Word: californians
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Rosenbaum, who had been a Ford admirer: "Republicans are hungry for a victory. Even those who find Reagan a little too far to the right for their tastes will back him in the general election." Pennsylvania Governor Richard Thornburgh, a former Ford backer, will support Reagan and thinks the Californian can win if he seeks support even from normally Democratic constituencies. Said he: "I would hope that no candidate would write off the support of labor unions because they have traditionally supported Democrats." Given the deeply ingrained loyalities of such groups, this will be no easy task for Reagan...
...political situation stands at this moment, a Reagan-Baker ticket could offer a worthy challenge to Carter-Mondale, who after all managed to defeat the Republican ticket in 1976 by only 56 electoral votes. If the Californian can hold the states won then by Ford, the switch of only a few states, such as Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana or South Carolina, out of the Democratic column could make the "unelectable" Ronald Reagan the next President...
That was demonstrated anew last week in the South. After clobbering former Texas Governor John Connally in South Carolina, Reagan swept on to three more victories. The Californian's triumphs in Georgia and Alabama were not unexpected, but his margins were huge. Some 207,000 Republicans turned out in Alabama (compared with 53,000 in 1976) to give Reagan a 73% to 26% lead over the faltering Bush. In Georgia, Bush was battered even worse, losing to Reagan 73% to 13%. Even more significant, however, was Reagan's decisive majority in Florida, which has a Republican electorate that...
After several years experimenting--often unsuccessfully--with the lucrative acting and endorsement opportunities awaiting him upon return from Munich in 1972, Mark Spitz, the celebrated swim star of the 20th Olympiad, decided to try his hand in business. While not yet approaching a par with his swimming achievements, the Californian is doing just fine as head of his own SUMARK Corporation...
DIED. Emmett Ashford, 65, first black major league baseball umpire, an ebullient Californian whose booming voice and animated gestures behind the plate delighted the fans at American League games from 1966 to 1970; of a heart attack; in Marina Del Rey, Calif...