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Topic: Terry Sanford


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In the News (Mon 14 Dec 09)

  
  Edward Terry Sanford
Edward Terry Sanford, a forty-one year old Harvard-educated attorney from Knoxville, was selected by Attorney General Charles Bonaparte to be the lead prosecutor for the Justice Department in the trial of Sheriff Shipp and others accused in connection with the lynching of Ed Johnson.
As lead prosecutor in the Shipp case, Sanford prepared the case for trial and took the lead role for the government in preparing the case and examining and cross-examining witnesses in Chattanooga.
Sanford wrote 130 opinions for the Court before his death in 1931 from uremic poisoning after having a tooth pulled.
www.law.umkc.edu /faculty/projects/ftrials/shipp/sanford.html   (300 words)

  
  Terry Sanford - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: )
In 1994, a new building was completed and the institute was renamed the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy in his honor.
The Terry Sanford High School in Fayetteville, NC is also named in his honor.
Sanford is buried in the historic Duke Chapel at Duke University.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Terry_Sanford   (678 words)

  
 About Sanford Institute of Public Policy
Terry Sanford was a person with a multihued personality: Courage – A World War II combat paratrooper (he was scared the whole time, but he did it), as governor he passed the sales tax on food to save our schools.
Among the group was a state highway patrolman, and Terry delighted in rousing everyone at 5:30 in the morning with the wail of the siren on the trooper's car.
The mission of the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy is to educate tomorrow's leaders and improve the quality of public policymaking through research, professional training, and policy and community engagement.
www.pubpol.duke.edu /about/Terry_Sanford/other.php   (1248 words)

  
 Terry Sanford Papers Inventory (#3531)
Terry Sanford of Scotland, Cumberland, Wake, and Durham counties, N.C., was a politician, educator, administrator, lawyer, and soldier.
Terry Sanford was born 20 August 1917 in Laurinburg, N. C., the second son of Cecil L. and Elizabeth Martin Sanford.
Sanford practiced as an attorney in Fayetteville, N.C., from 1948 until he was elected governor of North Carolina in 1960, serving as president of the Young Democratic Clubs of North Carolina, 1949-1950, and North Carolina state senator, 1953-1954.
www.lib.unc.edu /mss/inv/htm/03531.html   (2833 words)

  
 Terry Sanford   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Sanford, now 80, has led a distinguished public life, first as a state senator, later as governor, then as president of Duke University, and finally as a U.S. senator.
Sanford represents the best in the state's progressive tradition, a bloodline that goes back to Frank Porter Graham, and includes the more recent leadership of people like Bill Friday and Richardson Preyer -- men who stood firm in their support of equal opportunity and public education.
Sanford served a respectable term in the U.S. Senate from 1986 to 1992, countering political breezes that stirred up such foolishness as a constitutional amendment banning flag burning, before losing to one-time political ally Lauch Faircloth.
www.greensboro.com /sanford/battle.html   (368 words)

  
 UUFR Past Sunday Sermons - The Circles of Life   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Terry Sanford, the former governor of the state would be called on to be President of Duke in 1969 to help heal the wounds caused by strife surrounding the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights movement.
Terry Sanford, our new President, not only showed up at the protest, but he took the microphone and said he agree with the concerns of the students.
Sanford was a leader in a generation of leaders who were steadfast in the belief that the people of North Carolina had good instinct and good sense and generous hearts.
www.uufr.org /events/sunday/1998/circles.of.life.html   (2906 words)

  
 Duke University Alumni Magazine
In the interview, Sanford said that after the first couple of years of his presidency, "There were very few students who didn't think that this was absolutely the most wonderful place on Earth." That fierce attachment to their university contributed to Duke's "hot" status, he suggested.
Terry Sanford's example of what public service-minded lawyers can accomplish continues to inspire me. I will never forget his wit and remarkable ability to lead others to the right answer and make them feel that the inspiration was all their own.
Terry Sanford truly believed in students having an active and meaningful role in the governance of the university.
www.dukemagazine.duke.edu /alumni/dm16/sanford.html   (6538 words)

  
 Terry Sanford for President 1976 Campaign Brochure
Terry Sanford is a realist, but he is not afraid of the ideals and concepts which challenge the people to do and be their best.
Sanford is the former Margaret Rose Knight of Kentucky and they are the parents of Betsy and Terry, Jr.
During World War II Terry Sanford saw combat with the 517th Parachute Infantry in five major campaigns, including the Battle of the Bulge and the invasion of Southern France.
www.4president.org /brochures/terrysanford1976brochure.htm   (956 words)

