Word: wouldn
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Perhaps so. But it will also demonstrate that many voters--including Republicans--wouldn't like to see a Nixon. Johnson showdown in November...
...sitting down and preaching to us about--plain honesty. Now ask yourself what you really think Kennedy would have done if the vote were only 5 per cent. The answer to that is clear when you recall that he would back nominee even if it were Johnson. I wouldn't and neither I hope would you. Kennedy is unbelievable, and his attempt to take the credit for a bigger win which is already in store for McCarthy in states not so hard to tackle as N.H., by telling his supporters to help McCarthy in states where he is not entered...
...Well, I wouldn't have anything to negotiate with. All I have to run on is my commitment, and what I thought was my integrity as I committed it to people who were prepared to raise this challenge against the Johnson Administration at a time when it seemed to me a lot of other politicians were afraid to come down into the playing field. They were willing to stay up on the mountains and light signal fires and bonfires and dance in the light of the moon. But none of them came down. They weren't even coming...
...March issue of Ramparts was only part way out last week. Newsstand copies went on sale two weeks ago, but 145,000 subscription copies of the magazine were still piled up at the printers in Denver. Reason: Ramparts had run out of money. The post office wouldn't accept its checks, and its subscription-service company wouldn't produce the necessary address labels until a start was made toward clearing up debts of between $20,000 and $25,000. In desperation, Ramparts sent out telegrams and letters to selected subscribers, asking them to chip in at least...
...into homes away from home. Mata Hari, who received her suitors, and betrayed them, at the Athenee, may have been its only guest to face the firing squad. Edsel Ford, John D. Rockefeller II, and Charles Evans Hughes were among its loyal clientele; even today, the Fords and Rockefellers wouldn't dream of staying anywhere else. Greek shipping magnates and the new movie rich wander across its baroque lobbies and take in the view of the Seine and the Eiffel Tower or mingle with the chic luncheon crowd in the garden restaurant, nibbling lobster souffle or "Tournedos Plaza...