Results 61 to 70 of 3,325 | « previous | next »
- Dixiecrats and Democrats; Alabama politics, 1942-1950 by Barnard, William D.;
Bibliography: pages 186-190.
- Subjects: Democratic Party (Ala.); States' Rights Democratic Party.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
- On-line resources: Suggest title for digitization;
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- Democratic oak tree : messages for my party / by Bayliss, Jonathan.(CARDINAL)637753;
Includes chronology and index."In this collection of essays and letters, Jonathan Bayliss addresses crucial questions in American politics, including why political parties matter, why he believes citizens should register and vote as Democrats, what the Republican Party really wants, and what Democrats stand for." -- Back Cover.
- Subjects: Personal correspondence.; Bayliss, Jonathan;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- The North Carolina Democratic handbook / by Democratic Party (N.C.).State Executive Committee.(DLC)no2002093209(CARDINAL)223314;
1922 vol. has supplement.
- Subjects: Campaign literature;
- Available copies: 8 / Total copies: 8
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- Toward a democratic left : a radical program for a new majority. by Harrington, Michael,1928-1989.(CARDINAL)141102;
Bibliographical footnotes.
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Stanly County Democratic Party
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- Subjects: Stanly County Democratic Party.;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Democrats, dinners & dollars; a history of the Democratic Party, its dinners, its ritual / by Stinnett, Ronald F.(Ronald Floyd)(CARDINAL)564820;
Bibliography: pages 291-301.
- Subjects: Democratic Party (U.S.);
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- The most democratic sport : basketball and culture in the central Piedmont, 1893-1994 / by Grundy, Pamela.(CARDINAL)203118; Museum of the New South (Charlotte, N.C.)(CARDINAL)544938;
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- Subjects: Basketball;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- Trump's Democrats / by Muravchik, Stephanie,1970-author.(CARDINAL)837036; Shields, Jon A.,author.(CARDINAL)836687;
Includes bibliographical references and index.Front Cover -- Front Flap -- Title Page -- Copyright Information -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Three Democratic Communities -- Dragon Energy -- The Don -- America First -- Make America Great Again -- Democrats No More? -- Appendix: Long-Standing Democratic Counties that Voted for Trump -- Notes -- Index -- Back Flap -- Back Cover"Will they do so again in 2020? Looking for answers, Muravchik and Shields lived in three such "flipped" blue communities, finding that these voters still like the Democratic Party, but it's not the party many of this book's readers will recognize. In these communities, some of the most beloved and longest-serving Democratic leaders are themselves Trumpian-grandiose, combative, thin-skinned, nepotistic. Indifferent to ideology, they promise to take care of "their people" by cutting deals-and corners if needed. Stressing loyalty, they often turn to family to fill critical political roles. Trump strikes a familiar figure to these communities, resembling an old-style Democratic boss. Although Trump's Democrats have often been pictured as racists, Muravchik and Shields find that their primary political allegiances are to their town or county-not racial identity. They will spend an extra dollar to patronize local businesses, and they think local jobs should go to their neighbors, not "foreigners" from neighboring counties-who are just as likely to be white and native-born. When these citizens turn their attention to the nation and their place in it, their thinking is informed by their sense of belonging in their town. Thus, America first reflects a way of imagining political community that resonates by analogy to the social and political life in the places they live. The good news for Democrats is that the appeal of Trump does not yet extend to the rest of the GOP. The Democratic Party can reclaim its historic place as the home of working and lower-middle-class Americans. The first step is to gain a better understanding of Trump's Democrats"--
- Subjects: Trump, Donald, 1946-; Democratic Party (U.S.); Working class;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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- The Democratic hand-book / by Democratic Party (N.C.).State Executive Committee.(CARDINAL)223314;
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- Subjects: Campaign literature; North Caroliniana.;
- Available copies: 3 / Total copies: 3
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- Film : the democratic art / by Jowett, Garth.(CARDINAL)151064;
