Word: tiemann
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When he began his campaign for Governor, few Nebraskans outside his home town of Wausa (pop. 725) had ever heard of Republican Norbert Tiemann. To overcome that disadvantage, Nobby" Tiemann, 42, son of a Lutheran minister, dotted the state with billboards and filled the airwaves with spot commercials plugging the slogan: TIEMANN, Nebraska's New Way to Spell Governor." What the tall (6 ft. 3 in.), trim, small-town banker was actually telling the voters was that the time had come to find a new way to spell...
This month, Tiemann gave his constituents their toughest spelling lesson to date. By a 38-to-ll vote, the new Governor pushed through Nebraska's conservative, unicameral legislature a sales-income tax package that left New Hampshire the only state in the union with neither a sales nor an income tax. Nebraska still stands far down the list of states on public services. It is 39th in educational expenditures per pupil, 41st in teachers' salaries, last in state aid to public schools. Though its two conservative Republican senators-Carl Curtis and Roman Hruska-have given the state...
...from the East to campaign for Phil and immediately got into a shouting match with the Omaha World-Herald over some disparaging remarks that Ted had made about progress in his home state in 1961. In the end, Phil lost the limelight to a G.O.P. novice, Norbert ("Nobby") Tiemann, 42, himself a Kennedy-handsome, 6-ft. 3-in. banker from Wasau (pop. 724). An unknown nine months ago, Tiemann stumped the state shaking every outstretched hand, put across his German name with the slogan: "Tiemann. . . Nebraska's Way to Spell Governor." He won by 101,586 votes...
...NEBRASKA GOVERNOR 23% of the vote Tiemann (R) 74,000 Sorensen (D) 55,000 U.S. SENATOR Curtis (R) (winner) Morrison...
...Norbert T. ("Nobby") Tiemann, 41, a small-town bank president, became the Republican nominee for Governor of Nebraska with an impressive primary triumph over Val Peterson, 62, a former Governor who subsequently served as federal Civil Defense Administrator and Ambassador to Denmark. Tiemann, a political nobody six months ago, traveled 65,000 miles in a vigorous campaign that brought him face to face with 100,000 Nebraskans, and gives him an early edge in the November election. He faces another up-and-comer, Lieutenant Governor Philip C. Sorensen, 32, younger brother of Theodore, John F. Kennedy's longtime aide...