Word: ticket
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Southern states, on the other hand, have also made their choice, and Governor Barnett and his allies had better learn to live with that. The voters of Georgia, Louisiana and Texas (the three states where the Barnett efforts have been concentrated) selected electors pledged publicly to the Kennedy-Johnson ticket. Although no law compels these electors to honor their pledge, the nature of this pledge and of the electoral system as it exists today must force them to vote as they said they would vote last month. The effort of Barnett and that notably playful Louisiana legislature to persuade...
...newest proposal was to fill Democratic leadership positions with Senators from the big industrial states, on the reasoning that it was these states that gave Kennedy his victory. "We must not," said he, "approve the designation [to key committee positions] of members who have failed to support the national ticket or those who oppose the platform pledges in the area in which the committee has jurisdiction...
...questioning until after an emergency operation. By the time Adele Mailer had recovered enough to talk to detectives, her husband was in a television studio, taping an interview with Mike Wallace. He did indeed plan to run for mayor of New York next year, he admitted-on an existentialist ticket. The problem of juvenile delinquency would not be solved by disarming young hoods: "The knife to a juvenile delinquent is very meaningful. You see, it's his sword -his manhood." A better solution would be to hold an annual gangland jousting tournament in Central Park, "which would bring back...
Freshman Squash, Soccer, Lacrosse; Varsity Lacrosse; Flying Club; Phillips Brooks House (Hospital Group); Undergraduate Athletic Council; Hasty Pudding Theatricals (Ticket Manager); Spee Club...
...Philippe had put a little more spirit into the role. Armand wagers that he can, before the company goes on maneuvers, "win the favors of" some young mademoiselle, who has yet to be selected. At the provincial Red Cross ball Armand decides, by chance, on the holder of lottery ticket 34. She turns out to be a newly-arrived young woman named Marie-Louise Riviere, who looks sad and disillusioned, and remains that way throughout the film. The rest of the plot breaks no new ground. As Armand rather listlessly woos Marie-Louise, alternately losing and winning her favor...