Word: inde
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Mono Lisa. It is a certainty of American demography that just as Gibson is not the first black mayor of a large city, he will not be the last. In Cleveland, Carl Stokes became mayor with the help of 19% of the white vote; in Gary, Ind., Richard Hatcher won with 12% of the white voters on his side. Like Gibson, they are the products of poverty, determination and faith in the political process. In the future, there will be more Ken Gibsons, if present trends continue: the rise of black population in central cities and the white flight...
According to police and newspaper reports at the time, Flanagan attacked Elrod with a pipe, breaking his neck. But according to two witnesses, Elrod's injuries are the result of his own actions, not Flanagan's. Richard Hinchion, 43, an insulating contractor from Munster, Ind., says that Flanagan was running from the police when Elrod, apparently responding to a cry of "Stop that man!" joined the chase. Attempting a football-style block, he bowled Flanagan over, then crashed headfirst into the wall of a restaurant. Michael Rollins, 35, a reporter for Chicago radio station WCFL, confirms Hinchion...
...Elkhart, Ind...
...Biochemical Sciences): William R. Galeota, Jr., of Columbia, Mo., and Lowell House (Social Studies); Jerry Gechter, Pacific Palisades, Calif., and Lowell House (Mathematics); Jerald R. Gerst, of Yarmouth. lowa and Adams House (Social Studies): Larry E. Goad, of Louisville, Ky., and Winthrop House (Astronomy): Mark F. Gerzon, of Indianapolis. Ind??, and Dudley House (Social Studies); Stephen Paul Gold?n, of Swampscott and Kirkland House: Henry Greenspan H of New York and Winthrop House (History and Literature); Roger P. Guthrie, of Napa, Calif., and Eliot House (Chemistry); James B. Haley of Nevada City, Calif., and Eliot House (Classics...
Coming from Richard Hatcher, the black mayor of Gary, Ind., the analysis of urban machine politics was a bit startling. In an address in Washington, Hatcher said: "However well or poorly Mayor Daley may use his authority, the actions of America's last great political machine, in Chicago, demonstrate convincingly that patronage politics at least provides a way to get things done...