维奇在尼克松讲话时观察了他,觉得他是个顾家的好男人,看起来正如自己所期望的那样热情而友好。她之后表示自己挥动标语牌的时候甚至没来得及朝上面看上一眼,直到一位同学拿标语取笑她,这位同学揶揄称“让我们重新团结起来”(Bring Us Together Again,也可理解为“再让我们在一起”)指的是男孩子们,与政治无关。维奇之后留下了竞选广告裙,但告诉媒体自己扔掉了那张标语牌。[8][a]
来自加利福尼亚州伯班克的14岁女孩卡拉·加里蒂(Carla Garrity)认为科尔没有做出任何值得受此礼遇的功劳,因此对其全家得以参加新总统就职典礼表示反对。她在给自己国会选区联邦众议员埃德·赖内克(Ed Reinecke)的信中写道,自己曾非常努力地为尼克松及其他共和党候选人工作,“因此,我非常反对一个俄亥俄州的13岁女孩只是举了块‘让我们团结起来’的牌子就获邀参加就职典礼。那牌子甚至都不是她写了,她连看都没看!”[26]赖内克将这封信转交给了尼克松的助手约翰·埃利希曼,并附有自己的评论:“我猜在尼克松竞选团体中工作的其他年轻人可能也会有卡拉这样的反应。”[27]尼克松的另一位助手查尔斯·E·斯图尔特(Charles E. Stuart)向赖内克回复道:“维奇·琳恩并不是因为她举起了那句标语或是因为制作了一句标语而被邀请参加就职典礼,而是因为事实证明她举起的这句标语给了尼克松先生一种鼓舞。”他还表示自己相信这一邀请会在其他拥护尼克松的年轻人中得到良好的回响[28]。
^Mickelson, Sig, The Electric Mirror: Politics in an Age of Television, New York, N.Y.: Dodd, Mead: 103, 1972, ISBN 978-0-396-06363-6
^Morris, Roger, Richard Milhous Nixon: The Rise of an American Politician, New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt and Company: 808–809, 1990, ISBN 978-0-8050-1834-9
^ 6.06.16.26.3Ionne, Joe, Vicki hopes to see Nixon inaugurated, The Columbus Dispatch, 1968-11-09: 26A
^Girl gave Nixon theme(PDF), The Washington Post, 1968-11-07 [2009-05-05], (原始内容存档(PDF)于2011-06-29)
^Deshler youngster's sign provides Nixon with motto, Northwest Signal (Napoleon, Ohio), 1968-11-07: 1, I wanted a sign to wave. I had lost my own placard and as the crowd moved forward as the train approached I saw this sign lying in the street and I just picked it up and held it high, hoping Mr. Nixon would see it.
^ 11.011.111.2Nixon promises changes to large Deshler throng, Northwest Signal (Napoleon, Ohio), 1968-10-24: 1
^Nixon train draws big, orderly crowd, The Deshler Flag, 1968-10-24: 1
^Tight security precautions feature Nixon Deshler stop, Northwest Signal (Napoleon, Ohio), 1968-10-24: 1, his roots are here and mine are too!
^Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, 1968 speech files, October 22 (Deshler)
^ 16.016.116.216.3Safire, William, On Language ("The Way Forward"), The New York Times, 2007-09-02 [2013-11-28], (原始内容存档于2013-12-19), There's a little kid out there with a hand-lettered sign that I think says 'Bring Us Together'.
^Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, 1968 speech files October 22 (Toledo), October 23
^ 19.019.119.2Evans, Rowland; Novak, Robert, Nixon in the White House: The Frustration of Power, New York, N.Y.: Random House: 33–34, 1971, ISBN 978-0-394-46273-8, I saw many signs in this campaign, some of them were not friendly; some were very friendly. But the one that touched me the most was one that I saw in Deshler, Ohio, at the end of a long day of whistle-stopping. A little town. I suppose five times the population was there in the dusk. It was almost impossible to see, but a teenager held up a sign, "Bring Us Together." And that will be the great objective of this administration at the outset, to bring the American people together.
^Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, 1968 speech files, November 6.
^ 21.021.1Who made that sign?, Northwest Signal (Napoleon, Ohio), 1968-11-08: 4
^Garrity, Carla, Letter to Congressman Ed Reinecke(PDF), Nixon Presidential Returned Materials Collection: White House Special Files (WHSF) Box 19, Folder 3 (Virtual Library) (Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum), 1968-11-17 [2013-11-28], (原始内容存档(PDF)于2012-09-23), Therefore, I am very much against that 13-year old girl in Ohio who held up the sign 'Bring us Together' being invited to the inaugural. She didn't even read or write it!
^Reinecke, Ed, Memo to John Ehrlichman(PDF), Nixon Presidential Returned Materials Collection: White House Special Files (WHSF) (Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum), 1968-12-03 [2013-11-28], (原始内容存档(PDF)于2012-09-23), I suspect that Carla's reaction may be shared by other young people who worked in the Nixon campaign
^Stuart, Charles E., Letter to Congressman Ed Reinecke(PDF), Nixon Presidential Returned Materials Collection: White House Special Files (WHSF) Box 19, Folder 3 (Virtual Library) (Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum), 1968-12-17 [2013-11-28], (原始内容存档(PDF)于2012-09-23), Vicki Lynne has been invited to the inauguration not because she carried the sign, or even because she made the sign, but rather because the sign which she did carry proved to be an inspiration to Mr. Nixon.
^Sidey, Hugh, Nixon in a crisis of leadership, Life, 1970-05-15, 68: 28–29