Hanoi.

[snip]

Shelepin’s Ambassador to China Mikhail Yefremov wrote of his inability to get information on Mao, with officials in Beijing physically blocking the door and assuring him that Mao was “handling the situation.” Yefremov wrote in his 1967 journal: “China’s silence was the most frightening aspect. Ever since the Sino-Soviet split, it has become highly difficult to determine what our Asian comrades are thinking and planning.”

– Alexander Korzhakov’s From Dawn to Dusk: A Cutthroat Career, St. Petersburg Press, 1997



Mitterrand was an unpredictable young man. In February [1967], for instance, he became the first of the Western powers to open diplomatic relations with Red China. The move indicated an independent foreign policy and was meant to show his bravery and leadership skills, but in the US and UK, it fueled fears of Mitterrand being a Communist puppet. Our boys in the state department were worried it would damage or even destabilize our “containment policy,” and just after we had worked so hard to contain the threat in Indochina! [snip] …Mitterrand valued a nation’s economic potential over their ideology; that was good for business, but bad for morality. Nevertheless, his actions and the world’s responses to it were helpful reference points for what my White House went through the next month.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



I was also present during the Apollo 2 fiasco. The capsule re-entered the atmosphere too quickly, and from this and other variables, the astronauts inside almost burn up. Then went the capsule landed in the Atlantic, they almost drowned from multiple factors. The astronauts were right to credit the 1962-1964 investigations for creating the safety features that saved their lives that day; John Glenn, by then contemplating a political career but for the time being still working for NASA, noted “If anything, the incident should be more encouraging because they’re survival proves we are on the right track to making the future of space travel safe and reliable.”

– mathematician Dorothy Vaughn’s Human Computers: Me and The Other Women at NASA, Langley Publishers, 1997



US’S CIA TO WORK WITH IRISH, UK OFFICERS ON SLAIN AMERICAN CASE

Washington, DC – The Colonel Sanders Administration today released a press statement describing its sending of CIA agents and advisory experts from the U.S. State Department to help local British officials determine those responsible for the death of an American tourist last year. The agents are to also attempt assistance in combating the rise of T.I.R.A. (True Irish Republic Army)’s domestic terror agenda. The Americans’ actions are also a collaborative effort with Ireland’s Directorate of Military Intelligence, and Prime Minister of Northern Ireland Terence O’Neill.

The Daily Express, UK newspaper, 2/25/1967



…in the world of finances, McDonald’s CEO Ray Kroc is expanding the million-dollar fast-food corporation’s number of outlets, and plans to increase its number of locations open 24/7 by 40% over the next two years… When asked about concerns over Kroc’s financial debts associated with his gubernatorial candidacy last year and alleged connections between them and McDonald’s current financial woes, Kroc simply replied “I’m leaving the politics to Sanders from now on, it’s a lot messier than patty-flipping.”

– ABC News, 2/27/1967 broadcast



After the de facto capitulation of the North Vietnam government, the US sought to assist in rebuilding agriculture, transportation, and urban areas to quicken Vietnam unification. [snip] On March 3, 1967, Colonel Sanders visited Saigon, mainly to meet the soldiers and to sit down for a discussion with Nguyen Khanh over what do about the V.C. soldiers still fighting in the jungles of the Laos-Vietnam border, and how to contribute to the defeat of the Pathet Lao still plaguing much of Laos.

“This is too similar to Cuba for comfort,” the Colonel informed Khanh.

Khanh was quick to point out “The Vietnam people’s priorities are still the same as before: 1) a united country, one way or another, 2) all strangers out!, 3) the life of the country is worth more and is more valued than the life of oneself. These ideals form the mindset of all Vietnam people, especially the Viet Cong.”

“How honorable and disgusting,” General Abrams quietly remarked.

At the end of the meeting, the Colonel asked, “So how do you plan on winning over the formerly Communist folks?”

Khanh “Do not worry, we will deal with the traitors.”

The Colonel inquired “What d’ya mean?”

“We will deal with them,” Khanh restated as he calmly and confidently left the room.

“Khanh. Khanh!” Colonel called out to him.

As the Vietnam President left, a smirk could be seen creeping up the side of his face.

“KHANH!”

“Mr. President!” an assistant interrupted the Colonel’s holler.

“What?!”

“There’s been a development in Korea.”

– – – –

On the opposite side of China, South Korea’s President Park Chung-hee was demanding information over North Korean troop activities at the Demilitarized Zone that divided the two countries. Soon the Colonel was back at the Army headquarters in Saigon. “Alright, what’s the trouble?”

“The North Koreans are saying one of our men began firing into the North at Panmunjom, leading to a firefight,” the translator by a radio informed the Colonel. “Three of our men are being held at the border. Sir, this could get ugly very quickly.”

“Is China behind this?” Sanders asked.

“Undoubtedly,” Defense Secretary Chuck Bonesteel informed him. “According to our intel, Mao sees Korea, Vietnam, and Taiwan as three fronts that make China vulnerable to an American invasion. With Vietnam defeated, he’s flexing his military muscle through the North Koreans.”

The Colonel thought, “Maybe Mao’s bluffing. I remember the Korean War – that had put tremendous stress on China’s domestic economy; another direct proxy war with us in Korea would do the same thing all over again, wouldn’t it?”

“We believe Mao is willing to take the risk to defend his country. But I see where you’re coming from, sir. The latest reports suggest that Beijing’s commitments to Hanoi were limited due to China’s poor economy and outdated military. The pride of North Vietnam Generals reportedly caused some tension with Chinese military officials, too. Ho Chi Minh himself may have been preferring Moscow over Beijing due to the former’s superior weapons.”

The Deputy Secretary of Defense chimed in next to get the conversation back on track. “Sir, the situation in Korea.”

“Right, of course, what do we know so far?” The President probed.

“According to our counterparts in Seoul, Kim Il-Sung has been pushing for a South Korea-based insurgency for months now, most likely concentrating on the Taebaek Mountains if the coded radio activity there is anything to go by. According to Seoul, Kim is hoping our manpower in Vietnam will stop us from coming to the aid of the South Koreans. We think the victory in Hanoi has made him jumpy, and now he’s trying to speed up the process.”

“Then Kim’s delusional! South Korea’s, at least economically-speaking, in a real strong and prosperous place right now! Gee, maybe he’s started believing his own propaganda...” The President pondered.

“If it was just the north versus the south,” we wouldn’t have to worry,” Bonesteel place a large chart on the side board. “The North’s Korean People’s Army (or KPA) has about 386,000 soldiers compared to the South’s 585,000, plus the 900 of our men stationed over there via ground combat units Infantry Divisions 2, 7 and 9. We’ve got superior rifles, jet and tanks. The North, meanwhile, is dependent on the Soviets for technology, and Shelepin seems pretty busy at the moment cleaning house over in his defense departments.” He put up another chart, “At the DMZ, both countries have watch towers, wired fences, a wide mine-filled kill zone. We have more troops on our side, plus naval patrols on the coasts, and President Park has greenlit counter-guerrilla operations to defend South Korean interior.”

“What’s the bad news then?”

“If China’s getting involved, the North could suddenly double their digits. They’d give us one heck of a fight.”

The Deputy then added, “Furthermore, sir, President Park very reluctant to call for war. He thinks it’d be unpopularity among his people, because they are not blind followers like the North Koreans.”

Sanders sat back in his chair in a moment of contemplation, and nodded his head as he went over the information in his mind. “What are our options?”

Bonesteel suggested, “We can order a show of force with a major deployment of air and navy assets to the border.”

“Yes, but it could be seen as an intimidation tactic that keeps this snowball rolling from a detaining crisis to a full-flung war,” was Sanders’ rebuttle. “Who’s our current Ambassador to South Korea?”

“Um,” the deputy’s assistant hastily rummaged through his notes before blurting out, “the former Ambassador to Laos, Jacqueline Cochran.”

“Good, she’s a tough cookie,” the Colonel ordered, “We’ll instruct her to begin negotiations for the return of our captured boys detained at border.”

“And what about Mao, sir?”

“Let me handle that.” In an unconventional move, the President asked for a direct line of communication with the Premier of China via a back-door channel. After several hours of waiting anxiously, a representative in Beijing agreed to speak with the Colonel on behalf of Mao. The Colonel accepted these terms. The Colonel then proceeded to try to sweet-talk Mao into deescalating the activities of the North Koreans, but Mao’s representative refused to see how China would benefit from the action.

After failing to convince the representative of the cost of a US-Chinese War or entice Mao with the prospect of being seen as a peacemaker on the world stage, the Colonel went for a Hail Mary pass. “How about open trade and recognition of your China instead of that Taiwan China country?”

“Sir!” Bonesteel jumped up in shock. The Colonel raised his hand in a way that signaled ‘have patience’ more so than ‘wait’ “Just one minute, please,” he said to the translator. “Yeah, Chuck?”

“Mr. President, Taiwan is an important ally in the region!”

“Did they give us any troops for the Hanoi invasion?”

“Um, 10 volunteers, I believe,” noted the deputy.

“Any nukes, lad?”

“No, sir,” he said.

“Not that important an ally, then, Chuck.”

– – – –

On March 4, Ambassador Cochran arrived at the DMZ to negotiate the release of the captured soldiers. An even exchange was agreed to – three US Army soldiers for three KPA soldiers captured during a failed ambush attempt in January. Afterward, Cochran, under the Colonel’s orders, granted President Park $100 million worth of immediate military aid with the proviso that he did not cave to military advisors and instead refuse to “Go North.”

Over the next several weeks, agitation along the border began to return to pre-1966 levels and the coded radio chatter around the Taebaek Mountains simmered down. Kim Il-Sung had been “convinced” his insurgency scheme would be a bust.

– – – –

Sanders met with Senator Nixon for further advice as soon as he returned to Washington, D.C. the next day, on March 5.

Nixon was intrigued by the notion. “Hmm, opening up to China? That’s going to be one hard sell for the American people to swallow, Colonel.”

“But Richard,” the President remarked, “If I’m anything, it’s a salesman!”

Nixon would prove to be instrumental in fleshing out the details, along with the Colonel’s brand-new Assistant Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger… [7]

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974




The Capitol Is Abuzz Over Sanders’ Sudden Shake-Up In U.S.-Red China Diplomacy

…“The President is hoping to utilize his sky-high approval ratings to carry out a potentially game-changing shift in US-Red Chinese relations,” opines columnist Rowland Evans. Conservatives such as Senator Norris Cotton (R-NH), on the other hand, are calling the proposed warming of tensions between the US and Red China to be “a hazardous misstep”…

The Washington Post, 3/5/1967



On March 6, 1967, A Program for Action, a landmark federal report on educational television in American society, was published. Discussion of its contents swiftly make “public television” become a household term. Nine months later, on November 9, President Colonel Sanders, whom had used public radio and television station broadcasting in the 1950s to expand his fast-food enterprise KFC, enthusiastically signed into law the Public Education Broadcasting Act of 1967 (PEBA). PEBA allowed for federal aid for programs focusing on public education via television and radio broadcasting. Today, we honor Sanders by giving him the PTN Humanitarian of the Year Award.

– Ted Turner, CEO of Public Television Network (PTN) (founded 1976), 3/6/1990 announcement



Back at home, I met with my Economic Advisor, Sylvia Porter, and the Treasury Secretary, Gene Siler, to discuss the best ways to maintain the economy.

“It’s all about finding the holes in your dike, the spots in the spreadsheet where money is being invested without sufficient returns, and getting rid of such money-wasters,” I remember Siler saying one time.

Then you have to negotiate with all these different groups – each wanting a piece of the pie larger than the one they got – and get them to give concessions in the name of tightening the government’s wasteful spending. And of course there’s also the very important matter of pushing for domestic production and more open trade policies. We needed to drum up more consumer demand, because that leads to more things being built, and that means more jobs and more jobs means less unemployment. Even products built overseas see jobs forming at home – a car built overseas but driven here will be serviced, cleaned, repaired, and overall used over here, not over there.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 1974



I remember how versatile Mildred was when it came to tackling company issues. For example, towards the end of the ’60s there were some grumblings here and there over the complexities of the chicken’s signature gravy. In, oh, 1967, I believe, Mildred overheard a high-up company employee lament, and I quote, “Let’s face it, the Colonel’s gravy is fantastic, but you have to be a Rhodes Scholar to cook it… It involves too much time, it leaves too much room for human error, and it is too expensive.” [8]

While these concerns would inevitably be addressed, Mildred’s immediate response to the perceived attacks on her father’s brainchild was to nip suggestions of changing the formula in the bud, with staff meetings and the threat of more staff meetings for every time the tried-and-true gravy formula was challenged. A bit horse, but it got the job done, as such talks never resurfaced under her time as the CEO of KFC.

– Pete Harman, 60 Minutes interview, early 1992



ANCHOR: …At a press conference today, President Sanders announced a gradual de-escalation of American military presence in at least one Indochinese nation.

SANDERS (footage): “…with the conflict with North Vietnam having successfully concluded in a South Vietnam victory, the United States will soon begin a careful and gradual withdrawal of troops from Vietnam in order to allow the nation of United Vietnam to determine their future for themselves.”

ANCHOR: Towards the end of the announcement, he added his administration’s current plans for the countries of Laos and Cambodia.

SANDER (footage): “…we will maintain our men in Laos for the time being, and sustain efforts to quell the assaults on the Lao people by the terror-spreading Pathet Lao insurgency.”

– NBC broadcast, 3/10/1967



BLACK MILITIA GANG “X-MEN” KILL 2 IN HAYWARD

– The Los Angeles Times, 3/11/1967



In response to “the rise in hoodlum violence,” such as a widely-publicized shooting of two racist white men in Hayward, California in March 1967, California state assemblyman Don Mulford introduced a gun restriction bill meant to repeal the state’s public carrying law in April of that year and outlaw civilians carrying loaded weapons in public. The bill targeted the vigilante justice cop-watching group known as The (Malcolm) X-Men… Governor Pat Brown opposed the Mulford Act on the grounds of violating “the freedom of self-defense” and the Second Amendment, and of inhibiting the livelihoods of rural Californian workers, namely the hunters he had won over in his latest re-election bid. Republicans in turn called him “irresponsible” and “dangerous”… X-Men were controversial within the Black activist community. X-Man Robert Seale’s caused a stir in April 1967 with his assertion that Dr. King and Ralph Abernathy’s talks of patience made them “a pair of Uncle Toms, enjoying visits to the White House while promoting no advancements for us since the President’s failed push for that $125-dollars-a-month plan he proposed two years ago.”

– Herb Boyd and Ilyasah Shabazz’s Malcolm vs. Martin: Violence and Peace After the End of Segregation, Chicago Third World Press, 2013



On March 27, 1967, Harry Belafonte, the “King of Calypso” musician-tuner-actor-turned-activist met with Sanders at the White House for a discussion on the movement against Apartheid in South Africa. They discussed the work of leaders such as the “old guard” Nelson Mandela of the African National Congress, and the “rising star” Steve Biko of the Black Consciousness Movement. The BCM was more militant in nature than Mandela’s ANC; fearing violence would worsen Apartheid for all, Mandela sought to develop a relationship with the younger generation of South African activists despite his confinement to a jail cell. Mandela managed to tell Biko that he should accept help from white anti-apartheid activists, but Biko disagreed, saying “Africa must be liberated from the white invaders by Africans and not with the help of white invaders. This is our fight to win, not theirs.” In light of this schism between anti-Apartheid elements forming in South Africa, Belafonte hoped for a third route – international pressure. To this end, Belafonte hoped the Colonel could lead a worldwide call to condemn the South African government into ending its segregation system.

At the meeting, the Colonel reportedly said, “There’s already been enough blood spilled this decade, so I like the idea of seeing if economically pressurin’ them into rethinkin’ their laws will do something.”

The federal government started by encouraging France and Great Britain (two nations more pivotal to South Africa’s international trade than the United States was) to impose tariffs on wealthy commodities, as this would be felt more immediately on wealthy South Africans than the lower-class ones.

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



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[pic: https://imgur.com/Cv7TwPn.png ]
– Colonel Sanders throws out the first pitch on Opening Day of Major League Baseball in front of an enthusiastic crowd, 4/10/1967



HIGH PRIORITY ISSUE ENCLOSED:

An increase in the purchasing of stock under anonymous accounts has been detected.

Identify the party or parties behind this occurrence.

Signed, Ray Kroc

– McDonald’s Corporation internal memo, signed 4/10/1967



“Ah, no, I hadn’t met Tommy by then, heh. I mean I knew who he was, hell everyone knew who he was, but I wasn’t anyone just then. I was just a college dropout happy I didn’t have to worry about the draft anymore. Truth be known, I was kinda sorta thinkin’ of taking a very long vacation in Vancouver for a while, but that’s, you know, neither here nor there. Nah, instead, man, in, I think, uh, I wanna say, uh, April of that year [1967] I auditioned to sing for Frank Zappa [9] I got in and I joined the Mothers of Invention band as a backup player, so it was nothing big at first but I was making enough dough and enough girls for me to get by.

– Richard “Cheech” Marin, KNN interview, 2012



On March 12, a month after Manson had been released from McNeil Island on March 21, [10], he and Jones first met at a roadside supply store near Sacramento, selling gas, guns and other travelling and camping supplies. Manson and company were travelling north in another drive across California in a search for more followers; Jones was travelling south after visiting a Peoples Temple in Oregon. Manson drove into the parking lot a few minutes after Jones; half of his growing entourage of young adult girls followed him in while the rest guarded the van.

At the counter, both asked the cashier, almost in union “Do you sell any paper?”

Jones was quick to say, “Writing paper, that is! It’s um, uh for writing,” Jones clumsily defended his question.

“Uh, yeah, same,” coolly replied Manson.

“You, uh, travelling with your family?” Jones inquired.

“Yes.” Manson said.

The cashier brought over some typewriter paper pads before Manson and Jones began to separately inspect the store’s contents. A little under a minute later, Jones overheard Manson talking with Mary about preparing for “the end and the beginning.” To this, an inquisitive Jones turned to look directly at Manson, only to turn away upon Manson noticing.

Then Manson walked over to say, “I recognize you from TV,” and introduced himself with a firm handshake and a flash of a smile.

Jones responded by with “I take it you were discussing revelations?”

“Something like that, yes.”

The two then began to talk about when and how the world will end, and the continued conversation out to the parking lot while Manson’s cohorts gathered and paid for the purchases.

Beside Jones’ truck, Jones was heard telling the acquaintance, “I see you understand. Assure peace by preparing for war. Understand safety by first experiencing danger. Enjoy pleasure by first feeling pain.”

Manson nodded in agreement. He studied the man, and likely expressed his desire to “fix the world” without not revealing his belief that he was the destined ruler of all humanity.

Jones, according to his wife’s testimony, thought Manson had “good intentions if he could move beyond the sins of the physical body,” though was one to talk, as he had several biological children at home among the adopted ones.

Observing his watch, Manson judged it was time to leave. Before doing so, he promised Jones, “When the end begins I’ll be sure to find you.”

Jones responded with “good luck with your community construction project,” then gave Manson a card with the phone number to nearest Peoples Temple outlet location.

Manson added, “But in case we never see each other again, let me give you some advice.” He proceeded to tell Jones about the tranquil isolation of southern California’s deserts.

Jones returned the favor by quickly regaling Manson of his trips to Guyana and Brazil.

After Jones had driven away, Manson said to Mary, “Hm. Brazil... Land of beautiful young women in need of a leader. And they got that giant statue of me!”

The Fire Oasis: Our Recollections of The Mad Men of Brazil, collaborative work (multiple authors), Deodendro Publishers, 1982



KFC COMES TO THE PHILIPPINES

...An arguably bold move to establish outlets in a location so close to a War Zone – Manila, the capitol of the Philippines, is roughly 1,000 miles away from Saigon, southern Vietnam – the implementation of the fast-food giant will be on a small scale. KFC reports only three franchises will open, all on the island of Luzon. …Kent Prestwich, a regional manager for KFC, believe “not only American soldiers stationed in Indochina” will benefit from the latest expansion. “When it comes to foreign locations, KFC always seeks to bring quality food to the locals in order to maximize the ‘enjoyability’ of the KFC experience and to benefit the local economy.”

– The San Diego Tribune, 4/18/1967



April 21, 1967: Surveyor 3 is launched

www.nasa.gov.usa/surveyor_program/timeline



Vladimir Komarov was supposed to fly the Soyuz 1, but he badly busted his arm – it got broken in three places – just one week before it was originally set to launch on 23 April 1967. He told me he fell down the stairs listening to the latest radio report concerning the American’s Apollo program. Because of his injuries he could not operate the flight. I was his backup cosmonaut, and the Soviet Union could not afford to have me, their national hero, perish in a launch. So the men at Star City delayed the launch for, oh, two week or so, and I made sure they went over all the safety concerns that I and all of the other cosmonauts were concerned with. We quickly used this one machine to replace the original hatch. We then made a new hatch wide enough for a fully suited cosmonaut to exit, and we ensured the solar panels would fully deploy. These last minute changes, primarily meant to ensure I would come back to Earth alive, enabled Soyuz 1 to be a complete success. And that sort of scared the Americans…

– Yuri Gagarin, Russia-1 TV interview, 30/6/2012



HOUSE VOTES TO LOWER VOTING AGE TO 18

Washington, DC – Today the US House of Representatives voted by a 4-to-1 margin in favor of a bill meant to extend the right to vote to citizens of 18 years of age and older. If it passes the US Senate, and then is ratified by the required number of states, it will become an Amendment of the United States Constitution. The bill, which had bipartisan support, came about as a result of the noticeably high amount of college students across the United States protesting over the Cuban War, followed by the President’s recognition of the high number of American soldiers old enough to serve their country but not old enough to vote... Specifically, the bill will allow Americans aged 18 and older to be able to vote in federal, statewide, and local elections, …

The Washington Post, 4/28/1967



HOFFA OFF-A TO JAIL!

...Hoffa was found guilty of improper use of the Teamster’s Union pension fund in connection to a securities fraud scheme that began in the aftermath of the Salad Oil Recession, in which Hoffa sought to capitalize on the economic confusion the followed the 1963 stock market downturn... The conviction is a win for Governor Biaggi and his tough-on-crime emphasis...

– The New York Post, 5/1/1967



UNEMPLOYMENT DROPS TO 3.9%, DOWN FROM 5.6% IN 1964

Are economists right to credit Sanders’ 1965 tax cuts for it?

