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50 results for "North Carolina--Biography"
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Record #:
10585
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Maud Gatewood (fine arts), Robert L. Hill (science), Lee Smith (literature), George Watts Hill (public service), Joseph Mitchell (literature), and Andy Griffith (fine arts) received the award in 1984.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 21, Nov 1984, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10584
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Heather Ross Miller (literature), Frank Guthrie (science), Mary Dalton and Harry Dalton (fine arts), and Hugh Morton (public service) received the award in 1983.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 20, Nov 1983, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10583
Author(s):
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Nancy Winborn Chase (public service), Floyd W. Denny, Jr. (science), Willie Snow Ethridge (literature), R. Philip Hanes, Jr. (fine arts) and Selma Hortense Burke (fine arts) received the award in 1982.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 19, November 1982, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10582
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Adeline McCall (fine arts), Vivian T. Stannett (science), Glen Rounds (literature), Tom Wicker (literature), Ralph H. Scott (public service) received the award in 1981.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 18, Dec 1981, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10581
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Fred Chappell (literature), George H. Hitchings (science), Dan K. Moore (public service), Jeanelle C. Moore (public service), and Robert Lindgren (fine arts) received the award in 1980.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 17, Nov 1980, punnumbered, por
Record #:
9218
Author(s):
Abstract:
William S. Powell's, DICTIONARY OF NORTH CAROLINA BIOGRAPHY, will be published in eight volumes, the first of which is due out in July. Published by the University of North Carolina Press at Chapel Hill, the dictionary covers the lives of four thousand North Carolinians, many of whom have never before been in a biography.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 47 Issue 1, June 1979, p9, por
Full Text:
Record #:
10580
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Archie K. Davis (public service), John D. deButts (public service), Harry Golden (literature), Walter Gordy (science), and Sam Ragan (literature) received the award in 1979.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 16, Nov 1979, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10579
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Robert Robey Garvey, Jr. (public service), Henry L. Kamphoefner (fine arts), David Coston Sabiston, Jr. (science), Harriet L. Tynes (public service), and Manley Wade Wellman (literature) received the award in 1978.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 15, Nov 1978, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10578
Author(s):
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Elizabeth Duncan Koontz (public service), Reginald Glennis Mitchiner (science), Reynolds Price (literature), Joseph Curtis Sloane (fine arts), and Jonathan Williams (fine arts) received the award in 1977.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 14, Nov 1977, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10576
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Foster Fitz-Simons (fine arts), Romare Bearden (fine arts), Richard Walser (literature), Juanita M. Kreps (public service) and C. Clark Cockerham (science) received the award in 1976.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 13, Nov 1976, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10575
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Robert Ward (fine arts composer), Doris W. Betts (literature), William C. Friday (public service), and John L. Etchells (science) received the award in 1975.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 12, Oct 1975, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10574
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' James B. Wyngaarden (science), Thad G. Stem, Jr. (literature), William C. Fields (fine arts), and Ellen Black Winston (public service) received the award in 1974.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 11, Oct 1974, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10573
Author(s):
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Helen Smith Bevington (literature), Ellis Brevier Cowling (science), Burke Davis (literature), Sam J. Ervin (public service), and Kenneth Ness (fine arts) received the award for 1973.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 10, Oct 1973, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10572
Author(s):
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Sidney Alderman Blackmer (fine arts - actor), Edward E. David, Jr. (science), John Ehle, (literature), William Dallas Herring (public service), and Harold Hotelling (science) received the award in 1972.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 9, Oct 1972, punnumbered, por
Record #:
10571
Abstract:
The North Carolina Award is the highest honor the state can bestow on its citizens. Suggested by Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville and instituted by the 1961 General Assembly, the award recognizes 'notable accomplishments by North Carolina citizens in the fields of scholarship, research, the fine arts, and public leadership.' Guy Owen (literature), James Hustead Semans and Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans (fine arts), Capus Waynick (public service), and James Edwin Webb, for (creative leadership in the United States program) received the award in 1971. The award to the Semans is the first North Carolina Award given jointly.
Source:
North Carolina Awards (NoCar Oversize F 253 N67x), Vol. Issue 8, Sept 1971, punnumbered, por