Lenoir Chambers

Lenoir Chambers (1891–1970) was a writer, biographer and newspaper editor. In 1960, as editor of The Virginian-Pilot of Norfolk, Virginia (now owned by Landmark Media Enterprises), he won the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for his series of editorials in favor of school desegregation, especially in Virginia. A native of Charlotte, North Carolina,[1] he was elected to the North Carolina Journalism Hall of Fame in 1991.

Mr. Chambers authored Stonewall Jackson (1959), a two-volume biography of the Civil War general, and Salt Water & Printer's Ink: Norfolk and Its Newspapers (1967), a history of the newspaper industry in Norfolk.

As a young man in World War I, he served in 52nd Infantry, Sixth Division, American Expeditionary Forces.

Further reading

Leidhodlt, Alex, Standing Before the Shouting Mob: Lenoir Chambers and Virginia's Massive Resistance to Public School Integration (University of Alabama Press, 1997)

gollark: You can probably kill the programs or reboot in safe mode, but this sort of behaviour is more "malware" than just "programs you don't want", so reinstalling is probably better. At least run an antivirus or something. It might help. Maybe.
gollark: Well, you could try randomly deleting the files the programs own.
gollark: So remove them, using the normal thing to remove programs, which is in control panel or something.
gollark: If you don't have malware but just undesirable programs, remove them from control panel or whatever.
gollark: If you have malware, you should just entirely wipe the computer and reinstall from scratch.

References

  1. "Chambers, Lenoir (1891–1970)". www.encyclopediavirginia.org. Retrieved Jun 26, 2020.
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