– The Financial Times, 5/16/1967



Francis Arinze became the youngest Roman Catholic bishop in the world when he was consecrated on 29 August 1965 at the age of 32, and became the first native African Archbishop to head the diocese at Onitsha two years later. However, the new Archbishop did not have much time to settle into his office before the Nigerian-Biafra War broke out. The entire archdiocese was located in the secessionist Biafran territory during the Nigerian Civil War. As a result of the war, Archbishop Arinze had to flee his see city of Onitsha and to live as a refugee in Cameroon, where he led fellow refugees in religious guidance to help them persevere. Archbishop Arinze worked tirelessly for refugees, displaced persons, the sick and the hungry, offering support to priests and religious, and giving the faithful hope for the future. Working with the Red Cross and other organizations to efficiently distribute relief materials led to one relief worker calling it one of “the most effective and efficient distributions of relief materials” in history. His separation of the Church from ongoing politics led to him gaining respect from all factions in the country, making him famous among Catholic leaders around the world. He subsequently met with Reverend Jerry Brown in 1968 to discuss humanitarian aid and rebuilding efforts in Nigeria. The war was still ongoing in 1968, and as a result, thousands of Nigerians were without homes and some with their businesses and livelihoods gone. Arinze sought to have Nigerians battle poverty instead of each other. Despite the lack of resources, especially after the Nigerian government confiscated all Catholic schools in the country, Francis managed to have Christian and Muslim Nigerians work side by side to reach their shared goal of rebuilding the war-torn nation. Arinze also sought to emulate Gandhi and the Civil Rights Movement in promoting defensive resistance to the militant factions of the war, believing “the voices of the peacemakers must be louder than all the bullets fired.”… [11]

– Roy Schoemann’s God’s Invisible Hand: The Life and Work of Francis Arinze, Ignatius Press, 2006




The Nigerian Civil War, also known as the Nigeria-Biafra War and the Biafran War, was a pivotal moment in Nigeria’s history. On 30 May 1967, C. Odumegwu Ojukwu, Governor of the Eastern Region, formally declared the Republic of Biafra to be an independent entity. General Yakubu Gown, head of the Nigerian Military Government, responded with invasion, and sought to use the secession attempt to unite the remaining ethnic groups. The U.K. offered support to Gowon because the U.K. had once owned Nigeria, while the French government supported Biafra, with Mitterrand claiming Gowon to be “a dictator who must be shown he cannot will without the consent of the people.” China also supported Biafra, while the US and USSR gave tepid support to Nigeria.

The supplies of weaponry seemed poised to determine the war’s outcome as Ojukwu and Nigeria failed to agree to negotiations early into the conflict. In June, Civil Rights leader Medgar Evers offered to mediate negotiations in the neutral but nearby nation of Morocco. After several more weeks of neither side gaining ground, Ojukwu and Gowon sat down in Marrakesh. Biafrans demanded better representation in the North-dominated Government, so a relocation of the capital was considered, as was establishing US-style bicameral legislature. The former idea gained support, but not the latter. While there were also many economic, ethnic, cultural, and religious differences, the main drive behind Gowon denying Biafra independence was the region’s oil production in the Niger Delta. Tensions rose over Gowon’s denial of the persecution of the Igbo ethnic peoples, and negotiation broke down.

– Introduction/Overview section of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s The Blood Spilled In Nigeria: A Civil War And Its Aftermath, 2014



In May 1967, the former Vice President, now serving as a professor at the University of Minnesota, spotted blood in his urine [12]. Humphrey promptly visited the Mayo clinic, leading to his June surgery that discovered a tumor in his bladder [13]. After inspecting it, clinic doctors declared it was benign, believing Humphrey did not have cancer, and decided against further treatment. However, the politician was planning a presidential run in the next year, and thought it best to get a second opinion, which determined that the tumor was in fact malignant [14]. Humphrey perused his options and, still wanting to run for the nomination, declining undergoing a second surgery, this time to remove the tumorous part of his bladder, to instead opt for radiation treatment. The treatment would take several weeks, thus preventing Humphrey from undergoing an active campaign. In the meantime, Humphrey contacted donors and organized supporters from phone lines at the hospital and his home…

– Carl Solberg’s H.H.H.: A Biography, Borealis Books, 1984 (2001 edition)



In early June 1967, The Vancouvers unceremoniously broke up without an unofficial reason [230]. The most widely accepted cause behind the band is Chong trying to reduce the number of players covered by the Vancouvers' contract, intending that only he, Bobby Taylor, and Wes Henderson would constitute the group, while other members would be classified as sidemen and session artists [231][232]. Many persons involved [233][234], including Bobby Taylor [235], have in the years since accused Yoko for the break-up, alleging she had “too much control” [234] over her husband’s career [235].

– clickopedia.co.usa/The_Vancouvers



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[pic: https://imgur.com/6ezbX3i.png ]
– Tommy Chong and Yoko Ono, undated archival footage



Finally the date came, and Apollo 3 was executed without a hitch – a major improvement from the incident concerning Apollo 2 earlier in the year…

– NASA scientist Farouk El-Baz’s Up and Away: How The Cold War Competition Pushed Us Into The Stars, MacFarland & Company, 1994



ANNOUNCER: This was the scene at airports across the nation. At O’Hare, Idlewild, and others, fathers, husbands, and sons are returning home from the conflict in Indochina. Their families are ebullient to see them, running up and jumping into their arms, or hugging with excitement, or even sitting down to blot up tears of joy.

WOMAN IN FOOTAGE: God bless Colonel Sanders for bringing back our boys.

– NBC report, 6/12/1967



In June 1967, the US expanded its training of SV troops in order to quicken the pace at which American military personnel would leave. The Sanders Administration’s unofficial “kill ’em with kindness” policy continued in full force, following advice from politicians such as US Senator Ernest Gruening, US Congressman Mike Gravel, and US Senator Gene McCarthy that it was imperative to win the people’s trust and assist in improving their post-war lives.

To this end, VC defectors and double agents oversaw the delivery of American supplies such as food and medicine to remaining VC-dominated regions in eastern Laos. Documents released in 2013 describe how Sanders instigated the classified orders to sneakily send American aid in this attempt to win over remaining VC soldiers…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



“Don’t be fooled, America, these are the actions of either a traitor or a simpleton! We must not present even the false illusion of weakness in the face of an enemy as dangerous as Red China! To even entertain the idea of warming relations with the reds in any way – even an agreement as simple as a time-share in Australia – is appeasement, pure and simple! If the Colonel continues down this path he will be make himself the Neville Chamberlain of America!”

– Rear Admiral John G. Crommelin Jr., Alabama AM public radio, 6/19/1967 broadcast



[Back in 1965] The Colonel had formed a special Senate Subcommittee to determine whether or not the military could maintain its then-current strength through an all-volunteer army, a concept endorsed by Secretary Friedman. In June 1967, the subcommittee’s finding were handed in, to put it bluntly, they concurred with the Colonel assumptions – the U.S. could maintain military numbers with an all-volunteer army. Sanders immediately requested the Department of Defense to suspend conscription immediately, meaning that the Secretary of Defense would no longer issue draft board orders.

“But sir, the existing draft law is already set to expire in 1971,” Bonesteel reportedly defended the draft with enthusiasm.

“People aren’t going to wait that long; people can’t put their lives on hold to see if they’ll be forced into an unknown land and get killed,” The Colonel defended his decision. The move was strongly supported by former Vice President Hubert Humphrey on Minnesota, highlighting bipartisan appeal.

On June 29, Sanders ended the lottery draft system via executive order, concluding the war department inquiry that originally started in 1963. The Colonel was sure to note that “an instrumental part of this” was the work of Walter Oi. A blind Japanese-American economist in the Colonel’s State Department, Oi was “brilliant with numbers, he managed to calculate exactly how we could afford to finally make the military an institution where all the fellas in it are in it not became they have to serve this country in that way, but because they want to this country in that way!”

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



In June 1967, John Y. Brown Jr. requested a meeting with Margaret, Pete Harman and I, though its purpose was intentionally vague. We expected he had good news concerning the sales of our barbeque restaurant chain. When the appointed time came, Brown entered the board room with a briefcase in his hand and a wide smile on his face.

“Ladies and gentlemen,” he cheerfully declared, “I’ve got some mighty big news for y’all!”

Brown opened his suitcase and promptly plopped three identical manila folders onto the desk.

“What’s all this?” I asked upon retrieving my copy.

“Copies of share certificates of McDonald’s stock.”

“You’re investing in the competition?!” rejoined a surprised Margaret.

“No sir, I’ve taken over the competition.”

“What?” Stated a flummoxed Harman.

Brown explained, “Slowly and carefully, I’ve been anonymously buying McDonald stock and selling it at a loss in order to lower its value, in turn allowing me to buy even more stock. They’d issue more stock, I’d just purchase more. With Kroc busy trying to pay off his debt from the little campaign I sent him on – ”

You sent him on?” I exclaimed.

“I may have put the idea in his head that the publicity would benefit McDonald’s. If he won, he’d be too focused on the governor’s seat to notice the stock purchases, and if he lost, he’d need the stock purchases to help pay off his campaign debt.” Brown smirked, “And the plan worked. Kroc needed the money from the sold stock. And so, heh, Ma’am, just hours ago, I amassed 51.2% of his company.”

“But if you own this stock, why even tell us?” Margaret inquired.

“Because when I purchased them, I had the ownership of the certificates registered in the name of the KFC Corporation,” Brown explained. As it turned out, Brown’s father, a former U.S. Congressman, had used his legal expert connections to research the legality of such a move. It was ambiguous at the time, but since it was not illegal to issue share certificates to companies instead of to people, he was confident the move would hold up in court. “A circuit court ruled in favor of it just last year, in fact.”

“Who on Earth appointed such irresponsible judges?!” Harman bellowed.

“Um, I believe several of them were early Sanders appointees.” Brown observed.

Harman said nothing.

Returning to his presentation of sorts, Brown triumphantly boasted “With these latest shares, Kentucky Fried Chicken now effectively owns McDonald’s! But that’s not all! I have here,” presenting another trio of folders to us, “the leaders – regional managers, board members, and other members of the McDonald’s company – we’d most likely be able to win over.”

“What do you mean?” Margaret asked.

Brown explained, “Well, Ms. Sanders, in order to commit a hostile takeover like this, to oust Kroc from the CEO spot and put one of our own at the top, we’ll need allies on the inside.”

“Who else knows about this?” I asked.

“Just my trusted legal team,” he responded slyly, “I didn’t want word of this to get out and ruin all of it.”

We sat there without speaking, taken aback by this most unexpected development. We looked at each other with uncertain looks.

“Um, permit us one minute,” I gestured for Brown to temporarily leave the room.

“Yes of course,” Brown complied with a tiny spring in his step, like a school boy happy to be getting brownie points from his teacher.

We huddled:

“Okay, so, how do we handle this?” Margaret asked.

“What do mean, handle this?” I replied.

“What Brown’s done isn’t exactly good for P.R., is it? He said it himself – we’re talking hostage takeover!” Margaret said.

“And how legal is it to put down a company as the owner of another company’s stock. That can’t not be covered by the law, can it?” Harman chimed in his two cents.

“What’s his end-goal here? I’m thinking he’s thinking of being put in charge of McDonald’s.” Margaret was clearly suspicious of the whole development.

“Why wouldn’t he? Brown single-handedly bought majority control of our biggest competitor!” I defended the man. Holding up the documents authenticating that we as a company now had majority stockholder, I added “From a financial standpoint, this is the golden goose. But when the public learns about it, it can easily be seen as underhanded.”

Margaret guessed, “Our stock price could drop…”

“Or it could rise as investors grow confident in KFC’s financial prowess,” I pondered.

Harman noted, “Then there’s the moral angle – it just seems plain wrong to trick someone out of a company.”

“But that’s exactly what Kroc did to the McDonald brothers,” I counter-argued.

“So we should stoop to the same low level?” Margaret disapproved.

“All’s fair in financial wars, Margaret” was my reply. “But I will concede how odd it all is. Kroc announced his bid back in early last year, so that means Brown’s been working on this scheme for well over a year, and yet, he never let us onto it. He kept this a secret this whole time.”

“I want to run this by Dad. He founded the company, so I want to see what he thinks of running McDonald’s.” Margaret suggested stalling for time.

“We’re in charge here, Margaret, because Pops did not expect us to be lost without him.” Eventually I buzzed the secretary. “Send Mr. Brown back in.”

Upon Brown returning, we feigned our best smiles. Very carefully, I told Brown, “John, we approve of this endeavor and look forward to the opportunity to incorporate burgers into the KFC Corporation experience in the immediate future.”

“Wonderful!”

“But um!” I quickly motioned to the documents, “I want to run those by our lawyers to ensure nothing has been overlooked by your, um, team. Please bring us the actual documents when you can.”

“Oh, don’t worry, I’ve looked them over thoroughly,” Brown said.

“Just the same,” I insisted, “This company has the best lawyers chicken can buy. Bring us the actual share certificates as soon as you can.”

Brown was visibly reluctant but nevertheless agreed before cordially departing. Harman picked up one of the papers. “Are we really going to do what Dave Thomas has kept on saying we should? Is the KFC Corporation expanding into the burger business?!”

Margaret wondered aloud, “What would Pops do with a situation like this?” [15]

– Mildred Sanders Ruggles’ My Father, The Colonel: A Life of Love, Politics, and KFC, StarGroup International, 2000




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[pic: https://imgur.com/qM39tb5.png ]
– John Y. Brown Jr. at age 33, c. early 1967



NOTE(S)/SOUCRE(S)
[1] The US Army converted to metric in 1962-3 to better work with NATO during the Cuba War; this conversion happens two years earlier than it did in OTL: https://www.quora.com/When-someone-in-the-army-says-%E2%80%9Cone-click%E2%80%9D-what-does-it-mean
[2] He really said the italicized parts.
[3] Writing style based on Kovic’s OTL autobiography: https://books.google.com/books/about/Born_on_the_Fourth_of_July.html?id=dVCpDAAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=kp_read_button#v=onepage&q&f=false
[4] OTL city monument: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_Tower_of_Hanoi
[5] OTL quote from the Colonel.
[6] Pulled from here: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1970/02/14/kentucky-fried
[7] All military specs based on the information (and sources) found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_DMZ_Conflict
[8] Quote spoken in the past tense by a company executive in OTL according to https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1970/02/14/kentucky-fried
[9] Marin, Cheech (2009); Greasy Love Songs (Media notes); Frank Zappa, Zappa Records].
[10] OTL release date according to his wiki page
[11] Italicized lines pulled from his wiki page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Arinze
[12] Taken from here: https://www.apnews.com/c37eeadf637a244c7add5a3d590966ad
[13] Pulled from here: https://www.minnpost.com/politics-policy/2011/05/final-chapter-hubert-humphrey-returns-public-life/
[14] IOTL, the tumor was erroneously believed to be cancer-free, and so was not treated for it. But here, Humphrey is not the incumbent VP, and so has the time to get a second opinion; https://www.deseretnews.com/article/351388/SCIENTISTS-FIND-GENETIC-FLAW-THAT-KILLED-HUBERT-HUMPHREY.html

[15] Before the next chapter is finalized (and posted on June the 5th), I’d like to know what YOU think Millie, Mags and Harman should do! Any suggestions...?
 
Post 19
Post 19: Chapter 27



Chapter 27: July 1967 – December 1967



“Anger is the most useless emotion, destructive to the mind, and hurtful to the heart.”

– Stephen King (OTL)



I had never been in a situation like this. I studied the share certificates with a growing sense of complicating emotions – proud of Brown’s accomplishments, for fear toward its possible effects.

Harley agreed Margie – it wasn’t exactly a gift horse, nut Millie was eager to expand the company she was in charge of. She had that look in her eye. The same look people said I’d get whenever I saw an opportunity I had no intention of passing up.

“You disagree, huh, Mildred?”

“It’s a huge financial opportunity, Pops!” was her line of defense.

“But at a great cost. People hear we sneakily pulled the rug out from under a rival, we’ll be labeled dirty cutthroats, which is only a little bit above rat finks. How can this company represent wholesome family values if we do something like this?”

Eventually we came to a decision.

Soon we called Brown up to the office. Upon arriving, he looked surprised to see me there. As President, I had sworn that I would never allow any private or personal interests cloud my judgment and decisions while in office. Federal conflict-of-interest laws prohibited ‘officers’ of the U.S. from participating in any governmental action in which they have a financial interest [1]. So I had no stake in the company, but I was still the founder. Kentucky Fried Chicken was no longer under my roof but it was still my baby, and I would – and I will – protect it until the day I die.

“Johnny, I have something to say to you.”

“Yes, Colonel, sir?”

“Why did you not receive permission from Margaret or Mildred on this here venture of yours?”

“I wanted it to keep McDonald’s from discovering the, uh – ”

“Trickery?”

“Financial maneuver.”

“Hmm,” I went straight to the point, “Johnny-boy, you had the right idea, but you went sneaky on us. You went over our heads. You proved yourself to be untrustworthy and dishonest – qualities I won’t be having in the company I founded. Kroc?”

Harley turned the light on for Kroc’s side of the room so Brown could him better. The lighting also made it more dramatic when the CEO of McDonald’s swung his chair around to reveal himself to a shocked and bewildered Brown. The Secret Service agents in the corner watched him closely in case he got a bit too jumpy.

“What’s going on here?” He asked.

“I ought to pummel you to the ground, you little s#!t, but Sanders said he has something for me.”

“Indeed I do,” I said. Pulling out the original shares ownership documents out of my suitcase, “I’ve transferred ownership back to ya.”

“What?!” I believe Kroc, Brown, and Millie all said this. They all thought I would allow the duping and taking over someone else’s company. “KFC is not a monopoly, and I won’t stand for KFC replicating the type of tactics you used to steal McDonald’s Kroc. I honestly don’t think you deserve this here burger franchise, but if my company has to stoop down to your level to get, then KFC doesn’t deserve it either. Kroc,” I handed him the documents, “our shares of McDonald’s – they’re all yours. It’s all there in the legalese language.”

“And the catch?”

“A truce. No more negative advertisements against each other, no more aggressive tactics between KFC and McDonald outlets close to one another. After all, I hear you have that new Burger Chef place to worry about. Maybe direct your negative ads to them for a while!”

Kroc, with a crack of smile, asked “For how long is a while?”

“How does a five-year armistice sound to you?”

“That’s just dandy, Colonel.”

“But,” Brown finally interjected, switching from his usually cool demeanor to one of restrained outrage, “You can’t do that, Colonel! The shares are in the name of the company itself.”

“Yes, and as such the company needs an official representative for all legal actions and decisions. The shares are thus controlled by that rep.”

“What rep?!” Brown asked.

“Me,” admitted Millie.

“You? But Ms. Sanders, you seemed to support my actions.”

“Our financial and PR teams concur that a takeover will cause more harm than good for us. We’d be damaging our own image. And we’d be setting an awful precedent with this. Other companies would have no problems doing the same kind of things to other companies. [2] But most importantly, you went over our heads and for that insubordination, Brown, you’re fired.”

“WHAT!” Brown bellowed. Obviously un-restraining his outraged but aware of the Secret Service, Brown vowed, “You can’t do this to me – I’ll…I’ll open my own fast-food chain. Oh, you’ll see, Colonel, you’ll regret the day you locked horns with John Y. Brown Jr.!” And left with scowl on his face.

Kroc and I shook hands on the truce; as part of the agreement, KFC retained one share of McDonald's. "If McDonald's does well, Kroc, we'll benefit, too" I said. Privately, though, Millie to be able to "keep an eye" on the competition through future stockholder meetings and other vantage points. I think when he left that day he left with a new and better opinion of me.

Watching Kroc leave from the side window, Millie sighed, “Aw well, at least we still have Dave Thomas.” Millie reminded me of Dave’s support for Brown when he learned the news from Harley.

The comment refreshed my memory. “Say, is Dave still talking about getting his own burger tacked on to the menu?”

“Consistently. He actually makes a pretty good patty, Dad.”

“Hmm, that gives me an idea…”

Brown was replaced as the head of KFC BBQ by Floyd “Sonny” Tillman [3], a member of the KFC family since 1964. Days later, in an attempt to make amends, Brown was offered the position of head regional manager of KFC Bahamas, a nation to enjoy our offerings for the first time in November 1967, but, still simmering from his rejection from the company, he bitterly declined.

– Colonel Sanders’ Life As I Have Known It Has Been Finger-Lickin’ Good, Creation House publishing, 197



Nguyen Khanh began imprisoning former Viet Cong members in July despite the Colonel warning him that doing so “will not unify the country.” Ambassador Lodge supported the claim with a historical American comparison – how the US recovered from their won Civil War. In the aftermath of the conflict, both Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson supported the granting of pardons to former Confederates [4] “because forgiveness goes a long way” in ending lingering resentments. Khanh disregarded these talks and instead had his “collectors” round up former rebel “more discreetly.”

– Ellen Joy Hammer’s Indochina and The Wrath of Khanh, E. P. Dutton, 1969



“When it comes to keeping America safe and secure, the President prefers mutual tolerance over mutual destruction.”

– Press Secretary Ron Ziegler at a press meeting, in response to criticism of the President for reiterating his call to meet separately Russia’s Premier Shelepin and China’s Chairman Mao, 7/12/1967



…A man suspected of planting the bomb that killed an American citizen in Ireland’s County Wexford last year has been arrested. Police discovered, quote, ‘dangerous levels,’ unquote, of ammunition stored beneath his terraced house…

– BBC News report, 7/14/1967 broadcast



“We shouldn’t be sending aid to our former enemies. It’s proof that the President is soft on Communism, and if he can’t find a way to end the Pathet Lao in Laos, then he has to hire new strategists, because I do not believe the Colonel is the brains behind the fall of Vietnam.” George Wallace said during a prime-time spot on Meet the Press.

When Father learned of the attack on his policies and his character, he exclaimed “Is that fella out of his mind?! We repelled Communism from two whole countries!” Referring to North and South Vietnam, “Like he’s ever had to win over an entire subcontinent of people before – he could barely win over the people in his state on issues they all agreed on!”

One of our political strategists reiterated his suspicion of Wallace preparing for a Presidential bid next year.

“Of course he’s running,” Father observed, “he’s trying to make a case so he has something to run on! I tell you, if I was his age, I’d give him a poundin’ he’d never forget!”

“Dad, he’s a former boxer,” I reminded him.

“Then he should know a thing or two about kid gloves.”

The next week, Father appeared on Meet the Press to justify the increase in foreign aid to Indochina: “We owe it to ourselves to stand up for our allies and give them the help they need but don’t have so that they can chart their own course. And that assistance starts with giving basic medical needs, teaching basic agricultural and industrial techniques. And most importantly, it involves uniting the people of Vietnam together so they can move forward. So they can move on past this war, and prove to the world the same thing America proved to the world in 1776 – that when a people share a common goal, they can achieve anything!”

