Word: elected
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...amendment would allow the Freshman Council to appoint three H.C.U.A. members for the Fall term. The freshman class would elect representatives to serve during the Spring and remain in office through the following Fall...
...Republican, but calls himself an independent. Proxmire did add that the Democrats will have lots of other attractive possibilities in '68, when Jack Kennedy will, under the Constitution, be disallowed from seeking a third term. Among Proxmire's nominations: Attorney General Robert Kennedy and Massachusetts' Senator-elect Teddy Kennedy...
When President-elect Kennedy began looking for a Budget Director in late 1960, Lawyer Clark Clifford, who had been Harry Truman's No. 1 White House aide, told Kennedy that he knew of a man superlatively qualified for the job. Clifford reeled off a long list of qualifications and virtues. "And who is this paragon?'' asked Kennedy. Bell, of course...
Memories of Mississippi. Odds are that at least one of the Negro applicants, probably Gantt, will make it in time for spring semester in February. Is the prospect peace-or another Ole Miss mess? Last week Alabama's Governor-elect George C. Wallace rattled his battle plans in a speech before the Mississippi state legislature. "All that I am advocating is that these forces of evil bridle themselves in their lustful desires to destroy the South," he said. Like Mississippi's Ross Barnett ("your gallant Governor"), Alabama's Wallace hopes to foil desegregation by making himself "chief...
...South Carolina, a state so proud of its colonial past that it is often said to regret the American Revolution. South Carolina has always preferred a polite white supremacy to redneck ruffianism. Unlike Mississippi, it is run by gentlemen to whom disgrace is far worse than desegregation. Governor-elect Donald S. Russell, former president of the university, paid only lip service to segregation in his campaign...