Word: appointing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...moment. He knows I think so. We hope he'll run, and I think he has the best chance." As for his own future, Scranton, whose gubernatorial duties continue until next January, did not slam the door on Washington speculation that Lyndon Johnson may want to appoint him an ambassador. "As far as appointive positions are concerned, I haven't given any thought to any of them anywhere, and I won't until I'm out of office." For the moment, he said, "no job has been offered me in business or in Government...
Harry F. Byrd Sr., the man who built the machine and set it running when he was elected governor in 1926, retired from the Senate last November after running unopposed for reelection in 1964. Seventy-eight years old and stricken with arthritis, he had outgoing governor Albertis S. Harrison appoint "Young Harry," 51, to take his place. Virginia liberals and moderates railed against the "hereditary succession" and prepared to take on Byrd Jr. and Robertson in the state Democratic primary July...
...attitudes of the Episcopalians and Methodists. Under pressure from their Anglo-Catholic wing, the Episcopalians might well refuse to give Consultation delegates the power to negotiate a union plan. Methodist commitment to the union could collapse on many issues, such as whether bishops would have the power to appoint pastors. At Dallas, Methodist delegates acknowledged the justice of such fears but pointed out that, as the largest church involved, Methodism has most to lose from the union...
...fate of Romney's Presidential bid, then, depends heavily on what happens to the U.S. Senate seat vacated by the death this week of Senator Pat McNamara. Romney will probably appoint the already hand-picked Republican candidate, Congressman Robert Griffin. The fiercely contested Democratic primary between ex-Governor G. Mennen Williams and Mayor Cavanagh will probably help Griffin, and both Democratic candidates will have serious electoral weaknesses. Romney will certainly be out campaigning hard this fall to keep Griffin in the Senate--and to put a public relations man in the White House...
...predominantly feminine voice, since American women buy an estimated 75% of all goods and services. Thus it was a characteristically canny decision on Lyndon Johnson's part not only to decree the new post of Special Presidential Assistant on Consumer Affairs in January 1964 but also to appoint a woman as the first holder of that office. Her name is Mrs. Esther Peterson, and if gimmickry, guff and guile are ever banished from the Eldorado that U.S. industry has created for the shopper, Esther may well go down in history as St. Peterson...