Showing 251 - 260 of 436 Items

Interview with Norm Reef by Mike Hastings

Date: 2009-04-03

Creator: Norman 'Norm' S Reef

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Norman S. ā€œNormā€ Reef was born on August 16, 1933, in Portland, Maine, where he grew up with his parents, Samuel Reef and Dora Reef, and seven siblings. His father emigrated from Lithuania at age fourteen and worked as a cobbler. Norm grew up in the Jewish community of Portland, and the family struggled to make ends meet during the Depression and World War II. He attended Boston University and after two years joined the Army; the Korean War ended just as he completed training. He returned to study public relations at Boston University and then attended law school to help with his brothersā€™ insurance finance business. After being married, he set up a law practice in Portland. He became part of the fund-raising group for the Maine Democratic Party and encouraged Governor Brennan to appoint Mitchell to the Senate. He has also done legal work for Mitchell and is a personal friend. His daughter, Grace Reef, worked as a legislative assistant in Mitchellā€™s U.S. Senate office. He retired in 1989 from full-time practice of law. At the time of this interview, he was working on bringing about the production of a patent he holds for an industrial waste incinerator that generates power, associated with the firm Maine Microfurnace.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: family and educational background; the Jewish community in Portland; growing up in a large family during WWII; the Army and being a dental technician in Texas; Boston University and being president of a fraternity; working with his brothers and going to law school; joining the finance committee for the Maine Democratic Party; Muskieā€™s swearing in as secretary of state 1980; meeting President Clinton; why Mitchell lost the 1974 gubernatorial race; a meeting in Augusta and Brennanā€™s decision to appoint Mitchell to the Senate; Mitchell at hockey games and his involvement with the Red Sox; Mitchellā€™s relationship to Muskie; Mitchell as U.S. attorney; humorous anecdotes about Graceā€™s internship in Mitchellā€™s office; Reefā€™s retirement and return to work; the Microfurnace patent; and Mitchellā€™s exceptional character.


Interview with Sam and Carol Shapiro by Andrea Lā€™Hommedieu

Date: 2009-09-11

Creator: Carol Shapiro, Samuel 'Sam' Shapiro

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Samuel Shapiro was born in Brownsville, Pennsylvania, on August 26, 1927. His parents were Maurice and Anna (Silver) Shapiro. His father was born in the Ukraine and his mother in Lithuania. He spent two years in the Navy, then attended the University of Pittsburg on the G.I. Bill, graduating in 1952. He married and moved to Waterville, Maine, in 1953 and served as Maine Democratic Party treasurer for thirteen years. He also ran several furniture stores with his father-in-law. He served as Maine state treasurer for 16 years (1980-1996) during the Brennan, McKernan, and King administrations. He worked with George Mitchell on the Democratic State Committee in the early 1960s; he was especially close to George Mitchellā€™s brother, Robbie, and they often played tennis. Carol Shapiro was born and raised in Waterville, Maine, and attended Colby College. She and George Mitchell were high school classmates.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: family background; 1974 Maine gubernatorial campaign; Jim Longley story; military service; anti-Semitism; description of George Mitchellā€™s character and personality; state treasurers story; dating story; George Mitchellā€™s mother, Mary (Saad) Mitchell; Mitchell-Muskie comparison; Ken Curtis; and Bill Clinton story.


Interview with John Nale by Mike Hastings

Date: 2010-01-22

Creator: John E Nale

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

John Elias Nale was born on September 4, 1949, in Farmerville, Louisiana, to Caroline Theresa (Boles) and Melvin Travis Nale. The family had moved to Louisiana from Bangor, Maine, returning first to Bangor and then to his motherā€™s home town, Waterville, Maine, during his childhood. He is a second cousin of George Mitchell; his grandmother and George Mitchellā€™s mother were sisters. Nale is a graduate of the University of Maine, Orono and the Franklin Pierce Law Center. Upon joining the bar, he practiced law in Waterville and Portland, Maine, including practicing law with his three brothers for fifteen years. At the time of this interview, he was practicing elder law at Nale Law Offices, Waterville, Maine.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: growing up in Waterville, Maine, as next-door neighbor of the Mitchells; the Lebanese community in Waterville; Naleā€™s immigrant Lebanese ancestry; practicing elder law; Lebanese emigration to the United States; visiting Mitchell in Washington, DC, to celebrate Mitchellā€™s elevation to Senate majority leader; recollections of Mitchellā€™s mother, Mary (Saad) Mitchell.


