Word: sanfords
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...special schools, new and planned, are biracial, and on the score of desegregation the state's big cities and its university have led the South. But rural areas are so segregated that even now only one-half of 1% of Negro pupils go to school with whites. Sanford is not proud of that fact, but apparently feels that it was hard enough to get his new tax through the assembly without also trying to push desegregation by faster means than the present case-by-case court tests...
...Sanford's campaign as "education Governor" has meant a 50% jump in the school budget, to a four-year total of $1.14 billion. The state has risen from 46th place to 42nd in spending per pupil. The 1963 assembly not only added to the previous budget for public schools, but also voted for three new four-year colleges and a statewide system of two-year community colleges. Industrial investments of almost $600 million came in during Sanford's first two years, and he credits the lure of better schools. Says the Ford Foundation's admiring President Henry...
...back row are Sanford H. von Mayrhauser '65, of Leverett House and Worcester, advertising manager; Donal Holway '64, of Adams House and Darien, Conn., photographic chairman; and Donald M. Graham '66, of Winthrop House and Washington, D.C., sports editor...
...clock jam-up in the Houses has been one of the chief dining hall problems this year," commented Sanford J. Ungar '66, chairman of the HCUA group. Ungar said that opening the Union for the short period before noon should allow many upperclassmen to attend noon classes without being delayed in the 1 o'clock lines...
Running unopposed in Kirkland House was Michael E. Abram '66, a former Council representative. Sanford J. Ungar '66 won uncontested in Winthrop House. Leverett House witnessed a tight battle between William J. Billick '65 and Evan Davis '66, with Billick winning by a small margin...