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9 results for Congressional districts--North Carolina
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Record #:
16887
Author(s):
Abstract:
Eyre discusses congressional redistricting of North Carolina for the 1991-1992 year. He explains the objectives, guidelines, and political geography of this act.
Source:
North Carolina Geographer (NoCar F 254.8 N67), Vol. 2 Issue , Summer 1993, p45-59, map, bibl
Record #:
19873
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article lists the Congressional districts within North Carolina by year in the period of 1789-1934 including location information for the years before numbered districts were established. The introduction provides a brief history of the establishment of the state's congressional districts.
Full Text:
Record #:
31031
Author(s):
Abstract:
New congressional districts were set up by the 1961 North Carolina General Assembly. Several counties, including Bertie, Franklin, Vance, Harnett, Davidson, Wilkes, Scotland, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Davie, Yadkin, and the majority of the southwestern counties were transferred to new congressional districts.
Source:
Record #:
31427
Author(s):
Abstract:
New Congressional Districts have been set up by the North Carolina General Assembly. The eleven districts vary in population from 377,000 to almost 450,000, and varying ratios of Democratic and Republican voters.
Source:
Record #:
31480
Author(s):
Abstract:
North Carolina voters will finally get a chance to cast their ballots in primary elections June 29, after months of controversy over the alignments of the new Congressional districts. This article presents biographies of the twenty-eight candidates and their perspectives on rural electric issues.
Source:
Carolina Country (NoCar HD 9688 N8 C38x), Vol. 14 Issue 6, June 1982, p8-18, por, map
Record #:
31485
Author(s):
Abstract:
North Carolina voters will go to the polls November 2 to elect their first representatives to Congress under a new alignment of Congressional districts. This article provides biographies of the candidates, and their perspectives on the rural economy and unemployment.
Source:
Carolina Country (NoCar HD 9688 N8 C38x), Vol. 14 Issue 10, Oct 1982, p8-15, por, map
Record #:
32450
Author(s):
Abstract:
North Carolina Citizens Association’s Congressional Roundtable consists of the chairmen of the Association’s eleven Congressional District Committees. At a recent meeting in Raleigh, these business leaders reviewed a variety of legislation and federal issues. Among the issues were federal spending and tax limitations, capital cost recovery, value-added tax, collective bargaining, the Federal Trade Commission, and the Occupational Safety and Health Act.
Source:
Record #:
32912
Author(s):
Abstract:
New congressional districts were finalized by the General Assembly in late April on its fourth attempt to draw district lines that would satisfy minority racial and political interests. Because the issue was not settled until late spring, the state’s political primaries were postponed until June.
Source:
Record #:
35573
Author(s):
Abstract:
Walter Jones expressed a down home mentality in ways that went beyond maintaining his Farmville residency, instead of trading it for Washington DC. As for keeping his down home reputation, that was possible by keeping the campaign promise. Responsible was he in responding to the constituents who elected him to higher office.
Source:
New East (NoCar F 251 T37x), Vol. 1 Issue 4, Aug/Sept 1973, p10