2016-07-12

VEEP WATCH -- Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s allies in Washington and Indianapolis want him to be Donald Trump’s running mate, and are aggressively positioning him as the most logical choice. Pence insiders in Indianapolis and Washington are laying out a detailed case for why Pence is a no-brainer for Trump:

-- Makes up for Trump’s weaknesses. Supporters say Pence is a trusted figure in the pro-Israel movement, understands the international arena from his time on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and has strong support from grassroots conservatives and evangelical Christians. “They adore Mike for opposing spending measures during the Bush administration when GOP was in charge of Congress,” said one ally. “One of a handful of members to oppose No Child Left Behind, Cash for Clunkers, Medicare Part D and TARP.” And Pence was one of only a handful of elected officials who addressed the big tea party rally on the Capitol steps in September 2009.

--A bridge to the Hill. They say Pence is a good link to House Republicans. He came in with Speaker Paul Ryan, and spent 12 years in the House -- including a stint in GOP leadership.

--Executive experience. He passed the largest tax cuts in Indiana history, and eliminated the state estate tax.

--National political acumen. Has $7 million in his campaign account, and has served on the executive committee of the Republican Governors Association.

**SUBSCRIBE to Playbook: http://politi.co/1M75UbX

--NYT’s Ashley Parker and Alex Burns: “Mr. Pence’s vice-presidential aspirations have developed to the point where Republicans have begun preparing for his departure from the Indiana governorship. Joining Mr. Trump’s ticket would prompt Mr. Pence to abandon his campaign for re-election ... The [RGA] … has been drawing up contingency plans in the event he withdraws from the race ... Officials with the group have been in touch with several candidates who could replace Mr. Pence on the ballot, including Eric Holcomb, the lieutenant governor, and Brian C. Bosma, the speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives.” http://nyti.ms/29KI4bn

--Ted Cruz backer Steve Deace emails this hot take: “The last few times we heard from Pence nationally, it was the disaster that was his RFRA [Religious Freedom Restoration Act: Pence signed the controversial law, which some saw as discriminatory against gay people, and then approved changes to the language, angering some social conservatives who felt the move restricted religious freedom]. It was the worst we’ve ever been stabbed in the back by a Republican. It’s the worst I’ve ever seen. … Then there was the way-too-late, tepid, laughable, lukewarm endorsement of Cruz in May.

“Ten years ago, Mike Pence would have never done this. Five years ago. But because his stock with conservatives is so low right now, this may be his only chance to be a national figure. And being Trump’s running mate, your chances of being successful are slim to none, and slim is on his way to a second trip to the buffet line.” (h/t Katie Glueck)

HOW BERNIE FELL FOR HILLARY -- Bernie Sanders spent much of the last two years railing against the establishment. But in the end, when his campaign was all but over, two high-profile elected Democrats worked back channels to broker a peace that led to today’s Sanders-Clinton kumbaya moment in New Hampshire.

Aside from key conversations between Sanders campaign chief Jeff Weaver and Team Clinton’s Robby Mook, New York Sen. Chuck Schumer -- who is close to both candidates -- was critical. He launched a July 4 blitz to bring his two former colleagues closer together. Schumer dined with Sanders at Hunan Dynasty, a Chinese joint on Capitol Hill, to chat about how an endorsement could work. Over that holiday weekend, he spoke frequently with both Sanders and Clinton, trying to bridge the policy divide between the two candidates.

President Barack Obama -- who was painstakingly neutral in the intra-party squabble -- was in Florida leading up to the California primary. He called Sanders that weekend, and then called him and Clinton when she secured the delegates to let him know he would be endorsing his former secretary of State. Sanders then met with Obama in the Oval Office.

--“Clinton and Sanders unite for the war on Trump: Clinton operatives have been quietly working to court Sanders supporters in battleground states,” by Gabe Debenedetti in Portsmouth, N.H.: “That outreach appears to have produced material results after a primary that got increasingly chippy in its closing weeks: Sanders supporters have flocked to Clinton faster in 2016 than Clinton supporters went to then-Sen. Barack Obama’s side in 2008, according to a recent Pew survey. Fully 85 percent of Sanders’ primary supporters said they would vote for Clinton, compared to just 69 percent of hers backing Obama after she dropped out eight years ago.” http://politi.co/29AaPYr

TRUMP TOWER BRAIN DUMP -- The thought from Fifth Ave.: “Bernie supporters will never be excited about Hillary Clinton. She represents Wall Street, trade deals that hurt American workers, open borders, global intervention and the Washington establishment. Knowing just how much Bernie supporters despise her, today's endorsement will be fun to watch.”

