Word: capeharts
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...Terrier attack is impressive, Rafalko and halfback Bob Calascibetta are both proven runners, junior Gary Capehart has been a surprising newcomer, and sophomore Sam Hollo can both scramble and pass as well. It is a consistent, grinding running attack, but it has yet to encounter a defense as strong as Harvard's. There should be little cause for major concern this afternoon. Harvard should hold it to less than three touch downs...
...vulnerable to worldwide upheavals. During World War II, for example, Behn succeeded in saving his corporation from disaster only by hurriedly negotiating the sale of several overseas holdings. Trying to strengthen the company at home after the war, Behn rushed headlong into the domestic-appliance field, buying up Capehart-Farnsworth Corp. (record players, TV sets, radios) and Coolerator Corp. (refrigerators, air conditioners). Both lost money, were finally abandoned...
...only secondarily in preparing an election strategy. If, however, he sacrifices too much of his liberalism, he will lose what chance he has of being elected. Governor Rockefeller should remember that in 1962 the liberal Republicans, such as Kuchel and Javits, emerged with the most impressive pluralities, while Capehart and Nixon were defeated...
...debate as in private trading. He once made a Senate speech claiming that Republican Dwight Eisenhower could not comprehend the nation's fiscal policies, "because one cannot do that without brains, and he does not have them." There upon Indiana's loyal but hapless Republican Senator Homer Capehart rose to protest. The next day Kerr answered Capehart with a deft revision of the Congressional Record: "I do not say that the President has no brains at all. I reserve that broad and sweeping accusation for some of my cherished colleagues in this body...
...speaker in 1959, meanwhile earned a law degree at Indiana University. He started his hard campaign for the Senate a full year ago. Says Bayh: "I feel the average voter is impressed by a fellow who's out there just working his tail off." Homer Capehart. who just happened to be a responsible, hard-working Senator, would have expressed the same sentiment-but in the words of an old codger. And that was the difference...