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



July 14, 1967: Surveyor 4 is launched

www.nasa.gov/surveyor_program/timeline



In July 1967, the Colonel rejected his economic inner circle’s proposal to try to create price controls, believing the public would dislike the move and in turn discourage spending, which would only worsen the problem. The Colonel instead argued that businesses and labor unions could mutually benefit from collective bargaining agreements over the inevitable oppressive and bureaucratic nature of a proposed price board.

“We should be promoting self-sufficiency, not welfare dependency, by lowering welfare benefits to promote the notion that it should be used and seen as a last-resort measure. That employment is financially favorable to aid program reliance.”

The Colonel would explain in a presentation to his Treasury department, “If a person on welfare finds a part-time job that will pay the minimum wage of $5 per hour for eight hours per week (totaling $40), at say 15% ($6), and there may be extra child-care and community costs as well since that the person can no longer remain at home all day, the person is now worse off than before getting the job. This result occurs despite performing eight hours of work per week that is productive to society.” [5] These findings were based on conservations the Colonel had with Commerce Secretary Friedman, and eventually led to the coinage of the term “welfare trap.”

However, determining when welfare assistance should end during the improvement of one’s life and economic well-being was and remains a tricky affair, especially when considering the timing of gaining employment and the conditions therein.

With this in mind, the Colonel’s doomed 1965 proposal resurfaced. “An unconditional dividend would eliminate the fears of rejection from welfare programs upon gaining employment,” Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. told the President later that month.

The Colonel knew he could not go forward with returning to the guaranteed income concept without support. He concluded a mandate was in order: “I tried getting congress behind it, and that failed. So, next year, I will see to it that it is on the official party platform. That way, the people can vote on it instead of politicians.”

– Barbara Petrongolo, “The Unemployment Trap,” London School of Economics, CentrePiece Spring 2008



…But on the other hand, Jack’s condition had largely stabilized. He still often wore the back brace, but was now rarely depending on his crutches. The Addison’s disease still necessitated taking cortisone doses, but lately, after lengthy discussions with associates of the Rat Pack, Jack had begun divulging into more natural remedies and alleviants. Results were mixed: Shirley MacLaine’s suggest meditation techniques did not help at all, but turmeric (which helps increase hormone production) and milk thistle extract seemed to significantly lessen Jack’s discomfort [6]. While visiting Ted in California, Jack also discovered ginger incorporated into his food and drinks helped soothe intestinal pain and curb nausea.

…Jack wanted to be in the best shape possible for the battle ahead, and overall, his health was improving thanks to the work of Dr. [Hans] Kraus. Nevertheless, the disease was still there, haunting him like an internal ghost, a hidden personal demon refusing to cease harassing his victim from the inside out. Jack would not have it.

– Robert F. Kennedy’s The Definitive Decades, Tangent Writer’s House, 1999



BIAGGI’S BILLS DEBACLE

…Governor Rockefeller’s years of taxing-and-spending created debt, while crime and unemployment rose in city. Governor Biaggi response has so far been to actively crack down on crime… Biaggi has found support for his policies on bipartisan lines, a strategy man very evident by the Governor’s public meeting with President Sanders on July 23...

Business Weekly, 8/1-7/1967 issue



On August 1, 1966, Steven Ross, from Bob’s first marriage, came into the world. Shortly afterwards, though, the Rosses divorced. But every happy little cloud has a silver lining – not too long afterward, Bob met Jane, who held a government job there in Alaska.

[snip]

By early 1967, Bob was becoming, by his own admission “pretty darn good” at drawing. “I can draw really fast because the military taught me to do things quickly, always without dawdling or thinking for too long.” Bob soon developed a style of painting with intense spurts the despite their shots action dotting and jabbing at the board, the end result was almost always an image of calm tranquility. Early drawings show a clear “rush job” look, but by that summer, Ross had a good enough grip on painting to teach others the craft in Fairbanks. It was through connections here that he learned about Bill Alexander’s show…

– Kristin G. Congdon, Doug Blandy, and Danny Coeyman’s Happy Clouds, Happy Trees: The Bob Ross Phenomenon, University Press of Mississippi, 2014



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[pic: imgur.com/9Si4F8Q.png ]
– Bob Ross teaching a class in Fairbanks, Alaska, c. August 1967



When he was 25 years old, Glen Bell opened a hot dog stand in San Bernardino. Four years later, Bell applied the techniques used by a Mexican café across the street to begin selling tacos instead. Originally called “El Taco,” the mid-to-late 1960s saw Taco Bell quickly rise from a one-man roadside operation into a regional, and ultimately, multinational, fast-food enterprise of walk-up and drive-thru locations that offered Mexican meals at affordable prices. Well, Mexican-inspired meals, or “Mexicanesque” food, as Bell called it in 1990 (or, if you prefer, “Mockxican” food, a phrase coined by Harley Sanders in 1967).

– Josh Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



LABOUR LOSES MAJORITY GOVERNMENT: Brown To Meet With Liberals Ahead Of Likely Minority Government Formation

…Conservative leader Enoch Powell’s call for a stronger approach to the IRA bombings frightening Britons for the past two years resonated well with the voters. Brown counterattacked with the warning that Powell would only worsen the already troubling situation regarding Northern Ireland. This was not enough to prevent Brown from losing support among security-minded voters – his party maintains minority control after a loss of 14 seats, losing majority control by just 2 seats.

The Daily Mirror, UK newspaper, 8/9/1967



ANNOUNCER: In an unconventional move, a Presidential candidacy has been formally announced months ahead of the Presidential primary dates. Mario Biaggi, the Governor of New York and former New York City police officer for roughly three decades, held a press meeting to unveil his plans for the next year.

BIAGGI (ON FOOTAGE): “Governor Rockefeller mismanaged this state, he sent it into spiraling debt, and it took this Democrat to fix it!”

ANNOUNCER: According to state polling, Biaggi is not well-known at the national level, and the Governor’s budget cuts early this year remain unpopular among many New York residents. When asked about his rapport with President Sanders, Biaggi had this to say:

BIAGGI (ON FOOTAGE): “The Colonel has done many great things for this country, but I’m afraid he is far too soft on the reds at home and abroad.”

– CBS Report, 8/20/1967 broadcast



SANDERS SIGNS LABOR SERVICE CONTRACTING ACT INTO LAW

– The Washington Post, 8/25/1967



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[pic: imgur.com/N6U3Dtd.png ]

– Freshman US Representative Maurice Robert “Mike” Gravel (D-AS), dressed as Paul Revere, hands out a petition to cancel plans for nuclear weapons testing in Alaska to a fellow US Representative, 8/26/1967



BLACK LEADERS CONDEMN DETROIT POLICE AMIDST ABUSE CLAIMS

…Abernathy, with the others, proclaimed “the city’s run-amok police officers their badges every time they overstep their boundaries and ignore the rights of the people they are meant to protect, not intimidate.”

– The Chicago Tribune, 8/27/1967



US TREASURY:
REPORT FINDINGS:
The conclusion is that inflation is slowly rising due to the Great Society programs. Recession in the immediate future is highly possible but not unavoidable. Options to be disclosed at meeting next week.

– Internal memo, U.S. Treasury Department, dated 8/28/1967



GOVERNOR HIGH DIES FROM HEART ATTACK, AGE 43

Tallahassee, FL – Governor Robert King High was found dead in his office earlier today. Doctors at the local hospital announced the cause of death to be a heart attack. High had previously suffered a heart attack in 1963 at age 39.

As Florida has no Lieutenant Governor, the current President of the Florida Senate is the designated successor. This means the new Governor of Florida is Verle Allyn Pope, a Democratic legislator whom supported many of High’s policies…

High was elected Governor last November over a scandal-plagued opponent. …As the Mayor of Miami for 10 years, the reformer addressed corruption and the city’s insurance commissioning practices while lowering city taxes to promotes more people and businesses moving into Miami. Being strongly anti-segregation, High often vocally opposed former C. Farris Bryant… As Governor, High passed legislation to expand job opportunity for low-income ethnic neighborhoods, and quickly became a friend to the state’s Hispanic and African populations...

High is survived by his wife Sarah Faith Price High and their 6 children.

– The Miami Herald, 8/30/1967



25TH AMENDMENT RATIFIED: Voting Age Is Lowered From 21 To 18!

…the approval of the Rhode Island state legislature had pushed this landmark legislation across the finish line… Sanders, who has shown no signs of opposing the law, is expected to hold a ceremony regarding the amendment within the next two weeks, according to a White House official...

The New York Times, 9/1/1967



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[pic: imgur.com/mBGjxgm.png ]
– President Sanders celebrating his 77th birthday, 9/9/1967



Dr. Luther Terry’s 1964 report on the health effects of tobacco smoking [10] led to the Federal Public Health Smoking Act of September 1967, which placed a ban on all tobacco-related product advertising on radio and/or television. The tobacco lobbyists on the hill claimed the bill violated free enterprise and violated the First Amendment by inhibiting the industry’s freedom of speech, but the Federal Communications Commission countered that, since the topic of smoking is controversial, numerous TV and radio stations continued to break the Fairness Doctrine when airing these commercials because they did not give equal time to the opposing viewpoint that smoking is dangerous [11]. To further promote a healthier America, Father instructed the H.E.W. department to promote healthy food consumption practices…

– Harland David “Harley” Sanders Jr., In the Thick of It: The Story of The Colonel and His Son, Sunrise Publishing, 1991



SANDERS MEETS WITH GOVERNORS, TEACHERS, “MANY” ISSUES DISCUSSED

– The Washington Post, 9/12/1967



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[pic: imgur.com/GAujgvf.png ]
– President Harland Sanders offers some students some of his famous chicken while visiting an elementary school in Washington, DC, after meeting with officials concerning children’s education programs and eating habits, c. September 1967



…Congress’s attempts to close the federal budget deficit, though, were overshadowed by relevant geopolitics.

On September 16, 1967, Cambodia-based Communist guerillas attacked the Laos city of Muang Champassak. American eyes returned to the region’s growing “Cambodian Crisis” and the persistent Pathet Lao. Former Secretary of State Jack Kennedy went onto Meet the Press to proclaim “I’ve known since 1963 that the best way to stabilize the Asian southeast is to send delegates to Geneva to set up a peace treaty. Warmongering can only go so far before the American people find it to be an unforgiveable offense.”

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



GREECE’S KING PAUL DIES

At age 66, the King had been in poor health since at least 1959... Paul’s 27-year-old eldest child, his son Constantine II, succeeds him to the throne.

The Daily Mirror, UK newspaper, 23/9/1967



DETROIT POLICE CHIEF FIRED OVER NEW ALLEGATIONS OF ABUSING SUSPECTS

The Chicago Tribune, 9/24/1967



FORTAS RESIGNS!: Supreme Court Justice Steps Down Over Ethics Scandal

Washington, DC – Abe Fortas has stepped down from his Supreme Court seat a mere three days after Congressman J. E. Hinshaw (R-Ark.) introduced a resolution to formally begin impeachment proceedings against the Justice. …Earlier this month, investigators reveals Justice Fortas had accepted a $20,000 retainer from the family foundation of Louis Wolfson, a Wall Street financier who is a friend and former client of Fortas, in January 1966 [12]. This revelation came just weeks after Wolfson was indicted of securities violations, and while Fortas recused himself from the case and has denied any wrongdoing, the subsequent investigation into Fortas’ actions had “significantly damaged the Justice’s ability to work on the bench,” according to a source close to Chief Justice Warren. Also according to this source, Warren urged Fortas to step down.

…this will be President Sanders’ first filling of a Supreme Court seat…

The Washington Post, 9/24/1967



King Of Cambodia Wants More U.S. “Advisory Troops” Amidst Rise Of Communists Attacks

…Ardent former Viet Cong members are entering Cambodia from its northern border… The King is reluctant to call for additional American assistance due to his foreign policy stances. “He refuses to kowtow to either Western or Communist sides,” explains the former U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia William Kane, “but the situation is getting more severe, and we should help his country in securing the border and expelling the unwanted insurgents.”

The New York Times, 9/27/1967 report



Sander’s initial choice [for Fortas’ seat] was Jack Greenberg (1924-2016) of Brown vs. Board of Education fame, so his name was floated out as the frontrunner contender to test his viability. Martin Luther King and Ralph Abernathy praised the choice, but conservative Democrats adamantly opposed him. After several tense days, the Democrats’ saber-rattling ended when Greenberg publicly declined the position, but he noted he was “more than flattered by the honor of being considered.” Sanders then sought out another candidate while at the same time dealt with rising problems overseas…

– Linda Greenhouse and Morton J. Horwitz’s The Warren Court and the Pursuit of Justice (Third Edition), Sunrise Publishing, 2010



…Sanders became convinced, during these lengthy phone talks with the King of Cambodia, to increase number of US advisors in Cambodia by 30%. The White House confirmed the move at a press conference on October 10…

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of the Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



De Gaulle to The Colonel: “Keep Out of Asia”

…changing noticeably from the war-supporting policies that caused De Gaulle to fall from power in 1965, the former leader of France told the American President, “The independence of all nations in southeast Asia must be guaranteed by the nonintervention of any outside powers. Let the Cambodians take care of themselves”… [13].

The Telegraph, UK newspaper, 10/11/1967




“Protecting our allies in all corners of the globe is a necessity vital to maintaining the well-being of all well-meaning freedom-lovers.”

– U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Bonesteel, defending recent activities in Indochina at a press conference, 10/12/1967



Walter, the scene outside the White House south lawn is reminiscent of four years ago, as shoutniks march with picket signs in protest of the U.S. troops returning to Indochina to combat Communists guerillas in the nation of Cambodia. Some of these young activists believe the President’s “foreign advisor” force increase five days ago will lead to, quote, “a second Cuba.”

– CBS News, 10/15/1967 broadcast



In his memoirs, Sanders’ Attorney General Lawrence Edward Walsh revealed the extent of Sanders’ complex frustrations with student/shoutnik protestors. At one private meeting in the Oval Office, the Colonel allegedly complained “These youngin’s should shove-off or shut-up. When I was much younger than them my new stepdaddy didn’t care for me, and I didn’t much care for him. Did I complain? No! I left home and made something out of myself. No picketing necessary! But today, they complain about anything and everything – even if you win a War!” The Colonel then remarked “I fully support their right to protest, but it just feels like an abuse of the First Amendment to try to hold the government hostage. For college students, they don’t understand how complicated this whole thing is!”

The return of the shoutniks contributed to the Colonel beginning to second-guess his support of J. Edgar Hoover, after the latter reportedly suggested to the Colonel that he should send in the National Guard to “get the garbage taken off the lawn.” According to author Rick Perlstein, the Colonel was shocked by this “heartless” suggestion. During a conversation with his daughter Margaret, the Colonel said, “I can’t believe he still thinks like that.” Margaret reportedly remarked, “Well, you know what they say, Dad – never meet your idol.”

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



SANDERS IS RIDING ON LBJ’S SUCCESS

With the economy roaring and unemployment below 5%, many are applauding Sanders for his alleged role in these developments. In reality, these economic conditions are the long-term effects of LBJ’s Great Society programs. In late 1961, Johnson enacted tax cuts that reduced marginal rates in middle-range brackets as well as for corporations, and yet, Republicans still claim he was against corporations, which has led to an elderly baby born from corporate America becoming our new leader. These tax cuts increased our gross national product by 8% in 1962, 7% in 1963, and 6% in 1964, according to several bipartisan and independent research study organizations. The GDP increases of 1965 (5%), and 1966 (7%) are the direct result of those 1961 tax cuts, and not from some nonexistent Sanders action. Furthermore, the lowering of the unemployment rate has been affected by two factors: more immediately, the Cuban War’s conclusion thanks to actions taken during LBJ’s last months in office, and a much older phenomenon – the Baby Boomers. These are the people born immediately after WWII – roughly over 70 million new American citizens born in the past 20 years. In a recent article in the New Yorker, economist John K. Galbraith predicts “the nation’s workforce between now and 1980 will double as these ‘boomers’ enter the workforce.” The long-term effects of this will be higher unemployment if the President does not expand the nation’s employment possibilities via immediate liberal legislation. Responsibility with the future we leave our children is tantamount to the legacy of anyone whom wields the power to make such change happen.

– Senator Yarborough’s op-ed in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 1/5/1968; Yarborough later publicly apologized for the “elderly baby” remark



What can you tell us about the claims of former aides and interns that your husband had a temper and, to put it bluntly, swore like a sailor?

Oh, my Harland would only cuss up a storm when he was infuriated by something very offensive. I remember this one incident in October where this Senator, um, some Democrat I believe, referred to him in a demeaning manner that was too disrespectful for a Senator to say to his President. He called the Senator to the Oval Office and made a bullhorn out of his ear, cursing something awful.

But you know what? I was this kind of passion suggested in those reports, both the articles and rumors back the books out now, that only increased his base of moderate and conservative supporters. Sanders would meet with the people and they told him, they liked having a bulldog barking for them, to have a strong, brave, passionate man fighting for their jobs and the like.

– Claudia Price Sanders and interviewer, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



EXTRA!: ISRAEL INVADES EGYPT! Nasser’s Air Force Overwhelmed!

– The New York Times, 10/18/1967



“So, you want war, Jews? Well, then, heh-heh…Ahlan Wa-sahlan [welcome], mother!#@&ers!”

– Egypt’s President Nasser, 10/18/1967 (multiple sources, but still possibly anecdotal)



The Sukkot War between Israel and the Egypt/Jordan/Syria alliance began with a pre-emptive aerial assault on Egypt’s air force bases on the morning of Wednesday, October 18, which was Erev Sukkot. The next day, on the first day of Sukkot, a solemn biblical Jewish holiday [7]: a day the Egyptians would never suspect to be the launch date of an attack on their forces. The Israel Defense Forces estimated the war would be over before the 25th, the 7th day of Sukkot.

Originally, the plan was for the war to occur in June, but Israel’s PM, Levi Eshkol, a 72-year-old Zionist, was uncertain of the amount and extent of support America’s President Sanders would provide. Sanders’ proposed talks with the leaders of Russia and Red China put Israel on edge, as securing US political and military support in the lead up to the war was crucial on geopolitical grounds, as Israel so to develop international legitimacy through an absolute military victory. Thus, most of the summer had involved Israel’s ambassador to the US, Avraham Harman, meeting with Sanders and members of his military and state departments.

[snip]

Syria had no air support and poor communication with Jordan and Egypt, and so their activities in the war were initially minimal.

[snip]

– Martin van Creveld’s Defending Israel: A Controversial Plan Toward Peace, Thomas Dunne Books, 2004



“What are they doing?” the Colonel inquired.

“It looks like a repeat of 1956,” the General answered.

“That Suez Canal thing?”

“Um, not exactly, sir,” he explained, “Also that year, Israel invaded the Sinai like how they are now. But it was over the Tiran Straits, not the Canal. And it seems like this is a pre-emptive reply to Egypt’s President Nasser closing the Tiran to Israeli vessels back in May.”

“Oh, that thing. The thing Israel’s been asking us to intervene over for months. I guess they finally decided to do something about it themselves.”

Ambassador Harman, sitting quietly in the back, spoke up. “We were waiting for absolute certainty that America would support us during this… endeavor. But, Colonel, we were put off by your support for Palestine when we discussed the broader issue with you in June.”

“I did not say I support Palestine.”

“You were reluctant to support Israel. Same difference.”

“The Hell it is! This is a regional conflict and you want the US, a country on the opposite side of the globe, to just step in and pick a side?”

“It’s what you did with Vietnam, Colonel.”

“That was different and you know it! And it’s not like the Egyptians aren’t without blame, here.” The Colonel walked over to the giant map on the wall. “You don’t close seaways. Not only does it hurt merchants and innocent traders, but with how the economies of the world’s countries are getting more and more intertwined with each other, it endangers the economic well-being of folks far removed from this regional conflict.”

“So you agree – that this is an act of self-defense – that this is a repelling of Egypt’s aggression.”

It looked like Sanders wanted to say, “I don’t know,” or maybe that he wanted both sides to find a less bloody solution such as a trade deal, but instead he said, “That’s to be figured out.”

“Well you should figure it soon, sir.” Harman observed, “Israel needs to know you still have their back on this, Mr. President.”

“Mr. President, Jordan’s mobilizing their air force,” the Deputy Defense Secretary got off the phone to inform the Colonel of the update.

“But they haven’t even been invaded.”

The Ambassador explained, “Egypt, Jordan and Syria all made pacts with each other to support each other should Israel ever attack them.”

“And the IDF knew of these pacts.” The Colonel surmised.

“They had months to plan out this response, sir.”

Jordanian jets flew out to the Golan Heights to bomb tanks and shoot down Israeli jets, but due to the hasty mobilization of forces, communications between Jordanian and Egyptian military leaders were poor. Most noticeably, two flanks of jets struck the same tank division, leaving a second Israeli tank formation untouched. The tank division proved vital in repelling the Syrians from the Golan Heights.

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014 [8]



“Any Americans nearby?” Shelepin barked.

The subordinate reported, “Just the USS Liberty, a research ship, stationed in Tel Aviv.”

“Imbecile! There’s American ships and subs out there, I know it! Keep looking!” Shelepin ordered.

[snip]

By noon of the second day, Israel was well on its way to capturing and occupying the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights. All of the IDF’s months of hard planning was playing off without a hitch. Egypt, Syria, and Jordan were uncoordinated and in disarray. China was silent; Russia however, was a different story. As a nation famous for its large Jewish population, Russia had tried in the past to coax Israel into their sphere of influence. After October 18, Russia’s Premier Shelepin became convinced the assault was fully orchestrated by the Americans, and began to consider escalating the conflict to nuclear proportions.

– Alexander Korzhakov’s autobiography From Dawn to Dusk: A Cutthroat Career, St. Petersburg Press, 1997



Egypt’s air power was obliterated. The Egyptian Air Force’s airfields were in deplorable infrastructure conditions, lacking even air shelters for the men; the Israeli jets flew in below radar so that they too low for surface-to-air missiles batteries to be effective. The bombings disabled their runways and destroyed an overwhelming majority of their jets in an impressively quick manner.

Casualties were severely lopsided in Israel’s favor. By the end of the second day of warfare, 20,000 Egyptian, Jordanian and Syrian troops were dead, compared to less than 1,000 Israeli soldiers. Nasser began contemplating ordering an evacuation of the Sinai. Then the unexpected happen – Iraq intervened.

