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4 results for Greensboro--Officials and employees
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Record #:
3967
Author(s):
Abstract:
Jesse Warren was city attorney of Greensboro from 1961 until his retirement in November, 1998. During his tenure he dealt with some high-profile situations, including the civil rights demonstrations of the early 1960s and the November, 1979, shoot-out between members of the Nazi Party, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Community Workers Party that left five dead.
Source:
Southern City (NoCar Oversize JS 39 S6), Vol. 48 Issue 12, Dec 1998, p11, por
Record #:
4286
Author(s):
Abstract:
Every election year, many elected local officials, including mayors and council members who have served their communities long and well, retire from office. The mayors of Whiteville, Horace Whitley; Greensboro, Carolyn Allen; Mooresville, Joe Knox; and Morehead City, William C. Horton, Jr., are profiled.
Source:
Southern City (NoCar Oversize JS 39 S6), Vol. 49 Issue 8, Aug 1999, p1, 10-11, por
Record #:
18108
Author(s):
Abstract:
Community and municipal leaders in Greensboro attended a three week training session concerning sensitivity training for minority citizens. City Personnel Office organized the program which reached 140 city of Greensboro employees. Greensboro was very progressive not just with this program but its other initiatives to assuage racial tensions including; developing a human relations department, community relations department, and community relations division within the police department.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 35 Issue 2, Oct 1968, p11-13
Record #:
18214
Author(s):
Abstract:
Payroll for government employees constitutes a large budgetary concern. In 1975, the City of Greensboro proposed a new system of determining employee salaries based on quality of performance. Results of this five-year-old program are presented along with the consequences of using a qualitative-based pay scale.
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