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the country making speeches, otherwise they could not have
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gone to college, impossible, impossible, and I was criti-
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cized for that, but I had no choice, $4500, what could I
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do with 4500, and the newspapers, every time you said 4500,
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they, said, Look, you have got a yacht, a yacht with nine-
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teen crewmen. So what. I was on that very seldom, but even
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if I had it, so what, a crew of nineteen; and then you
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have a fifty-one room mansion. So what. My girl and boy
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were away at school, I was making speeches and my wife
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was locked up in one of those fifty-one rooms, and then you
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have five servants and butlers and $20, 000 for food. So
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what. There was nobody there to eat that food. And you
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have people who come in that you invite to eat "all" your
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food and drink all your liquor. I didn't have any liquor,
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but if I had it, they would have.
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Should the Governor's appointments of officials
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be subject to the advice and consent of the Senate?
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I don't think so, I don't think so. I think
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the Governor is elected, it is his responsibility, and I
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think the Governor ought to have the right to make the ap-
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pointments, and that is one of the great advantages, one
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