Word: elected
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Besides Springfield, the Yardlings still face the other Ivy freshman teams. The team will not elect a captain until after the Columbia match...
There is much soundness to the tradition, and it is extremely important that President-elect Kennedy understand and sympathize with it. Yet few of the essential differences, in particular the recent ones, can be considered negligible lovers' quarrels...
President-elect Kennedy owes his national victory November 8 largely to the electoral votes of the major industrial states, and these states in turn went Democratic by virtue of sizable Kennedy majorities in the big cities like New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Detroit. Thus, while Kennedy can without undue cynicism scrap the farm program the Midwest rejected, he cannot in good conscience go back on his promises of housing and urban renewal for the cities. His debt to them is too great...
...24th District were planning to write in his name as Democratic candidate for the state legislature. Promptly he asked his bishop, the Most Rev. Francis D. Gleeson, S.J., who told him it was all right to take the job provided that he did nothing to get himself elected. The final count: 210 for Father Llorente, 93 and 91 for his two opponents. At this point, Bishop Gleeson began to have second thoughts-especially in a year when Protestant-Catholic tensions had become an election issue. He asked Representative-elect Llorente to resign, and the priest dutifully sent his bishop...
Just about everybody--most important President-elect Kennedy's task force on education--now considers education of permanent interest to the Federal Government and of personal concern to the President. Die-hard states-righters will attempt to limit the degree of that "permanent interest," but through the efforts of Mr. Kennedy and his administration, 1961 should mark the time when Washington plays a much bigger role in educating Americans...