  
 Duke releases new biography of Terry Sanford   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Sanford considered the request, they said, and agreed with only two conditions: that all material gathered in the course of the research be donated to Duke afterward, and that he be permitted to read the manuscripts for factual errors.
Sanford’s life went from a Depression era boyhood in eastern North Carolina through World War II heroism through desegregation of schools while he was governor from 1960-1964 and on into the ferment on college campuses in the 1970s, when he was president of Duke.
Sanford opened his life and his files to the writers, providing what they call “unlimited access to personal files, journals, scrapbooks and unpublished manuscripts as well as a vast collection of material” at Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
www.thetimesnews.com /1999/99-10/99-10-03/accent-3.html   (1140 words)

  
 Suzy Bowler 2002, Terry Sanford-Waldon   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Terry has worked for 14 years as an Administrative Assistant at the Navy Budget Office at the Pentagon and was in the Pentagon when it was attacked on September 11.  Her office has since been moved to Crystal City.  She also serves as a part-time bartender at AMF Seminary Lanes.
Terry has served as Secretary/Treasurer for Monday Night Summer Doubles at AMF Seminary for the past 2 years and previously served as president of the league for 5 years.
Currently Terry is bowling in Saturday Night Mixed at AMF Seminary and Pete Gunn 3-2 Mixed League at Fort Myers.  She also subs on the Macedonia Baptist Church Mixed League.  She has bowled in the Women’s Travel League for 2 years and the Monday Night Summer Doubles for 8 years.
www.wdcawba.org /TerryWaldon.html   (203 words)

  
 Terry Sanford
Sanford, governor from 1961 to 1965, was listed in a 1981 Harvard University study as one of the nation's 10 best governors this century.
Sanford, the son of a schoolteacher and an oil worker, grew up in Laurinburg and received a bachelor's degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1939.
Sanford served as a special agent for the FBI for two years, then was a paratrooper in World War II.
members.aol.com /deathpool/obits98/sanfordt.html   (640 words)

  
 Edward Terry Sanford
Sanford was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, on July 23, 1865, the son of a lumber and construction millionaire.
Sanford was a native of Tennessee with a cosmopolitan education, and before serving on the Court, he had a private law practice, served in the
Sanford's opinion upheld the conviction because, in the Court's view, states should be free to prosecute citizens who advocate violent overthrow of government.
law.jrank.org /pages/10000/Sanford-Edward-Terry.html   (876 words)

  
 UNC-TV ONLINE: Local Programs: Terry Sanford and the New South
Terry Sanford and the New South, by award-winning filmmaker Thomas Lennon, examines how Sanford pushed his vision for the New South, winning major new programs in education and economic investment and influencing progressive southern politics that helped set the political stage for Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton.
Sanford calculated that while supporting Kennedy would likely cost him half the margin of victory in his own campaign, he would nevertheless win and that helping Kennedy would pay huge dividends to North Carolina and to him personally for years to come.
Terry Sanford and the New South is a production of Thirteen/WNET New York, co-produced in association with Duke University and The Center for Documentary Studies, and in association with Thomas Lennon Films and UNC-TV.
www.unctv.org /sanford_new_south/index.html   (804 words)

  
 Terry Sanford: Biography
Terry Sanford was born in Laurinburg, North Carolina, on 20th August, 1917.
Sanford was the first of the southern leaders attending the convention to leave the camp of
Sanford was elected as Governor of North Carolina in 1961.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /JFKsanford.htm   (531 words)

  
 UNC-TV: Biographical Conversations: Terry Sanford:
Terry Sanford begins the final installment of Biographical Conversations with comments about the late 1960s and the Vietnam War, which he states was a “terrible political mistake.” After his term as governor was over, he went back to practicing law and set up a study of American States to student other state governments.
Against opposition that stated that the program was too expensive, Sanford pushed to have an athletic program that had the same standards of excellence as the academic programs.
Like UNC president Graham, he held meetings with students and became affectionately known as “Uncle Terry.” In fact, he used that nickname to his advantage in a letter to students correcting them for their rudeness during athletic events.
www.unctv.org /biocon/tsanford/part3.html   (403 words)

  
 Terry Sanford and the New South
Terry Sanford with his wife Margaret Rose celebrates a political victory.
Come view the broadcast premiere of "Terry Sanford and the New South," a documentary by award-winning filmmaker Thomas Lennon that examines how Sanford, a former North Carolina governor and Duke president, pushed his vision for the New South, winning major new programs in education and economic investment and influencing progressive Southern politics.
The showing at the Sanford Institute will be preceded at the event by the showing of a 30-minute panel discussion of Sanford's legacy taped in 2006 at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and featuring former N.C. Governor Jim Hunt and others.
www.dukenews.duke.edu /2007/04/sanford.html   (513 words)