Bibliography: pages 487-505.Introduction: The agents of change; the changing face of America -- pt. 1: The recreation revolution -- The new "mass" media -- Recreation and entertainment at the turn of the century -- The development of recreational activity -- Notes -- pt. 2: Enter the movies! -- The search for pictorial realism -- The origins of an industry -- The first motion picture audiences -- The content of early motion pictures -- Special studies and statistics -- Notes -- pt. 3: The development of an industry, 1909-1918 -- Integration of the movie industry -- The star system -- The feature film -- The motion picture palace -- The content of motion pictures, 1909-1918 -- The movies and the first world war -- Notes -- pt. 4: The initial response -- Progressivism and the movies -- The moral and social issues -- The child and the motion picture -- The motion picture and health -- Movie morals and manners -- The motion picture in education and religion -- The motion picture as symbol -- The movies in print -- The Birth of a Nation controversy -- Notes -- pt. 5: The movies censored -- The first attempts at motion picture censorship -- Local or municipal censorship -- State censorship -- The Supreme Court decision of 1915 -- Federal censorship and regulation -- The Seabury proposal -- The national board of review -- The uniform standards problem -- The fight against censorship -- Notes -- pt. 6: The social setting for control, 1918-1930 -- The child, movies and crime -- Education and the motion picture problem -- The community and the motion picture -- The industry retreats -- Notes -- pt. 7: The Hays office, 1922-1933 -- The Hays office and censorship -- The Hays office and public relations -- The open door -- The federal motion picture council -- Women's organizations and the motion picture industry -- The Hays office--success or failure? -- Notes -- pt. 8: The industrial setting for control, 1920-1933 -- The content of American films, 1922-1933 -- The coming of sound -- Prohibition and the motion picture audience, 1919-1936 -- The criticism of sound films -- Industry developments and the critics -- Block-booking -- Block-booking: an evaluation -- The American film abroad -- The "Great American Art" -- Notes -- pt. 9: Social science and the motion picture -- The Toledo study -- Social science, delinquency and the movies -- The Pitkin "Formula", 1931 -- The Mitchell study, 1929 -- The Payne fund studies, 1933 -- Notes -- pt. 10: The motion picture controlled -- The attempt at self-regulation -- The motion picture production code -- Attempts at local control -- The NRA code, 1933-1935 -- The Catholic legion of decency -- The success of the legion of decency -- The machinery of the legion -- The response of the industry -- Notes -- pt. 11: America at the movies, 1930-1941 -- The movies as recreation -- Margaret Thorp's America at the movies -- Leo Rosten's Hollywood -- The movies as influence -- The movies as educator -- The consent decree (1940) -- The controlled motion picture -- Special studies -- Notes -- Part 12: Hollywood goes to war, 1939-1945 -- The movies enter politics -- The movies as propaganda -- The movies at war, 1942-1945 -- The movies and morale -- The "beachhead bijou" -- Movies on the home front -- The movies' contribution: an evaluation -- The "why we fight" films -- The movies and "world understanding" -- The movies in the postwar period -- Hollywood and World War II: an assessment -- Notes -- pt. 13: The decline of an institution -- The broken promise -- The audience examined -- The state of the industry, 1946-1950 -- Television and the motion picture industry -- The impact of television: a statistical analysis -- The drive-in theater -- The industry fights back -- Epics, wide-screen, and 3-D -- Notes -- pt. 14: The meaning of Hollywood -- The content of films, 1946-1960 -- The problem film and movie influence -- The movies psychoanalyzed -- The American movie audience -- The growth of the "art" movie -- The meaning of Hollywood -- Hollywood: the dream factory -- Hollywood and the American image abroad -- Special studies -- Notes -- pt. 15: The decline of control -- The HUAC hearings, 1947-1952 -- The code under attack -- Ruth Inglis's Freedom of the movies -- Changes in the Code -- The fight against censorship: The miracle -- Decision -- Censorship defeated -- The Times case -- The demise of the Code -- The moon is blue v. the Code -- The move to classification -- Special studies -- Notes -- pt. 16: The uncertain future -- The state of the industry -- Hollywood international -- Hollywood and television -- The "new" Hollywood -- The attempt to classify -- The new freedom -- The Supreme Court's indecision -- The public and the movies -- The black films -- The movies today -- The discovery of the movies -- Notes.
- Subjects: Motion pictures; Motion pictures;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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