chenowith was against federal welfare at all, so eisenhower described chenowith, why he's in favor of it, and of course he cites there's no more free land and untouched natural resources. since these are no longer here, the government has to step in and play that role, and that's why eisenhower tells chenowith he expanded social security to include another 10 million people. there is, again, that really interesting connection between ike, the old west, the frontier and how that expresses itself politically. oh, and yes. you don't have pop quizes without a final. so we have another question, and i'm sure a lot of you know the answer to this one. eisenhower lost the d-day invasion and that night of june 5th went and talked to the men at the 101st airborne division, probably one of the most famous pictures of the war, ike talking to his para troopers. there was nothing he could do until the first reports started coming back saying how bad the initial part of the invasion was going. so as his aide recorded in his diary, he went back and found ike propped up in his bed reading a western. h