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7 results for We the People of North Carolina Vol. 28 Issue 6, June 1970
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Record #:
10978
Author(s):
Abstract:
Allen Sims is a banker, and on February 10, 1970, he marked the 50th anniversary of his employment with Citizens National Bank of Gastonia. He began work as a bookkeeper in 1920, and today, at age 70, he is chairman of the board of Citizens National. Sims is featured in this month's We The People Magazine's North Carolina Businessman in the News.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 28 Issue 6, June 1970, p11-12, 42-43, por
Record #:
10979
Abstract:
In December 1970, a project of court reform that has taken fifteen years to complete will be fully implemented. For example, in the seventeen Piedmont and western counties that lie within six judicial districts, there will no longer be recorders courts, mayor's courts, justice of the peace courts, or other similar types. Six District Courts will replace them, each with uniform rules of procedure, court costs, and other standardized methods of dispensing justice.
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Record #:
10980
Abstract:
Since the summer of 1948, Wyatt and Lillian Taylor of Raleigh have been directing activities at Camp Sea Gull (boys) and Camp Seafarer (girls). The YMCA of Raleigh owns the camps, located three miles apart on the Neuse River in Pamlico County. The Taylors spend their summers supervising the activities of around 2,000 children ages 7-16.
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Record #:
10981
Author(s):
Abstract:
This article examines the status of women in North Carolina, including where she works; how she is paid in comparison to men; what her economic opportunities are; and the handicaps she faces.
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We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 28 Issue 6, June 1970, p28-29, 45, por
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Record #:
10982
Author(s):
Abstract:
Foy Ingram will retire June 30, 1970 after forty-seven years with the state of North Carolina. When she went to work for the State Department of Motor Vehicles in 1923, there were around 200,000 registered vehicles. For the past twenty-four years she has been director of the Registration Division of the NCDMV, presiding over a division that deals with over three million customers and collects over $57 million in revenues.
Source:
We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 28 Issue 6, June 1970, p30, 46-47, por
Record #:
10983
Author(s):
Abstract:
As senior vice-president for First Union National Bank, Helen Wardlaw is the highest ranking women banker in the state. She went to work for the bank in 1952, after teaching school in Charlotte a number of years.
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Record #:
10984
Abstract:
The first Kemper Open in North Carolina was played in 1968 at the Quail Hollow Country Club in Charlotte. This article recounts how the Kemper Insurance Company decided to choose Charlotte as the new home for the tournament.
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