Word: scrantons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Lieutenant Governor Raymond Shafer, the Republican candidate, spent only $239,000, chiefly because, as the choice of Governor William Scranton, he never had opposition serious enough to warrant the expenditure of really large funds. Though Shapp set a primary spending record that will probably stand for some time, big campaign expenditures are not uncommon in Pennsylvania-or, for that matter, in other parts of the U.S. Increasingly, they pose a disquieting problem for the candidate who lacks a massive bankroll...
...special multiguest edition from the 1966 Governors' Conference in Los Angeles. Governors being interviewed: California's Edmund G. ("Pat") Brown, Colorado's John A. Love, Illinois' Otto Kerner, Maine's John H. Reed, Pennsylvania's William Scranton, and Texas' John Connally...
...Republican Party's 1968 presidential nomination, Scranton insisted that he was committed to no single candidate. But "you know I'd be for one of the moderate Republicans," he said. "George Romney is the outstanding one at the moment. He knows I think so. We hope he'll run, and I think he has the best chance." As for his own future, Scranton, whose gubernatorial duties continue until next January, did not slam the door on Washington speculation that Lyndon Johnson may want to appoint him an ambassador. "As far as appointive positions are concerned, I haven...
...This is irrevocable," said Pennsylvania's G.O.P. Governor William Scranton. "I am not going to run ever again for any public office under any circumstances - there are no equivocations of that statement." And so, after one term in Congress and almost four years in the Pennsylvania Statehouse, ended the political career of Bill Scranton, 48, one of the U.S.'s ablest executives and one of the Republican Party's brightest lights...
...announcement came as a shock to reporters. "Does that include being drafted?" asked a newsman. "Including being drafted," said Scranton. And to prove that he meant to be as unshakable as William Tecumseh Sherman ("If nominated, I will not accept; if elected, I will not serve"), Scranton added, "I am not going to run for Congress this year-or ever. I am not going to run for the U.S. Senate in 1968-or ever. I am not going to run for the presidency in 1968-or ever...