Word: alabama
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...housing law and new taxes. Neither contender openly courted Kentucky's segregationists, but both gleaned more votes from that quarter than Conservative Candidate Christian Glanz Jr., who was seeking 2% of the total vote in order to qualify his party for the 1968 presidential ballot and thereby qualify Alabama's George Wallace for a third-party spot. Nunn received 449,788 votes, Ward 423,189-and Glanz a scant 5,169, barely half of 1%. Thus Kentucky's vote in effect was for moderation...
...room with six varsity football players sounds like something from Bear Bryant Hall at Alabama, and it is unique at Harvard. But if you look closely you find a pattern that describes the average senior conglomeration: varying personalities with underlying common interests. And in the best House system tradition, there is a cross-section of sorts, ranging here from a sure-bet All-Ivy to a seldom-playing assistant coach's assistant...
...when he dressed up like a hillbilly for a high school skit, he was funnier than a bowlegged mule. But later on, after he graduated from the University of Alabama and worked for a spell in New York City as a typist, he came back with a highfalutin accent, and no body thought he was funny any more...
...Zellner, first white person on the SNCC Staff (1961), will meet with students at 1 p.m. today in PBH. Zellner is currently organizing poor whites in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama...
...chart her way to power not seven minutes distant, not five miles off. In this Harvard shows itself no different perhaps than the society of which it is a product. No more and no less than the white bigot of South Boston, or the raw-voiced howling redneck of Alabama, the genial scholars of education and urban problems leave their offices at Harvard, step into their attractive little cars and drive off to their isolated white homes in segregated suburbs...