Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Maine women's serial pubs (4)
- Maine women (3)
- Maine women's history (3)
- Folklore (2)
- Northeast Archives Newsletter (2)
-
- Oral History (2)
- 19th century (1)
- Acadia (1)
- American journalism (1)
- Comprehensive Plan (1)
- Country-western music (1)
- Cumberland County (1)
- Demonstration Cities (1)
- Downtown renewal (1)
- Fiddles (1)
- Gruen (1)
- Hillbilly music (1)
- Historic preservation (1)
- Home industry (1)
- Knitting (1)
- Land preservation (1)
- Legislation (1)
- Lobbying (1)
- Local Government (1)
- Maine (1)
- Menario (1)
- Model Cities (1)
- Muskie (1)
- Nets (1)
- New York Times (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 12 of 12
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Model Cities, Housing, And Renewal Policy In Portland, Maine: 1965-1974, John F. Bauman
Model Cities, Housing, And Renewal Policy In Portland, Maine: 1965-1974, John F. Bauman
Maine History
Shepherded through Congress by Maine Senator Edmund Muskie, the 1967 Model (or Demonstration) Cities Program was originally intended for the nation’s large, ghetto-ridden metropolises where it would target a host of social and economic programs including housing. Thanks to Senator Muskie, both Portland and Lewiston benefited. Before the Nixon Administration scuttled the program in 1973, Portland had created a host of innovative housing, social welfare, law enforcement, and educational programs, shifting the city’s urban renewal program away from its strict emphasis on brick-and-mortar planning. Portland was unique in making Model Cities a part of its downtown renewal. Energizing the city’s …
The Hillbillies Of Maine: Rural Communities, Radio, And Country Music Performers, Erica Risberg
The Hillbillies Of Maine: Rural Communities, Radio, And Country Music Performers, Erica Risberg
Maine History
During the first third of the twentieth century, the United Sates underwent profound social, technological, and economic changes that fundamentally altered rural society. This shift created a divide between rural and urban dwellers, and by the 1930s, country people were developing their own cultural expressions, often reflecting the unique folkways of various regions — the South, Appalachia, the Ozark Plateau, the rural West. One such manifestation of country culture was old-time, or country-western music — also known as hillbilly music. At the time, radio broadcasting was at an experimental stage in reaching an American audience. Station WBLZ in Bangor covered …
Dawnbreaker Vol 58 No 2 (Winter 2010-2011), Dawnbreaker Staff
Dawnbreaker Vol 58 No 2 (Winter 2010-2011), Dawnbreaker Staff
Maine Women's Publications - All
No abstract provided.
“Taking Up The Slack”: Penobscot Bay Women And The Netting Industry, Nancy Payne Alexander
“Taking Up The Slack”: Penobscot Bay Women And The Netting Industry, Nancy Payne Alexander
Maine History
Between 1860 and 1900 the economy of Penobscot Bay communities changed dramatically, from the steady growth and prosperity of their natural resource-based economy to the decline in population and a painful transition to manufacturing and service industries. Both men and women had enjoyed independence in their labor in the old economy. The new cash economy made it necessary for them to seek out new ways of supporting their families, with home manufacture, or putting out work, one way of earning an income. They remained independent from an employer’s direct supervision and earned cash payment, a change from the face-to-face economy …
Dawnbreaker Vol 58 No 1 (Fall 2010), Dawnbreaker Staff
Dawnbreaker Vol 58 No 1 (Fall 2010), Dawnbreaker Staff
Maine Women's Publications - All
No abstract provided.
Maine Folklife, Vol. 15, Iss. 2, Maine Folklife Center
Maine Folklife, Vol. 15, Iss. 2, Maine Folklife Center
Maine Folklife Center Newsletter
In April, 2010 we launched our Drive Dull Care Away campaign to raise the Sandy Ives Endowment fund to $1 million. Folklorist Nick Spitzer, who produces and hosts American Routes on NPR agreed to be our honorary chair of the campaign and came to Maine to speak at the University in support of the Maine Folklife Center and preserving the legacy of its founder, Edward D. "Sandy" Ives. The Ives legacy of teaching, fieldwork, publishing and public programming has come under threat due to University budget cuts. First the academic position was cut (teaching), then the archivist's position was cut …
Maine Folklife, Vol. 15, Special Issue, Maine Folklife Center
Maine Folklife, Vol. 15, Special Issue, Maine Folklife Center
Maine Folklife Center Newsletter
Some day in the not-too-distant future, the Maine Folklife Center will have a self-supporting endowment. As a result, staff will continue to produce local cultural events, conduct folklife research, and care for the archives, without worrying about the Center's financial future. To make this dream a reality, the Folklife Center recently launched the Sandy Ives Endowment Campaign, through which the Center hopes to increase its endowment by $1 million. Income generated from the campaign will help support the Center's ongoing mission in light of recent unusual budget cuts at the University of Maine.
Saving Schoodic: A Story Of Development, Lost Settlement, And Preservation, Alan K. Workman
Saving Schoodic: A Story Of Development, Lost Settlement, And Preservation, Alan K. Workman
Maine History
Remote, isolated, and nearly barren Schoodic Point, now the easternmost part of Acadia National Park, was long bypassed by early explorers and settlers. It might have seemed destined to remain deserted, a candidate for coastal parkland preservation in the twentieth century. But like such distant outposts as Vinalhaven, Swan’s, and Ironbound islands, Schoodic in the nineteenth century was overtaken by extensive land development, logging, and settlement by fishermen farmers. Eventually its proximity to Bar Harbor made it a target for vacation resort cottages. Yet Schoodic’s peninsular ecology and elements of its social circumstances helped it escape such development in favor …
Dawnbreaker Vol 57 No 3 (Spring 2010), Dawnbreaker Staff
Dawnbreaker Vol 57 No 3 (Spring 2010), Dawnbreaker Staff
Maine Women's Publications - All
No abstract provided.
A Profitable Public Sphere: The Creation Of The New York Times Op-Ed Page, Michael J. Socolow
A Profitable Public Sphere: The Creation Of The New York Times Op-Ed Page, Michael J. Socolow
Communication and Journalism Faculty Scholarship
This stud y utilizes archival and other primary materials to describe the development of the New York Times op-ed page. This innovative forum for commentary, which premiered in September 1970, is examined through the lenses of Jiirgen Habermas' public sphere theory and eco nomic concerns in the American newspaper industry. The page provid ed a significant source of revenue and diversified social, cultural, and political news analysis. Times executives sought to serve the public interest while considering corporate profits.
The Maine Women's Advocate (2010 - Winter), Maine Women's Lobby Staff
The Maine Women's Advocate (2010 - Winter), Maine Women's Lobby Staff
Maine Women's Publications - All
No abstract provided.
Town Of Yarmouth Comprehensive Plan 2010, The Comprehensive Plan Steering Committee
Town Of Yarmouth Comprehensive Plan 2010, The Comprehensive Plan Steering Committee
Maine Town Documents
No abstract provided.