1964 Republican National Convention - Factbites
 Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: 1964 Republican National Convention


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


Related Topics

In the News (Wed 16 Dec 09)

  
 List of Republican National Conventions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This convention was known as the National Union Convention.
This convention was known as the Union-Republican Party Convention.
This is a list of United States Republican Party
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_Republican_National_Conventions

  
 CNN/AllPolitics.com - Election 2000 - The Republican National Convention
Hamlin, an influential anti-slavery senator from the state of Maine, caused a national stir in 1856 when he abruptly announced his resignation from the Democratic Party and joined the fledgling Republicans.
Republicans urged him to withdraw from the 1952 race, and Eisenhower considered dropping Nixon from the ticket.
Distinguished Republicans such as Hannibal Hamlin, Abraham Lincoln's first vice president; Schuyler Colfax, who served in the first term of Ulysses S. Grant; and William Wheeler, who was vice president to Rutherford B. Hayes, were seldom heard from during and after their vice presidencies.
www.cnn.com /ELECTION/2000/conventions/republican/features/running.mates

  
 Washingtonpost.com: Barry Goldwater Dead at 89
Barry Goldwater, right, poses with running mate William Miller at the 1964 Republican National Convention in San Francisco.
Goldwater observed that his run for the presidency in 1964 "was like trying to stand up in a hammock." He said he knew that his chances of winning were slim and contended that his fellow Republicans cost him any chance he might have had during the battle for the Republican nomination.
Long before his retirement, he had come to be regarded as the Grand Old Man of the Republican Party and one of the nation's most respected exponents of conservatism, which he sometimes defined as holding on to that which was tested and true and opposing change simply for the sake of change.
www.washingtonpost.com /wp-srv/politics/daily/may98/goldwater30.htm

  
 Illinois’ U.S. Senate race offers voters a choice and an echo by Peggy Boyer Long - Illinois Issues
Though the nature of conservatism has evolved, the spirit of the 1964 Republican convention is alive and well — and it arrived in Illinois with a vengeance in August when conservatives sidelined moderates by inviting Keyes to be their candidate for the U.S. Senate.
The state’s Republican right controls the party podium; voters face a clear ideological choice in the U.S. Senate race; and, though there is little doubt as to the outcome, the campaign promises to become one of the more fascinating set pieces in Illinois’ already-storied past.
He told Washington Post reporter Lloyd Grove in 1998, “When you say ‘radical right’ today, I think of these moneymaking ventures by fellows like Pat Robertson and others who are trying to take the Republican Party, and make a religious organization out of it.
illinoisissues.uis.edu /editor/choice.html

  
 CNN/AllPolitics.com - Election 2000 - The Republican National Convention
Republican Party rules are changed for the first time to elect women to the national committee, with one man and one woman to be chosen from each state and territory.
Ulysses S. Grant is the only candidate placed in nomination at the Republican convention, and, for the first time, one candidate wins 100 percent of the Republican votes on the first ballot.
Prior to the presidential roll call, he declared that he would accept the nomination of a progressive party if he could capture the nomination of an honestly elected majority at the Republican convention.
www.cnn.com /ELECTION/2000/conventions/republican/features/convention.history

  
 NPR's Election 2000 Coverage: Republican National Convention
Hear speakers from past Republican Conventions -- Eisenhower and Dirksen in 1952 -- Goldwater in 1964 -- Reagan and Ford in 1976 -- and Bush in 1988.
Leading up to the 1952 Republican national convention in Chicago, the GOP had lost five elections in a row.
Republicans, said Dirksen in a fiery speech, no longer need to listen to Dewey.
www.npr.org /news/national/election2000/conventions/past.eisenhower.html

  
 How I got into the 1964 Republican National Convention
How I got into the 1964 Republican National Convention
After I received my Scranton hat and my Scranton sign, I got on the bus, where we were all taken to the Cow Palace in San Francisco where the Republican National Convention was being held.
Then, after signing, we were given a Scranton hat and a Scranton sign, before we got on the bus to take us to the convention.
www.ishipress.com /1964repu.htm

