OCR Text |
Show fc ' ZiJi- - J . .' ' . r ; : j- - : J : . ZT' ! t , SkV.- - :r -- V- - ' , ,J: -- l ; , r 1 : tvt. 1 S- -. : - 1 . - jllsHiliTO ' zrA y i Observer-Dispatc- h fegl selected-c- ar and attacked the newspapers in lt fashion. Mason Taylor; said the hatchet- n men, was (Utica has a large Italian population) ; he also 1 j Vh ' jT anti-Italia- anti-Cathol- w, anti- - ic, Protestant, dependingon vhowai listening. The newspapers had "perverted the truth, influenced jurors, defamed innocent persons." Whether the campaign, waged by whispers and a party "newspaper was effective was impossible to gauge. Only bal lot counting could tell pre-electi- on fu " mm ffla<egjuieldaadeavl First returns showed it would be a close election, and the loser could pretty well be sure his influence in Utica was ending. Taylor admits to being a little nervous as he drove back to work that g. Suddenly a bulletin flashed ve-nin- 'CsTiertrtsrzttcstttraisI"" "oTeTHsHrnraaloltest returns flgwspsrbcjf teventk at Disneyland 0 tii fltnn indicate that Frank Dulan has won wr upset victory . nfag'atrcpporta to win a Chrysler Corporation Valiant 4 Door Sedan, a mountain cf Revsll I HE the-new- -- Hcby editor stopped his car and 3,500-vo- te Convention the Valiant and thsnpHor - iscmadotlhrCcn around the world via Qantas Airlines; trips to the Seattle World's Fair; Airlines; 4icularly tncycicpaega Entanrica sets? plurality with the ity in the long-dorma- nt League of Women Voters and the St newCttizensnAssati6n jerJUtica,, brought about a redis- tricting of city wards and an end toirymandering --- :z:-. startedcleanups val in both political parties; young inurffents. for exflnrhlfi. hpcan to campaign to oust the machine bosses who had disgraced their organization, and just jecently siioceedenlectingwrence T- :.;i.--f-L::-:-- 10 FamHi Weekly, April 22, 1HZ - insurance Gilroy, a executive, as county chairman. 38-year-- old " the 0Mm;4MspaK iisoh the Xxand Daily Press, they won journalism's highest honor, the Pulitzer Prize, "for disinterested and meritorious public service.' When votes were counted in the November, 1961, election, Utica showed it liked the new look. Du- lan was by a large ma jority,, and his party took control of the city council. "Sin City was yesterday's news. So was citizen apathy. The local Chamber of Commerce now offers a practical-politic- s course. In three years, more than 350 per-sohave completed it andnuL the lessons to use. Civic vigor broughtidbttsiness vigor, too. John Grier. a Utica "When a community is well run, it keeps the cost of re-elect- ns itniblrtorhrdastry and in pete, this, more jobs. turn, creates this: eupamSTj"No bn the campaignlike wants stir thsir cc?r.p!sted .model m an actual race. kmmg fee ether spectacular awards to a Family Trip to Brazil via Varig was partial, a council stiU in cont chine. Burthe had been endorsed by the people, and the war was no longer one- sided. Over a period of three years. 23 indictments and 21 con victions were obtained by JPischer. The resource of civic pride, par- - . The-uphea- doingHustnessownThisrmakes ss "Man's victory Sweejstakeseietittsir lM and Press hear news 0 Pulitzer Prize; salesman Frank Dulan as reform rrrr: candidate; I he machine took no chances anti-Je- 1 (Continued from page 7) newspaper exposes was V.: I below-the-be- UUilLliii i t Editors 0 the .. '. L- d rl x 5 5 : : 4: f , rrrrr-- . ' .n 1 -- v j I - , ; W - I to un about its home town, hnt jn newspaper dirt most cities the newspaper is the yrotection-people-have-wh- en- local law breaks down. We horw we never win another Pulitzer Prize if it means putting certain aspectsTrfiPTira'tvin a rKnrKtz wouldhesitater either, if corrup- tion were driving out honestliusiV ness and honest citizens." ' |