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- <text id=93HT1340>
- <link 93XP0476>
- <title>
- Nixon: "Now I Stand"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Nixon Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- November 16, 1960
- "Now I Stand"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> "You do the best you can and then you stand," said Richard
- Milhous Nixon, quoting a sermon he had heard in church on Sunday.
- Added Nixon: "I did the best I can and now I stand." In that
- spirit of fatalism--or resignation--Nixon flew home to
- California on election eve to await the people's judgment, bone-
- tired after a grueling campaign that had taken him 65,000 miles
- and into all 50 states. After a midnight rally and parade in Los
- Angeles, Nixon and wife Pat turned in at the Royal Suite of the
- Ambassador Hotel, rose after only two hours' sleep for an 18-mile
- drive to home-town Whittier--and the day of reckoning.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon voted early (at 7:35 a.m. in a green stucco ranch
- house) so that East Coast afternoon papers would have photographs
- in time, saw to it that he and Pat emerged from the booths at the
- same time, smiled at each other for photographers as they handed
- in their ballots. As his motorcade headed back toward Los
- Angeles, Nixon eluded reporters by switching en route from his
- Cadillac to a white convertible, sped off on a mystery trip that
- took him some 150 miles through sunny Southern California. His
- destination on the most crucial day of his career: Tijuana,
- Mexico, where he lunched (enchiladas, tacos and German beer) with
- Tijuana's mayor, Xicotencatl Leyva Aleman. Nixon stopped by the
- roadside to play touch football briefly with a group of marines
- from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, took time off on the way
- back to show an aide the San Juan Capistrano Mission, gulp down a
- pineapple milk shake at a roadside stand.
- </p>
- <p> Machines or Ike? Nixon napped in his suite for most of the
- afternoon, then settled down to await the results, wearing a
- lounging robe over his shirt and trousers. He got his news mostly
- from staff reports, left the TV set turned off. To Old Pro Nixon,
- the trend was soon all too obvious; long before most of his
- supporters, he realized that he was in trouble. While Nixon
- lieutenants kept up the spirits of 3,000 workers gathered in the
- ballroom below for a "Nixon-Lodge victory night," Nixon nibbled
- on sandwiches, sipped champagne. His personal agony was shared
- with only a few; he did not speak to his mother and family
- gathered in another suite, or to Running Mate Henry Cabot Lodge,
- who himself was getting the bad news at a Republican victory
- rally in Washington's Sheraton-Park Hotel.
- </p>
- <p> As Kennedy's lead piled up, the crowd downstairs cheered
- more wildly at every Nixon rally, shook the hall with shouts of
- "We want Nixon." Campaign Chairman Leonard Hall assured all that
- "this one would be a squeaker." "Who are you going to believe,"
- asked one worker, "those damned lying machines or good old Ike?"
- Disk Jockey Johnny Grant went to the microphone and bellowed:
- "Look, this is not a wake. We are not losing, and we are not
- going to lose." Hope died hard--but by 10 p.m. Pacific time,
- the somber recognition that victory was getting beyond reach hit
- the Nixon crowd. Almost as if by signal, the ballroom quieted,
- and the crowd began to drift away, leaving a loyal claque to see
- out the evening. Two women left in tears.
- </p>
- <p> Challenge of Destiny. There was still enough of a crowd
- left--swelled by returners hoping to see their candidate--to raise
- a mighty roar when Dick and Pat Nixon appeared before the TV
- cameras at 12:17 a.m. Smiling, trying hard to still the crowd,
- Nixon cautiously conceded that "if the present trend continues,
- Senator Kennedy will be the next President of the U.S." He
- congratulated Kennedy, assured him of "my wholehearted support."
- Both parties, said Dick Nixon, should "unite behind our next
- President in seeing that America does meet the challenge that
- destiny has placed upon us." As Nixon talked, Pat, looking gaunt
- and weary, forced a smile even as she gamely blinked back tears.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly afterward, in Washington, Cabot Lodge appeared in a
- hall outside his suite to echo exactly Nixon's sentiments--but
- to indicate clearly that he now considered himself plain Citizen
- Lodge. The campaign, said Lodge, "had tremendous value for its
- own sake," and the U.S. should now "close ranks and show a united
- front before the world."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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