Word: goldwaterism
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Though Senator Barry Goldwater is often tagged "far right" and "arch" and "ultra conservative" by our fearful, ultra-whited, journalistic sepulchers, he speaks and acts like a splendid classical liberal-one of the few public men producing sense instead of gobbledygook.
At home or on the road, Barry Goldwater is conscious that he rides an ever growing popular wave-one that could conceivably make him the party's presidential standard-bearer in 1964. New G.O.P. Chairman William Miller warmly suggested a Goldwater-Rockefeller ticket in the next campaign if Richard...
Nixon's eventual defeat convinced Goldwater all the more that the Republican Party had to return to what he considers first principles. He has been fighting-and traveling-for those principles ever since the voting stopped. Even in the comparative calm of Washington, he is up by 7 to...
Stereo & Steaks. At his office, Goldwater may skim the Wall Street Journal and the Phoenix newspapers-he rarely reads the New York Times and gave up the liberal Washington Post because of its "slanted reporting"-before plunging into the mail. He tries to get home by 7, sips two or...
About once a month, Goldwater heads back home to mend a few Arizona fences and supervise the finishing touches on his dazzling new $100,000 home in Scottsdale. Tailored to the Senator's taste for gadgetry, the home boasts, among other frills, a darkroom, and a radio set that...