The Pageant and the Glory

Author(s):  
Philip Gerard

A white handkerchief waved from a capitol window signals secession-and all over North Carolina the news is greeted with celebration and a rush to enlistment-though other voices are raised in dire warning of the destruction and death to come. The population of just under a million is almost evenly divided: one-third Unionists, one-third Secessionists, one-third enslaved and free blacks. The volunteer companies bear bellicose names: the Rough and Readies, the Lexington Wildcats, the Rockingham Invincibles. The Guilford Greys receive a silk flag from the local female seminary; 180 march to war and only 13 return home unscathed.

Author(s):  
Richard A. Rosen ◽  
Joseph Mosnier

This chapter describes Chambers's creation of a black-led and racially integrated law firm, for all intents the first such institution in the United States. In 1967, Chambers recruited two junior attorneys to his office: Adam Stein, a white George Washington University Law School graduate who had interned with Chambers in the summer of 1965, and James Ferguson, an African American from Asheville, North Carolina, who had just graduated from Columbia Law School. The three would form the nucleus of a powerful civil rights law practice for years to come. In 1968, after recruiting a young white Legal Aid attorney, James Lanning, Chambers formally created Chambers, Stein, Ferguson & Lanning. In 1969, African American attorney Robert Belton, a North Carolina native who was LDF's leading Title VII litigator, also joined the firm. So highly reputed was Chambers as a civil rights litigator, and so central was his firm to the wider LDF campaign in these years, that the firm was informally acknowledged as "LDF South."


1996 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 136-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark R. Mine ◽  
Hans Weber

Oth law of model dynamics: In a finite (and usually very short) amount of time, users of a graphics system will generate a model that shall bring said system to its knees. The purpose of this paper is to discuss our experiences with the impact of megamodels on interactive virtual environments. We consider a megamodel to be any model that causes the Oth law of model dynamics to come into effect. We will demonstrate how working with megamodels quickly reveals the limitations of the graphics hardware and software being used to support the virtual environment. We will give examples, based upon our experiences on the Architectural Walkthrough Project here at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), of the kinds of extra effort required to overcome these limitations.


1992 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 262-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith D. Singer

A statistical methodology relatively new to education—survival analysis—is used to describe the career paths of over 6,600 special education teachers newly hired in Michigan and North Carolina between 1972 and 1983, following them for up to 13 years, or until they stopped teaching in the state. Beginning special educators in both states continue to teach for an average of 7 years. They are most likely to leave teaching during the first few years after hire; those who survive this initial “hazardous” period typically teach for many years to come. Young women are particularly likely to leave, as are those special educators who provide support services or teach students with speech, hearing, or vision disabilities. Teachers with high test scores are at greater risk of leaving as are teachers paid comparatively low salaries.


1999 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 256-262
Author(s):  
Art Johnson

AN OLD SAYING GOES SOMETHING LIKE THIS, “ARTISTS ARE born, not made.” For Billie Ruth Sudduth, this statement is not quite true. Billie Ruth, who lives in the North Carolina mountains, makes baskets that are prized by collectors from all across North America and have been displayed in the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. She is internationally known for her basket artistry and was the first woman to be designated a Living Treasure by the state of North Carolina. But she was not always a basket maker.


Author(s):  
Cristina Soriano

During the last decades of the 18th century, Venezuela witnessed the emergence of several popular rebellions and conspiracies organized against the colonial government. Many of these movements demanded the reduction or elimination of taxes and the Indian tribute, the transformation of the political system, and fundamental changes for the social order with the abolition of slavery and the declaration of equality among different socio-racial groups. While demanding concrete changes in the local contexts, many of these movements reproduced the political language of republican rights enshrined by the American, French, and Haitian revolutions. Obsessed with silencing and containing local echoes of Franco-Caribbean republican values, the Spanish Crown and colonial agents sought to defuse these political movements, which they viewed as destabilizing, seditious, and extremely dangerous. This proved to be an impossible task; Venezuela was located at the center of the Atlantic Revolutions and its population became too familiar with these political movements: hand-copied samizdat materials from the Caribbean flooded the cities and ports of Venezuela, hundreds of foreigners shared news of the French and Caribbean revolutions with locals, and Venezuelans of diverse social backgrounds met to read hard-to-come-by texts and to discuss the ideas they expounded. During the Age of Revolutions, these written and oral information networks served to efficiently spread anti-monarchical propaganda and abolitionist and egalitarian ideas that sometimes led to rebellions and political unrest.


1979 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 59-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Loades

From about 1528 onward radical protestants of various kinds from the Low Countries began to seek refuge in England from the pressures of persecution in their homelands. Until the advent of Thomas More as chancellor, persecution in England was sporadic and rather lax. The royal authority had not hitherto been invoked, and the lollards were not commonly of the stuff of martyrs, which induced a certain complacency in the English bishops when faced with the challenges of nascent protestantism. After More’s brief tenure of office was over, persecution under royal auspices continued, but on a very much smaller scale than in the Netherlands, so that the incentive for radicals to come to England, either permanently or temporarily, remained. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of them lived in London, Norwich and other towns of the south-east over the next twenty years. A few, like Jan Mattijs, were burned in England, others, like Anneke Jans, met the same fate on their return home, but many lived and worked peacefully, attracting remarkably little attention. Considering their numbers, and the radical nature of their views, they seem to have made only a very slight impact upon their adopted country. A few Englishmen, like that ‘Henry’ who turned up as the sponsor of the Bocholt meeting in 1536, embraced their ideas wholeheartedly, but for the most part the effect seems to have been extremely piecemeal and diffuse, producing a wide variety of individual eccentricities rather than anything in the nature of a coherent movement. However, the presence of these radicals and their English sympathisers has always served to confuse students of the reformation, not least by appearing to justify contemporary conservative attempts to discredit protestantism as a Tower of Babel.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-134
Author(s):  
HUGH J. MORGAN

IT IS a pleasure and a great honor to come to the Old North State from a daughter state, Tennessee, to speak to you on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the foundation of your Medical Society. The conventional address for such an occasion would be a historical one. Certainly, old records of this Society provide extraordinarily rich and attractive material for the historian. Your current program of medical education, medical research and medical administration in relation to the improvement and extension of medical care, both preventive and curative, is a source of pride and stimulation for all of the southern states. North Carolina is leading the way in the South. But I do not plan to review in detail the past or current accomplishments of the profession in North Carolina. This has just been done for us in a scholarly and inspiring address by Dr. Hubert A. Royster. Suffice it to say that the membership of your Society has exhibited a capacity, unusual in organized medicine, for self examination and self evaluation and has been alert to change. Your membership has been judged courageous and progressive, and the country in general and the South in particular has become accustomed to look to North Carolina for guidance and example. Perhaps some of you hardly recognize yourselves as I talk! Maybe there are a few of you like the thieving, prowling, lying and intemperate colored man on judgment day who read, as he arose from his grave at the sound of the trump, the inscription on a tombstone—provided by the faithful, generous wife who survived him—"Here lies an honest man, a faithful husband, a truthful citizen and a temperate, devoted churchman." "Scuze me, Lord," said our friend, "I done come up outer the wrong grave!"


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