Word: ronald
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...court also struck down the law's limits on how much a candidate can spend on each primary-for example, $200,000 in New Hampshire. Again, however, the various candidates must still abide by these limits if they accept federal matching funds. Somewhat wistfully, an aide to Republican Ronald Reagan says: "In a close battle in some other state, it would be nice to be able to spend more money than we were allowed to before...
...Minority Leader John Rhodes, Minority Whip Robert Michel, Congressmen John Anderson from Illinois and Barber Conable from New York knew that the President looked upon the vote as a key test of his ability to defend his tight budget. Not incidentally, a victory would give his campaign against Conservative Ronald Reagan a flying start by showing that Ford was not only a conservative but a leader who could make things happen-and keep them from happening...
...leaders hope, Democrats like Senator Kennedy, spurred on by the press and public opinion, will get the bills through. Then they would land on the desk in the Oval Office, where President Ford would face a dilemma. If he approves bills that break his budget, he risks attack from Ronald Reagan, his conservative Republican rival. But if he wins the nomination by saying no to jobs and social programs, Jerry Ford may hobble his chances of being elected in November...
Before Maude, the most prominent lithium patient was Director-Producer Joshua Logan. In 1973 Logan revealed that his 30-year struggle with manic-depression had been successfully ended by lithium after psychoanalysis and antidepressant drugs failed. Since then, lithium has become "in." Dr. Ronald Fieve of the New York State Psychiatric Institute, who treated Logan, trumpets lithium in his book Moodswing (William Morrow and Co.) as the start of a revolution in psychiatry in which drug cures will supersede psychoanalysis and other therapies aimed at emotional change. To the dismay of many Freudians, Fieve said that Freud's classic...
...favorite candidate in the seven Southeastern states (North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee)? No, it is not George Wallace. It is Ronald Reagan...