THE NATION: Before the Vote

Just as Ohio's Republican Senatorial Candidate George Bender puckered his lips to begin a curbside television interview in Cleveland, a passerby jeered at him, a Bender admirer took strenuous offense, and in an instant the cameras were staring wide-eyed at the best TV fight in a long while. In Pittsburgh, an orator invoked the gods of Republicanism and was promptly conked on the head by a picture of Dwight Eisenhower, which fell from the wall. In New York, Democrat Averell Harriman may have broken a coarse record by calling the state's G.O.P. leaders liars some 15 times in as many minutes.

Philadelphia's Democratic Mayor Joseph Clark Jr., about to begin a dinner speech, was summoned to an air-raid drill that just happened to be called by Governor John Fine, who just happens to be Republican. Oregon Republicans muttered darkly that someone—a Democrat, no doubt—had punctured the huge "Ike" balloon they planned to float over Portland. John Roosevelt, barnstorming for the Republicans, had an interesting comment: "I come from a traveling family—and the standards are still set by my mother." In New Jersey, Democrat Adlai Stevenson said that Vice President Richard Nixon had campaigned with "smut, smear and slander." In California, Republican Nixon said Stevenson was "snide and snobbish."

All over the U.S., all last week, the Sunday punches were thrown in the last round of the 1954 political campaign.

Fainting Spell. The man in the center of the ring was Dwight Eisenhower. The President's week began with the first televised Cabinet meeting in U.S. history, occasioned by the return of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles from Paris and the signing of new agreements for Western European unity. Reported Dulles: "It is my honest opinion that history will not soon forget the results which came about."

From time to time Dulles was interrupted by Cabinet members, e.g., Treasury Secretary George Humphrey asked what the Paris agreement would cost the U.S. and Dulles replied: "It isn't going to cost us a nickel extra." Later, Dulles confessed that "I was going to say $6 billion. Then Humphrey was going to faint, and we were going to carry him out in front of everybody."

At his first press conference in nearly three months, Ike was concerned about voter apathy. Perhaps, he mused, the people, far from being disenchanted with his Administration, are too well-satisfied to have much interest in the elections. The following evening, the President spoke at a banquet given by the Citizens for Eisenhower Congressional Committee. There was nothing apathetic about his audience, which interrupted him 20 times in 25 minutes with applause.

"We have an America at peace," said Ike. "We have a prosperous America. We have an America whose government is honest and efficient . . . I believe the overwhelming majority of the American people want this kind of progress to continue. Although the presidency is not at stake, this election will have a heavy impact on the future of all our people."

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
JOE LIEBERMAN, a Senator from Connecticut, on his refusal to support a health care reform bill that includes a public option
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
JOE LIEBERMAN, a Senator from Connecticut, on his refusal to support a health care reform bill that includes a public option

Stay Connected with TIME.com