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“It has,” Park charged: ibid., p. 2.

“Came in to tell how important. . . .”: Randy Sowell of Truman Library to author, May 24, 1999.

By September 10, Harold Smith's staff: Michael Warner, “The Creation of the Central Intelligence Group,”
Studies in Intelligence,
Fall 1995, p. 6.

Just a week before his death: PSF Box 153.

The horseplay masked: Warner, “The Creation of the Central Intelligence Group,” p. 1.

“I stopped him. . . .”: Curt Gentry,
J. Edgar Hoover,
p. 148.

Whether through Hoover's machinations: Polmar and Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 173.

“What a man! . . .”: Brown,
The Last Hero,
p. 833.

He delighted in his midnight rides: William M. Rigdon,
White House Sailor,
p. 18.

“Mr. Roosevelt made a fetish. . . .”: Eric Larrabee,
Commander in Chief,
p. 624.

It was FDR who chose the exotic: William D. Hassett,
Off the Record with F.D.R., 1942–1945,
p. 113.

“He had long ago learned to conceal. . . .”: Rexford Tugwell,
The Democratic Roosevelt,
p. 355.

He did not want anyone to know: Larrabee, p. 624.

“[F]ewer friends would have been lost. . . .”: Goodwin, p. 78.

Roosevelt himself rarely recorded: Brian Loring Villa, “The Atomic Bomb and the Normandy Invasion,”
Perspectives in American History
2 (1977–78), p. 466.

“[T]here took place. . . .”:
FRUS,
2d Quebec Conference, vol. 1, p. 481.

“There is hardly a dependable record. . . .”: Larrabee, pp. 144, 624.

The OSS, only temporarily scuttled: Joseph E. Persico,
Nuremberg,
pp. 359, 517.

In a generation, the United States:
NYT,
Dec. 5, 1999.

Hitler once pronounced accurate intelligence: David Kahn,
Hitler's Spies,
p. 540.

Across a report on Russian: ibid., p. 187.

“I was,” this spy observed: Persico,
Piercing the Reich,
p. 38.

“opportunistic in meeting problems. . . .”: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 55.

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