NCPI Workmark
Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

Search Results


9 results for Cochrane, William M.
Currently viewing results 1 - 9
PAGE OF 1
Record #:
17149
Abstract:
For some two million U.S. citizens who are males and old enough to fight, and for millions more who are their dependents, a national transition from a state of peace to a state of war naturally creates more or less acute personal problems in connection with debts, taxes, shelter, and food. The aims of the Soldier's and Sailor's Civil Relief Act of 1940 was set up in advance \"to promote and strengthen the national defense by suspending enforcement of certain civil liabilities of certain persons serving in the Military and Naval Establishments.\"
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 8 Issue 1, Jan 1942, p7, 9
Record #:
17264
Abstract:
The 1946 edition of Municipalities and the Law in Action is a cross section view of the wheels and cogs of municipal government machines all over North Carolina.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 12 Issue 7, Aug 1946, p10-13
Record #:
17305
Abstract:
Cochrane discusses the happenings of the 1947 North Carolina General Assembly such as the opposing philosophies on public spending and the fight for Speakership.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 13 Issue 1, Feb 1947, p1-6, f
Record #:
17448
Abstract:
The new Federal Housing Act and the North Carolina Local Housing Authorities Law make it possible to provide low-rent housing to members of various communities. Local authorities in North Carolina have already begun to take advantage of these opportunities.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 16 Issue 1, Sept-Oct 1949, p7-9, Inside Back Cover
Record #:
17450
Abstract:
Although there is no question that North Carolina's Housing Authorities Law enables municipalities to establish and operate housing authorities in the field of low-rent housing, it is doubtful whether this law authorizes condemnation of slums to be sold for redevelopment.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 16 Issue 2, Nov 1949, p9-10, Inside Back Cover
Subject(s):
Record #:
17451
Abstract:
Sample surveys in 1947 showed quite clearly that the nation's \"ill housed\" citizens were not confined to the slums of cities; farmers, especially in areas such as Eastern North Carolina, lived in conditions of overcrowding, with no electricity or running water. Under the Housing Act of 1949, loans and grants are available to North Carolina farmers from the Farmers Home Administration.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 16 Issue 3, Dec 1949, p6-7
Record #:
17568
Abstract:
In 1945 the legislature of North Carolina enacted a statute authorizing the consolidation of the Forsyth County and Winston-Salem city health departments. In 1950, the joint city-county health board adopted a milk ordinance forbidding sale within the county of unpasteurized milk. Buttermilk farmers' reactions were immediate and grew to full-scale protests.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 18 Issue 4, Dec 1951, p7, 13-14
Record #:
17604
Abstract:
Cochrane discusses hospitalization for the poor. There are many questions associated with who is eligible, who participates in providing care, and who pays the cost.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 19 Issue 3, Nov 1952, p6-11
Subject(s):
Record #:
17681
Abstract:
Cochrane discusses the changes in health from the beginning of North Carolina's history to the present. Laws have been and still continue to be changed in hopes of coinciding with changes in public health.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 20 Issue 7, Apr 1954, p7-9