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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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2075 results for "We the People of North Carolina"
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Record #:
662
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Swisher Service Company of Charlotte provides high-quality service in the sanitizing of public restrooms.
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Record #:
663
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A unique combination of resources, geography and climate ensures that North Carolina's travel and tourism industry is always growing.
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Record #:
664
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Advertising mogul C. Knox Massey formed interesting relationships during the Great Depression with C. T. Council, B.C. Headache Powder inventor, and Chuck Collins, University of North Carolina football coach.
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Record #:
668
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Bald Head Island is a popular resort community on the Cape Fear River.
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Record #:
673
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The NCSU Annual Emerging Issues Forum considers business-related problems in NC. Speakers include H. Ross Perot, Michael Dukakis, and Paul A. Volker.
Record #:
674
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The advertising firm of Sterrett Smith and Spangler has climbed to the top of the very competitive advertising market in Charlotte.
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Record #:
676
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The Weyerhaeuser Company is a major player in the pulp and paper industry in North Carolina.
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Record #:
6579
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In this NORTH CAROLINA magazine interview, Robert W. Scott, governor of North Carolina during the early 1970s, reflects on his time as the state's chief executive.
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We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 38 Issue 1, Jan 1980, p22, 24, 45-46, por
Record #:
6580
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In this NORTH CAROLINA magazine interview, James E. Holshouser, governor of North Carolina during the mid-1970s, reflects on his time as the state's chief executive. Holshouser was the first Republican governor of North Carolina in the 20th-century.\r\n
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We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 38 Issue 1, Jan 1980, p26, 28, 46, por
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Record #:
10010
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In this first of a series of articles about North Carolinians whose lives have left an imprint on the state, Warren discusses Dr. James Y. Joyner, who was Superintendent of Public Instruction from 1902 to 1919.
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We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 1 Issue 1, May 1943, p13, 34-36, por
Record #:
10011
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Through the efforts of State Representative John W. Umstead of Orange County, the 1943 General Assembly added a ninth month to the public schools. Educators feel that the longer term is a more efficient means of educating students and that the cost of re-teaching retarded pupils would be substantially reduced.
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We the People of North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 1 Issue 1, May 1943, p18-19, 37, por
Record #:
10012
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T. Austin Finch died January 11, 1943. He was a graduate of Duke University and later entered the furniture business with his father and his uncle. At the time of his death he was president of the Thomasville Chair Company, which is recognized as one of the leading furniture industries in the world.
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Record #:
10013
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This is the first in a series of articles about women who have played dramatic and interesting roles in the history of North Carolina. The author describes an incident in the Revolutionary War when Gen. Nathanial Greene, weary, despondent, and lacking money for his troops, arrives at the Salisbury inn of Mrs. Elizabeth Maxwell Steele. Mrs. Steele, an ardent patriot, gave the general two bags of gold and silver, her entire life savings, so that he and his men could continue the fight for independence.
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