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Word: aldermen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...opponent was Roland Giduz, a 43-year-old white who has served twelve years on the town board of aldermen. Giduz is a liberal on race issues and supports the town's open housing ordinance. He manages the University of North Carolina alumni magazine; Lee is head of employee relations at Duke University in nearby Durham. Lee is not unaware of his special position. "I'll be walking a tightrope," he says. "I could be slaughtered from both sides: by the white racists or the black militants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Breakthrough in Chapel Hill | 5/16/1969 | See Source »

...historical study is human consciousness. His concern is not for the great system-builders and the source of their thought, but for the vitality and diffusion of ideas themselves. His archives are the libraries of second-rate thinkers. For example, he ransacked the effects of the Puritan ministers and aldermen for evidence for his major work, Religion and the American Mind. The Idea has for Heimert a life of its own, conditioned by the physical furniture of reality but also conditioning it. He has little patience with historians who insist that "objective reality" exists, that it alone determines human action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Alan E. Heimert | 11/1/1968 | See Source »

...after Christmas, Tuesday, Dec. 26, was what police wearily call a "typical" day in U.S. cities-perhaps a cut too typical. In Nashville, Tenn., armed robbers held up two of the area's banks. In Chicago, one of the city's 50 aldermen was shot twice in the leg by thugs as he walked the South Side streets, and, just three miles away, another alderman barely escaped from robbers by locking himself inside his garage and screaming for help. New York...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Crime & Counterforce | 1/5/1968 | See Source »

...areas between buildings. Trash and garbage have been collected irregularly, gaping holes in the streets have gone unrepaired, and recreational facilities have been nonexistent. Most serious, more than half of the younger men are unemployed. "They just hang around the streets," says Richard Freeman, chairman of the board of aldermen's police committee. "The trouble is, nobody does anything until you have some trouble like this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cities: Recipe for Riot | 6/30/1967 | See Source »

...Evers as a man of his word, and Natchez whites seemed to take Jackson's murder more seriously than similar incidents in the past-most notably, the still-unsolved slaying of two young Negroes whose dismembered bodies were dredged from the Mississippi River in 1964. The board of aldermen put up a $25,000 reward for the killers, and Armstrong, which has so far pleaded inability to keep Klansmen off its payroll, chipped in another $10,000. Mississippi Governor Paul Johnson called the bombing an "act of savagery which stains the honor of our state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mississippi: Act of Savagery | 3/10/1967 | See Source »

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