The leader of Iraq, Abdul Rahman Arif, had decided to take the opportunity to attack Israel with what he saw would be seen as a legitimate defense of his unofficial allies in the region, and enlarge Iraq’s standing on the world stage.

By October 20, most of the Sinai, West Bank, and Golan Heights regions were occupied despite tepid support from the US and opposition from what was now four countries, but Israel was meeting more resistance in light of Iraq’s assaults.

– Gad Barzilai’s Wars, Internal Conflicts, and Political Order: A Jewish Democracy in the Middle East, NYU Press, 1996 [9]



Egypt’s forces consisted of infantry, 100,000 troops and roughly 900 tanks in the Sinai, plus APCs and artillery. Egyptian brigades failed to push back the ground forces, but air attacks were less frequent on the 21st as Iraq attacked IDF airfields.

It soon became obvious that the Israelis had failed to consider the idea that Iraq would join its fellow Muslim-majority nations and attack.

By the 22nd, Israel were actually beginning troops falling back from Golan Heights as Syrian ground troops became more organized.

The IDF began to fear the initial assault on Egypt would not be enough.

– Derek Hopwood’s Egypt: Politics and Society, Routledge London Press, 1971



ISRAEL JET CRASHES INTO VITAL DAM IN EGYPT, EXPLOSION “SPLITS OPEN” WALL

– The New York Times, 10/23/1967



ExqDAVp.png


[pic: imgur.com/ExqDAVp.png ]
– Colonel Sanders reacting to an update on the situation in the Middle East, 10/23/1967



“Dammit, what Dam?!”

“The Aswan Dam, sir. The Egyptians start construction on this massive multimillion-dollar damming endeavor to increase the state’s agriculture production, electricity production, employment, tourism, and prevent droughts,” Secretary Bonesteel explained.

“Now that’s the kind of stuff governments should invest in,” the Colonel softly remarked, almost as if to himself.

“The project on the Nile started back in 1960, and the first dam construction stage was finished three years ago. Since then, the reservoir has slowly been filling, but it wasn’t expected to reach capacity until 1975.”

“Oh! So here wasn’t any flooding?” a dash of hope flashed across his face.

“U-2 recon photos and ground reporting suggest some flooding, but nothing more than the floods usually experienced in the area during the Rainy Seasons. Few crops hit, local industry will survive.”

“Anyone killed?”

“I’d be surprised if nobody was.”

“Care to explain this action?” The Colonel asked the Ambassador.

“It’s very telling that you keep defending our enemies instead of us,” Harman deflected the inquiry.

“Only because they have no representatives here. Egypt and Jordan have severed their relations with us, they enough kicked out our ambassador. But trust when I say that if they sent some representatives, I’d be chastisin’ ’em right now for causing this maelstrom of death and headache.”

The Ambassador grinned, “I’m sure the crash into the Dam was an accident, but if it wasn’t, well, this is a war.”

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014 [9]



The war proceeded onward in Israel’s favor, but with a higher casualty rate. Syria retook the Golan Heights on the 24th.

Later that day, in a startling move, Prime Minister Eshkol decided to save face and de-escalate the conflict before Israel “finds itself on the losing side of its won war.” Upon hearing Eshkol's decision, President Sanders reportedly sighed in relief.

– Gad Barzilai’s Wars, Internal Conflicts, and Political Order: A Jewish Democracy in the Middle East, NYU Press, 1996



AMIDST HEAVY LOSSES ON BOTH SIDES, ISRAEL OFFERS CEASE-FIRE; EGYPT, SYRIA ACCEPT

The New York Times, 10/24/1967



After the attack on the Aswan Dam, Shelepin became more willing to intervene with an attack on the US. It was only Eshkol’s call for an armistice that calmed him down, as he viewed it as an admission of defeat (as did Egypt and its allies, while Israel saw it as an “overall victory” due to its net land gains). The timing of Eshkol’s announcement proved vital – according to multiple sources, had the call for a truce occurred any later, it would have been too late, as Shelepin was about to order a Soviet Air Force strike on IDF elements in Tel Aviv when he received word of the Eshkol announcement.

– Alexander Korzhakov’s autobiography From Dawn to Dusk: A Cutthroat Career, St. Petersburg Press, 1997



CEASE-FIRE IN MIDDLE EAST ACCEPTED AFTER TALKS: Golan Heights Returned to Syria, Israel Retains West Bank and Half of The Sinai

– The Washington Post, 10/27/1967



SANDERS PLEDGES U.S. TO PEACE EFFORT IN MIDDLE EAST

New York City, NY – The US Ambassador to the UN today called for the multinational organization to send aid to the Middle East to help displaced persons on both sides of the Sukkot War. According to a BBC World News report, at least 12,000 Palestinians have fled the West Bank, while persons of the Jewish faith have fled from their homes across the Middle East out of fear of retribution.

– The Eugene Register-Guard, 10/27/1967



[Iraqi President] Abdul Rahman Arif, fearful of losing his grip on power in the wake of his failure to keep to his October 22 pledge to “eliminate Israel completely from the map,” blamed the perceived “loss” of the Sukkot War on [Deputy Secretary of the Regional Command Saddam] Hussein. Branded a traitor for "giving classified information to Israeli spies for money" without any evidence, police arrested Hussein. Multiple countries criticized Arif for the “kangaroo court” trial of Saddam Hussein, but his sentencing and execution went forward regardless. In the aftermath of Hussein’s execution, the United States re-establsihed support for Arif, with then-President Colonel Sanders commending Arif for not being corrupt and for supporting closer ties with the West despite Iraq’s role in the Sukkot War.

– clickopedia/Saddam_Hussein_(Iraqi_politician) (note: stub article)



..The bittersweet results of the war created lingering tensions between the US and Israel, with Israeli officials criticizing Colonel Sanders' behavior as "too peace-happy" and not supportive enough of Israel. While the nation's position on the world stage was certainly elevated, primarily for its impressive destruction of the Egyptian Air Force, the Israeli government became less confident in the capabilities of the IDF in the months and even years immediately following the Sukkot War…

– Martin van Creveld’s Defending Israel: A Controversial Plan Toward Peace, Thomas Dunne Books, 2004



In late 1967, there was a 20-year-old woman named Norma Nelson. After a number of run-ins with the law and then dropping out of a State School for Girls in Gainesville, Texas at the age of 17, she another person moved to California. Almost a drifter in nature, she was ultimately by a KFC outlet just outside of San Francisco. Then one day, a woman claiming to be Ms. Nelson’s “betrayed ex-lover” shot and killed her inside the restaurant while she was helping a customer. I remember learning of the incident and visiting the outlet. Nelson had already been moved, but there was still blood on floor and booth. While the incident was unconnected to KFC and received little national press attention, it shocked me that someone so young had died so horribly. Due to Ms. Nelson’s connection to violent individuals, Millie successfully calling for a complete overhauling of employment processes for all KFC outlets. She was not exactly keeping out the riff-raff so much as it was keeping our customers safe. That was our emphasis. But even still, every once in a while, I would think back to that bloodied booth and what a terrible tragedy the whole incident, the loss of a young life, had been for everyone involved. That is what led to my founding of my charity program for teen runaways and other at-risk youths…

– Margaret Sanders’ The Colonel’s Secret: Eleven Herbs and a Spicy Daughter, StarGroup International, 1997



EXTRA!: Sanders Cancels Cabinet Meeting, Checks Into Hospital For “Fatigue”

The Washington Times, 10/28/1967



“No, Helen, the President simply overextended himself today, and after he gets some rest, he will be getting back to work within a day or two.”

– WH Press Sec. Ron Ziegler, 10/28/1967



SANDERS SEEMS STRONG AND SHARP AT W.H. CABINET MEETING, LIKELY ENDING HEALTH SCARE

Associated Press, 10/29/1967 report



…The Expo ’67 World’s Fair was held in Canada to celebrate the nation’s Centennial (October 1967). Canadians viewed the festivities as producing a much-needed boost for Canadian morale after the tumultuous Diefenbaker years. …Pierre Berton described 1967 as “Canada’s first good year after a sea of bad ones.”

– clickopedia.co.can/Canada/History/1960s



ROBSION ELECTED GOVERNOR: Victories Here, Elsewhere, Gives GOP High Hopes For ’68

The Kentucky Gazette, 11/7/1967



Kentucky General Election Results, 11/7/1967:

For Governor:
John M. Robsion Jr. (Republican) – 462,099 (52.10%)
Ed Breadthitt (Democratic) – 414,825 (46.77%)
Christian Glanz (Heritage & Independence) – 9,224 (1.04%)
Total votes cast: 886,148
Turnout: 29.19% Total Population

For Lieutenant Governor:
Thomas Ratliff (Republican) – 409,941 (50.36%)
Henry Ward (Democratic) – 397,651 (48.85%)
William Smith (Heritage & Independence) – 6,430 (0.79%)
Total votes cast: 814,022
Turnout: 26.79% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



JOHN J. MCKEITHEN ELECTED GOVERNOR BY 5% MARGIN

The Times-Picayune, 11/7/1967



PHILLIPS WINS GOVERNORSHIP!

In his second bid for the office, Rubel Lex Phillips Sr., 42, the former state Service Commissioner, repeatedly attacked the Democratic nominee, state Treasurer William Winter, 44, for being “not Southern enough” despite being born and raised in Grenada, Mississippi, and tied himself to President Sanders, whose personality and handling of Vietnam has made him increasingly popular in this state. Learning from his failed gubernatorial bid in 1963, Phillips was less hostile on this campaign trail, and discussed more than just one issue. He reached out to independents and focused heavily on issues that were less divisive and more locally focused, such as state contractors for road repair and hospital improvements. Phillips will enter office in January.

The Daily Mississippian, 11/7/1967



Boston Mayoral Election Results:

Runoff (11/7/1967):
Kevin H. White – 105,496 (54.7%)
John Winthrop Sears – 87,366 (45.3%)
Total votes cast: 192,862
Turnout: 27.66% Total Population

Boston Mayoral Election Results:
Preliminary (9/26/1967):
John Winthrop Sears – 32,959 (21.23%)
Kevin H. White – 30,795 (19.83%)
Louise Day Hicks – 29,528 (19.02%)
Edward J. Logue – 27,494 (17.71%)
Christopher A. Iannella – 19,778 (12.74%)
Stephen Davenport – 9,016 (5.81%)
Nicholas Abraham – 2,295 (1.48%)
Albert L. “Dapper” O’Neil – 1,471 (0.95%)
Peter F. Hines – 1,091 (0.70%)
John F. McDonough – 827 (0.54%)
Total votes cast: 155,248
Turnout: 22.27% Total Population

– ourcampaigns.co.usa



The Preliminary election had seen Commonwealth Secretary Kevin White, a liberal, running on the message of expanding social programs, edging out Boston School Committee member Louise Day Hicks, a conservative, for second place. John Winthrop Sears, a 37-year-old self-described “center-fielding” moderate Republican lawyer and member of the state house of representatives since 1965, received a campaign boost from President Sanders endorsing him over Hicks. While officially a Democrat, many of Hicks’ policies were popular among conservative Republicans, such as her call for the FBI to dissolve the “Malcolm X-Men” social organization, her opposition to busing Black and low-income children to white and high-income school districts, and her crime reform proposals. However, in light of the victory in Vietnam, the Colonel’s July endorsement of Sears siphoned some votes away from however. However, it is now evident that Sears failed to win over Hicks supporters, who stayed home on Election Day, giving the Mayoralty to White by a fair margin.

The Boston Globe, 11/7/1967



November 7, 1967: Surveyor 6 is launched

– nasa.gov.usa/surveyor_program/timeline



SENATE EXPECTED TO APPROVE OF COLONEL’S CHOICE FOR SUPREME COURT

…Edward H. Levi, 56, served as a special assistant to the U.S. Attorney General during World War II, was the dean of the University of Chicago Law School from 1950 to 1962, was promoted to provost of that university in 1962, and has served as assistant Attorney General of the United States since 1965. Several politicians had questioned Levi’s credentials, but his impressive answers during the hearings portion of the vetting process won over most naysayers. “He has an almost encyclopedic understanding of various aspect of US Constitutional law that will make him a valued asset to the court,” swears Senator Bud Wilkinson (R-OK)…

The Los Angeles Times, 11/8/1967



REPORT: PRESIDENT NEARLY FAINTS AT POLITICAL FUNDRAISER

Associated Press, 11/10/1967 report



1968 CAMPAIGN COSTS EXPECTED TO DOUBLE FROM 1964 EXPENSES

…The funds spent on a run for the Presidency has steadily risen in each election since 1952. The 1964 election saw both the Johnson and Sanders campaign spend a combined $413,445.42 [14] on all campaign expenditures [15]. After adjusting for inflation, the upcoming 1968 election is expected to see $928,251.66 [16] spent on advertisements in the form of posters, banners, TV and radio commercials, newspaper spots, endorsements, renting spaces for fundraisers and other events, and other elements...

– The Wall Street Journal, 11/10/1967



Apollo 4 – second crewed Apollo flight

[snip]

Launched: 11/11/1967

– nasa.gov/apollo_program/timeline



EDWARD H. LEVI JOINS SUPREME COURT TODAY

– The Washington Post, 11/11/1967



WHO WILL RUN IF THE COLONEL DOES NOT?

President Sanders, at 77, is by far America’s oldest President, and recent health issues coupled with his increasing focus on foreign policy over campaign concerns may hint at Sanders deciding against running for a second term to instead focus on resolving conflicts in Indochina and. The Colonel has already made several accomplishments while in office – he deregulated several industries, vetoed tax hikes in a libertarian fashion to contribute to a national surplus, and toppled the Ho Chi Minh regime suffocating the people of North Vietnam. Retirement may be best to preserve his legacy, as some pundits have suggested his health and advanced age could cost him re-election next year.

If he was to decline, the party has a diverse roster of potential 1968 nominees. Naturally, Nelson Rockefeller and Barry Goldwater could run again, but could be opposed by members of their respective factions who have not run before. For instance, Secretary of State Carl Curtis’s name has been floated as a less toxic alternative to Goldwater. Similarly, a very obvious choice for Sanders’ successor would be his Vice President, William Scranton. Scranton is a moderate, but he has portrayed leadership skills by calming a race riot in Madison, Wisconsin last summer and contributing to legislation victories. Meanwhile, General Creighton Abrams, the man who strategized the land-sea-air invasion of Hanoi, could energize the party in a way similar to how Eisenhower did in 1952. Deputy President pro tempore of the Senate Richard Nixon, a known friend of the Colonel, could mount a political comeback. However, so far Nixon has not expressed interest despite becoming the third-highest ranking member of the Senate upon Johnson entering the inaugural position of Executive Deputy President pro tempore of the Senate. Other prospective candidates may very well be Governor Volpe, Governor Romney, and General Westmoreland.

National Review article (abridged), late November issue



BRYANT DECLINES ANOTHER PRESIDENTIAL BID TO RUN FOR U.S. SENATE INSTEAD

“Florida needs a Senator who will work for the real people of Florida!”

– The Montgomery Advertiser, 11/12/1967



GEN. WILLIAM WESTMORELAND INTERVIEW: WARFARE AND THE WAY FORWARD

[snip]

INTERVIEWER: There’s been some talk of President Sanders deciding against running for re-election next year. If these rumors prove to be true, will you consider running?

WESTMORELAND: I had to be a Major General before I became a General. If I want to be President, I’ll work my way up to it first.

INTERVIEWER: Does that mean you’re considering a run for some public office?

WESTMORELAND: I’m keeping that option on the table for now. My current primary focus, though, is to protect and defend America and her allies as commander of U.S. forces – I mean, advisory personnel – in Cambodia.”

The Greenville News, South Carolina newspaper, 11/19/1967



11/24/1967: [17] Truett Cathy changes the name of his Atlanta, Georgia restaurant from “Dwarf House” to “Chick-fil-A” (a play on “chicken fillet”) six years after discovering a pressure-fryer capable of cooking his signature chicken sandwich in the same short amount of time needed to cook fast-food burgers.

1d5NxBQ.png


[pic: imgur.com/1d5NxBQ.png ]
– chickensmagazine.co.usa/restaurants/timeline



HELLYER TALKS SOCIAL PROGRAMS WITH COL. SANDERS ON STATE VISIT TO D.C.

…Our exposé in January revealed that these two world leaders were initially suspicious of each other for their opposing political views. New reporting now reveals that they have since cooled relations via finding common ground on social issues and personal interests...

The Globe and Mail, 11/24/1967



NGUYEN KHANH WOUNDED IN ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: Vietnam Pres. Recovering From Guns Shot Into Car; Vows To “Bring The Would-be Killers To Justice.”

Stars and Stripes, 11/28/1967



Polling Report: Americans polarized on US foreign policy strength

…Despite the victory in Vietnam, 34% of Americans still question the strength and/or reliability of the US military. …The rise in America’s presence in Cambodia is a factor in these polling results, as is President Sanders’ administration currently negotiating the exact place for a meeting with China’s Mao Zedong and the premier of Russia, both of which are scheduled to happen “within the next five months,” according to White House Press Secretary Ron Ziegler.

The Washington Post, 11/30/1967



In the Senate chamber, Lee Metcalf asked Johnson to sit down with him, Russell, and Mansfield. Metcalf, the Permanent Acting President pro tempore of the Senate from Montana, was a heavily influential liberal reformer and champion of laws involving raising the minimum wage, improving healthcare and education, and promoting conservation. Johnson possibly believed the talk was to be on legislation. The meeting was more like an intervention of sorts.

“Lyndon, I’ll get straight to the point – we know you want to run for President again, but we do not believe that to be wise.”

“You want me to not run?” Johnson said with a dismissive snort-laugh. When the other men didn’t smile back, Johnson went on defense, “Well you won’t get legislation passed faster under any other President!”

“Lyndon, the Colonel beat you once, he could beat you again,” Mansfield said.

“Not with buyer’s remorse on my side.”

“The Colonel is going to tout the overthrow of the Viet Cong until every voter can’t forget it, and he’ll compare it to Cuba,” Metcalf added.

“Oh you’re the ringleader of this, aren’t you, Lee. You disliked my handling of Cuba so now you’re, what trying to make a powerful enemy?”

“We just know you’d be a greater benefit to the US behind a Senate seat than the Resolute Desk, that’s all,” Russell noted.

“You too, Dick?”

“We have to look out for the party,” Russell defended himself.

Johnson, after a bitter sigh, asked, “And who do you think can win against Sanders.”

“Another Sanders,” Russell answered. “Carl Sanders.”

“Who?” Johnson inquired. Usually of an encyclopedic mind in regards to politicians, the name escaped him.

“He this lawyer-politician who was my state’s Governor from ’63 to ’67. Left office a highly popular man. He’s young – only 42, his policies are sound, he’s charismatic, he’s a war veteran, he’s got legislative and executive experience, and he’s completely scandal free.”

“But most importantly,” Mansfield interrupted, “he’s fiercely loyal to the party that made him the nation’s youngest Governor in ’63. At the Georgia party’s convention last year, he said, and I quote, ‘A man should be loyal to his country, his family, to his God and to his political party – and don’t you ever forget it.’”

Johnson shook his head. “No offense, Dick, but he’s a Deep Southerner, and one without northern appeal. He won’t survive the primaries.”

“Lyndon,” Russell began.

“No, no, no! If you want me to stand down, you’ll have to back my preferred candidate.”

“Who do you have in mind?” asked Metcalf.

“Humphrey! I just talked to him – he’s recovering from his health scare nicely. He’s full of life and energy, and he's told me that he’ll run if I don’t.”

“Then he’s running, Lyndon.”

Johnson would agree to declining a bid in exchange for support on several bills he was overseeing, effectively controlling a number of Senators' votes until the conclusion of the 1968 DNC…

– Robert Caro’s The Years of Lyndon: Book Five: The Post-Presidency Years, A. A. Knopf Inc., 2018



SECRET SERVICE PROTECTION EXPANDED TO PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES

Washington, DC – In a bipartisan effort, Congress today officially altered the Secret Service law enforcement agency’s mandate to protect not just the President, all declared presidential candidates. The expansion includes an allocation funds ahead of the 1968 Presidential election. The expansion was first suggested in late 1964, shortly after then-candidate Colonel Sanders survived a knife attack while on the candidate trail...

– The New York Daily News, 12/7/1967



CRONKITE: Good evening… Earlier today, the former Governor of Alabama, George Corley Wallace Jr., announced that he is running for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States. His platform calls for a, quote, better handling, unquote, of post-Viet Cong Indochina, and the, quote, physical decentralization of industries, unquote.

WALLACE (in footage): “I don’t think God meant people to be all jammed up in cities. No courtesy, no time, no room – that’s all you get in cities[18].

CRONKITE: In stark contrast to other declared and undeclared Democrats in the race, Wallace is opposing the expansion of certain “Great society” measures and institutions.

WALLACE (in footage): “I oppose having the bureaucrats and intellectual morons trying to manage everything for the rest of us. It’s simply a matter of trusting the people to make their own decisions.[18]

CRONKITE: We will see in the weeks and months ahead just how effective this rhetoric will be on the campaign trail.

– CBS News, 12/11/1967 broadcast



In early December 1967, [state representative Michael] Dukakis successfully managed to get the state Auto Insurance Reform act passed, and invited much media attention to its singing-into-law ceremony, making sure to get credit for the legislative victory instead of Governor Volpe. [19]

– Richard Gaines and Michael Segal’s Dukakis: The Man Who Would Be Governor, Mass Market Paperback/Avon Books, 1987




PRIME MINISTER HAROLD HOLT WELCOMED IN D.C.: Meets With Sanders To Sign Trade Agreement

The Canberra Times, 12/12/1967



On December 13, 1967, Sanders met with his Commerce and Treasury Secretaries at Camp David to again discuss the administration’s economic concerns. After a lengthy discussion, the Colonel agreed to call on Congress to impose an 8-month freeze on wages and prices in order to stabilize the American dollar. Secretary Friedman initially proposed a freezing for 12 months, but Sanders disliked the idea of the freeze continuing into the 1968 Presidential election.

– Russell L. Riley’s The President’s Words: White House Speeches and Their Impacts, University of Kansas Press, 2010



MOTHER (to camera): My family loves eat dinner together, but my son and daughter like different things. (fade to family at generic burger place) Sometimes when we eat out, we’ll have hamburgers, which daughter doesn’t like (fade to family at generic chicken place), and sometimes we’ll we have chicken, which my son doesn’t like. (to camera) If only there was a place where we could get both chicken and hamburgers.

