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4 results for "Arendell, Banks"
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Record #:
24588
Author(s):
Abstract:
Andy Winecoff went by the nickname ‘Shake’ and was a notorious lawbreaker in Robeson County who was able to escape the gallows after a Governor of North Carolina pardoned him of his crimes. This article presents the life and exploits of ‘Shake.’
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 39 Issue 13, December 1971, p17-18
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Record #:
10767
Author(s):
Abstract:
Colonel Fred A. Olds, resident of Raleigh, was a newspaper man, Chamber of Commerce worker, North Carolina tour guide, North Carolina historian, and the former of youth organizations. He is credited with donating the more than 20,000 items that made up the initial collection of the North Carolina Hall of History, established in 1902. He is said to have personally escorted more than 300,000 persons on sightseeing tours around Raleigh.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 36 Issue 3, July 1968, p13-14, por
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Record #:
14398
Author(s):
Abstract:
Dean Samuel F. Mordecai, Dean of Trinity College in the early 20th-century, implemented stricter standards for law students by establishing rigorous requirements for entering law students, earning a reputation as a fair yet authoritarian figure. Mordecai composed his own text books.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 16 Issue 51, May 1949, p6-7
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Record #:
15815
Author(s):
Abstract:
Former student, Banks Arendell, write a glowing tribute to Samuel Mordecai, who was Dean of the Law School at Trinity College (now Duke University) for almost a quarter of a century.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 3 Issue 21, Oct 1935, p1, 22, por
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