35 Quotes & Sayings By David Pietrusza

David Pietrusza is a freelance writer covering the NHL, NCAA, and the Olympic hockey programs. His work has appeared in numerous publications including The Hockey News, ESPN The Magazine, The Sporting News, USA Today, and the Los Angeles Times. Pietrusza served as a scorer for the Boston Bruins from 1992-94 and now contributes to the Bruins' official web site as a contributor to B's Inside Edge.

While JFK had made the sale on a political level,...
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While JFK had made the sale on a political level, he had not yet completed it on an emotional one. David Pietrusza
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Organizing a coup was not the same as wanting one. David Pietrusza
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John F. Kennedy responded, as he often did when at his best, skillfully mixing dollops of wit with, self-deprecation, and the principle of not-really-going-near-the-question. David Pietrusza
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Nixon was by nature a excluder. Halderman like to exclude people. When Nixon's need met Halderman's abilities, you had the most perfect formula for disaster. — Jim Shepley David Pietrusza
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Richard Nixon coveted, to the point of obsession, a controversy-free, stage-managed coronation. David Pietrusza
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JFK apparently felt genuine sympathy for his 1960 presidential opponent Richard Nixon. He felt that, with Nixon's frequent shifts in political philosophy and reinventions, he must have to decide which Nixon he will be at each stop. This, Kennedy reasoned, must be exhausting. David Pietrusza
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The author commented that John F. Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign team worked like a band of brothers, while Richard Nixon's campaign team worked like a band of brothers in law under the direction of a quarrelsome aunt. David Pietrusza
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Nixon wanted view and advice brought to him through intermediaries. He wanted information filtered as it came to him — and he wanted his filters to filter his will back to those whom he must direct. David Pietrusza
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Eisenhower on LBJ: "He hadn't got the depth of mind nor the breath vision to carry great responsibility. David Pietrusza
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Henry Cabot Lodge was like medicine, good for you, but hard to take. — Teddy White David Pietrusza
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There are really two essential things in campaigning. First, you must be in good humor. If you're going to be a raffle, you are to stay home. Second, you are to make sense in your speeches. These aren't the two things you must do. Unless you're saying, if you can be in good humor when you're exhausted. — Henry Cabot Lodge David Pietrusza
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Eleanor Roosevelt on the changes in John F. Kennedy that led her to drop her opposition to his nomination for president: "He has the qualities of a scholar, and a sense of history. I had the feeling that he was the man who can learn. I like him better than I ever had before because he seemed so little caulk-sure, and I think he has a mind that is open to new ideas. David Pietrusza
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The author's alliterative description of politics since the 1960 presidential debates: "Government by Gotcha". David Pietrusza
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Jack Kennedy protected a mature and presidential image — tough, yet not unduly combative. David Pietrusza
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What we saw in Richard Nixon's face was the panic in his soul. — Richard Goodwin David Pietrusza
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In the 1960 campaign, Arthur Schlesinger wrote of Adlai Stevenson, who already lost twice as the party's presidential nominee, "He has been away from power too long; he gives me an odd sense of unreality, a certain frivolity, distractedness, over-interest in words and phrases. David Pietrusza
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A lot of people here some South in your mouth, and they automatically think you're dumb. They think if you talk funny, you are funny. — Lloyd Hand David Pietrusza
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Jack had an actor's control." Chuck Spalding David Pietrusza
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Jousting with an obvious hoodlum couldn't hurt. David Pietrusza
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The political mind is the product of men in public life who have been twice spoiled. They have been spoiled with praise and they have been spoiled with abuse. — Calvin Coolidge David Pietrusza
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Politics look very simple to the outsider whether he is a businessman or a soldier — it is only when you get into it that all the angles and hard work become apparent. James Forrestal David Pietrusza
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No matter what office LBJ assumed he lifted greater than when he found it. David Pietrusza
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JFK had to act before his fragile body betrayed him. David Pietrusza
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Jack and Bobby Kennedy were too young, too attached to real family to transfer affection and loyalty to those that of their blood or region or upbringing. David Pietrusza
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In front of an audience of Protestant clergy, the Catholic JFK "was drawing strength from his vulnerability. David Pietrusza
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Be civilized. Grudges are for Neanderthals. — Hubert Humphrey David Pietrusza
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John F. Kennedy "is, in reality, a deeply serious man, reflective in his mental habits, historically minded, and given to seeing men and nations and events in the sobering context that history provides. As a human being, he is often humorous, easily bored by total routine but open to all fresh experiences, careless of the superficialities of life, warmly loyal to his friends, and oddly detached about himself. His most curious trait, in fact, is his way of discussing his most vital affairs with the dry humor and cool analytical remoteness that most people reserve for the affairs of others. — Joseph Alsop . David Pietrusza
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Author points out in Woodrow Wilson the flipside of the positive we might call big picture vision. He observes that as college president Wilson resorted to the language of a national crusade when he met resistance in a local, academic issue. David Pietrusza
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As the pace of the campaign quickened, politics began to clash with Kennedy's innate sense of responsibility. — Arthur Schlesinger David Pietrusza
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Woodrow Wilson intimate Edward House urged that his boss never first be approached by argument. Instead, the President could be made most receptive by laying a groundwork of 'common hatred". David Pietrusza
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JFK had a way of grabbing grandeur from mishap. David Pietrusza
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Presidential campaign observer Teddy White on the second Kennedy-Nixon debate in which the candidates spoke from separate television studios: "It was as if, separated by comments from his adversary, Richard Nixon was more at ease and could speak directly to the nation that lay between them. David Pietrusza
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TR on using extramarital accusations against Wilson: "It won't work. You can't cast a man as Romeo who looks and acts like an apothecary's clerk. David Pietrusza
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For Jack Kennedy, who only made campaigning LOOK easy, it was, in fact, anything but. David Pietrusza