| Title |
Hal Schultz, Carbon County, Utah, Carbon County oral history project, No. 7, October 13, 1993 |
| Creator |
Schultz, Harry James, 1919-1993 |
| Contributor |
Tomsic, Madge; University of Utah. American West Center |
| Publisher |
Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
| Date |
1993-10-13 |
| Date Digital |
2015-12-28 |
| Spatial Coverage |
Carbon County, Utah, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/5536454 |
| Access Rights |
I acknowledge and agree that all information I obtain as a result of accessing any oral history provided by the University of Utah's Marriott Library shall be used only for historical or scholarly or academic research purposes, and not for commercial purposes. I understand that any other use of the materials is not authorized by the University of Utah and may exceed the scope of permission granted to the University of Utah by the interviewer or interviewee. I may request permission for other uses, in writing to Special Collections at the Marriott Library, which the University of Utah may choose grant, in its sole discretion. I agree to defend, indemnify and hold the University of Utah and its Marriott Library harmless for and against any actions or claims that relate to my improper use of materials provided by the University of Utah. |
| Subject |
Schultz, Harry James, 1919-1993--Interviews; Community Action Program (U.S.); Head Start Program (U.S.); World War, 1939-1945--Aerial operations; Strikes and lockouts--Miners--Utah; Carbon County (Utah) |
| Description |
The interview with Hal Schultz covers the subjects of his father's work in the mines, mechanization, prejudice, history of aviation in Carbon County, mining strikes, experiences in the military, involvement with Head Sttard and the Community Action Program, his family, and awards. The Carbon County oral history project (1972-1993) consists of oral histories from residents of Carbon County, Utah. While the main emphasis is on living in coal mine country, the interviews are verbal snapshots of rural Utah life from the earliest settlers to as recently as 1993. |
| Collection Number and Name |
Accn1479, Carbon County oral history project, 1972-1993 |
| Type |
Text |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Language |
eng |
| Rights |
 |
| Relation |
http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv38397 |
| Scanning Technician |
Mazi Rakhsha |
| Conversion Specifications |
Original scanned with Kirtas 2400 and saved as 400 ppi uncompressed TIFF. PDF generated by Adobe Acrobat Pro X for CONTENTdm display |
| ARK |
ark:/87278/s6pz7c68 |
| Topic |
Strikes and lockouts--Miners; Utah--Carbon County; World War (1939-1945); Military operations, Aerial; Head Start Program (U.S.); Community Action Program (U.S.) |
| Genre |
oral histories (literary works) |
| Setname |
uum_ccoh |
| ID |
785488 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6pz7c68 |
| Title |
Page 84 |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Setname |
uum_ccoh |
| ID |
785473 |
| OCR Text |
Show HAL SCHULTZ how we survived that one. But in the meantime, Nixon had ordered the destruction of the CAP and we had close-out orders, five pages of orders on how to close this thing out quick. The guy that was running the CAP then said I can't stay with a sinking ship, it will look bad on my career resume, I'm quitting. The board came to me and asked me if I take over the run the program either fold it out gracefully with no harm to anybody if Nixon won or make a program out of it if he didn't. So I said I'll take the second choice. We had the same battle with Reagan when he came in, they gave him fits down in California because he was a hard headed reactionary. It's kind of interesting, he had at one time been a card waving Democrat, and then became a right wing Republican. Just the opposite of my search. We, in the meantime, had gotten smart enough to know that we had to do something in the Congress. We could never expect any help from the White House, because when Jimmy Carter was elected we thought wondrous things would happen. But Jimmy treated us, what I choose to call, benign neglect, he just didn't care. Don't know why, but mostly probably not informed. So we decided to build a base. in Congress, so we formed a Community Action Foundation. We found a young fellow that started lobbying for various groups. We hired him. The first thing the Congress did on Reagan's request, 82 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6pz7c68/785473 |