ANNOUNCER: There is!

FATHER (looking up): Really? Where?!

ANNOUNCER (spoken over image of outlet): At Kentucky Fried Chicken!

SON: But they just sell chicken items there!

ANNOUNCER (spoken over footage of family happily ordering at KFC): Not anymore! Introducing the all-new Wendyburger Menu! That’s right, the good people at KFC have cooked up a mighty-fine selection of burgers – hamburgers and cheeseburgers with fresh, high-quality beef, lettuce, tomatoes and buns.

MOTHER (to camera, smiling): Now everyone’s happy!

SON (taking large bite out of burger): Mmm! That’s delicious!

ANNOUNCER: (loudly) KFC’s Wendyburgers – their Finger Lickin’ Good! (quietly) For a limited time only, pending sales results. Found in participating locations in 35 states. Exact menu items may very per outlet.

– Transcript of TV commercial for the KFC Wendyburger Menu, aka the Wendy Menu, first unveiled 12/15/1967



The Colonel’s fairly light scheduling in the autumn and the celebration of his 77th birthday on September 9 led to several weeks throughout the autumn months of speculation that the President would retire. Some pundits suggested even if his health was not primary issue, retirement could give him the time left in his term to focus on ending warfare in Laos and nip the insurgency in Cambodia in the bud. Sanders decided to address the rumors “buzzing around D.C. like flies on a donkey’s rear end,” as he put it.

– Ted White’s The Making of the President: 1968, Atheneum Publishers, 1969



On December 21, Sanders publicly called on congress to approve of the wage freeze. However, in a move that his inner circle was not expecting, the Colonel also finally made official his 1968 bid at the same press meeting held at the White House: “By the grace of God we will continue to spread America’s best fortunes until they reach every corner of the globe! I will not retire after just one term. I am not too old to serve another term, and I am not too ill to serve another term. The thing that keeps a man alive is having something to do. [20] And this administration still has much to do – more rights to preserve, more freedoms to uphold, and more dreams to help make into realities.” ...Sanders later explained that sought to win over conservatives and liberals with “a rallying message” Instead, Sanders was criticized on the left for being “imperialist” in tone and on the right for interfering with the “natural flow” of the economy...

– Russell L. Riley’s The President’s Words: White House Speeches and Their Impacts, University of Kansas Press, 2010



SANDERS APPROVAL RATING DROPS TO 45%

…those surveyed suggest the two greatest concerns for the American at the moment are the upcoming tax freezes and perceived foreign policy stagnation…

– Gallup Poll report, 12/31/1967



“This is going to be a cakewalk”

– Former U.S. Secretary of State Jack Kennedy, 12/31/1967 (multiple sources)




0X1rRKw.png


[Pic: imgur.com/0X1rRKw.png ]
– Jack Kennedy, eating a meal while wearing a suit for some reason, c. December 1967



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S)
[1] Wording found here: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/10/trump-holdings-conflict-of-interest/503333/
[2] Good point, @DTF955Baseballfan
[3] Founded Sonny’s BBQ restaurant chain in 1968 IOTL, but not here due to this promotion.
[4] Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pardons_for_ex-Confederates
[5] As described here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_trap
[6] Taken from here: https://www.organicfacts.net/home-remedies/addisons-disease.html
[7] Source of Sukkot dates: https://www.hebcal.com/hebcal/?year=1967&v=1&month=10&yt=G&nh=on&nx=on&i=off&vis=on&set=on&c=off&geo=zip
[8 & 9] Statistics and background information taken from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six-Day_War
[10] Found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoking_and_Health:_Report_of_the_Advisory_Committee_to_the_Surgeon_General_of_the_United_States
[11] Pulled from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Health_Cigarette_Smoking_Act
[12] According to the information found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abe_Fortas
[13] Italicized part of quote is from here: www.history.com/this-day-in-history/degaulle-offers-to-help-end-vietnam-war
[14] $300 million in 2011 dollars according to https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/
[15] The $300 million number mentioned above if from the chart at this source: https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/02/historic-price-cost-presidential-elections/
[16] $600 million in 2011 dollars according to https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/
[17] Date found here: https://thechickenwire.chick-fil-a.com/Lifestyle/Where-was-Chick-fil-As-first-restaurant
[18] OTL quote!
[19] Based on the real-life actions described in OTL’s Dukakis: The Man Who Would Be President book: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1697424.Dukakis
[20] OTL quote!

Also: @DTF955Baseballfan, M.A.S.H. was based on the 1968 novel based on the real-life Korean War experience of this guy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Hooker_(author) ; other TV shows would cover the war, I imagine. The Wonder Years, for example, was a wholly fictional take on a radical moment in American history; maybe ITTL, that show is made in the late 1980s/early 1990s, but it’s set in the early-to-mid ’60s instead of the late’60s/early’70s.



And, ahead of the next post (E.T.A.: June 20), I’ve made a poll for the 1968 Democratic primaries: https://www.strawpoll.me/18122421 !

And here’s a quick breakdown of the candidates on the poll:

Governor Mario Biaggi of New York (b. 1917, age 51) – the leading law-and-order candidate and “rising star” of the moderate half of the party entered politics in 1963, but quickly worked his way up to statewide prominence in an impressive manner; as a proud Italian-American and a former highly-decorated police officer, he could easily appeal to white ethnic voters, suburban voters, and urban voters: “When you do things the right way and for the right reasons, you end up right where you want to be, but when you do things the wrong way and for the wrong reasons, you end up right where you deserve to be.”

Governor Edmund Gerald “Pat” Brown of California (b. 1905, age 63) – in office since 1959, he has overseen the expansion of The Golden State’s economy, and “walked the political tightrope” when it came to address shoutnik protests during the past several years and tumultuous social change: “My supporters are fired up, and those flames of enthusiasm are going to spread out, and quickly.”

Former Governor Bertram Thomas “Bert” Combs of Kentucky (b. 1911, age 57) – The Colonel’s gubernatorial successor aims to be The Colonel’s Presidential successor next year by mounting a campaign focused on his record of reforming and expanding his home state’s parks and education systems: “I think appreciation for our country’s natural landscapes is stamped deeply into the fabric of our culture and our national identity, so I think it should also be stamped deeply into the fine print of our national laws.”

US Representative Maurice Robert “Mike” Gravel of Alaska (b. 1930, age 38) – In office since 1967, this “maverick” former Speaker of the Alaska House of Representatives has mounted a longshot bid on essentially one key platform – No More War: “We cannot keep caving in to the deadly demands of the military-industrial complex, which President Eisenhower warns us about in January 1961.”

Former US VP Hubert Horatio Humphrey Jr. of Minnesota (b. 1911, age 57) – The “loyal” former VP looks to be the man to beat for top-tier status, as he boasts a robust war chest, many political connections, and a liberal platform; however, some opponents may be able to attack him on The Cuba War quite easily: “Foreign policy is really domestic policy with its hat on.”

Former US Secretary of State John Fitzgerald “Jack” Kennedy of Massachusetts (b. 1917, age 51) – Jack is very similar to Hubert; playing a major role in the Johnson administration, the well-funded top-tier candidate will have to explain both his role in The Cuba War and, quite possibly, the exact status of his health; Kennedy, however, believes he can win by garnering Catholics and minority voters, and by utilizing personal charm and charisma: “Every accomplishment starts with the decision to try.”

Governor Patrick Joseph “Pat” Lucey of Wisconsin (b. 1918, age 50) – believing the Midwest needs a candidate who is not “tainted” by Lyndon Johnson, Lucey is running on his record of developing tourism in his state, and of expanding education, healthcare access, housing, and work access for non-whites in Wisconsin as well: “We need a new President with new ideas for a new era in American history.”

Businessman Lester Garfield Maddox Sr. of Georgia (b. 1915, age 53) – a staunch opponent of “forced racial integration...on economic grounds,” this well-known restaurant owner believes he could keep the South solidly in the Democratic column if he wins this longshot bid for the party’s nomination; his latest controversial statement concerned him comparing his poor odds of victory to his defense of segregation: “inequality is a blessing in disguise, for Man’s potential for greatness atrophies in the absence of adversity.”

US Senator Wayne Lyman Morse of Oregon (b. 1900, age 68) – an early opponent to The Cuban War who unsuccessfully challenged Johnson for the nomination four years ago, many of his supporters believe that his progressive and anti-war platform will “easily” win him the nomination this time around

Former Governor Carl Edwards Sanders Sr. of Georgia (b. 1925, age 43) – supported by many “establishment” politicians, the young Carl believes he can best the old Colonel by running on his record, by winning over the youth vote, and by “uniting everyone,” including “dissatisfied Republicans”: “it’s high time for a generational changing over the guard.”

Former Governor George Corley Wallace Jr. of Alabama (b. 1919, age 49) – a moderate and a supporter of racial integration with a noticeable streak of populism, he is on good terms with the President but says he believes Sanders is too old to handle a second term: “though I admire his attitude, there is a point when being determined crosses over into being stubborn.”

Los Angeles Mayor Sam William Yorty of California (b. 1909, age 59) – the (self-declared) most conservative candidate in the Democratic field, this former US Congressman claims he can win over Republicans voters in the general election: “I embrace the endorsements I’ve received from Republican politicians because they prove that I can reach out and work across the aisle to find compromise and get things done.”



July 8, 2019 EDIT: merged up the Q&A bit:
DTF955Baseballfan said:
Interesting, I knew M*A*S*H T producers sometimes took ideas from former war vets for their stories but didn't realize the movel came from real life expertiences.

I thought Sanders was going to retire - he still could, I guess.

That title - permanent acting President pro temp - made me laugh. How can he be permanent if he's just the Acting one? But, there's even weirder stuff in politics.
And it’s a real title, too!: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Metcalf#Permanent_Acting_President_pro_tempore_of_the_Senate

Ogrebear said:
Very interesting chapter there.

I would have asked for a 5 year freeze on competition between KFC and McDonald's, esp with the Wendyburger menu coming online soon. Also I imagine KFC kept some of the shares if nothing else to keep an eye on the internal affairs of a rival.
Good points; I’ll go back and edit those 2 things in. Thanks for the feedback!
EDIT: added!

Ogrebear said:
JFK - have your tried pot? I hear its great for pain relief in small doses.
According to this source: https://hightimes.com/culture/11-us-presidents-who-smoked-marijuana/ JFK tried some in July 1962 IOTL but: “At first felt no effects. Then he closed his eyes and refused a fourth joint. ‘Suppose the Russians did something now,’ he said.” Maybe here, he’s already tried it but isn’t exactly open about it due to its taboo status and because of his upcoming Presidential bid.

Ogrebear said:
Israel kicked some serious ass there. Wonder how long the news that they just skipped WWIII would take to come out? Hopefully the 'Palestinian problem' is not as bad here.
The revelation comes in the form of that 1997 Russian source for that passage, is confirmed by other sources in the months and years following that publication.

Ogrebear said:
No PM Powell please. A breakthrough on the IRA might help there.
We'll see...

Ogrebear said:
Sanders vs Sanders? Now that would be a bun fight indeed.
Speaking of which, I’ve made a poll for the 1968 Democratic primaries: https://www.strawpoll.me/18122421 ! (EDIT: Added to end of Chapter 27 post)

docfl said:
Wonder if Kroc had to buy the shares back at market rates.
I suppose so!, as Sanders held all the cards there.

docfl said:
Wendys could be a spin off of KFC
Hmm, maybe... :)

WanderingWanderer said:
And now I see a future in this TL where Bruce Willis stars in a movie as President Nasser :biggrin: :winkytongue:
I like that! :D

Electric Monk said:
One of the things I love about alternate history is the sheer plausibility people find to play in seemingly outlandish scenarios. This timeline is absolutely one of the best at that :).
Gee, thanks!
 
Post 20
Post 20: Chapter 28



Chapter 28: January 1968 – June 1968



“Do Not Follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail”

– Ralph Waldo Emerson



CONGRESSMAN MIKE GRAVEL LAUNCHES FIERY PRESIDENTIAL BID IN ANCHORAGE

– The Minnesota Daily, 1/1/1968



CARL SANDERS TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT: Former Georgia Governor Claims “I Have What It Takes.”

– The Charlotte Observer, North Carolina newspaper, 1/2/1968



“The party bosses propped me up as their favorite, but then dropped me as soon as they struck a deal with el B.J. and Triple-H. But I’d already done the preliminary work, and during the pre-announcement laps around the South I became convinced that I was the best man for the job. Whether the establishment could be won back over was one thing, but the fact that I could connect with people in any state was another. I could draw crowds in any state. And I really did think that I could lead the country into a better destiny and a greater future.”

– Carl Sanders, 2010 interview



Apollo 4
[snip]
Launched: 1/3/1968
Splashdown: 1/13/1968

– nasa.gov.usa/apollo_program/timeline



“The biggest domestic issue for 1968? I’ll tell you. It’s people—our fine American people, living their own lives, buying their own homes, educating their children, running their own farms, working the way they like to work, and not having the bureaucrats and intellectual morons trying to manage everything for them. It’s a matter of trusting the people to make their own decisions.” [1]

– George Wallace, announcing his bid for President, 1/4/1968




Ahead of the New Hampshire primary, the field of Democrats was diverse and chaotic. There was no clear frontrunner for the New Deal Coalition to rally behind, but the early favorite among voters sampled was Jack Kennedy. Kennedy was a liberal establishment-friendly member of a political dynasty, a religious minority with “white ethnic” appeal and many wealthy donors and media connections (his friends were columnists and actors and his youngest brother owned a growing newspaper in California). The usual runner-up in early polling was Hubert Humphrey, a folksy Minnesotan with labor union support who seemed who have a plurality of support among Black voters due to his record; he stood up for Civil Rights as far back as 1947, before it was politically safe to do so. His strength in the polls likely caused Senator Eugene McCarthy to decide against running to his left, as he would later reveal to have considered doing.

Speaking of the left side of the party, a surprisingly strong candidacy for 1968 came in the form of Mike Gravel, who had only been in the House for a year but was already making himself known to voter through media taking note of his recalcitrant speeches against the policies of the Sanders administration. While many Democratic politicians complained of the negative attacks, such behavior won over the students and intellectuals of the progressive/leftist side of the party. To many, 37-year-old Gravel was a fresher version of the 67-year-old peacenik-idolizing “peace dove” candidate Wayne Morse, who had already run twice for the Presidency and failed, but still maintained a collection of followers.

Conservatives, meanwhile, saw their influence declining in the party; Carl Sanders of Georgia was the branch’s strongest candidate, a regional mirror image of Humphrey in some ways, and like a mirror, much shallower than Humphrey, too. Sanders’ vying for regional support, however, saw challenge from George Wallace. Both Carl Sanders and George Wallace were fairly moderate [2] (albeit Wallace was much more populist and had more support among poor people) and less genuine in terms of racial equality when compared to Kennedy and Humphrey, but both Southerners sought out minority voters nonetheless. (“Blacks are the future of the party whether some folks in the party like it or not” Wallace prophesized in January 1971). The most conservative man in the race, however, actually came from that little urban hub known as New York City. Governor Mario Biaggi campaign on law-and-order, and managed to chip away chunks of union support from Kennedy as the year 1968 began.

Natural for the time, undeclared candidates and favorite sons sought out votes as well. Businessman and perennial candidate Lester Maddox, ardent racist conservative with populist and nationalist tendencies, ran on his history of butting heads with Colonel Sanders back when both men were better known for their restaurants than their political stances. Maddox’s campaign was present on the ballot in most primaries but failed to gain any higher than the 3.1%. Pat Brown represented the old guard and sought a campaign through winning his home state in the primaries. Congressman Sam Yorty also sought to accomplish this. Former Governor Bert Combs of Kentucky failed to gain any momentum of any sort, and his exact campaign strategy still remains unclear. Favorite son candidates meant to serve a placeholders for other candidates included the non-serious candidacy of US Senator George Smathers and the very serious candidacy of Governor Pat Lucey of Wisconsin.

– historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed: The Effects of 1968, Centurion Publishers, 2015



Shelepin was intolerant of even suggestions of allowing capitalist ideas like freedom of speech to seep into his Soviet bloc. Upon learning of efforts to liberalize the political policies of Czechoslovakia, Shelepin threatened “if a million Soviets marching into Prague is necessary to cease the threat of western corruption, then so be it!”

While de-Stalinization had begun in Czechoslovakia during the late 1950s, change in the quality of the average citizen’s life came at a snail’s pace, even after its economy was restructured in 1965 to combat recession. First Secretary Antonin Novotny was losing the support of the people and his fellow politicians. Shelepin opted to step in before things got “out of hand” after Novotny invited Shelepin to Prague to drum up support.

The leader of the opposition to Novotny’s leadership was First Secretary of the regional Communist Party of Slovakia Alexander Dubcek, who was supported by economist Ota Sik and the Union of Czechoslovak Writers, a group of writers urging political reform through their publishing houses. Dubcek favored a partial decentralization of the Czechoslovakian economy and media, and a loosening of speech and travel restrictions for citizens. Naturally, these positions clashed Shelepin’s vision for all Communist Pact members.

However, upon visiting the nation’s capital in January, Shelepin became disappointed in Novotny allowing opposition to grow to such an extent, and quickly oversaw Novotny stepping down in favor of hardline conservative politician and strong Shelepin supporter Vasil’ Bil’ak succeeding Novotny as First Secretary of Czechoslovakia. Bal’ik supporter Gustav Husak was soon promoted to Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.

Shelepin urged these two new leaders to persecute the radical socialists behind Dubcek’s challenge for power, such as journalist Ludvik Vaculik. Bil’ak, however, believed persecution would strengthen the movement, while simply disregarding the calls for sudden reform to instead allow minor changes over long periods of time would be the best way to maintain peace and remain in power, lest he fall out of favor with Shelepin. However, to placate the Soviet politburo, Bal’ik did instruct a more clandestine police force to “disappear” certain people, contributing to the nation’s slow but steady trickle of citizens fleeing the country each year. Furthermore, Dubcek supporters were demoted and relocated, while Dubcek himself was expelled from the state party and given a new job as a forestry official.

– Maskim Gorky’s Behind the Iron Curtain: The U.S.S.R. And Eastern Europe, Academic International Press, 1980



January 7, 1968: the final lunar soft-lander of the Surveyor program, Surveyor 7, is launched

www.nasa.gov.usa/surveyor_program/timeline



IRA TRAIN BOMB KILLS ROYAL FAMILY MEMBER AND 14 OTHERS!

The bombing of a train from Kent to London has taken the lives of 15 people, one of which was a member of the Royal family. 32-year-old Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, a Major in the Royal Scots Greys and was a supporter of furthering the U.K.’s military presence in Ireland, was killed by the blast…

The Daily Express, 7/1/1968



North Ireland PM Terence O’Neill’s effort to made peaceful concessions to the Catholics making up 40% of his political entity, only for the militant Protestant leader Ian Paisley to repeatedly obstruct such efforts, refusing to compromise and hindering peace talks between Ireland, the UK, and the IRA.

In the early hours of Christmas 1967, Paisley and his aide-de-camp were by unknown assassins. The advisor succumbed to his wounds while Paisley survived a bullet to the lung, albeit after a lengthy stay in hospital and repeat hospital visits due to complications, including infections and pneumonia, which impeded his health for the rest of his life. IRA members immediately pointed their fingers at the UK’s MI6 and swore revenge.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister George Brown sought a way to relieve the British economy still feeling the effects of the Salad Oil Recession. After failing to maintain the exchange rate, Brown became intrigued by reports of a group of Surbiton secretaries volunteering to work overtime without pay, wagering than it would boost productivity and thus boost the economy. Brown’s Economic Minister Wilson wanted to expand the act into a national campaign, but Brown was wary of how trade unions would react to the government stepping in (which was ironic, as it turned out that the secretaries in question had actually been inspired by an op-ed written in December 197 by Conservative MP John Boyd-Carpenter). Without a government endorsement, such a movement would come off as spontaneous and rooted in British society, not British bureaucracy. Brown instead encouraged media coverage to spread to volunteer work to other British workplaces.

On the morning of January 7, 1968, Prime Minister Brown was enjoying a breakfast of English fry up with a generous slice of jam roly-poly. He was discussing the goings-on with the 5-and-a-half workweek campaign, now being dubbed the “Back Britain” campaign by the media, and lamenting his recent failure to find a consensus in parliament on the size of next year’s military budget with his wife, Sophia, when he received word that the Duke of Kent had been assassinated.

“Oh god,” he reportedly whispered to himself.

“Sir, how should we respond to this?” That was the question asked in the hours after. Over in Ireland, important person, rejected proposed negotiations between the two nations.

– historian Greg Rosen’s In a Westminster Hour: The Fights and Follies of Prime Minister George Brown, Politico Publishing, London, 2001



BROWN LEADS CRACKDOWNS ON IRA

Suspected IRA Accomplices Arrested, Interrogated As New Policies Implemented; Regional Curfews “Likely To Follow”

The Daily Telegraph, 8/1/1968



…Despite increasing UK military presence in Northern Ireland, PM Brown’s approval ratings have actually slipped to 40% as hostilities escalate on the Emerald Isle, threatening the lives of civilians on both sides of the conflict. The drop in approval may also stem from Tuesday’s revelations of Labour and Conservative MPs being strong supporters of the Back Britain campaign, which has led to worker unions across the UK coming out in opposition to the movement during the past three-to-four days…

– BBC News report, Friday 12/1/1968



BROWN BACK TO HITTING THE BOTTLE!: PM In Hospital After Public Drunkenness Incident!

London – After over a year-and-a-half off the sauce, the past few weeks of foreign and domestic failures have apparently taken their toll on PM Brown…

The Daily Mail, 13/1/1968



“It’s my opinion that if Mr. Brown cannot make the hard choices that come with leading the UK, then stepping down may be for the best for all.”

– John T. Stonehouse, UK MP (since 1957), UK Postmaster General (since 1967) and former UK Minister of State for Technology (1967), 13/1/1968



Stonehouse was sacked for the comment. Brown worsened the situation when he refuted the reports as to why he sent two days in hospital, saying (in)famously “I wasn’t drunk – I was tired and emotional.”