  
 Sanford, Edward Terry --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
One of the most influential teachers of acting in the United States after World War II was Sanford Meisner.
A noted stage performer, Ellen Terry was known for the grace and intellectual grasp that she brought to her roles.
Born in Coventry and the mother of celebrated actor and theatrical theorist Gordon Craig, she was long associated with Henry Irving in one of theater's most famous partnerships.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-9313401   (672 words)

  
 TerritoryRE Blog » Territory Profile: Terry Sanford
Terry has an older brother who works for a private equity firm in Miami, FL and a younger sister who is traveling the world by sailboat.
Terry began his career in real estate at Sanford Real Estate in Nantucket, MA working extensively as a listing agent for high-net worth clients.
Terry is an expert negotiator and has intimate knowledge of real estate in the Greater Boston Area, including diverse neighborhoods like The Back Bay, Beacon Hill, The North End, The South End, The Fenway, Brookline, Cambridge and Newton (among others).
www.territoryre.com /wordpress/?p=7   (208 words)

  
 Edward Terry Sanford
Edward Terry Sanford, who received both A.B. and Ph.B degrees from the University of Tennessee in 1883, is the only University of Tennessee alumnus to have served as associate justice of the U. Supreme Court.
Sanford began his legal career in Knoxville in 1890 after receiving a second A.B. degree from Harvard in 1885, as well as M.A. and LL.B. degrees in 1889.
With the support of Chief Justice William Howard Taft, Sanford was nominated by President Warren Harding in 1923 to the high court, where he served until his death in 1930.
www.lib.utk.edu /outreach/about/hall_fame/sanford.html   (236 words)

  
 Terry Sanford - Charlie Rose
An hour conversation with the former Democratic governor of North Carolina, Terry Sanford, about the influence of racial tensions on his 1960 election campaign, his work for education, his acquaintance with J.F.K. and the novel he is at work on.
Sanford was noted for his leadership in the fields of civil rights and education.
Sanford established the North Carolina Fund, to fight poverty and promote racial equality across the state.
www.charlierose.com /guests/terry-sanford   (212 words)

  
 Marvin’s Laurent, SD Blog: February 2005 Archives   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Terry then went to meet with Ken Pedersen of TM Rural Water to discuss options in providing water needs for Laurent and the surrounding areas.
Terry Sanford and Mark Miller along with M.E. and Marvin met with local architects, Jeff Hazard and Bob Natz of Koch, Hazard and Baltzer in Sioux Falls to discuss plans for charrette, local trade skills and needs as well as plans for specific buildings.
Mark Miller and Terry Sanford gave a visual slide show showing possible types of buildings and asked them to discuss the challenges and potential difficulties in building them.
www.laurentsd.com /blog/archives/2005_02.html   (594 words)

  
 NCAE | Terry Sanford Award
The NCAE member works on their Terry Sanford project that will be submitted for competition.
Terry Sanford Projects are screened by the Terry Sanford committee/IPD Commission, with the winner announced at the NCAE Annual Awards Banquet.
The Terry Sanford winner is announced at the NCAE Annual Awards Banquet.
www.ncae.org /structure/awards/tsatimeline04.shtml   (162 words)

  
 PBS Pressroom - TERRY SANFORD AND THE NEW SOUTH
By February of 1960, Terry Sanford had been working for the better part of a decade to win the governorship of North Carolina, a job he had dreamt of most of his adult life.
But when four young fl men sat down at a Woolworth counter in the city of Greensboro in his home state and demanded to be served, their actions put him in the most excruciating dilemma.
TERRY SANFORD AND THE NEW SOUTH is the story of a progressive Southern governor and his bare-knuckle politics during segregation's reign.
pressroom.pbs.org /programs/terry_sanford_and_the   (190 words)

  
 Terry Sanford High School - Fayetteville, North Carolina / NC - school information
The only segregation in place at Terry Sanford is due to the students choosing to be that way.
Many students in Terry Sanford are very rude and obnoxious to the other students and they don't like to move out of their comfort zone to meet new people.
However, like I said Terry Sanford is a very good school, probably the best in the county.
www.greatschools.net /modperl/parents/nc/77   (702 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Terry Sanford: Politics, Progress, and Outrageous Ambitions: Books: Howard E. Covington Jr.
North Carolina's Terry Sanford was one of the first "New South" political leaders of the 1960s and 1970s.
Sanford served as North Carolina's governor (for one term), as president of Duke University, and as a United States senator.
They had Sanford's cooperation (and access to some personal papers) and drew on the substantial archives of material related to his public life.
www.amazon.com /Terry-Sanford-Politics-Outrageous-Ambitions/dp/0822323567   (630 words)

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