Word: raleighs
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...plucked by a member of the light-fingered league in the I.R.T. was Journal Editor Vermont Connecticut Royster, a Raleigh, N.C., boy despite the Yankee twang to his name. To Royster, the loss of his credit cards, shopping lists and drugstore prescriptions, not to mention $100 "secreted in the back of our wallet against such grave emergencies as running out of expense-account money in San Antonio or St. Paul." turned out to have a leaven of unexpected value. "I use all kinds of incidents that happen to me when I'm groping around for a way to make...
Festival of the Performing Arts. The Robards show (see col. 1) will be broadcast in Raleigh, N.C. (WRAL-TV, 4-5 p.m.), Boston (WHDH-TV, 4-5 p.m.), and Philadelphia (WFIL-TV, 3-4 p.m.), plus repeat performances in Washington, D.C. (WTTG, 8-9 p.m.), and New York (WNEW...
...remaining two articles, Bruce M. Galphin's discussion of how Georgia desegregated peacefully, and Susan B. Schwartz '64's analysis of Negro voter registration in Raleigh, N.C., restore the generally high level. Galphin is a Nieman Fellow from the Atlanta Constitution, and devotes himself to a presentation and analysis of the concrete facts which he, as a journalist, had occasion to know rather well. Unlike Stone's piece, Galphin's article has more than local significance; Georgia stands almost alone among Deep Southern states in having accepted, however unwillingly, the principle of school integration without violence: perhaps it will...
Susan Schwartz gained her knowledge of conditions in Raleigh as a member of CORE and the Civil Rights Coordinating Committee. Articles by civil rights activists in other publications have quite frequently been marked by a highly emotional, and hortatory presentation. Miss Schwartz's careful avoidance of this traditional approach lends her observations dignity and force...
...sufficient funds. But in England, geography, perhaps because of its long association with maritime and colonial enterprises, has always occupied a respected place in scholarship. In addition to geography chairs in the major universities, there is the Hakluyt Society, which publishes the narratives of famous explorers and adventurers. Raleigh A. Skelton has been secretary of the Society for sixteen years; and to support his infectious belief in the romance of maps he might quote the Society motto...