Interview with Grace Reef by Diane Dewhirst

Date: 2009-03-26

Creator: Grace Reef

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Grace Reef grew up in Portland, Maine, with her father, Norman Reef, an attorney, and her mother, Patricia Reef. In 1974, as a twelve-year-old, she was the first female Little League baseball player, having sued to integrate girls into the program. She first heard of Senator Mitchell when he ran for governor in 1974. She attended Colby College, graduating in 1983 with a degree in public policy. During college she interned in Mitchellā€™s Senate office in Washington, D.C.; she worked as a legislative correspondent and was later promoted to be a legislative assistant, eventually becoming one of Mitchellā€™s senior advisors on children and poverty issues and economic development. She worked for minority leader Tom Daschle after Mitchell retired in 1994, continuing to work on issues of welfare reform and child care. She also worked for Senator Chris Dodd as the minority staff director of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Subcommittee on Children and Families. She has served as director of intergovernmental affairs for the Childrenā€™s Defense Fund. At the time of this interview, she was chief of policy and evaluation for the National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies (NACCRRA).

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: interning in Mitchellā€™s Senate office; the legislative process; tax reform in the mid-1980s; Mitchellā€™s decision-making process; the Family Support Act; doing research on child care providers in Maine; child care and development block grants; the Better Child Care Act; the structure of the Senate and the work Mitchell had to do to get legislation passed; Title 4A At Risk Child Care; the compromise on child care vouchers (church-state); Mitchellā€™s ā€œdivide and conquerā€ approach to dealing with different senatorsā€™ doubts and bringing them on board; the Family Medical Leave Act; anecdote of Reefā€™s presence in the Rose Garden with Mitchell when the Family Medical Leave Act was signed; George H.W. Bushā€™s saying that they needed a ā€œkinder, gentler nationā€; Environment and Public Works Committee work and highway funding; the formula for gas tax returns; miscalculating the formula and watching the bill on the floor of the Senate for three weeks; the National Affordable Housing Act; Mitchell and the Maine delegation; Mitchellā€™s patience as his greatest attribute; and Mitchellā€™s sense of humor.


Interview with Paul Brountas (2) by Andrea Lā€™Hommedieu

Date: 2010-04-12

Creator: Paul P Brountas

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Paul Peter Brountas was born on March 19, 1932, in Bangor, Maine. He and George Mitchell were classmates at Bowdoin College, where he was graduated with a bachelorā€™s degree in 1954; he took bachelorā€™s and masterā€™s degrees from the University of Oxford in 1956 and his law degree from Harvard Law School in 1960. That same year, he joined Hale and Dorr, the predecessor of WilmerHale. He became a partner in 1968 and served as senior counsel to the firm from 2003 until his retirement in 2005. In 1987 and 1988, he served as national chairman of the Committee to Elect Michael S. Dukakis President of the United States, and in 1968 he served as a campaign aide to Senator Edmund Muskie during the Humphrey-Muskie presidential campaign.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: student life at Bowdoin College in the early 1950s; George Mitchellā€™s basketball skills; the Edmund Muskie vice presidential campaign (1968), especially working with Don Nicoll and the Press; friendship with and gubernatorial (Mass.) and presidential campaigning for Michael Dukakis, especially the selection process for filling the vice presidential candidacy (Lloyd Bentsen, and consideration of Jesse Jackson); the Kennedy-Johnson ticket (1960) and Kennedyā€™s assassination; Harvard Law School; George Mitchellā€™s negotiating skills.


