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Illian, George, 1894-1932
Keep It Coming : "We Must Not Only Feed Our Soldiers at the Front But Millions of Women & Children Behind Our Lines" ...Waste Nothing
[United States]: United States Food Administration, [between 1914 and 1918].
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Insane Asylum of North Carolina
Annual Report of the Board of Directors and the Superintendent of the North Carolina Insane Asylum, for the Year Ending November 30,1884
Raleigh: Ashe & Gatling, 1884. 30 p.
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Insane Asylum of North Carolina
Reports of the Board of Directors and Superintendent of the Asylum for the Insane of North-Carolina
Raleigh: Holden and Wilson, 1857. 26, [2] p.
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Jones, William H.,
Mallett, Edward J.,
Scales, James P.,
Iredell, Samuel Tredwell, and
Dortch, William Baskerville, 1828-1882
Petition of a Committee of Students for the Erection of a Building, September 1, 1848
2 pages, 4 page images.
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Irons, Ned
conducted by Pamela Grundy
Oral History Interview with Ned Irons, March 16, 1999. Interview K-0170. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
White student reflects on race and racism at West Charlotte High School.
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Iverson, Kenneth
conducted by Joseph Mosnier
Oral History Interview with Kenneth Iverson, June 11, 1999. Interview I-0083. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Kenneth Iverson describes his rise through the steel industry. An innovator in both the social and business side of management, Iverson rose to become president of Nucor Steel in 1964, and he quickly restructured the struggling company, moving it to Charlotte in 1966 and turning it into a profitable business. He seemed to have little trouble dismantling racial segregation or breaking down gender barriers, and while he disapproves of unions, he insists that Nucor's policies reward its employees enough that they have little need of union protection.
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Ivey, John
conducted by John Egerton
Oral History Interview with John Ivey, July 21, 1990. Interview A-0360. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
John Ivey received his doctoral degree in sociology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1944. He and his wife, Melville Corbett Ivey, describe their interaction with such leading figures as Howard Odum, Rupert Vance, and Frank Porter Graham. After a brief sojourn working for the Tennessee Valley Authority, Ivey became the director of the Southern Regional Education Board, where he advocated for the desegregation of public schools in the South.