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Mayor Helen Boosalis: My Mother's Life in Politics

Autor Beth Boosalis Davis
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 aug 2013
As a 1950s housewife and League of Women Voters volunteer who spearheaded the city of Lincoln’s switch to a “strong mayor” form of government, Helen Boosalis (1919–2009) never anticipated that she herself would one day be that strong mayor and chief executive of Nebraska’s capital city.
Helen Boosalis’s story, told by her daughter, Beth Boosalis Davis, is that of a true pioneer of women in politics. The daughter of Greek immigrants, Boosalis achieved national prominence as the first woman president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors and as an outspoken advocate for economically distressed cities facing President Reagan’s “new federalism.” Winning the Democratic nomination for governor of Nebraska in 1986, Helen Boosalis ran against Kay Orr in the first gubernatorial contest between two women in U.S. history. The interwoven tales of conflict and challenge, from the mayor’s office to the campaign trail, combine personal insight into one woman’s trailblazing political history with a compelling memoir of a half century of public service and private devotion  shared by two remarkable women, mother and daughter.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780803271739
ISBN-10: 0803271735
Pagini: 552
Ilustrații: 54 photographs, 1 illustration, 2 appendixes
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 39 mm
Greutate: 0.78 kg
Editura: BISON BOOKS
Colecția Bison Books
Locul publicării:United States

Notă biografică

Beth Boosalis Davis is the daughter of former Lincoln mayor and gubernatorial candidate Helen Boosalis. She has practiced law in both the private and the public sectors, was executive director of the National Lekotek Center for children with disabilities, and serves on the boards of Carleton College, Steppenwolf Theatre, the Illinois Arts Council, and First Bank & Trust. Davis lives in Evanston, Illinois, where she was elected and served ten years on the city council.

Cuprins

List of Illustrations   000
Note on Sources and Structure 000
Acknowledgments   000
Introduction      000
Flash Forward: Calling Me Home      000
1. Call to Action 000
Flash Forward: Down to Two    000
2. Madame Mayor   000
Flash Forward: May the Best Woman . . .   000
3. This Is Not Your Father's City Hall    000
Flash Forward: Money Talks    000
4. Roll Up Her Sleeves  000
Flash Backward: Roots--All Greek to Me    000
5. Expect the Unexpected      000
Flash Forward: Getting to Know You  000
6. Everything Old Is New Again      000
Flash Forward: One False Move and . . .   000
7. Mayors' Mayor  000
Flash Forward: Issues, Debates, Polls, and Other Irrelevancies    000
8. Another Time Around  000
Flash Forward: Trails End     000
9. Life (After) Is Politics     000
Afterword   000
Photo Acknowledgments   000
Appendix: Lincoln City Councils, 1975<EN>1983   000
Notes 000
Interviews  000
Bibliography      000
Index 000

Recenzii

“A true pioneer in American politics, Helen Boosalis moved from being a housewife and volunteer to being elected the first female mayor of Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1975—then she became a nationally prominent advocate for troubled U.S. cities. Her inspiring story is told through the eyes of her daughter.”—AARP The Magazine

"An informed and loving tribute of a daughter to her mother."—Mike Steinman, Lincoln Journal Star

"While the book will be of greatest interest to people who have lived in Lincoln, who have known [Helen Boosalis] personally or by her reputation over the decades, it is so well-done that even those who have not known her should find her story compelling. Her daughter, Beth, who lives in Evanston, Illinois, and who was a member of the Evanston City Council, has written a loving and careful tribute to her—I guess you have to say—amazing mother."—Charles Stephen, All About Books

"For readers interested in Nebraska’s local politics and how it may have changed between then and now, the book offers a wealth of information to contemplate. . . . This book is well worth reading for its insights into the national and local political scene in the second half of the 20th century, for its insights into local political interactions, and for its descriptions of the interaction between political activity and family."—Chris Beutler, Prairie Fire

"Beth Boosalis Davis has drawn on personal memory, thirty-five interviews, and voluminous scrapbooks collected by her father, Mike Boosalis, to chronicle her mother's career. The result is an intimate look at one of Nebraska's best known and most effective politicians during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s."—James E. Potter, Nebraska History

“Doubtlessly, for Helen Boosalis, life and politics were inextricably interconnected; to tell the story of Boosalis, the mayor, is to tell the story of Boosalis, the person. Davis does her mother proud.”—Jan P. Vermeer, Great Plains Quarterly