Word: nelsons
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Full Membership. With a little will, a great deal can be done without vast expenditures. Still, it is obvious that permanent solutions cannot be found on the cheap. In his first, long-heralded speech on national issues last week, Nelson Rockefeller said that it will take at least $150 billion in public and private investment over the next decade to over come the "agony" of the nation's cities. New York City's Mayor John Lindsay, who is often at odds with Governor Rockefeller, applauded the speech, but warned that capital spending is only a part...
...principal contenders for the Republican presidential nomination emerged last week from nearly a month of political hibernation. Both chose the same forum: the American Society of Newspaper Editors, meeting in Washington's Shoreham Hotel. Nelson Rockefeller, advertising his "availability" in the first of a series of speeches on national problems, addressed himself to the urban crisis in a half-hour weighty but well reasoned address that left the editors slightly comatose. Richard Nixon, by contrast, sparkled in a relaxed format that mixed stand-up wit with graceful repartee before a panel of four editors. The same editorial audience that...
Other candidates include Oregon Governor Mark O. Hatfield former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, New York Mayor John V. Lindsay, Sen, Charles Percy (R-III.), California Governor Ronald Reagan, New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller, perennial candidate Har-old Stassen, and former Governor of Alabama George C. Wallace...
Neither Richard M. Nixon nor Nelson A. Rockefeller wants any trouble with Volpe, the only candidate on the Republican primary ballot. Both candidates are working to win the governor over...
...press conference in Holmes Hall at the Law School before his speech, Lindsay said he hoped New York's Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller would be drafted as the Republican Presidential nominee. Asked if he himself would refuse to serve if elected, Lindsay said, "no man wishes to insult the office by making silly statements about...