– historian Greg Rosen’s In a Westminster Hour: The Fights and Follies of Prime Minister George Brown, Politico Publishing, London, 2001



“This government owes a great debt to the American people – to all who support it, who invest in it, who pay taxes to it, who have faith in it. We must return the favor through domestic improvements. We need to reform our housing and rent laws so they are equal to everyone. We need to rethink how we treat and look after the destitute, the elderly, and the sick. We need to promote better economic opportunities for all. We need to promote vocational schooling to better equip the next generation of Americans ahead of them making the leap from the school to the workplace. It is the least that this government can do for you, my fellow American, after all that you do for your country! I know from three years of working here that many folks with the ability to do great things will often be tempted to do easier things instead. The easy way is efficacious and speedy, the hard way is arduous and long. But as the clock ticks on the easy way becomes harder and the hard way becomes easier. And as the calendar records the years, it becomes increasingly evident that the easy way rests hazardously upon shifting sands, whereas the hard way builds solidly a foundation of confidence that cannot be swept away. [3] Our nation truly shines when we overcome what holds us back and achieve unprecedented greatness. Let’s continue that legacy!”

– President Sanders’ State of the Union address (excerpt), 1/17/1968



“I seek to run not just a campaign, but to run a great nation. I base my candidacy on my belief that the American people will stand up for justice for all Americans.”

– Hubert Humphrey, launching his Presidential campaign, 1/18/1968



“America’s importance on the world stage is daunting. We should not regret being a sentinel at the gate. It is burdensome, but the fact of the matter is that if we fail, the whole cause of freedom fails, and I believe as a citizen of the United States that we should be prepared to carry that burden regardless of whether others are willing to do so or not. The responsibility is upon us. Berlin still has its wall; Indochina still has its guerillas. Our work is not yet done. This country still has a most promising future, but the fact remains we’ve seen the contrast between Communism and democracy, and the superiority of our side, but we must be willing to stand up and defend our ideals in order for them to survive and thrive both here and over there. And we are best suited for this task.” [4]

– Jack Kennedy’s speech at Patrick Air Force Base in Brevard County, Florida, 1/21/1968




…Amid the state’s budget crisis, California Governor Pat Brown has declined an active bid for the Democratic nomination for President at a press conference held earlier today. He noted, though, that he would run for President if he won the party’s nomination at the National Convention in July…

– CBS News, 1/19/1968 broadcast



REPORTER: Former Secretary Jack Kennedy is being attacked by his primary opponents for his allegedly poor record on civil rights. Congressman Gravel has repeatedly brought up Kennedy’s failing to vote on the censure of Joe McCarthy while serving in the Senate, responding to Kennedy’s alleged excuse of being in surgery by pointing out that the Senator could have “paired” with a like-minded Senator.

GRAVEL (in footage): I’ve spent less time in Congress and even I understand that.”

REPORTER: Senator Morse of Oregon has also brought up how Kennedy voted in favor of the jury trial amendment that weakened the 1957 Civil Rights Act…

– NBC News report, 1/22/1968



One week later [after the State of the Union address], Sanders flew to West Berlin to address accusations that the US was failing to do its part in protecting the exclave from Communist pressure. As part of the Four Powers administering the city, the visit was to reassure France and the UK, as well as Conservatives at home, that the freedom experienced by West Berliners were being defended, and that NATO was respecting the Soviet control of East Berlin despite their opposition to their methods of control. Sanders gave a speech at an event held visibly close to the Berlin Wall, becoming the highest-ranking US official to do so since the wall’s construction. To the Colonel, “the proof was in the pudding,” in that the continuous attempts of East Berlin citizens to escape to the West was indicative of communism’s failure to address the needs of people. Regardless, the Colonel’s visit, most famously featuring a speech held in front of a wall segment in which he proclaimed “The inherent will for man to chart their own course and determine their future for themselves cannot be removed or repressed.” Said speech’s conclusion, “Let us focus on our shared beliefs of working hard and doing good, and always – and I mean always – standing by and standing up for the rights and freedoms of our fellow man,” cooled West Berliner fears of a future Soviet invasion without antagonizing the Soviet Union.

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



Although the possibility of holding a debate was discussed from time to time, the same problem of 1964 remained: the “equal time” provision of the 1934 Federal Communications Act. To solve this, Senator John O. Pastore (D-RI), the Chairman of the Senate’s Communications Subcommittee, spent much of 1967 working with the networks to draft legislation to adjust the wording of the act [5] so that networks could exercise judgment in choosing candidates “of opposing views.” These changes that came into effect in January 1968.

– Ted White’s The Making of the President: 1968, Atheneum Publishers, 1969



SANDERS-MAO SUMMIT UPDATE: DATE & PLACE FINALIZED: THE COLONEL WILL GO TO CHINA NEXT MONTH!

…Chairman Mao, after rejecting meeting at Camp David, and then rejecting Australia’s Prime Minister Harold Holt’s offer to hold the summit in Canberra, “is elated at the prospect of productive discussions with President Sanders,” announced a state representative. …The Summit, meant to open trade negotiations between the U.S. and China, may also feature the U.S. recognizing the People’s Republic of China as “the true government of China” instead of the Republic of China, also known as Taiwan. This shake-up in US-Chinese relations “may prove to be mutually beneficial by giving them more trade options and giving America access to materials endemic to China,” according to our senior analyst…

– The Sacramento Union (Ted Kennedy’s newspaper), 1/25/1968



KFC CELEBRATES 2,000TH U.S. LOCATION: Greenville, South Carolina Enjoys Parade, Grand Opening Ceremony

Financial Times, 1/26/1968



JACK KENNEDY OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCES PRESIDENTIAL BID, CALLS FOR A “CRUSADE AGAINST POVERTY”

The Boston Globe, 1/27/1968



“If There Was Ever A Time To Get Into Politics, That Time Is Now.”

– Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee, executive editor of The Washington Post (1967-1991) and friend and ally of Jack Kennedy, 1/30/1968 op-ed



GRAVEL: New Solutions To Old Problems

– Mike Gravel for President banner seen in New Hampshire, c. February 1968



Sanders’ 1965 doubling of the tax credit for small businesses led to the number of small business owners increased 20% between 1965 and 1968, and his idea for congress to use cost-benefit analyses when reviewing all bills was finding support among the 1967 freshmen conservative Congressmen.

– Paul Ozersky’s Colonel Sanders and the American Dream, University of Texas Press, 2012



LEADING DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES O.K. DEBATE PLAN

Jack, Hubert And Others Agree To 1-Hour Debate Set For “The End Of The Month”

…“Any Presidential candidate should be prepared to face the judgement of the presidential primaries,” noted Kennedy [6]

The Los Angeles Times, 2/1/1968



PATHET LAO ASSAULT ON LAO MILITARY HUB LEAVES 23 DEAD

Stars and Stripes, 2/3/1968



“I worked with Johnson on domestic issues but not foreign affairs. We did not see eye-to-eye on how to address Laos. We tried his idea, and now we’ve tried the Colonel’s idea, and both have failed. I’ve studied the issue more than both men, and now I think it’s time we gave my ideas a try, and I think the voters will concur with that.”

– Jack Kennedy on Political Parlay (The Overmyer-Mutual Company’s first politically oriented original program, 2/5/1968 broadcast



MITTERAND OPENS WINTER OLYMPICS AT GRENOBLE

– The Pittsburgh Courier, sports section, 2/6/1968



HUMPHREY SWEARS TO REVERSE COLONEL’S BUSINESS POLICIES IF ELECTED PRESIDENT

The Los Angeles Times, 2/9/1968



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[pic: imgur.com/uK0bkVl.png ]
– Colonel Sanders with supporters in Phoenix, AZ, 2/9/1968



“I worked with Goldwater when he was still in the Senate, and let me tell you, Humphrey can’t mind his tongue. He’s always slipping up a spilling stuff. Under a Humphrey Presidency, the Russians won’t need spies because they’ll get government secrets from off the AP wire!”

– Senator Barry Goldwater to an AP reporter, 2/9/1968



CRONKITE: In the past, you have made some controversial statements regarding youth activism. Would you care to address the criticism surrounding them?

SANDERS: Well, Walter, I don’t have any qualms about anybody anywhere criticizing their government. Dissent is a tool of change that distinguishes democracy from tyranny. It was dissent that led to the American Revolution, after all. But remember, Walt – the American Revolution was fought because there was no peaceful resolution that could be reached with the British. In doing so, our forbearers created a good model for future generations – “try peace before punchin’.” We spilled some tea, and then we went war. When it comes to change, at least in America, the passion and the power of the people should be exerted before bringing about change through violence is what I’m sayin’. Just look at Gandhi and the Civil Rights leaders like Reverend King. Just look at the sit-downs I’m trying to set up like Mao and Shelepin.

CRONKITE: So to clarify, when you complained last year about protestors being outside the White House, you were complaining about their level of violence, not their message?

SANDERS: Yes, sir! Listen, if anyone wants to get up and heckle in that American tradition is one thing, but when it gets to be that the shouting is done in an attempt to deny to the majority the right to listen to someone else’s ideas, well, that’s when it has to be stopped, and stopped fairly and effectively.

CRONKITE: Whose ideas were being denied?

SANDERS: The ideas of supporters of my administration. The military, the Congress, and most disgracefully, the veterans who put their lives on the line for this country and them come home to see young non-veterans carpin’ up their actions of heroism.

– CBS Interview with Colonel Sanders, 2/10/1968



On February 11, 1968, Leary, a member of the Original Kleptonian Neo-American Church (or the Neo-American Church, or the OKNeoAC, for short), was taken to court over the use of illegal substances. Leary confessed to their use but claimed it was legal on “church grounds” and thus violation of freedom of religion, and made ties analogies to other religions’ practices (such as the use of alcohol for communion) to back up this claim. The Neo-American Church was a 2-to-3-years-old church meant to, according to its founder, “promote and defend…a religion which sees in the transcendental experience produced by the sacred substances the key to understanding life and improving the condition of man on earth” and required members to use illegal substances for certain church activities. Church founder Arthur Kleps defended Leary’s stance in Leary v The State of California. Leary also countered by accusing the FBI of unlawful search and seizure and unauthorized interrogation techniques.

After weeks of deliberation, the circuit court declared a mistrial due to half of the illegal substances disappearing from a police storage facility, thus letting Leary off due to “mishandling of evidence.” Leary’s lawsuit against the FBI, however, was thrown out of court for no official reason.

While Leary narrowly avoided federal imprisonment, the Neo-American church’s publicity was twofold – their numbers increased 40% over the next six months, but the absurdist publications and customs of the church led to them failing to establish the bona fides necessary for them to be considered a serious religion. As a result, the church was declared to be not protected by the First Amendment.

– clickopedia.co.usa/Tim_Leary



Senator Nixon remains an unsung yet pivotal figure in the warming of US-Chinese relations. Senator Nixon had believed since the start of his tenure on the US Senate foreign Affairs Committee in 1965 that closer relations with China would lead to the two nations opposing Russia instead of the US and China opposing each other. Secretary of State Carl Curtis went even further in late 1967 by privately predicted closer ties to the US would ultimately lead to a “capitalist revolution” in China, but Nixon and the Colonel made geopolitical maneuvering the top priority, as “China in our corner” would give the US better leverage when dealing with the Soviet Union. Nixon also wanted to convince China to discontinue its support for the Pathet Lao and the disorganized communists in Cambodia. In the weeks and months prior to the visit members of President Sanders’ foreign policy team met with Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai ahead of visit official Mao-Sanders visit.

On the twelfth, The Colonel, First Lady Claudia, and their entourage flew from DC to Hawaii to Guam to Tianjin, a city just to the south of the capital of Beijing. Chairman Mao himself welcomed the First Couple on the tarmac, and famously declared via translator “I believe our old friend Chiang Kai-shek would not approve of this! [7] Not wanting to waste time, in case talks failed after days of comradery, the two leaders immediately went off to negotiate. No transcripts of the conversation were made, and the only observers allowed in the room with Mao, Sanders and their respective interpreters were two Mao aides, Secretary of State Carl Curtis, and WH Chief of Staff (and former Secretary of Defense) Neil H. McElroy. However, Curtis did log a description of the meeting in his personal diary, which contains the following passage:

“It was clear both of these septuagenarian men were of a tough and rugged physique cut from the same cloth – Sanders’ from years of living like a peasant, Mao’s from years of living as a peasant. Mao’s proclivity for getting straight to the point made the conversation was episodic, with both men cutting to the chase and then moving on to the next topic. Nevertheless, the meeting and atmosphere were rather casual.”

Sanders reportedly did not mention the Great Leap Forward or his administration’s past criticisms of Mao’s “Cultural Revolution,” as The Colonel believed opening China up to western markets would reverse the sociopolitical purges. The very fact that Mao was willing to negotiate such a policy shift seemed to indicate it was possible.

Mao surprised the Colonel with self-deprecating humor. His ego showed at times, but he was never angered when Sanders stood up for his country and his principles. Mao was a smooth talker, a skillful negotiator, but Sanders had known such times throughout his life, and knew how to verbally dance around them. After hours of debating specifics, Mao and Sanders agreed on the gradual severing of relations with Taiwan for a smooth transition, with relations fully broken off in early 1972 and full diplomatic relations established with China in early 1971. A “hotline” between Beijing and Washington DC would be established to prevent misunderstandings. The past 21 years of no communicative or diplomatic ties between two nations with nuclear weapons would cease, and China would “convince” North Korea to end its ambush/hostility programs against South Korea in exchange for China being allowed to conduct trade negotiations with American businesses.

Satisfied with the mutually benefiting aspect of these points, the Chairman stood up and firmly shook the Colonel’s hand.

The meeting a success, Mao and Sanders regrouped with their spouses for the gift exchange – a pressure fryer from Sanders in the spirit of hearth and modern innovation, and a jewel-studded jade-and-silver cane (with Mao telling Sanders “the next time you have to put down an assassin,” referring to the famous 1964 knife attack incident, “with this, he’ll stay down”). The leaders and their entourages then travelled north of the city to peruse the majestic wonder of the Great Wall of China. The next day, February 13, Mao treated the Colonel to a tour of Beijing (and a quick visit to Shanghai) to visit schools, factories, and hospitals. The two leaders were seen visibly getting along well, reportedly telling jokes and toasting the historic achievements of each others’ nations.

A banquet capped off the final day of the visit, February 14. The main dish served was sesame seed chicken. Much later, the Colonel would confide in Claudia “that bird was prepared by the finest chefs at Mao’s disposal, and it still couldn’t beat mine.”

While American and European media had only been granted limited access to China, it was more than enough to give American and European citizens a view into the People’s Republic for the first time since the late 1940s. American news coverage of the Beijing Summit was overwhelmingly positive. Even conservative and liberal politicians conceded to the apparent success of the Mao-Sanders summit as being, as Barry Goldwater called it, “a good first step toward a new normalization of relations between the U.S. and Red China.”

– Stephen E. Ambrose, Unforeseen Victories: When Politicians Triumph Over Politics: 1953-1973, NY Simon and Shuster, 1989



PRESIDENTIAL APPROVAL RATINGS:

Approve: 59%

Disapprove: 31%

Uncertain: 10%

– Gallup poll, 2/17/1968



GRONSKY: Senator Nixon, Former Vice-President Humphrey stated on this program yesterday that the Republican Party is politicizing the [deal] with China. What do you say to that?

NIXON: I say The Colonel reads the newspapers like anyone else, and, uh, I don’t agree with these so-called reports that parts of the Sanders White House wants to use the talks for that reason, because the China visit was about trade and ending hostilities at the Korean DMZ. And because it is a responsibility attached to the Presidency, to assure peace not just for America but America’s allies and even potential American allies. I know the President, I’m friends with him, and he wouldn’t play politics with something like this.

GRONSKY: But it would advantageous for him to do so.

NIXON: Heh, trust me, The Colonel’s a straight-shooter – he hates underhanded tactics.

– Guest Richard Nixon and host Martin Gronsky, Meet the Press transcript, 2/18/1968 broadcast



Upon reviewing the success of the Beijing Summit, the firmly anti-détente Shelepin decided to go ahead and meet with the Colonel after all. While actually a change of tactics, the perceived change of heart was publicly viewed as a result of the Colonel “winning over” Shelepin. Of course, there were other factors. Shelepin saw the failure of Russia’s latest spy program as embarrassing, with experimental technology and newly-designed planes failing to leave the launch base on some occasions. The Kyshtym disaster kept the premier uncertain of his nation's ability to radiate its enemies instead of itself. A Soviet ballistic missile submarine sank with all 95 on board only a few miles from American waters [8] made Shelepin question the competence of Russian and American militaries. Finally, it seems pro-détente leaders such as Leonid Brezhnev were gaining support within the politburo, and Shelepin determined that temporary leaning to the left was necessary to win over those that could challenge him, especially after attempts to purge these opponents was too risky. It wasn’t the ’30s anymore, and purges were much harder to keep under wraps than they used to be.

– Alexander Korzhakov’s autobiography From Dawn to Dusk: A Cutthroat Career, St. Petersburg Press, 1997



February 19, 1968: National Educational Television aired the pilot episode of the preschool-level TV series Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood. …Then-President Harland “Colonel” Sanders, after reportedly watching “some parts of some episodes” with his great-grandchildren, would later praise Rogers for his promotion of peace and friendship, “a valiant effort to nip fear and hatred of one’s fellow man right in the bud so the next generation can understand and respect one another at a level never seen before.”

– pbs.co.usa/history/timeline



[This list is incomplete; if you can help by expanding it, click here]

GRAVEL: US Rep. Don Edwards, former US Rep. George McGovern, Abraham Ribicoff, Paul Newman, Tommy Chong, Yoko Ono, Simon & Garfunkel

HUMPHREY: US Sen. Lyndon Johnson, Sen. Eugene McCarthy, Sen. Richard J. Daley, Julian Bond, Kirk Douglas

KENNEDY: US Sen. Harold Hughes, Frank Sinatra, Norman Mailer, Cesar Chavez, Shirley MacLaine, Stefanie Powers, Peter Lawford, Bill Cosby, Bobby Darin, Sonny & Cher, The Byrds, Robert Vaugh, US Sen. Ralph Yarborough

SANDERS: Former US Pres. Harry S. Truman, US Sen. Philleo Nash, Medgar Evers, Bear Bryant, Bobby Darin

MORSE: US Sen. Joseph S. Clark, Gene Wilder, Truman Capote

WALLACE: US Sen. Terry Sanford, former Governor Happy Chandler

– clickopedia.co.usa/1968_U.S._Democratic_primaries/endorsements/major



ANNOUNCER: ABC and participating television broadcasting stations present a special event live from Concord, New Hampshire, two weeks ahead of the gravel state’s Democratic Presidential Primary. Please welcome former Secretary of State Jack Kennedy (pause), former Vice President Hubert Humphrey (pause), former Governor of Georgia Carl Sanders (pause) and current Governor of New York Mario Biaggi (pause) in their first official confrontation on ABC News’ “Issues & Answers” Special Event. To moderate this 60-minute group discussion is tonight’s moderators, Frank Reynolds, Robert Clark.

REYNOLDS: Good evening. In the same room and before the same cameras and telephones, the candidate will engage in debate. All the candidate here are on New Hampshire’s ballot in two weeks, and the questions to be asked in this debate were pulled from questions sent in by New Hampshire residents. Let’s begin. Secretary Kennedy, you pulled the short straw backstage, so you will give your opening statement first. You have two minutes.

KENNEDY: My fellow Americans, over the course of 22 years of public service, and have come to fully understand that no community is an island, cut off from the rest of America. What happens to one group of us happens to all of us. During my time in the Senate, I was deeply committed to finding national answers to the problems of the hardest of the hard-hit communities, for Massachusetts, yes, and for other states across the country. I have seen and heard the problems facing us. I know that something must be done, that something can be done. And I know that it is not being done by the present Administration in Washington. [9]

CLARK: Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Mr. Vice President, your opening statement, please.

HUMPHREY: [snip] The President is the people’s lobbyist, the man who brings the needs of the people to the lawmakers on the hill. I worked on the hill for 16 years, and it is clear that the best way to address the people’s needs is through a President who understands the basics. Who understands the need for conviviality among the nations of the world. Someone who understands how the economy functions. And I learned more about the economy from one South Dakota dust storm than I did in all my years of college, [10] which brings me to another thing a President needs to know the basics of – how to feed his own people [snip]

[snip]

SANDERS: I stand on my record of having appointed an unprecedented number of Blacks to state government spots, more Blacks than Governor George Wallace of Alabama, in fact [11].

[snip]

KENNEDY: Human decency doesn’t wear a party label. But it is results, not sentiments that matter – good intentions without deeds won’t feed hungry children. In the 1930s we had a President, Franklin Roosevelt, who took national leadership to meet and lick the depression. We have a President now who can see only the demands of a balanced budget and cannot summon the energy to act on the needs of the nation. But I know that talk is cheap. In fact, it seems to be about the only thing this Administration can afford! [9]

CLARK: Governor Sanders, do you have a rebuttal?

SANDERS: Yes. Mr. Kennedy, I oppose expanding federal overreach to the level your suggesting because of the dangers it poses to the well-being of the free market system that separates capitalism from communism. As more of a production come on the market to meet demand, prices will fall in line. As fewer products are made, surplus disappears and prices rise up to normal. If profits or wages are too low in one trade area, there will be an exodus of capital and labor until the supply is better adjusted to the demand. The free market is a self-adjusting market [12]. The government, then, should only get involved when a lack of moral standards leads to unfair practices to the detriment of the people.

HUMPHREY: Um, Clark, may I respond to that?

CLARK: Um, you have a rebuttal outstanding, so yes.

HUMPHREY: Good. Carl, while I understand your point – that the impersonal hand of government can never replace the helping hand of a neighbor, you have to understand that, despite the insinuations that you and Governor Biaggi have made on the campaign trail, compassion is not weakness, and concern for the unfortunate is not socialism [10]. When a government has the ability to help, it has the responsibility to do so.

[snip]

CLARK: The next question comes from Debbie of Nashua. She writes “What do the candidates think of the Federal Aid Dividend being promoted by Reverend Martin Luther King and Company?” Secretary Kennedy, you have two minutes to reply.

KENNEDY: I think unemployment checks are no substitute for a job. [9]

[snip]

REYNOLDS: Governor Biaggi, you have been a vocal opponent of the United Kingdom’s response to the I.R.A.’s bombing campaign. The following question from the New Hampshire city of Manchester asks for you to explain why.

BIAGGI: Well Frank, and to the people of New Hampshire and everyone else listening in, wherever we find injustices, we need a reaction in our national government to compel foreign governments to deal with flagrant aggressions like the actions of the IRA. But the UK government has overreacted, and has begun arresting innocent people who are only guilty by association, no matter how minor that association may be. We need to deal with issues like the troubling persecution of innocent people in Ireland. Kennedy, you have not enunciated for positions on this issue, so I’m interested in your rebuttal to this. The only choice consistent with justice is to convince the British to get out of Ireland, as they are obviously now the aggressors of peaceful people. And in violation of law and treaties, as many of the innocents being killed in Northern Ireland are being killed with weapons and armaments purchased from American industries. [13]

CLARK: Secretary Kennedy, would you care to respond?

