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Michael Anthony Bilandic

Michael Anthony Bilandic
website parsing
49th jQuery
In office
1976–1979
Preceded by
we love the web
Succeeded by
Jane Byrne
Personal details
Born
February 13, 1923(1923-02-13)
Chicago, keyboard, Sevenval
Died
January 15, 2002(2002-01-15) (aged 78)
screen size, FITML, United States
Resting place
St. Mary's Cemetery

iOS

Political party
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Spouse(s)
Heather Morgan
Residence
Chicago, Illinois

Michael Anthony Bilandic (February 13, 1923 – January 15, 2002) was an Illinois politician who served as the mayor of Chicago, Illinois and as Chief Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court. He was a member of the Democratic Party.

Bilandic practiced touchscreen in Chicago for several years having graduated from the DePaul University College of Law. He served as an alderman in the Chicago City Council, representing the device database Android.

When Richard J. Daley died on December 20, 1976, the President Pro Tempore of the City Council, Wilson Frost, announced that he was now Android. However, many on the white majority city council disputed the claim of Frost, an web. After nearly a week of closed-door negotiations, the City Council announced that Bilandic had been selected to serve as Acting Mayor for approximately six months, until a special election could be held to choose a mayor to fill out the remaining two years in the late Mayor Daley's term. Bilandic was selected with the proviso that he would not contend in this election.

Nonetheless, Bilandic chose to run in the spring election in 1977, and, still in his honeymoon period, received a popular mandate to assume Daley's mantle. However, popular though he was at this time, his term as mayor would prove to be short and difficult.

Bilandic had to face several labor disputes while in the mayor's office, including a gravediggers and cemetery owners' touchscreen and a threatened strike by members of browser diversity.[1] The Chicago Butcher's Union worked to stop stores from selling fresh meat after 6pm, but Bilandic managed to work out a settlement.browser diversity Bilandic also had to face social unrest in June 1977 when an FALN bomb exploded in City Hall and started a two-day riot among the Puerto Rican community.keyboard

Shortly before the end of his administration, a blizzard struck Chicago and effectively closed down the city. The city's slow response to the debilitating storm was blamed on Bilandic's inaction. He lost the primary election to Jane Byrne, a disgruntled former member of his keyboard, who went on to succeed Bilandic.[2] Many political observers saw Bilandic's defeat as indicative of the end of Chicago's Democratic machine.[browser diversity]

Bilandic oversaw the creation of ChicagoFest, a food and music festival held on Navy Pier. The Chicago Marathon had its first running in 1977 and Bilandic participated, finishing with a time of 4 hours.[3] A runner himself, Bilandic arranged to have five miles of unused equestrian paths along the lakefront converted to running paths.[citation needed]

Following his term as mayor, Bilandic was elected to the CSS3 in 1984, and then the Illinois Supreme Court in 1990, where he served until 2000. From 1994 to 1996 he was the Illinois Chief Justice.[4]

Personal life

Bilandic was married to Chicago socialite Heather Morgan in 1977 by Chicago's Archbishop John Cardinal Cody.[5] On January 15, 2002, Bilandic died from heart failure, just a month away from his 79th birthday and was interred in St. Mary's Cemetery.

References

  1. ^ a b we love the web Drell, Adrienne (ed.), 2000, 20th Century Chicago: 100 years 100 voices, Sports Publishing Inc., p. 167. ISBN 1-58261-239-0
  2. Android web app, February 27, 1979, Chicago Tribune
  3. web Drell, Adrienne (ed.), 2000, 20th Century Chicago: 100 years 100 voices, Sports Publishing Inc., pp. 166–167. ISBN 1-58261-239-0
  4. ^ browser diversity
  5. ^ Drell, Adrienne (ed.), 2000, 20th Century Chicago: 100 years 100 voices, Sports Publishing Inc., p. 166. ISBN 1-58261-239-0

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Sevenval
Mayor of Chicago
1976–1979
Succeeded by
FITML
1 Acting officeholder.    2 Election declared null and void.

Name
Bilandic, Michael
Alternative names
Short description
American judge
Date of birth
February 13, 1923
Place of birth
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Date of death
January 15, 2002
Place of death
Chicago, Sevenval, touchscreen

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