  
 WHMC-Columbia--Ginn, Rosemary Lucas (1912- ), Papers, 1950-1985 (C3964)--INVENTORY
In 1972 Ginn was appointed to the Rules Committee of the Republican National Committee which was charged with reviewing the rules for the selection/election of vice-presidential candidates at national conventions and the process of choosing convention delegates.
She was named a permanent member of the Republican National Committee for Missouri in 1960 and was a member of its Executive Committee from 1962 to 1964.
She became involved with the Republican Party at the state and local levels in the 1940s and 1950s acting as secretary at the Missouri Republican Convention and as an alternate delegate at the Republican National Convention in 1956.
www.umsystem.edu /whmc/invent/3964.html

  
 R.html
See also Barry Goldwater, The Republican National Convention, 1964 and "Proto Funky Chicken." Ref., Lord Nelson.
pweb.jps.net /~mythology/R.html

  
 Newsday.com - 2004 Republican National Convention
called the Democratic Party "racist" in its appeal to blacks yesterday and was seconded by his African-American lieutenant governor, whom the Republicans are showcasing today in a prime-time speech at their national convention.
Republican officials carefully avoided using the same language as Ehrlich in describing the relationship between blacks and Democrats yesterday but said they welcomed a re-examination of party ties.
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend tossed Oreo cookies at Steele during the lone gubernatorial debate in 2002, a symbolic slur that suggested because he was a Republican, he was white on the inside and black on the outside.
www.newsday.com /news/politics/rnc/bal-te.ehrlich31aug31,0,7633472.story?coll=ny-breakingnews-topspan

  
 The Impact of the Draft Goldwater Committee on the Republican Party by Jay D. Hartz
In 1960, the republican National committee had reconstituted the committee selection process to give more incentive for women to participate at the national convention.
Republicans even picked up seats in state legislatures that had not seen Republicans since Reconstruction.
Republicans had retained all their southern congressional seats and added five new House seats.
www.ashbrook.org /articles/hartz-draftgoldwater.html

  
 NPR's Election 2000 Coverage: Republican National Convention
Barry Goldwater, an outspoken Arizona senator and conservative hero, clearly had his nomination wrapped up long before Republicans opened their 1964 national convention at the Cow Palace in San Francisco.
Other moderates rallied behind Pennsylvania Governor William Scranton to challenge Goldwater and what they called his "absurd and dangerous positions." Scranton forces threw down the gantlet: they wanted an open debate at the convention between the two.
The Arizona senator then delivered a speech that stubbornly stuck to his conservative principles as he blasted Democrats, led by President Lyndon Johnson, for being soft on communism, weak on national security, and spurring the moral decline of the nation.
www.npr.org /news/national/election2000/conventions/past.goldwater.html

  
 CNN Transcript - Sunday: Republican National Convention: Traditional Quarrels Unlikely to Surface This Year - July 30, 2000
BRUCE MORTON, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Some Republican conventions left scars: 1964 when Barry Goldwater's conservatives booed moderate Republican Nelson Rockefeller, for instance.
Republican National Convention: Traditional Quarrels Unlikely to Surface This Year
CNN Transcript - Sunday: Republican National Convention: Traditional Quarrels Unlikely to Surface This Year - July 30, 2000
fyi.cnn.com /TRANSCRIPTS/0007/30/sun.05.html

  
 Phi Gamma Delta's Political Leaders
Arnett, Foster D. (Tennessee 1946) - Republican National Convention delegate 1964.
Convention Delegate 1868, 1872, 1876, 1884; Republican National Committee 1872, National Republican Executive Committee 1876-1889; State Representative 1872, State Senator 1874, State Attorney General candidate 1875, Kentucky.
Kellogg, James Young Corey (Washington 1903, Columbia 1905) - Republican National Convention delegate 1936, Washington.
www.phigam.org /history/Lists/Politics/politicos.htm

