6,983 research outputs found
Kenneth Hayes, interviewed by Sarah Winsor
Kenneth Hayes, interviewed by Sarah Winsor, December 15, 1978, for AY 125, fall 1978, Veazie, Maine. Hayes talks about his house which was built by Samuel Veazie for his son, John Veazie about 1829.
Listen mfc_na1207_t1265_01https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mf064/1062/thumbnail.jp
Kenneth Hayes and Rachel Hayes Interview, July 14, 1987
Kenneth Hayes describes living in Wibaux, Montana, and how the Great Depression affected his family, with his mother serving as both a housewife and farm hand on their family’s farm. He recalls joining the Civilian Conservation Corps [CCC] in 1935, the people he met, and how workers within the program were paid. Hayes talks about working as a cook for the CCC and what his brothers’ jobs were in the Corps. He mentions the leadership of the CCC and what he and his brothers did after leaving the Corps in the late 1930s. Hayes talks about moving to Missoula, Montana, where he worked various jobs and marrying his wife, Rachel Hayes. He briefly discusses his wife’s childhood in Missoula, before Rachel Hayes shares her memories of the Great Depression. She describes the welfare program and her father’s job with the Works Progress Administrations (WPA).https://scholarworks.umt.edu/depressioninmissoula_oralhistory/1007/thumbnail.jp
Hayes, Kenneth
Kenneth Hayes - Professor of Political Science.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/univ_photos/2539/thumbnail.jp
Mrs. Kenneth Hayes Holds Wool Sweater
Mrs. Kenneth Hayes holds the crocheted wool sweater she won third place with at the National Wool Needlework contest
Another in a series of guest columns examining President Clinton\u27s performance b
Another in a series of guest columns examining President Clinton\u27s performance based on his campaign agenda. Kenneth P. Hayes, chairman of the Department of Political Science at the University of Maine at Orono and of Maine Common Cause, says that changing foreign politics have worked to keep the president from focusing on his domestic agenda
Plant : A Conversation of Views
In his essay to accompany PLANT's installation for the Gairloch Gardens, Hayes considers this architectural firm's work in relation to Richard Serra's land work "Shift." The author draws attention to how the architects differ from Serra in their "careful archeological reading of the landscape in terms of its class, gender, and even humanist presumptions." Includes an analysis of the mirrored globe in the garden. Brief biographical notes on Hayes
Interview with Kenneth Sprunt
Kenneth Sprunt was born in Wilmington in 1920, the third son of James Lawrence Sprunt. The Sprunts have a long history in and around Wilimington. His grandfather was a cotton merchant in the area and his great-great Uncle is the man for whom James Sprunt Community College is named for as well as the author of Chronicles of the Lower Cape Fear. Mr. Kenneth Sprunt relates his family history both before his birth and after. He spent three years in the Coast Guard during WWII primarily working on anti-submarine warfare in small boats
Memorandum from Kenneth Iyeko
Memorandum from Kenneth Iyeko regarding establishment and support of the Japanese American Citizens' League at incarceration camps operated by War Relocation Authority.Personal correspondence, organizational records, government documents, publications, and other papers created or collected by Joseph R. Goodman documenting the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, as well as organized resistance to incarceration. Included in the collection are records of the Japanese Young Men's Christian Association and the Japanese American Citizens' League in San Francisco, including papers of the Japanese YMCA's executive secretary Lincoln Kanai; Sakai family papers; Goodman's correspondence to and from Japanese American incarcerees, organizations opposing forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans, the War Relocation Authority, and others; publications, photographs, and ephemera from the Topaz Relocation Center, where Goodman taught high school; War Relocation Authority records and publications; and newspaper clippings, pamphlets, and reports about forced removal and incarceration created by various government, religious, and civic organizations, in California and nationwide
Kenneth Hayes, the chairman of Maine Common Cause, yesterday said that congressi
Kenneth Hayes, the chairman of Maine Common Cause, yesterday said that congressional term limits represent a superficial approach that should be rejected by Maine voters. Under the proposal, which will be on the November ballot, Maine\u27s U.S. Representatives could serve no more than three two-year terms within a 12-year period, while the state\u27s U.S. Senators could serve two six-year terms within 18 years. Details
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Images of women shopping in the art of Kenneth Hayes Miller and Reginald Marsh, ca 1920-1930.
This thesis examines images of women shopping in the art of Kenneth Hayes Miller and Reginald Marsh during the 1920s and 1930s. New York City's Fourteenth Street served Kenneth Hayes Miller and Reginald Marsh, respectively, as a location generating the inspiration to study and visually represent its contemporaneity. Of particular interest to this thesis are relationships between developments in shopping and the images of women shopping in and around Fourteenth Street that populate the paintings of Miller and Marsh. Although, as Ellen Todd Wiley has shown, the emerging notion of the New Woman helped to shape female identity at this time, what remains unstudied are dimensions that geographically specific, historical developments in shopping contributed to the construction of female identity which, this thesis argues, Marsh and Miller related to, by locating in, the department store and bargain store
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