Interview with Regina Sullivan by Brien Williams

Date: 2009-05-26

Creator: Regina Sullivan

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Regina Sullivan was born on January 16, 1957, to Richard and Julia Sullivan in the Bronx, New York, and grew up in Washington, DC. Her father was chief counsel to the House Public Works and Transportation Committee and her mother ran a nonprofit organization called Candle Lighters Childhood Cancer Foundation. Regina was graduated from Bishop Dennis J. Oā€™Connell High School and went on to Regis University in Denver, Colorado, where she received a degree in economics. During her senior year of college, she worked for Denver Mayor Bill McNichols. After graduation she returned to Washington, D.C., where she took a temporary job in Senator Ed Muskieā€™s office. She worked there for approximately four months helping the receptionist and doing filing. She went back to Denver to help run a city council race, and then decided to move back to Washington as a legislative correspondent in Muskieā€™s office. She stayed on when Mitchell was appointed to fill Muskieā€™s vacant Senate seat. When Charlie Jacobs came on staff as head of scheduling, she became his assistant. She worked on scheduling in Maine for the 1982 campaign; after Mitchell won the seat, she returned to Washington and worked as the deputy press secretary, later going back to the front office to do scheduling and worked as a liaison between Mitchellā€™s Senate staff and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) staff. In 1986 she left Mitchellā€™s office and started a government relations firm, now R. Sullivan & Associates, where she continued to work at the time of this interview.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: Regis University; starting work in Senator Muskieā€™s office; working on a city council race in Denver, Colorado; working for Mayor McNichols in Denver; learning about Congress while growing up in Washington, D.C.; working as a legislative correspondent for Muskie; the transition in the office when Mitchell was appointed to fill Muskieā€™s seat; the degree of changeover or continuity in staff between Muskie and Mitchell; Mitchellā€™s first Banking Committee hearing and Senator Proxmireā€™s praise of his performance; working on Mitchellā€™s scheduling in Maine; working in Maine on the 1982 election; Mitchellā€™s work ethic, especially on the campaign; Mitchellā€™s relationship with Senator Cohen; 1982 U.S. Senate campaign and David Emery; moving over to the press office; the complications that arose from Mitchellā€™s attempts to travel back to Maine every weekend; Mitchellā€™s relationship with the women on his staff; the ā€œfun timesā€ they had on the campaign; commiserating with other senatorsā€™ schedulers; what Sullivan learned from and respected about Senators Muskie and Mitchell; the increasing partisanship on Capitol Hill; and Mitchellā€™s ability to see other opportunities to do public service beyond his Senate career.


Interview with Mary and Harold Friedman by Andrea Lā€™Hommedieu

Date: 2008-09-08

Creator: Mary Mitchell Friedman, Harold J Friedman

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Mary (Mitchell) Friedman was born on September 30, 1957, in Waterville, Maine, one of seven siblings and niece to George Mitchell. Her father, Robert ā€œRobbieā€ Mitchell, worked for the FDIC, and her mother, Janet (Fraser) Mitchell, was an elementary school teacher. Mary grew up in Waterville, attending St. Josephā€™s school, Waterville Junior High School, Waterville High School, and then she continued on to Colby College. She earned her law degree from the University of Maine School of Law and practiced law for approximately fifteen years. She spent three years in Washington, D.C. as a trial lawyer for the Constitution Torts Division at the Department of Justice and later returned to Maine. She has served on the board of the Mitchell Institute since its founding in 1995, and has been chair for eight years. Harold Friedman was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on December 4, 1942. He grew up in Detroit and attended Wayne State University, then earned his law degree from Boston University. In 1975, while he was a federal prosecutor in New York, he went to Maine and met George Mitchell, who recommended him to the law firm Preti Flaherty, where he was subsequently hired. He met Mary Mitchell there, and they later were married. At the time of this interview, he was a trial lawyer with the firm Friedman, Gaythwaite, Wolf & Leavitt in Portland, Maine.

Summary

Interview includes discussions of: family history at Colby College; founding the Mitchell Institute; the Mitchell Instituteā€™s intent and expansion; higher education in Maine; Northern Ireland and the Good Friday Agreement; life with the Mitchell family in Waterville; cribbage; the 1968 presidential election and the younger generation of the Mitchell family being politically active; Hubert Humphreyā€™s visit to Mrs. Mitchell; volunteering for the Muskie presidential campaign in 1972; the 1974 Maine gubernatorial campaign; George Mitchellā€™s campaign strategy for his senate campaign; growing up in Detroit; summer work on Marthaā€™s Vineyard and the Kennedy presence there; George Mitchellā€™s accessibility; and the Mitchell familyā€™s roots shaping their commitment to public service.


Interview with David Emery by Mike Hastings

Date: 2009-12-18

Creator: David F Emery

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

David Farnham Emery was born on September 1, 1948, in Rockland, Maine. His father was a bookkeeper, accountant, and golfer (he also played baseball for the University of Pennsylvania), and his mother was a nurse. Both parents served in the military during World War II, his father as a staff sergeant and his mother as an officer. He grew up in a Republican family and attended Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Worcester, Massachusetts from 1967-1970. He was elected to the Maine legislature immediately after graduation, during the Vietnam War. In 1974, he was elected as a U.S. congressman during the Nixon administration and served from 1975-1982. In 1982, he was the Maine Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate and lost to Democrat George Mitchell in the election. He served as deputy director of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency from 1983-1988. At the time of this interview he was involved in political polling and management consulting, as well as renewable energy resource strategies in Maine.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: election to Maine state legislature; early involvement in politics; Dick Berry; Sawin Millet; the 1974 House election and the recount; Emeryā€™s win; Mitchellā€™s 1974 loss to Jim Longley; meeting Mitchell in the 1974 campaign; 1974 Maine congressional race recount and Peter Kyros, Sr.; the staff in the Congressional Office; Charlie Smith; Stan McGeehan, Emeryā€™s campaign manager; Emeryā€™s 1981 decision to run for Senate; political consulting/polling; Emeryā€™s view of current politics in Maine; the 2nd and 1st Districts in Maine; and the 1982 U.S. Senate race.


