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There are several other such outsiders, most notably Kentucky's Senator Thruston B. Morton and Oregon's Governor Mark Hatfield. But any realistic political estimate must consider them much more likely as vice-presidential nominees than for the top place on the G.O.P. ticket...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Republicans: This President Thing | 6/14/1963 | See Source »

This does not mean that Ike is not interested. He is. He makes it clear that Rockefeller, Goldwater, Romney and Scranton are all acceptable to him. He asks about Kentucky's Senator Thruston Morton, Oregon's Governor Mark Hatfield, even the Governor of his old home state, Kansas' John Anderson Jr. His face lights up when a visitor mentions as possibilities such old friends as retired Generals Lucius Clay and Al Gruenther...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: SIX QUALITIES THAT MAKE A PRESIDENT | 6/14/1963 | See Source »

...than 60,000 votes (309,377 to Chandler's 247,661). Breathitt, a former state representative, state commissioner of personnel, and state public service commissioner, will face Republican Louie B. Nunn, 39, in November. Nunn is a Glasgow attorney who managed the successful 1956 U.S. Senate campaigns of Thruston Morton and John Sherman Cooper but, like Breathitt, has never before run for state office...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kentucky: Sad Day for Happy | 6/7/1963 | See Source »

...Adams House and New York City; Leon I. Jacobson '63 of Quincy House and Belmont; Stephen D. Marcus '63 of Winthrop House and Chicago; Andrew J. Nathan '63 of Lowell House and Pound Ridge, New York; David R. Riggs, Jr. '63 of Claverly and Gladwyne, Pennsylvania; Norman E. Thruston '63 of Eliot House and Exeter, N.H.; and Edwin A. Winckler '63 of Dudley House and Ingomar...

Author: By Traveling Fellowship, | Title: Shaw, Sheldon, Knox Fellowships Awarded | 5/22/1963 | See Source »

...country. From Washington, the National Republican Senatorial Committee mailed out invitations to a $1000-a-plate dinner to be held in May with Arizona's Senator Barry Goldwater as guest of honor. The dinner is billed as a "preview of the bright prospects of 1964." Kentucky's Thruston B. Morton, chairman of the committee, happily pointed out that in 1964 the G.O.P. will have extraordinarily favorable arithmetic going for it in Senate races. Only nine Republican seats will be at stake as against 25 Democratic seats, and only six of them Southern...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Politics: Some Blows for Next Year | 4/12/1963 | See Source »

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