FIRST LOOK from the Trump campaign -- “Top Five Reasons Sanders Supporters Will Never Be Excited About Hillary Clinton” http://bit.ly/29AKzu2

LIST DU JOUR – RNC memo, “The Top 15 Sanders Attacks On Clinton” http://bit.ly/29AarEh

OOPS – “The time the Clinton campaign accidentally released a Sanders attack ad — in July,” by WashPost’s Peter W. Stevenson: “On Monday, the Clinton and Sanders campaigns both released a carefully worded statement officially announcing the New Hampshire event. The Clinton campaign also appeared to release something else: an anti-Sanders attack ad. ‘The Export-Import Bank,’ a 28-second spot, was posted to one of the campaign’s YouTube accounts Monday afternoon.” http://wapo.st/29uJxNy

Good Tuesday morning. Just 6 days until Cleveland. 13 days until Philadelphia. And 119 days until Election Day. The Olympics in Rio begin in 24 days (h/t McPike).

CARRIE BUDOFF BROWN named Politico editor, to take the wheel from Susan Glasser after the election. Many, many thanks to Susan for all she has done to support us and for an amazing run at the magazine and in the newsroom – John Harris emails the staff: “Carrie has an extraordinary POLITICO story. This is a publication for risk-takers. Within days of Robert, Jim VandeHei, and I announcing this venture, Carrie reached out to us, then total strangers. ... She was a key player in our first great chapter — as we took advantage of the opening of the 2008 campaign and again as the new administration came in. Then when POLITICO needed to show we could be more than just great at campaigns, Carrie helped us show we could cover governing too, leading POLITICO’s coverage of President Obama’s overhaul of health care, which in turn led the competition. That success proved we were as much a policy news organization as a political one, providing a template for what are our now 18 policy desks. In effect, Carrie was the first Pro reporter.

“Next, Carrie was instrumental in a new venture, the launch of POLITICO Europe in Brussels ... As a co-founder, Carrie has POLITICO in her blood, and her passion and protectiveness is like that of a parent for a child. Her appreciation of policy coverage and her vision for nurturing and fully integrating the policy teams builds on the huge strides Susan, Marty Kady, and Peter Canellos have taken the past couple years. This work is more urgent than ever at the start of a new administration. Finally, Carrie’s gift for human connection is an indispensable asset in a newsroom that is now a large place — filled with some people who have been here for years and others who have just arrived this year.” Full memo http://politi.co/29DRfsV ... NYT story http://nyti.ms/29SRGQX

SCOOP – WSJ A1, “Trumped! Candidate Was Clinton Fan in 2008” (online headline: “Donald Trump Said Hillary Clinton Would ‘Make a Good President’ in 2008,”) by Michael Rothfeld and Mark Maremont: “Donald Trump is attacking Hillary Clinton these days, but eight years ago, in the midst of the 2008 Democratic primary race, he said she would ‘make a good president’ and a lot of people thought pairing her with Barack Obama would be a ‘dream ticket.’ His kind words for Mrs. Clinton came in a previously unreported clip from ‘Trumped!,’ a syndicated radio feature that aired from 2004 to 2008 and consisted of a daily commentary of about 60 seconds from the real-estate mogul.” http://on.wsj.com/29A9Ulw

HOT TICKETS -- Hillary Clinton is hosting a high-dollar fundraiser tonight for supporters to see the Broadway hit Hamilton in New York. Attendees can watch the musical with HRC in a “preferred seat” for $5,000. “Event chairs” need to contribute $100,000 http://hrc.io/29JYG1a ... Hillary comes to D.C. on Thursday for a “Summer Celebration with Hillary” at Lee Satterfield and Patrick Steel’s home. “Host” level is $27,000, but a “champion” ticket goes for $2,700. http://hrc.io/29unwzd

-- CLINTON is in Springfield, Illinois, Wednesday and Northern Virginia Thursday -- Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine is with Clinton in Virginia. TRUMP is with Gov. Mike Pence in Indiana.