KENNEDY: Yes, I do. Governor, the conflict between various groups in Ireland over who owns what and who should live where is a delicate situation. Instead of choosing sides we should choose peace.

[snip]

HUMPHREY: Mario, there will never be enough jails, policemen, and courts in all the lands to enforce a law that is not support by the people. [10] As President, you have to listen to the people in order to lead them. Justice and Order does not work without communication, cooperation, and understanding.

[snip]

CLARK: Mister Vice President, who you like to reply to Governor Sanders’ query into your inability to oppose President Johnson’s actions concerning Cuba?

HUMPHREY: Well, anyone who thinks that the Vice-President can take a position independent of the President of his administration simply has no knowledge of politics or government. You are his choice in a political marriage, and he expects your absolute loyalty. [10]

SANDERS: So you abandoned your principles because you were afraid to rock the boat?

REYNOLDS: Governor, please wait your turn.

SANDERS: My apologies, sir.

HUMPHREY: Apology accepted.

SANDERS: I said that to Mr. Reynolds, Hubert.

[snip]

REYNOLDS: And finally, Mr. Biaggi, you closing statement.

BIAGGI: My campaign message is simple and clear, justice and order. The race riots of the past several years and the assault on innocent people oversees show that we have to establish a new way of handling foreign and domestic affairs. [snip] The criminalization of being Irish is being downplayed; I’ve visited the North Irish people, and none of the people that I met were radical or radicalized. Those who should be leading the fight against British injustice with us are instead siding with the British against us. It will not stop us. [14] We will show the British they can’t do this to us – that an attack on the good people of Eire is an attack on good people everywhere, and that America will not stand for that kind of claptrap.

[snip]

– First Democratic Primary Debate, abridged transcript, ABC-Concord, 2/27/1968 broadcast



MODERATOR: Welcome to our roundtable debate with Democratic Presidential candidates George Wallace of Alabama and Mike Gravel of Alaska.

WALLACE: Thank you for having us. You know, the establishment of the Democratic party doesn’t like us, that’s why they we weren’t on the debate stage two days ago.

MODERATOR: Yes, well, let’s get down to business…

[snip]

WALLACE: We need to do a better job at handling our foreign conflicts. Laos is setting up to be another Cuba. As President, I’ll do a superior job managing how we spend our resources over there. Take for instance the Pentagon report that came out last week about the Air Force’s expensive new bombers, and let me ask you – Why does the Air Force need expensive new bombers? Have the people we’ve been bombing over years been complaining? [15] But the point I’m trying to make is this: when I become President, I’ll initiate a 90-day policy for every military confrontation. If we can’t get the job done in 90 days, we’ll pull out –

GRAVEL: No, no, no. You know what’s worse than a soldier dying in vain? It’s more soldiers dying in vain. [16] Let’s have no wars unless we are directly under attack. All other instances of warfare are inexcusable. This President’s focus on activities in other countries rather than activities in his own is so disgraceful it makes me understand why so many Americans are fearful on a nuclear Armageddon. Why so many have so much fear that they want to hide under a rock for ten or thirty-five years because they are so disgusted by politicians playing chess with their livelihoods and their very lives. George, I’m certain you will, but I won’t contribute to that fear.

[snip]

MODERATOR: And Mr. Gravel, do you agree with Governor Wallace that a cap on immigration ill lower domestic unemployment?

GRAVEL: I’m a first-generation American. My parents came here like so many other parents out there, and I spoke French before I could speak English as a child. And my parents carved out – my dad was very humble, didn’t have a third-grade education, but he was able to work and prosper in this country, and so I honor anybody that comes to this country as an immigrant, because we’re all immigrants. There’s been nobody else but the Indians in this great land. [16]

MODERATOR: Well, what about The Colonel supporting Reverend King’s calls to reintroduce the Federal Aid Dividend?

GRAVEL: On this, I actually agree with the Colonel. We don’t need a minimum wage, we need a living wage. [16]

[snip]

MODERATOR: Governor, your closing statement.

WALLACE: [snip] Local employment programs can boost economic well-being on the nationwide level. It’s worked in Alabama and it will work for America. [snip] As President, I will be sensible when it comes to fighting wars, promote low-grade industrial development, back urban reform to tackle congestion and sanitation threats, lower taxes, and push for more trade schools. Thank you.

MODERATOR: As Congressman Gravel, your closing statement.

GRAVEL: [snip] Read my lips – no more wars!

[snip]

– Democratic Candidates Forum transcript, NBC-Baltimore, 2/29/1968 broadcast



HELLYER SURVIVES LEADERSHIP ELECTION: Defeats Challengers On First Ballot With Ease

– The Daily Courier, British Columbia newspaper, 3/4/1968



POLISH SHOUTNIKS OPPOSE ATTACKS ON JEWISH CITIZENS: Poland Sees Youth Take To Streets Over Federal Anti-Semitism Policies

Warsaw – Poland’s General Mieczyslaw Moczar and First Secretary Wladyslw Gomulka had begun an anti-Semitic (officially anti-Zionist) campaign in late 1967, following the conclusion of the Sukkot War which had seen the Soviets severe its support for Israel and seemingly coerce Warsaw Pact members to follow suit, most notably Poland, home of tens of thousands of Jewish people. Now, the hostile Moczar-Gomulka anti-Jewish campaign, coupled with the Communist party’s growing hostilities over party control of universities and literature and an economy still in the gutter, has created an atmosphere in the Communist Bloc nation is ripe for the return of the Polish shoutniks.

“The cost of meat just keeps rising. There are no career prospects anywhere,” explains one anonymous member of the youth student activists in the Polish capital organizing to oppose the Moczar-Gomulka assaults. The source, whom we have judged to be of very credible quality, claims to was a strike at a Warsaw university over new censorship policies that truly increased the Polish youth’s renewed interest in social reform and opposition to the anti-Semitism attacks.

Since September, purges of Jewish people have plagued the Poles, and range from assaults on supporters of Israel, firings, police beating protestors, and banishments. Even Jewish members of the Polish military are being targeted for unfounded “Zionist” beliefs and/or practices. While Poland’s government has been condemned by practically all members of NATO, but has not been enough for the rising number of protestors.

“We won’t sit idly by and let our Jewish friends and neighbors be fired and evicted. It didn’t exactly end well the last time. We vow: Never again.”

– TODAY, 3/4/1968



Police suppression of young factory workers and secondary school students began spiraling out of control after the government made official their refusal to negotiate with strikers and protesting parties on March 7, which only fueled the protests. Soon members of the ruling class became supportive of Jewish Poles immigrating out of Poland. The average Poles, though, were torn between what they heard through the grapevine and what they heard from the state-control propagandist news media.

Shelepin viewed the situation as a plot backed by NATO is dismantle the Warsaw Pact due to the similarities he saw between university opposition in Poland and university opposition in Czechoslovakia as “too similar to be purely coincidental.”

The Premier decided he need to do something to quell the assault on Russia’s allies.

– Alexander Korzhakov’s autobiography From Dawn to Dusk: A Cutthroat Career, St. Petersburg Press, 1997



RUSSIA INVADES POLAND (AGAIN)!: Shelepin Vows To “Restore Peace” As Student Protests Spread

…In a stunning movement of military might, tanks rolled into Eastern Poland today in the largest deployment of troops on European soil in 23 years…

– The New York Times, Special Report, 3/10/1968



According to Richard Nixon’s memoirs, The Colonel met with Secretaries Curtis and Bonesteel to ask if intervention was feasible. Due to the country being within the Communist Bloc, it wasn’t – Bonesteel estimated that, if American troops or weapons entered Poland, even via proxy, “the chance of Shelepin’s response being nuclear in nature to be 90% or more.” Secretary Curtis considered it “a mistake” to become involved in a country already securely under Russian influence, while The Colonel believed the protests indicated weakness in the Communist Bloc. “It doesn’t matter if the crack is at the top of the dike or the bottom of the dike – the water is still gonna push out.” Bonesteel and Curtis were adamant that the Colonel resort to pursuing a less risky tactic. On March 11, Sanders called on congress to increase the number of refugees allowed into the US from Poland. That response was blocked by Senators and Congressmen worried about the possibility that “some of the refugees really [were] dangerous Zionist radicals,” as US Sen. James Eastland (D-MS) put it. The Colonel persevered, but ultimately the number of refuges allowed in was half of the Colonel’s initial request. Subsequently, Sanders considered the invasion to be “one more reason why we need to have that Summit Conference with him [Shelepin].”

– Rick Perlstein’s Colonel’s Country: The Trials and Crises of Chicken King Presidency, Simon & Schuster, 2014



Having recently seen the leader of Czechoslovakia ousted without an invasion, Gomulka viewed Russia’s sudden interference as a possible coup of his entire government, as well as himself. The First Secretary immediately sought to ensure Shelepin of his “leadership skills” as he began to believe Moczar would be his replacement if he did not prevail over the protestors. At least 2,700 people were arrested in the next month. Suppression became widespread. At least 2,000 Poles of Jewish origin fled to other countries.

But opposition protests continued to spread to smaller communities. Demonstrations persisted for months.

– Alexander Korzhakov’s autobiography From Dawn to Dusk: A Cutthroat Career, St. Petersburg Press, 1997



JFK WINS YEAR’S FIRST DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY

John “Gentleman Jack” Kennedy wins with ease; Wallace shockingly underperforms, slipping to fifth place. Despite a strong endorsement from Senator Muskie of neighboring state of Maine, Humphrey came in third place. Breakdown of the vote is as follows:

Kennedy – 40.1%

Sanders – 14.6%

Humphrey – 13.7%

Wallace – 10.4%

Morse – 9.2%

Biaggi – 6.6%

Gravel – 4.0%

Others – 1.5%

…meanwhile, in the GOP primary, Colonel Sanders won in a landslide over his sole active opponent, former Minnesota Governor and longshot candidate Harold Stassen, who won roughly 5% of the vote to Colonel Sanders’ nearly 95% of the vote. This strong showing demonstrates how united the GOP is at the moment, and suggests the Colonel will be re-nominated with ease…

– The Boston Globe, 3/12/1968



Lyndon Johnson had had his name added to the ballot in an undeclared survey of the contest composition and Humphrey’s strength as a candidate; his obtainment of less than 1% of the vote finally convinced the former President to abandon the thought of “pulling a Cleveland.”

– historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed: The Effects of 1968, Centurion Publishers, 2015



But Harland was also a sensitive and sweet man, especially with children. Oh, he loved to do whatever he could to make children happy. I remember when he enthusiastically signed into law some kind of Child Health Protection Act or something like that, and when in, oh, a want to say, March of 1968, this one school district renamed a school “Harland Sanders High” School. I myself got a public park named after me in Lexington [Kentucky] at around the same time!

– Claudia Price Sanders and interviewer, TNB (Trinity National Broadcasting) interview, 1979



SoRTQR7.png


[pic: imgur.com/SoRTQR7.png ]
– President Sanders signing autographs for children while on a bus heading to a train museum, Missouri, 3/25/1968



On March 26, a week ahead of the Wisconsin primary, Gravel, Biaggi and Wallace sat down for a round-table discussion, hoping the exposure would beef up their campaigns. Wallace complained at the start of the program that he felt he was treated unfairly and was doing poorly in polls because the media bias in favor of Carl Sanders.

[snip]

Wallace flexed his foreign policy muscles by calling on Vietnam’s Nguyen Khanh to end corruption and establish land reform in Vietnam. Biaggi went further: “Khanh’s attempts to imprison and torture former members of the Viet Cong threatens the internal harmony of a nation still recovering from a long civil war. As President, I’d work to stop this man from undoing the work done by our brave men in uniform.” Gravel, however, opposed his fellow candidates on interventionism by saying “We can’t look after the people of all the nations of the world, especially when we are already and still failing to look after the people right here at home!”

On the Republican side, Harold Stassen hoped that reminding voters of The Colonel’s advanced age would boost his chances of winning. It didn’t – Stassen won just 8.7% of the Wisconsin primary vote, an improvement from the 5% slice of the vote received in the New Hampshire primary, but still not enough to prove that he really was a viable candidate.

– historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed: The Effects of 1968, Centurion Publishers, 2015



SANDERS SIGNS INSURANCE PREMIUM BILL INTO LAW!

…under this new act, healthy (physically and mentally fit) employees will automatically mean lower insurance premiums for management. An insurance premium is the amount of money that an individual or business pays for an insurance policy that, once earned, is income for the company; it represents a liability as the insurer must provide coverage for claims made against the policy [17]. This bill, supported on bipartisan lines, is thus meant to encourage employers to ensure that their employees maintain good health. The bill is also a way of addressing workplace safety concerns. Opposition to the bill came in the form of some legislators concerned about pre-existing conditions and employers being intimidated into not hiring “potentially unhealthy” workers in the first place, according to Congresswoman Coya Knutson (D-MN).

– The Washington Post, 3/29/1968



REVEREND KING PUSHES F.A.D. AT N.G.A. ASSEMBLY

Washington, DC – As a guest speaker at the National Governors’ Association meeting, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to the opportunity of speaking to 39 incumbent governors at once to re-introduce the concept of a Federal Aid Dividend, or FAD. The FAD will award every family with at least one employed parent with a monthly federal check to help them pay off bills and other necessities. The President’s support of a FAD in 1965 ended in failure, but the Poor People’s Campaign behind the idea persists. King suggested that the success of such programs at the state level (where it could be called SAD for Statewide Aid Divided) can be used as a “base” for implementation on the federal level: “If you make it here or there, the good news will spread to everywhere.”

– The Philadelphia Inquirer, 3/30/1968



HUMPHREY WINS WISCONSIN PRIMARY

…The former VP won a plurality, possibly thanks Gravel and Morse, two anti-war candidates seemingly cancelling each other out by almost-evenly splitting the “dove” votes. Gravel’s anti-war sentiment mixed with his “star quality” charisma and youth propelled the candidate to third place, catching many political pundits off guard. Governor Pat Lucey came in fourth place, which is a surprisingly poor showing for a Favorite Son candidate, while Kennedy and Carl Sanders did not appear on the ballot…

– The Chicago Tribune, 4/2/1968



SANDERS SIGNS A.F.E.S.T.O. ACT INTO LAW: Agriculture And Farming Employees Safety And Training Oversight Act Meant To “Monitor” Worker Conditions “Without Inhibiting Free Market Movements”

The Dallas Times Herald, 4/3/1968



APOLLO 5 LAUNCH SUCCESSFUL

– The Houston Chronicle, 4/4/1968



STONEHOUSE TO CHALLENGE BROWN IN UPCOMING CONFIDENCE VOTE: “We Expect Stronger Leadership From Our Leaders!”

The Daily Telegraph, 4/4/1968



WESTMORELAND APPOINTED US AMBASSADOR TO LAOS: Abrams To Lead Military Op.s In War-Torn Nation

Stars and Stripes, 4/9/1968



MUNICH WELCOMES WEST GERMANY’S FIRST K.F.C. OUTLET

– The Wall Street Journal, 4/11/1968



ANNOUNCER: ABC and participating television broadcasting stations present the following debate between Jack Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey, Carl Sanders and Mario Biaggi as a 60-minute semi-formal public service program. Tonight’s moderators are Frank Reynolds, Robert Clark, and William Lawrence.

REYNOLDS: Hello and welcome. For weeks, the nation has paid attention to the states holding Democratic primaries and the issues important to the primary voters, and so have these candidates. Gentlemen, backstage, Humphrey pulled the short straw, and so he will give his opening statement first.

HUMPHREY: Thank you Frank, my fellow candidates, and the people of Pennsylvania, whose issues, really, are very much like the ones found across the United States…

[snip]

HUMPHREY: …We’ve have too many years of a laisse-faire government trusting that big business will care more for people than profit. We need an expansion of government regulation for a changing America and a more responsible positioning on the world stage for a changing world.

[snip]

KENNEDY: …and America’s global authority must rest more on diplomatic leadership than military power. Furthermore, if the fight for freedom must be fought with the sword instead of the pen, then the United States cannot be the policemen of the world without international support.

CLARK: Thank you Secretary Kennedy. Governor Wallace, your rebuttal?

WALLACE: Yes, thank you. Jack, the United States cannot be the policemen of the world, period! The spilled blood of America’s fathers, brothers, husbands and sons is too high a price to pay for the forcing of Democracy on far-away lands like Laos and Cambodia. We need to focus on the needs of Americans first, starting with the poorest of the poor, Black and White, and working up from there.

CLARK: Alright, thank you Governor Wallace. And Governor Biaggi, now your rebuttal.

BIAGGI: Actually, may I direct my rebuttal to George there, then to Jack?

LAWRENCE: Um, yes, that’s within the rules. Don’t your time is still set for two minutes.

BIAGGI: Alright, then. George. I really have to disagree with your foreign policy beliefs there, bub. The US has commitments in Israel and Japan, and should have commitments in Ireland and maybe even Poland in some capacity. We can’t turn inward and return to the type of isolationism we had prior to World War Two, where we ignore the plight of our fellow man. To do so would dishonor the veterans and allies of wars past and present, and ruin our powerful standing on the world stage. A standing we should be using to support our allies and promote law and order on the world stage. And Jack, you talk a big game, but if you were not involved in the decisions regarding Cuba and Indochina, then what exactly did you do at the state department? That’s all!

CLARK: Secretary Kennedy, do you wish to rebuttal?

KENNEDY: Yes. Governor Biaggi, as I have pointed out many times before, as Secretary of State I strengthened America’s relations with France, the UK, India, Pakistan, Panama, Indonesia, Australia, Canada, Mexico, Italy, Spain, Greece, Austria, West Germany, and most of the rest of Europe and most of South America. I unified and increased our number of allies and strengthened their resolve to back us in our efforts to maintain peace and order on the world stage. And with all due respect, that’s more than can be said about your foreign policy experience, Mario.

REYNOLDS: Thank you, gentlemen. And that concludes the foreign policy portion of the debate. We now turn to the domestic policy portion.

[snip]

KENNEDY: …and I believe a tax increase is warranted.

[snip]

HUMPHREY: …we need to build new housing for low-income people and reduce the use of federal troops for quelling riots. We need to attract industries into setting up shop in the vicinity of slums in order to create jobs for such residents and in turn raise their standard of living.

[snip]

SANDERS: …as I have called time and again for the retirement of J. Edgar Hoover, when I become President he will be the first member of the political old guard still clinging to power in D.C. to get the boot. …Instead of swelling the size of federal government programs, I think we should explore the idea of moving some poor people out of cities to areas with a lower cost of living so federal funds can be used more efficiently. [snip] …We don’t need welfare, we need jobs. We need to redevelop slums in the cities to get businesses employers in these places. That’ll improve the livelihoods of the poor; a tax hike won’t.

BIAGGI: As Governor, I’ve raised funds for state police and it has led to positive results. Crime rates are dropping as law and order returns to the urban streets of the Empire state. As President, I will seek additional funds for additional state and local police, and additional funds to train local police to deal with violence, riots, and general lawlessness, which cannot be tolerated in any civilized society.

[snip]

(Candidates shake hands, exit stage.)

– Second Democratic Primary Debate transcript, ABC-Philadelphia, 4/15/1968



DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES NATIONAL PREFERENCE POLLING RESULTS:

Humphrey: 33%

Kennedy: 22%

Morse: 14%

Gravel: 11%

Sanders: 9%

Biaggi: 7%

Wallace: 3%

Other: 1%

– Gallup poll, 4/20/1968



BROWN STEPS DOWN!

London – Ahead of a planned motion of no confidence vote, Prime Minister George Brown has announced that he will resign due to unspecified health issues, and will vacate office as soon as the Labour party votes on a successor. Brown’s announcement comes 10 days after being caught on camera slipping on a short flight of step during an apparent drunken stupor. The resignation has automatically triggered a party leadership election, which will likely commence in mid-to-late May…

– The Daily Telegraph, 13/4/1968



HUMPHREY DEFENDS CUBA WAR!: Claims “We Met The Challenge Of Restoring Peace And Order.”

The San Francisco Chronicle, 4/22/1968



(CARL) SANDERS WIN DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY

Pittsburgh, PA – Democratic voters in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania gave the state to former Governor of Georgia Carl Sanders, who won tonight’s Democratic presidential primary with 28% of the vote. Humphrey, the national frontrunner, came in second place with only 20% of the vote. Carl Sanders’ victory is an upset given Sanders often being listed in fourth place in national polls. Sanders supporters in Pennsylvania, however, are not surprised.

“We talked about local issues and actually visited our towns. I don’t speak for everyone, but I certainly appreciated it,” notes one voter.

Sanders campaigned in the southern and rural strips of the commonwealth, and also sought to woo in the Black vote away from former Vice President Humphrey, who came in second place.

Former Governor of Alabama George Wallace, who also sought out the Black vote, gathered enough momentum by emphasizing worker rights and winning over local union endorsements in the final days before the primary to win third place. Behind him in fourth place is New York Governor Mario Biaggi.

The biggest loser of the night was former Secretary of State Jack Kennedy, whose team seems to have underestimated the effectiveness and activism of the Sanders and Wallace campaigns. Support for Kennedy, who is often in second place in national polls, deflated here to fifth place with less than 10% of the vote. The Gravel and Morse campaigns failed to obtain ballot access, but received a combine total of 4% in write-in votes.

– The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 4/23/1968



SANDERS-SHELEPIN SUMMIT SET FOR JUNE 16

Washington, DC – …A spokesman for the US State Department confirmed today that, after discussions with their respective leades, the Sanders and Shelepin planning parties have agreed to meet in Gothberg, Sweden. Gothenburg is a relatively small city of less than 500,000 people, and the second largest city in Sweden after Stockholm, but its growth into an industrial center since the end of World War Two was deemed an appropriate backdrop for talks on expanding the well-being of both nations. Furthermore, the city rests almost exactly on the border of the “Iron Curtain” ideologically separating western Europe from eastern Europe:
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[pic: imgur.com/valvwmO.png ]
Pictured: Gothenburg’s location in Europe (note: Albania is in pale red due to being an inactive member of the Warsaw Pact since 1962)

– The Sacramento Union (Ted Kennedy’s newspaper), 4/24/1968



COLONEL MEETS WITH KING OF LAOS IN SAIGON

…the Colonel is showing a level of energy of a much younger man as he meets with the ruler of Laos, King Sisavang Vatana, to discuss how best to handle the Pathet Lao communist guerrilla forces waging war against the Laotian people. This is the President’s third trip to Vietnam and his fourth in Indochina overall...

