Word: ridded
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...more traditionally conservative states in the region is not much different. Many staunch Maine Republicans have left the fold. Says William McKeen, a Brunswick, Me., businessman who is running for the town council: "I voted and campaigned for the guy, but I wish they'd get rid of him now. If there are just seven tapes, then he should have said so long ago." Adds Mrs. Norman Kinney, a Vermont housewife: "Vermont is a strong Republican state. That so many people hate Nixon says something, I think...
...media coverage, which borders on "insurrection and sedition." But such views in this area are the exception. More typical is that of Helen Carson, a mother of three in Brunswick, Me., who says: "I'm not so worried about what will become of the country if we get rid of the President; I'm worried about what will happen if he stays...
...problem were only Richard Nixon, the answer would be simple. Once we get rid of Nixon and get a half-way decent man into the presidency, the problem would be repaired and government could again begin to function. Unfortunately, nothing is that simple nowadays...
...Middle East, undoubtedly felt the burden of the Watergate suspicions and litigation more keenly than ever. As Senator Baker put it: "You can only be nibbled by so many ducks at a time." Perhaps he even saw the war as a propitious time to try to get rid of Watergate once...
...assessment. "Whites don't seem to be aware of the seriousness of the situation," says Ann Dumett, author of A Portrait of English Racism. "There seems to be the idea that we don't have to live in a society that's racially mixed, that somehow we can get rid of them...