THE NARRATIVE -- “GOP operatives dread Trump convention,” by Alex Isenstadt: “Many GOP regulars are skipping Cleveland entirely. (‘I would rather attend the public hanging of a good friend,’ says Will Ritter) ... The idea of a blowout party, [GOP establishment operatives] say, just doesn’t seem appetizing at a time of such uncertainty and division within the GOP. For some, it’ll be the first time in decades they’ll be missing a national convention. ‘What’s there to celebrate?’ asked Jay Zeidman ... ‘The party has hit rock bottom in terms of leadership.’ ‘I don’t want anything close to the appearance of supporting Trump,’ said Jason Roe, a veteran party strategist. ‘This ship can sink without me as a passenger.’” With cameos by Danny Diaz, Ryan Williams, Alex Conant http://politi.co/29T7qTO

THE MAP -- “A lot of holes in GOP presidential ground game in key states,” by the AP’s Steve Peoples and Julie Bykowicz: “[T]he national GOP has delivered only a fraction of the ground forces detailed in discussions with state leaders earlier in the year. … Ohio Republicans thought they were going to see 220 paid staffers by May; in reality there are about 50. Plans for Pennsylvania called for 190 paid staffers; there are about 60. Iowa’s planned ground force of 66 by May actually numbers between 25 and 30. In Colorado, recent staff departures have left about two dozen employees, far short of the 80 that were to have been in place.” http://apne.ws/29x32EO

--“Poll: Clinton struggles to make inroads with young Americans,” by AP’s Julie Pace and Emily Swanson -- Per a new GenForward poll: “The majority of the nation's younger blacks and Asian-Americans have a favorable impression of Clinton, but the presumptive Democratic nominee struggles with whites and Hispanics.Just 26 percent of young whites and 49 percent of Hispanics have a positive opinion of the former secretary of state. Both groups overwhelmingly say she is not trustworthy.” http://apne.ws/2a582T5

SNEAK PEEK -- ROBERT DRAPER in this Sunday’s N.Y. Times Magazine, “Can the G.O.P. Senate Majority Survive Donald Trump?”: “The party’s most vulnerable down-ticket candidates try to escape the shadow of a presidential campaign that is imperiling their prospects in November.” http://nyti.ms/29uYwqJ

PLATFORM WATCH -- “GOP Platform Committee Welcomes First Gay Member, but Not Gay Marriage,” by NYT’s Jeremy Peters: “While she was received politely by her fellow committee members, their response was hardly enthusiastic. When she mentioned that she was their first openly gay member, barely anyone applauded.” http://nyti.ms/29JOSEp

YOU’RE INVITED! -- Join Mike Allen, Anna Palmer and Jake Sherman TOMORROW for a special Playbook Breakfast featuring Education Secretary John King. Doors open at 7:30 a.m. at The W Hotel (515 15th Street, NW). RSVP: http://bit.ly/29AVCmq. The Playbook Breakfast series is sponsored by Bank of America.

CAMPAIGN EMAIL DU JOUR -- Hillary twists the knife, saying the self-proclaimed billionaire Trump isn’t as rich as he says he is: “Together, we can build an America that works for all Americans, not just selfish millionaires like Donald Trump.”

VIDEO DU JOUR -- Bloomberg Politics’ Alexander Trowbridge and Griffin Hammond on Cleveland’s political history plus a preview of this week’s delegate meetings: http://bit.ly/29SSZz9

2016 PLAYERS -- “Trump Eyeing Gingrich for National Security Position,” by Bloomberg’s Terrence Dopp, Jennifer Jacobs and Mark Halperin: “Even if Donald Trump does not pick Newt Gingrich as his running mate ... Trump is considering picking Gingrich for a top national security post should he be elected ... A national-security role in a potential Trump administration could be a good fit for Gingrich. He holds a doctorate in European history and is known for his intellectual curiosity. ... Asked about the potential role, Gingrich said, ‘I know nothing of this.’” http://bloom.bg/29A9Ge1

PRESIDENT TRUMP -- “Trump’s budget: Making the deficit great again: His proposals are a series of puzzle pieces that don’t fit together into a coherent whole, according to experts on both sides of the aisle,” by Matthew Nussbaum and Ben Weyl: “Donald Trump’s bare-bones tax plan would cut rates — but add more than $10 trillion to the debt. His goal to trim the national debt to zero in eight years would require slashing all federal spending by two-thirds, even if he ditched the proposed tax cut. And he’s got no plans to trim Medicare or Social Security, the main drivers of spending.” http://politi.co/29Ktq3y

TOP TWEETS -- @ChuckGrassley: “Do u think 2day’s journalists r too elite for ‘ordinary Americans’?”

