Word: kuchel
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Warming up, Dirksen waved his arms and pounded his desk. He leaned so close to Assistant Republican Leader Thomas Kuchel that the Californian was practically horizontal at his desk. He shook his head so emphatically that his carefully coiffed mane soon flew askew in a Medusaean tangle of curls. "Our outer defense perimeter started in Korea and went to South Viet Nam," he said. "That is our outside security line. Suppose it fails. It will run from Alaska to Hawaii." Thundered Dirksen, his voice now at full volume: "Let me say that I was not made a Senator to preside...
Obvious Needs. It would thus have seemed natural for the newly empowered Reagan to whoop up opposition to Kuchel in next year's primary. However, both men are finding that, regardless of past reasons for continuing the feud, political considerations provide more cogent motives for cooling...
...Kuchel's need is obvious. Reagan's support of a conservative challenger could cost Kuchel his seat. On the other hand, one of Reagan's major aims is to lead a cohesive California delegation to the 1968 Republican National Convention as the favorite-son candidate. A primary squabble could well disrupt that effort. Then there is Kuchel's value to California as the party whip and ranking Republican on the Interior Committee. As a Los Angeles businessman pointed out: "The state gets 25% of its gross product from the Federal Government. Conservative businessmen are realists. They...
Look What I've Done. Reagan has already pledged neutrality in the event of a primary fight, and support of the party's senatorial candidate in the general election. "If I were Governor," says Kuchel, "I would do the same thing." More to the point, some of Reagan's friends have been discouraging ultraconservative Max Rafferty, the state superintendent of public instruction, from challenging Kuchel...
...Although Kuchel and Reagan make no display of mutual admiration, their staffs are in frequent consultation. The Governor and the Senator have found it easy to cooperate on public-works programs to benefit the state, and have even agreed on a controversial plan to preserve California's redwood forests (TIME, March 24). Reagan's help on such nonideological issues can only buttress the look-what-I've-done-for-California theme that Kuchel will probably use in his re-election campaign. And Kuchel allowed solemnly last week: "I think a U.S. Senator has a duty to cooperate...