Word: connors
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Connor, on the other hand, will probably have three boroughs' delegations sewed up: Brooklyn, the Bronx, and Queens. How he will get the rest is another question, but he showed himself capable of clever maneuvering when he abandoned the mayor's race and agreed to take the number two spot on the Beame Team. That is, he got out of a race with a tough primary and a tough November election and jumped into a primary he won by a mile and a general election in which he easily (by 436,000 votes, while Lindsay was winning...
...returns unexpectedly and bumps into her again. Ashamed to admit that she lives in a depressed area (Washington Square, apparently), Sandra lets him escort her "home" to his flat, saying it's hers. The rest is a comedy of confusion involving His harried boss (Donald O'Connor), Her door-slamming roommate (Nita Talbot), some cozy dinners (duck a I'orange) and other misfortunes. Put them all together, they add up to Funny Feeling. Take a couple of aspirins first and it'll hardly be noticed...
Thomas S. Eisenstadt. Joseph Lee Jr., and William E. O'Connor, three incumbents who have agreed with Mrs. Hicks on most racial issues, ran behind her in the early balloting but ahead of the five-man Citizens for Boston Schools slat-supported by civil rights leaders...
Today in the School Committee elections Bostonians face a clear choice between progress and stagnation. Mrs. Louise Day Hicks and her confederates William O'Connor and Thomas Eisenstadt propose to ignore the fact that Negro enrollment rose by 1900 last year, and white enrollment fell by 1500; they encourage the belief that all Negro children can be crammed into Roxbury's ancient schools...
...Hicks, O'Connor, and Eisenstadt ignore the new Massachusetts Racial Imbalance Law. Their fellow incumbent Joseph Lee proposes to comply with it by shipping Negro children out to suburban school systems...