Mayor Bosley got about the same support from black voters that he got four years ago.
It expanded over the years, using the Bosley hair-restoration brand name that's now well-known thanks to U.S. infomercials.
The question is will the receiver actually go after everyone who made money, said Bosley, who has studied investment scams.
Like mayors up for re-election all over the country this year, Mayor Bosley could point to a declining crime rate.
Most white voters had their own set of accusations against Mr Bosley, holding him responsible for a series of City Hall scandals.
But Harmon has one big problem: his coalition did not include many black voters, as Mayor Bosley was quick to point out.
Mr Bosley had the solid support of black ministers and civil-rights activists.
Mr Bosley also took some blame, perhaps unfairly, for the city's response to the Great Flood of 1993, which inundated the white suburbs shortly after he took office.
The upset victory of Clarence Harmon over Freeman Bosley, the incumbent, for the Democratic nomination for mayor marked one of the sharpest divisions in the city's troubled history.
An exit poll showed whites voting overwhelmingly for Harmon, 94 percent to 5 percent, while black voters stuck overwhelmingly with Mayor Bosley, 83 percent to Harmon's 17 percent.
Mr Bosley captured an almost equal percentage of black voters, but higher turnouts in white districts doomed the first black mayor of St Louis to a three-to-two defeat.
On Tuesday, the city's first African-American mayor, Freeman Bosley Jr.
It is not unusual for court-appointed receivers and regulators to go after big net winners in investments scams, said Stacie Bosley, an economics professor at Hamline University in St.
The key shift came in the racially mixed central corridor of the city, where liberal white voters, who would have been reluctant to support a white candidate over Mayor Bosley, felt comfortable voting for a black alternative.
Four members of the cast, Williams, Marion Ross, Don Most, and Erin Moran, along with the widow of Tom Bosley, sued CBS, claiming they have not been been paid what they're owed for the worldwide sale of "Happy Days" merchandise.
Four members of the cast, Marion Ross, Don Most, Anson Williams and Erin Moran, along with the widow of Tom Bosley, sued CBS in April 2011, claiming they have not been been paid what they're owed for the worldwide sale of "Happy Days" merchandise.
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