  
 1992 Republican National Convention
Sorry, no screened links relevant to 1992 Republican National Convention were found.
The 1992 Republican National Convention was held in the
The convention is most remembered for the perception it generated of a Republican Party dominated by radicals.
omniknow.com /essays/1992_Republican_National_Convention.html

  
 Daly City on Encyclopedia.com
The “Cow Palace,” scene of the 1964 Republican national convention, is there.
Kim Piechowski of San Francisco, left, and Pat Maginnis, from Oakland, protest outside the 2003 Grand National Rodeo in Daly City, California October 25, 2003.
Settled in 1906 by refugees from the San Francisco earthquake, Daly City is still primarily residential and marked by a steady growth in population since the 1970s.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/D/DalyC1ity.asp

  
 Encyclopedia: List of Republican National Conventions
1964 Republican National Convention San Francisco, California Barry Goldwater / William E. Miller L
1960 Republican National Convention Chicago, Illinois Richard Nixon / Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.
1996 Republican National Convention San Diego, California Bob Dole / Jack Kemp L*
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/List-of-Republican-National-Conventions

  
 New Bridge Built for Republican National Convention - New York Bridges
New Bridge Built for Republican National Convention - New York Bridges
The Republican National Convention comes to town in just nine months.
To the anarcho-bureaucratic protest movement, the Republican convention is the opportunity of a lifetime.
www.nymetro.com /nymetro/news/rnc/9504/index.html

  
 2004 Republican National Convention NYC Oklahoma
He served as a delegate to Republican conventions in 1980, 1984, 1992, 2000, and is proud to serve again at this year's convention.
He has attended every convention since 1964 either as a Delegate, Alternate, or Aide to the Delegation
Skip Healey is small business owner is the agriculture, forestry, and fishing industries.
www.2004nycgop.org /oklahoma

  
 The Political Graveyard: Arkansas Delegation to 1964 Republican National Convention
The Political Graveyard: Arkansas Delegation to 1964 Republican National Convention
The coverage of the site includes certain federal officials, state officeholders and candidates in all 50 states, state and national political party officials, federal and state judges, and mayors (including candidates at election for mayor) of qualifying cities.
The site opened on July 1, 1996; the last full revision was done on September 1, 2003.
politicalgraveyard.com /parties/R/1964/AR.html

  
 2004 Republican National Convention
Republicans Announce Convention Jockeys to Host 2004 Republican National Convention
Remarks by The Honorable Bob Beauprez (CO-07) as Prepared for Delivery at the 2004 Republican National Convention on Monday, August 30, 2004
Remarks by Melissa Brown as Prepared for Delivery at the 2004 Republican National Convention on Monday, August 30, 2004
www.prnewswire.com /gh/cnoc/comp/638366.html

  
 IOWA WOMEN'S ARCHIVES - Mary Louise Smith Papers
In 1964, Smith won a hard-fought three-way battle for the position of Republican National Committeewoman from Iowa, replacing Anna Lomas, who stepped down that year.
In 1974, President Gerald Ford named Mary Louise Smith to chair the Republican National Committee, the first woman to hold this appointment.
            The Republican Party series (1960s-1984) represents the major part of Smith's papers (12 linear feet), and is divided into three major subseries: the Iowa Republican party; the National Republican party; and Republican women's clubs and organizations.
sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu /iwa/findingaids/html/SmithMaryLouise.htm

  
 Republican Party National Convention
Location : Microfilm JK 2351 R4 Scope: These are the official reports of the proceedings of the 1st-29th Republican National Conventions, 1856-1964.
For more information on the Republican National Conventions see: Republican Campaign Text Book, 1880-1940
library.truman.edu /microforms/republican_party_convention.htm

