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Byline: Mary M. Shaffrey
Aug. 19--WASHINGTON
Jonathan Felts does not have a famous face, but when he sits down to lunch less than a block away from his office, it seems that everyone knows him.
In the course of just over an hour, no less than eight people stop by his outside table to say hello or schedule a meeting for later in the week.
That's because his office isn't typical: It's the White House. His boss, at least until the end of the month, is Karl Rove.
"This is the best job I've ever had," said Felts, a Davie County native whose title is deputy assistant to the president and director of political affairs.
Rove, who announced his resignation as deputy chief of staff on Monday, evokes strong feelings in grass-roots activists on both sides of the aisle. Republicans love him because he is…