Word: elected
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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MARJORIE BEATY New York City Sir: Mr. Goldwater succeeded in at least one thing. He succeeded in undermining the respect for the man the American people must elect President...
Robert Kennedy began his campaign for the Senate at the Fulton Fish Market, and the day after election he returned. The same hands pulled at him, and the same voices said, "He looks just like Jack--a little thinner and sadder, but just like him." But this time Senator-elect Kennedy smiled, for the campaign was behind him. Now he looks to the future and what will happen in New York...
Actually, Johnson's reference was to a man who had worked faithfully for Ike during the 1952 campaign and was, indeed, designated by the President-elect to fill the post of White House appointments secretary. But, immediately after the election, Ike had all of his tentative appointees subjected to security checks. Only days before the inauguration, it was learned that the man had a homosexual history. He was quietly dropped from the presidential staff even before Ike took office...
...said Senator-elect Kennedy, "an overwhelming mandate" for the policies of John F. Kennedy, "and, of course, Lyndon Johnson." In other key Senate races...
...only one chance to win, and that's if Goldwater is a sensation." Hearnes was right, won in a walkaway over Shepley, former chancellor of St. Louis' prestigious Washington University and the strongest candidate fielded by the G.O.P. in more than a decade. The Governor-elect is a West Point graduate who served ten years in the state legislature and the past four as secretary of state. > Republican John Chafee, 42, won in Rhode Island by a mere 398 votes in a 1962 race that was not officially decided for weeks. This year, in the generally Democratic state...