BULLETIN -- AP at 5:25 a.m.: “THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - Tribunal: China has no historic basis to its claims behind ‘nine-dash line’ in South China Sea.” http://yhoo.it/29Ebsi7

CLICKER – “Our Boat Was Intercepted by China,” by NYT’s Javier C. Hernandez and Sergey Ponomarev: “For four years, China has been blocking fishermen from a reef near the Philippines. Why?” http://nyti.ms/29DQfoC

DAILY DONALD -- “Trump, Bill Maher and Miss Pennsylvania: The ‘I’ll sue you’ effect,” by USA Today’s Nick Penzenstadler: “‘I’ll sue you’ was a Trump mantra long before ‘Build a wall.’ But an analysis of about 4,000 lawsuits filed by and against Trump and his companies shows that he rarely follows through with lawsuits over people’s words. He has won only one such case.” http://usat.ly/29MDF49

-- “Trump predicts more protest violence to come this summer,” by AP’s Jill Colvin and birthday boy Matt Daly: “Donald Trump said Monday he believes relations between police and the nation’s African-American community are ‘far worse’ than people think, predicting that protests against police violence that followed last week’s slaying of five police officers in Dallas ‘might be just the beginning for this summer.’ ... Trump suggested that a lack of training for officers might be at least partially to blame for the two police shootings that led to last Thursday's protest in Dallas ... At the same time, Trump denounced the name of the Black Lives Matter movement as ‘a very divisive term.’” http://apne.ws/29JBeRA

OBAMA IN DALLAS -- “Obama, Travelling to Dallas, Seeks to Console and Reassure,” by NYT’s Gardiner Harris: “[Obama] huddled with his speechwriters for much of Monday, hoping to find words that would not only console the officers’ grief-stricken families, but also reassure a nation fearful that racial divisions are worsening after the Dallas slaughter and the killing days before of black men by the police in Louisiana and Minnesota. Mr. Obama approached the effort with the frustration of a man who has poured his heart and soul into similar speeches, only to later feel that nothing has changed and no one is listening. This will be the 11th time in his presidency that he has sought to comfort a city after a mass killing.” http://nyti.ms/29E6hPc

--“Obama tells police: ‘I’m your best hope’ for relations with communities of color,” by WashPost’s Juliet Eilperin: “The president met for nearly two hours with leaders of eight law enforcement groups Monday, informing them that he considered the killing of the five police officers in Dallas on Thursday ‘a hate crime’ and that he would work actively to serve as an intermediary between minority activists and police.” http://wapo.st/29snn2V

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Americans for Responsible Solutions PAC is going up with a “significant six-figure” digit and broadcast TV ad buy in the Manchester market and on cable statewide attacking Sen. Kelly Ayotte in a new 30-second ad, titled “Mislead.” The group, which is backing Gov. Maggie Hassan’s Senate bid, is attacking Ayotte for her position on gun legislation. http://bit.ly/29KVe7Y

SENATE WATCH -- EVAN BAYH’s entrance into the Indiana Senate race has immediately made the state one of the biggest battlegrounds in the country. One Democratic source tells Playbook, “Bayh getting in the race is bigger for Democrats than Rubio getting back in the race was for Republicans … The element of surprise is huge.” As for Republicans, they already hitting him on Obamacare, his wealth, and his famous last name.

