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Showing posts from December, 2013

New CityLab Acquisitions

The New (right foreground) and Old (back left) Union Stations in Washington Square.  CityLab has recently acquired a good number of research materials from a bulk purchase at an antiquarian book sale.  Among the new volumes are additional City Directories and House Directories, some institutional histories, and three years of the monthly Worcester Magazine (1912-1914). Of particular interest in the Worcester Magazines are the descriptive articles and images including the one on the right.  Below you can find a detailed list of the new materials.  You can also go to the developing CityLab webpage to explore an in-progress listing of the CityLab Collection. A Tribute to the Columbian Year by the City of Worcester, a graphic exhibit of a city of diversified industries Board of Trade Book 1893 Purchase, November 2013 Annual Report, No. 144, fiscal year ending June 30, 1990 City of Worcester Report 1990 Purchase, November 2

An AUD Afternoon

A group of Urban Studies students and Dr. Tom Conroy toured the inside of the Worcester Memorial Auditorium recently.  Traveling both deep and high into the building, they were able to explore many areas not generally seen by people even when the structure was open. How they got there has everything to do with the department capstone course.  One of the capstone students, Desiree Cunningham, has been researching the AUD's history and previous plans for its preservation as part of her project.  She is now putting together a preliminary study of the building and working on a proposal of her own.  But during one of the writing workshop days in which students commented on each other's draft papers, Desiree noted that she while she now knows all this information about the AUD, she has never been into the building.  At that point, we began to make some calls about gaining access. As befits the collaborative dynamic we like to build in the department, the other Public Admini

ELL Programs Finish for the Semester

The department's ELL Tutoring programs are coming to an end as the semester winds down.  The participants and tutors received certificates this week for all their hard work.  Classes will resume again in February.  Have a good break!

Capstone Research Presentations Continue...

Worcester's Abbie Hoffman was integral to the Civil Rights Movement beginning here. Urban Studies students in the Research Seminar/Capstone class continue to make their end-of-semester research presentations. Recently we heard about the following projects:    Christian Tsetsos is preparing an elementary-aged mentoring program proposal for Worcester schools based on a survey of best practices among national mentoring programs. . Katie Benoit is looking at the Civil Rights Movement in Worcester and how the city was racially, socially, and economically divided in the 1960s.  . Tia Spetaccino is exploring how foster children programs in the United States and what happens with the 20,000 children who annually "age out" of the system. Dannielle Morrow is examining transportation systems in Worcester and ways that mid-sized American cities can help their populations diminish their reliance on cars.