Word: ticket
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Martin Luther King Jr. at a press conference in New York yesterday avoided all questions about whether he will run for President on a peace ticket. But he promised to discuss his political plans today...
...omitted the one Republican who has a chance of beating Johnson-Mark Hatfield of Oregon. Unlike such me-too supporters of the war as Romney, Rockefeller, Reagan and Nixon, Hatfield offers a real choice-he wants to end the war by stopping the bombing and seeking peace. The ticket is Hatfield-Lindsay. But it could never get the nomination from the present conservative G.O.P. organization...
...Work is work anywhere. 1 have saudades [yearnings] for New York that have to be cured by thinking hard about how the trains don't run very well there-and how the New York Central tracked me down in Rio with a bill for a January commutation ticket that I never got or used. If I ever get back, though, I will have saudades of equal strength for here...
...popularity rating soared to an unbeatable 87% after the presidency was thrust on him, and Humphrey would probably fall heir to a similar fund of sympathy. In any case, according to Kennedy sources, Bobby has no intention of accepting second spot on either a Johnson or a Humphrey ticket...
Kennedy says he will loyally campaign for the ticket in 1968, and has promised to submit sworn affidavits, if need be, to keep his name off primary ballots in such states as New Hampshire, Nebraska and Oregon. His avid supporters may mount write-in campaigns for him anyway-although they have found little backing thus far in the ranks of regular Democrats. One outfit, the Citizens for Kennedy-Ful-bright, wrote 5,000 former delegates and alternates to Democratic conventions requesting support, got only 28 positive replies. Said an Oregonian: "The only time I would favor Senator Fulbright...