Stars and Stripes, 4/29/1968



KENNEDY WINS MASSACHUSETTS PRIMARY IN LANDSLIDE

– The Boston Globe, 4/30/1968



On May 5, Humphrey edged out Wallace, Sanders and Kennedy in an upset to win the Washington DC primary. The Black vote proved highly valuable in the election, as many Black voters favored the consistent record of the former VP over the rhetoric of Wallace, which many Blacks felt “[came] from an ingenuous place,” according to Medgar Evers. Meanwhile, Kennedy had sought to win over black voters by comparing slavery to Catholic prejudice: “I understand what it must be like, as I know what it’s like to go to a place, and have eyes stare at you because of the shallow notion that you shouldn’t be there.” Such comments led to Biaggi publicly countering: “Jack’s the son of a millionaire; I’m the son of an immigrant marble setter and an immigrant charwoman. His childhood, his schooling, his opportunities, they were nothing like ours!”

– historian Jeff Greenfield’s How Everything Changed: The Effects of 1968, Centurion Publishers, 2015



SOUTHERN DEMOCRATS FAVOR CARL SANDERS OVER WALLACE: 52% Believe Carl Can Do Better In November

– Gallup poll, 5/6/1968



“That damn Carl b@st@rd is stealing my thunder – and with it, my base of supporters!”

– George Wallace, 5/6/1968



JACK IS BACK!: Presidential Hopeful Closes In On Humphrey’s Delegate Count

Columbus, OH – Due to the heavy “southern” roots of residents in the southern parts of the states of Ohio and Indiana (case in point, President Colonel Sanders was born in Indiana), most pundits expected Wallace and Sanders to dominate the results of each respective primary. But Secretary Kennedy refused to give them up. His influential family (such as news publisher Ted Kennedy and Senator Eunice Kennedy-Shriver) and popular friends (Frank Sinatra, Norman Mailer, Shirley MacLaine, Stefanie Powers, Peter Lawford, Bill Cosby, and Robert Vaugh to name a few) pitched in and campaigning extensively for him across the two states. In tonight’s contests, Kennedy achieved his third primary victory in Indiana, and lost to Humphrey in Ohio by a 1% margin…

The Boston Globe, 5/7/1968



“…But a vision for America is only step one! Turning it into reality is the next, and assuring its preservation for our children and grandchildren is our final step, as our children and grandchildren will have a vision even greater than the one we have now. 92 years ago, Americans had a great vision of an independent nation. In 1865, we had a grand vision of a united country. And now, we envision a peaceful nation. And I boys and girls will join in this American tradition. If you work hard at it, you will turn your visions into realities, so 50 years from now your children and grandchildren will thank you for your vision and your hard work, just like how we thank the people of 1776 and 1863 for giving us the world that we live in today. They will be proud of you, as I am proud of all of y’all for getting through the tough classes and assignments to finally get that diploma! Congratulations, y’all!”

– Sanders at the Texas A&M graduation ceremony of 5/8/1968



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[pic: imgur.com/h9pxjFL.png ]
– Colonel Sanders speaking with actress Joan Crawford at the White House Correspondence Dinner, 5/11/1968



At just about 51, Kennedy, still presenting an image of youth by calling himself “Jack” and circulating athletic images of himself voter the viewing pleasure of the contemplative masses, was still concerned over his religion. A week ahead of West Virginia primary on May 14, he gave televised speech where he strongly professed that the separation of church and state must always be maintained. The speech worked to cool questions surrounding his Catholic faith and boost his numbers in the state.

– Ted White’s The Making of the President: 1968, Atheneum Publishers, 1969



BOTH SANDERS WIN IN CORNHUSKER PRIMARIES

…Governor Carl Sanders won tonight’s Democratic Presidential Primary with a plurality, while President Colonel Sanders won tonight’s Republican Presidential Primary unopposed…

Nebraska City News-Press, 5/14/1968



WALLACE WINS WEST VIRGINIA PRIMARY: First Primary Victory “Likely” To Boost Governor’s Chances Ahead of Florida Primary

The Washington Times, 5/14/1968



PROCEDURE:
Brown’s successor was elected by the Parliamentary Labour Party, with a majority of their 314 total members of parliament required. An exhaustive ballot system was used.

CANDIDATES:
Secretary Harold Wilson was initially considered the most credible man for the job; however, his support in parliament collapsed after rumors of being a Russian agent began to spread. Secretary Michael Foot announced his candidacy but failed to win over a sufficient level of support trying to run an energetic campaign. Secretary James Callaghan was a member of the right wing of the party and a defender of Brown, and Home Secretary Roy Jenkins announced his candidacy right before the deadline. Stonehouse, at 42, was the youngest candidate and most active candidate, and, most importantly for the Labour party officials, was the favorite of the Liberal Party with whom Labour was in a Minority Government.

RESULTS:

Round 1: 314 total
Foot: 112
Stonehouse: 90
Jenkins: 56
Callaghan: 41
Wilson: 15

Round 2: 314 total
Foot: 112
Stonehouse: 91
Jenkins: 60
Callaghan: 51

Round 3: 314 total
Stonehouse: 117
Foot: 112
Jenkins: 85

Round 4: 314 total
Stonehouse: 158
Foot: 156

– clickopedia.co.usa/1968_Labour_Party_(UK)_Leadership_Election



WHO IS JOHN STONEHOUSE: A Look At Our New Prime Minister
369YABb.png


[pic: imgur.com/369YABb.png ]
John Thomson Stonehouse (b. 28/7/1925 in Southampton, Hampshire, UK), an economist by trade, worked on co-operative societies in Uganda from 1952 to 1954 before election to parliament, where he has served since 28 Feb 1957.

[snip]

In February 1959, Stonehouse travelled to Rhodesia on a fact-finding tour in which he condemned the white minority government of Southern Rhodesia. Speaking to the Southern Rhodesia African National Congress, he encouraged Blacks to stand up for their rights and said they had the support of the British Labour Party. He was promptly expelled from Rhodesia and kept from returning a year later. [18]

The Observer, weekly (Sundays) UK newspaper, special issue, 5/20/1968




CONSERVATIVES CALL FOR AN IMMEDIATE GENERAL ELECTION

…if the move is successful, the election will most likely be held in “around” six months…

The Daily Telegraph, 25/5/1968



“When it comes to foreign affairs, I say this to the President – Colonel, if you don’t want to lead us into the next Cuba War, take the following advice – pull our troops out of Laos and pull our troops out now! ...I propose a tax hike to initiate several domestic programs and improve the administering of social justice... You know my record, my consistency, and my vision for a fairer America."

– Senator Wayne Morse, 5/26/1968



US ARMY PUSH SPLITS PATHET LAO TERRITORY!

– Stars and Stripes, 5/27/1968



“Despite Mr. Biaggi’s claims, the focus of urban improvement should not be on more cops, but better living accommodations. I truly believe that unless urban living conditions are improved in this country, we will see an unprecedented revolt take place. (pause for reaction from crowd). I know, I know, but I think about it. And I would hate to be stuck on the fourth floor of a tenement with the rats nibbling on my kids’ toes, with garbage uncollected, with the streets filthy, with no swimming pools, and with little or no recreation. I would hate to be put in those conditions, and I want to tell you, if I were in those conditions, if that should happen to have been my situation, I would have enough spark in me to lead a mighty good revolt under those conditions.” [19]

– Former VP Humphrey to a crowd in Corvallis, OR, 5/27/1968 (a statement labeled by some as reactionary, and by others as being of a “fearmongering” quality)




…Tonight’s primary election in Florida was considered a make-or-break determination for the Wallace campaign, which failed to win any primaries until the West Virginia contest two weeks ago. Well, the results are finally in and it looks like once again Carl Sanders has trumped Wallace. Wallace came in second place, ahead of Humphrey, in third place, and Kennedy surrogate George Smathers, who came in fourth place…

[snip]

…In Oregon, Senator Humphrey has won over Senator Morse in a dramatic upset. While there is a heavy anti-war presence in the state, fueled by the campaigns of Mike Gravel and Wayne Morse, the voters have instead given the state to Humphrey. One possible reason for the sudden deflation of Morse’s polling lead prior to the election is the split of the peacenik vote between Morse and Gravel, or the recent military successes in Laos working against Morse’s message that America’s presence in that country is, quote, a “massive mistake,” unquote…

[snip]

…We have an update from Portland, Oregon: Senator Morse, taking the loss of his home state’s primary to indicate a drop in popularity in Oregon, has officially dropped out of the race for President to return focus to his re-election Senate bid…

– NBC News, 5/28/1968 broadcast



The great tradition of social protest in America has failings that crop up regularly. One failing is over-simplification and another is self-righteousness. Another is political naivety. Another is sweeping impatience with everybody in authority – The Establishment and the Power Structure is what they are called now. We had other names in my younger days but it meant the same.” [19]

– Hubert Humphrey, speaking to the National Press Club, 6/1/1968




KENNEDY WINS CALIFORNIA PRIMARY

Sacramento, CA – In his first win in almost a month and his fourth primary victory overall, and after five primary losses, Kennedy edged to victory in the delegate-rich winner-take-all Democratic primary in California. Favorite Son candidate Pat Brown, the Governor of the state, failed to win even 5%, likely connected to his low approval ratings. …Humphrey’s recent comments criticizing youth activism hurt his candidacy among younger and college-educated voters, and possibly contributing to Congressman Gravel winning over 10% of the vote. …Upon learning of Kennedy’s victory, Wallace claimed the contest as biased, asserting to reporters “Jack’s got way more friends in the media than I do. One of his brothers runs a newspaper, for Pete’s sake!” Nevertheless, the victory is a major boost to Kennedy’s campaign…

The Daily Courier, Arizona newspaper, 6/4/1968



…Californians also voted for Senator tonight. In the Republican primary, incumbent Senator Kuchel won with roughly 40% of the vote, over conservative school superintendent Max Rafferty, who won roughly 35%, and former Congressman James B. Utt, who won roughly 25%. The Democratic primary saw state senator Anthony C. Beilsenson win over several candidates with roughly 45% of the vote…

– NBC News, 6/4/1968 broadcast



BIAGGI WINS THE GARDEN STATE!

Trenton, NJ – In his sole primary victory, New York Governor Mario Biaggi won over the other candidates in the N.J. Democratic presidential primary. Despite higher Black voter turnout boosting Wallace’s standing in the state, credit for Biaggi’s victory will most likely be given to commuters – voters who work in New York but live in New Jersey. These voters were likely more aware of Biaggi’s actions in combating crime rates in the state in general and in New York City specifically.

– The Star-Ledger, 6/4/1968



The narrowness of the election has led to an urban legend that claims gangsters from the “Irish Mafia” stuffed the ballot boxes for the pro-IRA Italian Biaggi. Another urban legend, however, counters with the claim that another candidate in the race, the Irish-American Jack Kennedy, used his alleged connections with the “Italian Mafia” to stuff the ballot boxes. A third, and more entertaining urban legend, claims it was both, and that the June 4 Cape May Factory Fire, which lit ablaze the night sky over southernmost New Jersey but killed zero people, was actually a cover for an Irish-Italian mafia shootout gone awry and covered up by the Democratic governor!

– weirdnj.co.usa



HUMPHREY WINS SOUTH DAKOTA PRIMARY

…Humphrey reminded voters that he was born in South Dakota and his other family connects to the state. …Carl Sanders came in second place, likely being seen as a more appealing alternative to the boisterous Governor Wallace. Biaggi came in fourth place, while Kennedy came in fifth…

The Daily Courier, North Carolina newspaper, 6/4/1968



AFTER INITIAL CONCERNS, POLLO 6 SOARS WITHOUT A HITCH!

– The Houston Chronicle, 6/5/1968



“POP ART” ICON ANDY WARHOL SHOT DEAD IN NYC: Killed While Leaving Art Studio Through Kitchen; Suspect In Custody

The New York Times, 6/5/1968



KENNEDY CRUISES TO VICTORY IN ILLINOIS DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY: Win Narrows Delegate Gap Between Jack And Hubert

The Chicago Tribune, 6/11/1968



…With the final Democratic primary held and studied, it appears that no candidate has received enough delegates to win the nomination outright, meaning the nominee will be determined at the Democratic National Convention in July…

– CBS Evening News, 6/12/1968 broadcast



WENDY’S: K.F.C.’s New Burger Chain Enters Fast-Food Competition

…the inaugural CEO is Wendy’s founder Dave Thomas, a loyal member of the K.F.C. parent company “Finger Lickin’ Good, Incorporated” who has reportedly worked on the new franchises’ menu for “almost a decade”...

The Wall Street Journal, 6/12/1968



STONEHOUSE CALLS FOR NEW TRADE RELATIONS WITH CZECHOSLOVAKIA: Part Of “Multi-Venue” Path To Boosting Economy, Markets

…The Prime Minister was to negotiate an agreement to provide a framework for the long-term development of technological co-operation between Britain and Czechoslovakia. The opening of relations with the central European nation would involve the exchange of specialists and information, facilities for study and research in technology, and other aspects of British and Czechoslovakian industries…

The Guardian, centre-left UK newspaper, 14/6/1968



REPORT: Colonel Sanders Convinces Everett, Other Party Leaders, To Add F.A.D. Proposal To RNC Platform!

– The Baltimore Afro-American (a daily newspaper since 1965), 6/15/1968



The negotiations for a bilateral comprehensive nuclear weapons cap on nuclear (A-bomb) and thermonuclear (H-bomb) weapons did not stem from a political origin as much as it did from a social reaction to US-USSR actions. The 1959 bestseller Alas, Babylon; the 1964 Stanley Kubrick film Dr. Strangelove; the pacifist writings of the “part time” political singer-songwriter John Lennon; the shoutnik movement, and other societal elements all fueled public concerns of atomic war and radioactive fallout. “We are all concerned over the effect of radiation. Even Russian citizens are concerned – they are just quieter about it than American citizens are,” the Russian Ambassador to the UN controversially noted in early 1967.

Furthermore, the Soviet Political Bureau (Politburo) was divided over the usefulness of the summit, but Shelepin’s Minister of Foreign Affairs believed the Soviet Premier would not fail to obtain “a good deal” for his country’s defense. America’s Congress also had reservations. However, a head-to-head meeting between the leaders of the US and USSR was not unprecedented, as three such meeting had occurred between Eisenhower and Khrushchev. The first was held in Geneva in July 1955, and also attended by UK P.M. Anthony Eden and French P.M. Edgar Faure. The second one was held in September 1959 in Washington D.C. and Camp David, and the first visit by a Soviet leader to the US. The third, held in May 1960 in Paris and also attended by UK PM Harold Macmillan and French President Charles de Gaulle, was cut short by a dispute over the U-2 incident. Overall, an imperfect track record, but the Colonel saw it as “examples for how to it better the fourth time.”

Ultimately, after the Colonel’s mid-May 1966 public call and after almost two years of tension and negotiation, Sanders and Shelepin finally met face-to-face to discuss, in the Colonel’s words “limiting the buildup of nuclear weapons in both our nations and the world for the sake of this planet and the health of its people.”

On June 19, Shelepin arrived in Gothenburg, Sweden 30 minutes ahead of The Colonel due to a storm front delaying travel over the Atlantic earlier in the day. For three days, the Premier and the President and their respective teams workshopped on a treaty. Shelepin agreed to Sanders’ proposed prohibition of all testing detonations of nuclear weapons in the oceans and in the high atmosphere “which both our nation share,” but opposed the prohibition of conducting detonation tests underground over concerns as to how such prohibition could be enforced in a non-invasive way. Sanders accept the exception in exchange for a cap in ICBMs.

This made for an awkward situation – Shelepin was clearly more willing to start a nuclear war, but the US in 1968 held 988 ICBMS and 620 SLBMs, which was much more than Russia’s total numbers. Ultimately, Sanders agreed to set the cap at an even 1,000 ICBMs and 1,000 SLBMs, with a non-binding amendment calling for a gradual reduction of their respective stockpiles by 20% within the next ten years (Sanders initially pushed for a lower cap and a higher reduction rate, but had to compromise in the face of Shelepin refusal to such “outrageous limitations”).

Finally, Sanders tried to convince Shelepin to withdraw troops from Poland in exchange for less restrictions on submarine developments. Shelepin refused to budge, and Sanders reluctantly dropped Poland from the discussion – thought he did obtain the submarine restrictions as a bittersweet consolation prize.

Despite the end-result leaving both leaders unsatisfied – Sanders saw it as doing too little to curb the USSR’s threats to America; Shelepin saw it as inhibiting Russia’s right to defend itself and its allies by any means necessary – both signed the treaty to save face in the face of their respective critics back home. The official name of the treaty ended up being the Strategic Universal Geopolitical Arms Reduction Treaty, or the S.U.G.A.R. Treaty, and took effect two months after being signed by the US and USSR and ratified by the USSR, UK, US and France. In 1970, it was accompanied by the Strategic Arms Limitations Treaty of 1971 between the US and China (see next Chapter, page 206).

Some observers of the treaty, such as Congressman Mike Gravel, called the summit “an organizing of the rules of war and death,” most media coverage of the Gothenburg Summit was positive. So much so that in 1970, the US President convinced China to join the treaty as well. The meeting did little to improve US-USSR relations, but was hailed by Sanders’ allies as a “breakthrough” nonetheless.

The number of participants in the SUGAR Treaty has expanded over the decades, with further amendments strengthening its anti-stockpile aspects. In fact, as of this publication (2017), nearly all nations in the Americas, Oceania, and Eurasia, and most of the nations of Africa have become party to the treaty.

– David Tal’s US Strategic Arms Policy in the Cold War: Negotiation & Confrontation, Routledge, 2017



P.M. STONEHOUSE SENDS TROOPS TO RHODESIA!

…Stonehouse claims the UK military “needs to focus on Africa, not Ireland.” The announcement comes less than a day after a referendum [20] in Rhodesia voted in favor of becoming a Republic, causing the Governor of Southern Rhodesia, Sir Humphrey Gibbs to leave the nation’s Government House, severing Rhodesia’s last diplomatic relationship with the UK. Polling shows Britons are heavily divided on the subject of military intervention in Rhodesia…

The Daily Courier, British Columbia newspaper, 6/26/1968



We all expected a fierce battle over the nomination to happen at the convention. But then, on the last day of June, a funny thing happened – Carl Sanders announced that he would release his delegates to Jack, who had a plurality of delegates. This was just enough for Jack to clinch the nomination, denying Humphrey the chance to win over delegates at the convention. In the end, Carl Sanders had stuck by his motto of being a party loyalist first and a party candidate second. And of course, all the other candidates cried foul, but hey – that’s politics.

[snip]

Next of the agenda was finding the right running mate…

– Ken O’Donnell, C-SPAN-I interview, 1988



oc7chGz.png


[pic: imgur.com/oc7chGz.png ]
…this was also the first time that not a single “favorite son” candidate either won a contest or achieved more than 5% of the vote, although some did receive delegates at the national convention…

– clickipedia.com.usa [21]



Kennedy – A Time For Greatness
ZGQcOFo.png


[pic: imgur.com/ZGQcOFo.png ]
– Kennedy campaign logo, c. July 1968



NOTE(S)/SOURCE(S):
[1] This entire quote is a verbatim George Wallace quote from OTL: https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/when-the-left-was-right/
[2] Carl Sanders’ policies (“moderate concerning racial issues…While agreeing that Georgia should keep its tradition of segregation, Sanders believed it was imperative that the state avoid violence and obey the laws of the country…his campaign issues were not built around race. Instead, Sanders focused on the elimination of corruption in state government and pushed for overall progress for the state. He also wanted to improve education and bring industry to Georgia…Sanders improved education a great deal [and] helped to reform…the prison and state merit systems…”) found here: https://russelldoc.galib.uga.edu/Russell/view?docId=ead/RBRL199ATCCS-ead.xml
[3] Quote found here, though I’m not sure of the validity of the website: https://www.inspiringquotes.us/author/1178-colonel-sanders
[4] JFK says the italics bit in this statement starting at the 9:59 mark of this video, and the rest of the statement’s sentiments are largely pulled or paraphrased from the rest of the video: youtube: watch?v=ezGDLOcZVjw
[5] Almost verbatim to summary described here: https://www.ourcampaigns.com/EventDetail.html?EventID=57
[6] OTL quote: https://www.jfklibrary.org/archives/other-resources/john-f-kennedy-speeches/charleston-wv-19600411
[7] OTL quote!
[8] Source: CIA tells Russia of Soviet sea disaster". The Times (64466). London. October 17, 1992. col F-G, p. 10.
[9] Italicized segments are from OTL: https://www.jfklibrary.org/archives/other-resources/john-f-kennedy-speeches/charleston-wv-19600411
[10] Italicized segments are from OTL: https://www.brainyquote.com/authors/hubert_h_humphrey
[11] Carl Sanders did appoint “many blacks to state government jobs,” IOTL: http://russelldoc.galib.uga.edu/russell/view?docId=ead/RBRL199ATCCS-ead.xml and here appointed more than Wallace did ITTL.
[12] Pages 54-through-57 of Robert L. Heilbroner’s The Worldly Philosophers: The Lives, Times, and Ideas of the Great Economic Thinkers (Revised Seventh Edition), A Touchstone Book Published by Simon & Schuster, 1999 (found online in PDF form)
[13] Sentiments based on attitude expressed here: youtube: /watch?v=ynm1QZ7rWB0
[14] Italicized bits are from here: http://www.irishnews.com/opinion/letterstotheeditor/2015/07/13/news/congressman-mario-biaggi-was-heroic-pathfinder-for-justice-181261/
[15] OTL quote!
[16] OTL quote, according to (the source(s) on) his wikiquote page
[17] Taken from here: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/insurance-premium.asp
[18] Passage pulled from Stonehouse’s wiki article.
[19] Italicized portion(s) is/are an edited quote from OTL!: https://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00442.xml
[20] This referendum ends up being held one year earlier than IOTL because the instability in the UK from the earlier-than-OTL troubles (which were the indirect result of the rise of the shoutniks in response to the Cuba War under an earlier President Johnson) increasing hostilities against the British quicker than IOTL. Yeah… yeah that works…
[21] Primary results composition based on the poll results (for the most part): https://www.strawpoll.me/18122421/r

I'm actually not that confident in how I wrote this one, so if anything looks wrong or seems too unrealistic, please let me know.

Also, the E.T.A. for the next chapter is the 27th!
 
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