Word: lininger
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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At 1:35 p.m. one day last week the doors of the old White House conference room swung open and 50 reporters walked in, some grabbing chairs, the others lining up against the walls. At a great oval table before them sat Presidential Press Secretary James Hagerty, his spectacles glinting...
At a gilded gambling resort in Las Vegas, shy, poker-faced TV Comic Wally (Mr. Peepers) Cox was dealt out of an 11,000-a-week hand for the second time in less than a fortnight (TIME, July 25). Reason: he again failed to draw a full house. After first...
Died. Judge Harold M. Stephens, 69, chief justice of the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia; of cancer; in Washington. An early and ardent New Dealer, Stephens served with distinction during the early years of the Roosevelt Administration as assistant attorney general in charge of antitrust matters, was...
Bats at Twilight. The drum-thumping, backslapping governor had another reason for dancing. For weeks, the rumors that President Eisenhower might decline to run again in 1956 had flittered through Washington like bats at twilight. At the governors' conference, early this month, Goodie had heard them-whispered in Washington...
Once formally "adopted" by the local party, a candidate is by law required to hire a campaign agent who, for a set fee of $210, assumes responsibility for running the campaign, lining up volunteer workers, and keeping a stern eye on every ha'penny.