Word: eastvold
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...term Senator Warren G. Magnuson, 51, who, although unopposed for renomination, gathered 426,000. This was a resounding 150,000 more than his November opponent, Republican Governor Arthur B. Langlie (TIME, Sept. 3), managed to poll in his primary race. Thoroughly drubbed in the Republican gubernatorial primary: Donald W. Eastvold, Washington's ambitious young (36) attorney general, who first gained political fame as the Ike-supporting "young man with a book" at the 1952 G.O.P. National Convention, later had a personal falling out with Governor Langlie. Eastvold lost by a two-to-one margin to Langlie-backed Lieutenant Governor...
...most adroit political battler for education that Washington has ever known. So adroit has she become, in fact, that many a Democrat had hopes that she would run for governor next fall. It would have been a spectacular race, for even the Republican hopeful, Attorney General Don Eastvold, admitted: "She'd be a formidable opponent." This week, however, Pearl announced that she had only one office in mind. She intended to seek re-election to the post she has held so long...
Washington State's Attorney General Don Eastvold, who was conspicuous on TV screens in July 1952 as the "young man with a book" among the Eisenhower speakers at the Republican National Convention, came to Brownell's defense. He wrote airmail letters to all the other state attorneys general urging a boycott of the meeting if Brownell was not invited. Twenty-four attorneys general replied to Eastvold, most of them backing his position...
...alternate delegate to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights: Donald W. Eastvold, 33, lean, eager-looking attorney general of Washington state. Televiewers remember Eastvold's bold and brilliant leadership ("Beware a young man with a book") in the successful fight against the seating of the Taftist Georgia delegation at last summer's Republican convention...
...each side were few and simple. The Julia group claimed to be the electees of the true convention, while the Blenes group based its case on the fact that the National Committee's call came to them. Once the attorneys were through, the Committee began a raucus internal argument. Eastvold repeated his declaration, and the member from Rhode Island took up the strain. He first suggested that the call was unimportant in this case since the National Committeewoman from Puerto Rico was married to one of the Rump delegates, and then harrangued his colleagues on Gate's part...