Word: benders
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Ohio's Republican Senator George Bender campaigned as a 100% Ikeman-but Ohioans still thought of him as a bell-ringing buffoon at the 1952 Republican convention, and they overwhelmingly backed Governor Frank Lausche, a great vote-getter who managed to project his own honesty and humility (but little more), and thus seemed to rise above political partisanship...
...Ohio, five-time Governor Frank Lausche once again proved the truth of the local axiom that "nobody likes Lausche but the people" by capturing for the Democrats the state's second Senate seat, defeating a hard-working latter-day Ikeman, Senator George Bender...
Ohio: Stevenson was encouraged by campaign receptions, but Eisenhower Is the favorite. So is Democratic Governor Frank Lausche in close Senate race against Republican Incumbent George Bender...
...time he began his second tour on Oct. 9, Republican candidates all over the U.S.-from New York's Senatorial Candidate Jacob Javits to Idaho's Senator Herman Welker-were begging for more Nixon time and effort. Ohio's U.S. Senator George Bender happily grabbed Nixon's coattails, crying, "Ohio loves Dick Nixon." It seemed to. At Defiance a crowd equal to a third of the town's population (12,500) turned out to hear him; in Warren more than 30,000 people lined the streets to cheer. The crowds and the confidence were growing...
...answered in great detail questions on everything from the Eisenhower Administration's policy in the Suez crisis to statements he had made on the Fifth Amendment a decade ago. He also showed some deft footwork. In Toledo, one correspondent tried to trap him into an indorsement of George Bender's opponent, Ohio's Democratic Governor Frank Lausche, who has been favorably inclined toward the Eisenhower Administration. Was Lausche Nixon's kind of Democrat? Nixon made clear that he was all out for George Bender, but he added: "I have great regard for many of our Democratic...