Word: paule
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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They are Robert Braucher '40, Professor of Law, Edward H. Chamberlain, David A. Wells, Professor of Political Economy, Arthur H. Cole, Professor of Business Economics, Gottfried Haberler, Paul M. Warburg, Professor of Economics, Alfred C. Handford, Professor of Government, Malcom P. McNair '16, Lincoln Filene Professor of Retailing, and Richard S. Meriam '14, Charles Edward Wilson Professor of Business Policy...
...reasons that had brought the President winging out from Washington on a five-day hedgehop that carried the Columbine into five states and logged for Ike another 5,850 campaign miles. In Minnesota, where 500,000 jammed his path during a 33-mile tour of Minneapolis and St. Paul, the President extended coattails to Republican Gubernatorial Candidate Ancher Nelsen. Droning westward to the coast, he boosted Washington's Art Langlie and Oregon's Doug McKay, both hand-picked to run for the Senate, both lagging before Ike appeared on the horizon. In California the Eisenhower grin gleamed...
...hero records were not all made in military service. Perhaps the most heroic image of all is that of towering (6 ft. 4½ in., 240 Ibs.) Paul Sutton, 46, running against Republican William Broomfield, 34, in Michigan's 18th District. For ten years Sutton starred on the radio program Sergeant Preston of the Yukon. Even so, he is losing...
...most attractive new faces of 1956 belong to the ladies. In Florida's Sixth District, Mrs. Dorothy Smith, 39, is a 98-lb. dynamo in her race against Democratic Incumbent Paul Rogers, 35. She is conducting a Kefauver-type handshaking campaign, but says: "I hope I don't mumble like Kefauver." In Idaho's First District, Republican Louise Shadduck, 39, is just beginning to make progress against 50-year-old Incumbent Democrat Grade Pfost (pronounced, as in her 1952 campaign slogan, "Tie Your Vote to a Solid Post"). In the populous Sixth District of New Jersey, Republican...
...last week the magic kinship between Ike and the campaign crowds was hardly news, for the story could only be reported in round numbers, and the numbers rolled on from Peoria to Pittsburgh, from St. Paul to Portland. They rolled on just as they had in other years when the kinship was military, the numbers were millions, and the place names were London, Bizerte, Palermo, Salerno, Normandy and Bastogne. Probably no man in public life today has touched so many people in so many different ways as Dwight David Eisenhower. Yet, strangely, it is the sum total of Dwight Eisenhower...