  
 Special Collections, Langsdale Library
Certificate of Delegates - Maryland Republican State Convention - 1958
Republican Candidates 5th City Council District - 1963
Schedule of Dinner, Rallies, and Larger Meetings - 1964
archives.ubalt.edu /web/web4_1.htm

  
 AU Archives -- Guide to the Alabama Republican Party Records, RG 545
Republican National Committee Analysis, 1964, Why Not Victory in Alabama?
Scope / Content: Official records of the Alabama Republican Party, including administrative office files; attorney's papers; convention files; subject files (1960-1984); contribution and pledge files (1971-1977); publications and general campaign materials (1970-1984); Young Republican Federation of Alabama files (1965-1971); resumes and files on elected officials, both Republican and Democrat; photographs; and clippings
Republican Dinner Speech of Senator Carl T. Curtis and Photographs- March 25, 1977
www.lib.auburn.edu /archive/find-aid/545.htm

  
 The Dirksen Center - Promoting a Better Understanding of Congress and Its Leaders
The first program contains portions of two interviews conducted in 1964 and 1967where Sen. Dirksen talks about his childhood, the 1952 Republican National Convention, his work on the 1964 Civil Rights Act, and his relationships with President John Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson.
The second program features a 1964 interview with NBC's Len O'Connor during which the Senate Minority Leader discusses his family, his start in public service, his relationships with President John Kennedy and President Lyndon Johnson, his role at the 1952 Republican National Convention, and the 1964 presidential race (audio courtesy of the Chicago Historical Society).
Scanned copies of Senate documents which contain the texts of the leaders' press statements following weekly Republican congressional leadership meetings, 1961-68.
www.dirksencenter.org /print_emd_features.htm   (389 words)

  
 James D. Squires papers, (MC 20)
Squires served as a delegate to the 1952, 1954 and 1964 Republican National Conventions.
Additional material relating to the Republican platform is included in the 1964 Convention material, since Squires was a member of the platform committee that year.
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE: The James Duane Squires Papers consist of correspondence and materials dealing with Squires's participation in the 1952, 1956 and 1964 Republican National Conventions as a delegate for the State of New Hampshire.
www.izaak.unh.edu /specoll/mancoll/squires.htm   (389 words)

  
 Republican Party National Convention
Location: Microfilm JK 2351 R4 Scope: These are the official reports of the proceedings of the 1st-29th Republican National Conventions, 1856-1964.
Index Republican National Conventions: 1856-1968 (Microfilm JK 2351 R4 1856-1964 Index)
For more information on the Republican National Conventions see: Republican Campaign Text Book, 1880-1940
library.truman.edu /microforms/republican_party_convention.htm   (389 words)

  
 RNC for Life Report -- July/August 1996 - No. 11
She was an elected Delegate to six previous Republican National Conventions: 1956, 1964, 1968, 1984, 1988, 1992, and an elected Alternate Delegate to two other Republican National Conventions: 1960 and 1980.
RNC/Life national chairman Phyllis Schlafly was elected a Delegate to the Republican National Convention in San Diego from the 2nd District of Missouri.
RNC/Life board member Morton Blackwell was re-elected to his third four-year term as Republican National Committeeman at the Virginia Republican Convention in a hot contest.
www.rnclife.org /reports/1996/july96/july.html   (389 words)

  
 Katharine Kennedy Brown Papers
Brown, as leader of Ohio's Republican women, the largest GOP women's organization in the country, opposed the entrance of Ohio into a national federation, and was able, for a time, to keep her Ohio organization separate.
In 1942, she was elected a member of the Executive Committee of the Republican National Committee and served in that capacity until 1952.
She became a member of the Republican State Committee of Ohio in 1928, representing the 3rd Congressional District, a position to which she was elected every two years for forty years.
www.libraries.wright.edu /staff/dunbar/arch/ms146.old.htm   (389 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.