Interview with Tom Bertocci by Mike Hastings

Date: 2008-11-08

Creator: Thomas 'Tom' A Bertocci

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Tom Bertocci was born in Lewiston, Maine, on February 17, 1945. His father was Salvatore Theodore ā€œTedā€ Bertocci, the son of Italian immigrants who came to the United States in 1912. Two of Tomā€™s uncles became professors at Bates College, where they met Ed Muskie. Tomā€™s father worked at Bath Iron Works, and met Tomā€™s mother, Margaret True Allen of Auburn, Maine, through his brothers. Tom was graduated from Morse High School and Wesleyan University. He became involved with the Chewonki Foundation during his college years, when he worked there as a camp counselor. He taught history at the Hotchkiss School in Connecticut, then earned a masters degree in education at the University of Wisconsin while becoming increasing interested in activism and politics. He became the first director of the Chewonki Foundationā€™s Maine Reach School, where he led a citizen action project with students to help on George Mitchellā€™s 1974 campaign for governor. He returned to Wisconsin as a full-time graduate assistant and co-authored Skills in Citizen Action with Fred Newman. In 1979, he returned to Maine to work for the Maine Audubon Societyā€™s campaign opposing repeal of Maineā€™s bottle bill. In the spring of 1980, he was hired as a field representative and driver in Mitchellā€™s Rockland, Maine, field office, where he remained until Mitchell retired in 1995. He married his wife, Portland native Cindy Stanhope, in 1981. He died on April 4, 2010, at his home after a prolonged illness.

Summary

Interview includes discussions of: family background and education; growing up in Bath, Maine; the basketball team at Morse High School and the New England Championships; association with the Chewonki Foundation as a counselor and academic director; summer jobs; attending Wesleyan College and teaching at the Hotchkiss School; his political philosophy (transitioning from the Republican to the Democratic Party), and views on politics and education; graduate studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison; working on McCarthyā€™s campaign in 1968; co-authored Skills in Citizen Action; involvement in Wisconsin politics; working for the Maine Audubon Society; getting the job as Mitchellā€™s field representative in Rockland; the offices in Rockland and Waterville; helping with the Midcoast countiesā€™ issues such as Bath Iron Works, fishing, the Windjammers, and Martin Mariettaā€™s Thomaston kiln and solvent incineration controversy; involvement in Mitchellā€™s Maine gubernatorial campaign (1974); Mitchellā€™s Maine visits as senator; travel, especially driving Mitchell around the state; Mitchellā€™s geographic knowledge; Mitchellā€™s personality and leadership qualities; Mitchellā€™s interactions with his administrative staff and his relationship with Bertocci; Mitchellā€™s retirement from the U.S. Senate; and an anecdote about Senator John Glennā€™s visit to Maine relating to Cindy Bertocciā€™s father, Joe Stanhope.


Interview with Donna Beck by Andrea Lā€™Hommedieu

Date: 2010-03-22

Creator: Donna L Beck

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Donna Lee Beck was born in Virginia in 1949 and grew up in Washington, D.C. Her mother worked various jobs on the Hill, including in the cafeteria of the Senate and the folding room. After completing high school, Donna also went to work on the Hill, where she stayed for thirty-two years. She worked for Senators Everett Dirksen, Alan Cranston, Ed Muskie, and George Mitchell. When Mitchell replaced Muskie in the Senate, Beck went to work as Mitchellā€™s office manager, both in his personal office and the majority leaderā€™s office.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: growing up in D.C. in the 1950s; Beckā€™s mother; working for Everett Dirksen, Alan Cranston, and Ed Muskie; Muskieā€™s staff, including Gayle Cory, Anita Jensen, and Jane Oā€™Connor; the transition from Muskie to Mitchell; impressions of Mitchell; an anecdote about Mitchellā€™s reporting the advance from his book; working in the majority leaderā€™s and personal offices; and Mitchellā€™s retiring.