home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- LETTERS, Page 6THE VELVET HAMMER
-
- Secretary of State James Baker is one of the most
- influential, savvy and respected national figures America has
- produced in this decade (NATION, Feb. 13). I met him in 1978,
- when he was campaigning to be Texas' attorney general. I gave
- him my support. He did not win, but his loss of that race has
- proved a windfall for the rest of the country.
-
- James L. Schwinkendorf Arlington, Texas
-
- Have we forgotten that it was just a few short months ago
- that Baker was directing what was probably the dirtiest campaign
- in political history? And now he is being described as a
- "gentleman" and "the Velvet Hammer." No, James Baker is more
- like a mudslinger par excellence.
-
- Edwin M. Schmidt Springfield, Va.
-
- Baker is definitely "a man for all seasons." Count me as a
- supporter for his candidacy for President in 1996.
-
- Patricia Purdie Houston
-
- There is nothing more repulsive to a true sportsman than
- someone who shoots baited game. My admiration for our kinder,
- gentler President who chose such a person as his Secretary of
- State has declined more than somewhat.
-
- Lynwood Johnson Montgomery
-
- Secretary Baker said, "The Soviet Union remains a very
- heavily armed power with interests that are adverse to the
- U.S.," and claims that Moscow continues to "test the alliance,
- to probe, to look for weaknesses." Statements like these do not
- generate optimism for good relations between the two countries.
- In the Soviet Union too, there are influential people who are
- inclined to argue that the U.S. still conducts a hostile policy
- with respect to the U.S.S.R. and is continuing the arms race.
- These mistaken polemics can only bring our two nations back to
- the positions they occupied before the recent summit meetings.
-
- Valeri Neyev Novosti Press Agency Moscow
-