TODAY IN #NEVERTRUMP -- Sen. Ben Sasse on Medium: “Today, I do not have this confidence about either of the current frontrunners. I think one of them does not even know what the Constitution is about, and the other doesn’t care.” http://bit.ly/29BcIjt

THOUGHT LEADERS – JAMIE DIMON, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, writing in an op-ed in the N.Y. Times, “Why We're Giving Our Employees a Raise”: “We must find ways to help them (American workers) move up the economic ladder, and everyone — business, government and nonprofits — needs to play a role. ... Over the next three years, we will raise the minimum pay for 18,000 employees to between $12 and $16.50 an hour for full-time, part-time and new employees, depending on geographic and market factors… Above all, it enables more people to begin to share in the rewards of economic growth.” http://nyti.ms/29JN9yS

--“The brutal truth about being a pregnant worker in 2016: It’s pretty awful,” by Avra Siegel, former deputy director of the White House Council on Women and Girls, and director of public policy for Care.com: http://for.tn/29AWKHf

WASHINGTON, INC. -- “Global Strategy Group launches Analytics Practice to bring worlds of analytics and polling together under one roof – helping companies and campaigns understand attitudes at the individual level. Emily Norman, an alum of Obama for America’s analytics team and McKinsey & Company, has joined GSG to lead the group, and will work alongside GSG’s existing team of data scientists, digital experts, and pollsters.” http://politi.co/29JC6Wm

MOOD MUSIC – “Can We Ignore the Alarm Bells the Bond Market Is Ringing?” by The Upshot’s Neil Irwin: “Taken at face value, they imply that the smart money expects inflation will remain extraordinarily low for years to come, and that growth will stay so weak that central banks won’t be able to raise rates for years. ... [T]he current shape of the American ‘yield curve,’ the chart of how rates compare for short, medium and long-term bonds ... implies a 60 percent chance of a recession in the next year based on historical patterns ... Long-term interest rates hit record lows last week — which is to say the lowest in the 227-year history of the United States.” http://nyti.ms/29AUL4S

LIFE ONLINE -- “You Should Probably Check Your Pokémon Go Privacy Settings,” by BuzzFeed’s Joseph Bernstein: “According to the Pokémon Go privacy policy, Niantic may collect — among other things — your email address, IP address, the web page you were using before logging into Pokémon Go, your username, and your location. And if you use your Google account for sign-in and use an iOS device, unless you specifically revoke it, Niantic has access to your entire Google account.” http://bzfd.it/29T7oeY

MEDIAWATCH -- “Who Would Run Fox News if Roger Ailes Was Forced to Step Down?” by Variety’s Cynthia Littleton: “Multiple sources said the most logical candidate to take the reins from Ailes, if circumstances were to force him to step down as chairman-CEO, would be Bill Shine, Fox News’ senior exec VP who oversees non-news programming for the channel.” http://bit.ly/29ufchZ

TEAM AILES PUSHES BACK -- “More Female Fox News Anchors Come Forward to Defend Roger Ailes,” by The Hollywood Reporter’s Marisa Guthrie: “A growing contingent of Fox News employees are coming forward to publicly support embattled chairman and CEO Roger Ailes in the wake of the sexual harassment claims by former anchor Gretchen Carlson.” http://bit.ly/29zFrXq

FIRST LOOK – Paul Allen’s “Vulcan Productions and Show of Force Partner on ‘We The Voters: 21 Films for The People’”: “The films will demystify how U.S. elections work, and promote a call to action for Americans to make informed choices and seize the power of their vote.” http://politi.co/29u8Aks

CORRECTION - Solamere Capital, Romney’s firm, is a private equity shop, not hedge fund … And, in an early morning fog, we accidentally referred to Gretchen Carlson as Margaret Carlson -- we aren’t perfect, and we’re sorry!

BOOK WATCH – Sen. Elizabeth Warren got $625,000 last year as a book advance … Sen. Marco Rubio made $102,500 in 2015 off of book sales … Sen. Rand Paul earned $209,502 in book advance cash.

COMING ATTRACTIONS -- WSJ DC Bureau Chief Jerry Seib and editor in chief Gerry Baker are moderating a conversation Monday with Speaker Paul Ryan with reporters in Cleveland.

SPOTTED: Bob Schieffer having a sandwich yesterday at Taylor Gourmet on 19th St.

OUT AND ABOUT -- Dr. Phil Roe (R-Tenn.) took the stage at Hill Country last night with the Pony Express, his bluegrass band who cut their first and only record in 1972. Original Band Members: Phil Roe, Tom Eades, Steve Barnes and Jim Arthur. Pic http://politi.co/29LOxjm

SPOTTED: Reps. Dan Benishek, Steve Stivers, Erik Paulsen, Larry Bucshon, Marsha Blackburn, Diane Black, Elise Stefanik, French Hill, John Carter, Dave Trott, Doug La Malfa, Earl Blumenauer, Robert Hurt, Brian Babin, and Bill Flores.

