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'Not Compromise Candidate,' Warren Says; Cannot Address University Republicans

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Governor Earl Warren of California discounted speculations in an interview with the CRIMSON yesterday afternoon, that he was hoping for a deadlock between General Dwight D. Eisenhower and Senator Robert A. Taft to gain the Republican presidential nomination. Warren had been scheduled to address the Harvard Young Republican Club today, but was forced to cancel the talk.

Commenting on the fact that a number of magazines have claimed he expects to get the G.O.P. nomination as a compromise. Warren said. "You can't keep people from expressing their views." Pressed further, he stated, "I hope to have my name submitted to the convention without regard to what happens to the other candidates."

Speaking of the jibes that G.O.P. hopefuls have been aiming at each other, Warren declared, "the less we have of candidates talking about one another, the better for the party."

John B. Harrington 3L, president of the H.R.Y.C., regretted Warren's inability to speak to the University Republicans. He explained that the Governor had to fly back to California early this morning.

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