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nikoloslvy
02-22-2007, 09:01 PM
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-mazo20feb20,0,7053814.story?coll=la-home-obituaries

the diffrence between gore and nixon

Earl Mazo, 87; Nixon biographer also covered politics for New York papers

From the Washington Post
February 20, 2007


Earl Mazo, a biographer of Richard Nixon and former political correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune and the New York Times, died Saturday at a hospital in Bethesda, Md., of complications from a fall at his Chevy Chase, Md., home. He was 87.

Mazo wrote "Richard Nixon: A Political and Personal Portrait" (1959, reissued and updated with Stephen Hess in 1968), which the Times deemed "far and away the best Nixon study to date — the most detailed and most penetrating."

Mazo knew Nixon in the 1950s when he covered the White House as chief political correspondent for the Herald Tribune. He accompanied Nixon, then vice president, on his 1958 trip to Venezuela and wrote a vivid account of how the Secret Service saved Nixon from a mob intent on dragging him from his car.

Born in Warsaw, Mazo immigrated to the United States as a toddler. He grew up in Charleston, S.C., graduated from Clemson University and served in the Army Air Corps. During World War II, he was a reporter for Stars and Stripes newspaper in Europe. After the war, he worked at newspapers in New Jersey and served one year in the Truman administration as deputy assistant secretary of defense.

In 1951, he joined the Herald Tribune, working in New York until 1956, when he moved to Washington.

When John F. Kennedy won the 1960 presidential race against Nixon, Mazo felt strongly that the Democrats had stolen the election, telling the Washington Post in 2000: "There's no question in my mind that it was stolen. It was stolen like mad. It was stolen in Chicago and in Texas."

Tipped off by reporters in Chicago, Mazo went to the Windy City, obtained lists of voters in precincts that seemed suspicious and started checking their addresses.

"There was a cemetery where the names on the tombstones were registered and voted," he recalled. "I remember a house. It was completely gutted. There was nobody there. But there were 56 votes for Kennedy in that house."

At the urging of Chicago Democrats, Mazo went to Republican areas downstate and looked for fraud there. He found it, but on a smaller scale than in Chicago. He then headed to Texas, where he documented similar Democratic electoral shenanigans. Mazo began writing what he and his editors envisioned as a 12-part series on election fraud. By mid-December 1960, he had published four of the parts, which were reprinted in papers across the country.

Nixon called and asked Mazo to stop writing his series because the country couldn't afford a constitutional crisis at the height of the Cold War.

"I thought he was kidding, but he was serious," Mazo told the Post.

Failing to persuade Mazo, Nixon called the reporter's bosses at the Herald Tribune and implored them to stop running the series. The editors pulled him off the story.

Mazo joined the New York Times in 1964 as national political editor, but after a year switched to Reader's Digest, where he was a roving correspondent.

His wife of 62 years, Rita Vane Mazo, died in 2003. He married Regina Schatz in 2005.

Survivors include Schatz, of Chevy Chase; two children; two stepchildren and 12 grandchildren.

and gore....
book: at any cost

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/customer-reviews/0895262274/ref=cm_rev_sort/103-3166924-5964624?customer-reviews.sort_by=-OverallRating&s=books&x=11&y=8

i own it but i havent read it yet.

Fruit Monkey
02-22-2007, 09:02 PM
SO many words. Readers Digest version anyone?

Sct Ptersns Twn
02-22-2007, 09:04 PM
X2

abudabit
02-22-2007, 09:11 PM
Basically the reporter uncovered massive voter fraud from the Kennedy campaign, and he thought that it was significant enough that Nixon shuld have won.

When John F. Kennedy won the 1960 presidential race against Nixon, Mazo felt strongly that the Democrats had stolen the election, telling the Washington Post in 2000: "There's no question in my mind that it was stolen. It was stolen like mad. It was stolen in Chicago and in Texas."

Tipped off by reporters in Chicago, Mazo went to the Windy City, obtained lists of voters in precincts that seemed suspicious and started checking their addresses.

"There was a cemetery where the names on the tombstones were registered and voted," he recalled. "I remember a house. It was completely gutted. There was nobody there. But there were 56 votes for Kennedy in that house."

At the urging of Chicago Democrats, Mazo went to Republican areas downstate and looked for fraud there. He found it, but on a smaller scale than in Chicago. He then headed to Texas, where he documented similar Democratic electoral shenanigans. Mazo began writing what he and his editors envisioned as a 12-part series on election fraud. By mid-December 1960, he had published four of the parts, which were reprinted in papers across the country.

Nixon called and asked Mazo to stop writing his series because the country couldn't afford a constitutional crisis at the height of the Cold War.

"I thought he was kidding, but he was serious," Mazo told the Post.

Failing to persuade Mazo, Nixon called the reporter's bosses at the Herald Tribune and implored them to stop running the series. The editors pulled him off the story.

nikoloslvy
02-22-2007, 09:21 PM
nixon told him not to run with the story.
he refused so nixon called his boss.

gore did nothing like that.

the reporter just died.

MrBogey
02-22-2007, 09:59 PM
Everyone knows that the election was rigged. Hell, LBJ probably never won a clean election anywhere. That's why LBJ's name pops up so often in the JFK assassination theories because he was such a power-hungry bastard that the idea that he took the job just to line himself up for the top job was not unfathomable.

abudabit
02-22-2007, 10:02 PM
How come he didn't run for a second term when he was president?

Razor Roman
02-22-2007, 10:04 PM
How come he didn't run for a second term when he was president?

Vietnam.
He planned on running but dropped out either really early in the primary season, or very close to the New Hampshire primary.

MrBogey
02-22-2007, 10:07 PM
How come he didn't run for a second term when he was president?

Because he was probably the most hated Christian in America.