REMEMBERING SETH RICH – WashPost’s Peter Hermann and Clarence Williams: “Seth Rich made such an impression as a teenage intern in Nebraska that a U.S. Senate campaign hired him before he completed high school. ... As [the DNC’s voter expansion data director], Rich worked tirelessly on a project to help voters easily find their polling places. But he was lighthearted, too, sometimes pulling on a sweatshirt adorned with a picture of a panda, his favorite animal, just to make co-workers laugh. Early Sunday morning, the 27-year-old was shot to death in a crime that has shaken not only his family, colleagues and friends, but also many in his Bloomingdale neighborhood of Northwest.” http://wapo.st/29xAHOD

WELCOME TO THE WORLD -- Dan Hirschhorn, director of news at Time and a former Politico, andJennie “JJ” El-Far, arts producer at the British Council and the founder and chair of the board of the Harlem Arts Festival, welcomed Henry Rockwell Hirschhorn, born at 6:21 a.m. yesterday. 7 pounds, 12 ounces. 20 inches long. Mother and baby are happy, healthy. Father is hoping for a slower news stretch the rest of the summer. Pic http://politi.co/29AJUsB

BIRTHDAYS: Susan Axelrod ... First Data’s Josh King, former Clinton presidential events maestro ... Adam Elias, COS to Rep. Bill Foster (D-Ill.) … Politico’s Isaac Dovere and Nicole Narea ... Beth Lester Sidhu, a Politico alum now COO of PE firm The Stagwell Group ... The New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza ... Brendan Daly, senior director of comms at the Save the Children Action Network, a Pelosi alum and twin brother AP’s Matthew Daly (h/ts Melanie Fonder Kaye, Allie Wright and Ted Greener) ... Christie Vilsack, the pride of Mount Pleasant, Iowa ... Jason Childress ... Paul Shone (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) ... Eric Ueland, Senate Budget Committee staff director and a Nickles and Frist alum (h/t Stewart Verdery) ... Thea McDonald, director of member services at the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee (h/t Kristina Baum) ... Brandon Shaw of Fifteen Minutes Public Relations ... Eva Brown ... Amway’s Ginny Justice, a Lynne Cheney and Commerce alum ... Jordan Gehrke, partner of Vertical Strategies and a Ben Sasse alum ... John Gans Jr. ...

… David Lerman, editor of CQ’s Budget Tracker and formerly of Bloomberg, (once again) celebrating his 29th birthday (wink, wink) (h/t Catalina Camia) ... Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.) is 62 ... Rep. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) is 4-0 ... Commerce’s Angela Belden Martinez ... Ashley Williams, a Biden alum now special advisor and director of special projects for the Ambassador-at-Large for global women’s issues at State ... CBS News’ Mary Walsh ... Basel Hamdan, HuffPost supervising producer ... Jessica Hanks, VP at DKC and a HuffPost and CBS alum ... Brian Schoeneman, political and legislative director at Seafarers International Union, is 39 ... Uber’s Debbee Keller, a House Energy and Commerce alum ... Alex Levy, VP at SKDKnickerbocker and a Schumer alum ... Rachel DiCarlo Currie, senior fellow at the Independent Women’s Forum and a Kyl alum ... Seton Motley ... writer-producer Brian Grazer is 65 ... actress Michelle Rodriguez is 38 ... Rachel Brosnahan (‘House of Cards’) is 26 … Nobel peace prize laureate Malala Yousafzai is 19 (h/ts AP)

DESSERT -- “Hidden Messages Found in Computer Code of Apollo Moon Mission” – WNYC’s The Takeaway: “When the computer code for the Apollo moon missions was uploaded in its entirety to GitHub, a popular open source website for developers, it was revealed that the original MIT programmers who authored it had a healthy sense of humor. It was quickly discovered that the programmers inserted Easter eggs — or hidden messages — into the lines of the Apollo Guidance Code. The files are full of tongue-in-cheek sayings and a few quotes from Shakespeare’s play, ‘Henry V.’” http://bit.ly/29Ljx2O

Show more