Date
6-27-1967
Series
City '67
Length
1 hour 3 minutes
Notes
Donald Pollard, who was director of the planning branch of the regional office of Housing and Urban Development, spoke as the first of five speakers in the summer series, "City '67." Lyndon Musolf, director of Urban Studies at Portland State, served as moderator.
Transferred and preserved by Portland State University Library’s Special Collections with the generous support of the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Library Services and Technology Act, administered by the Oregon State Library.
Subjects
City planning -- United States, Subculture
Original Format
Reel to reel, 3.75 ips, 1/2 track, mono
Rights
This digital access copy is made available as streaming media for personal, educational, and non-commercial use only. It cannot be reproduced in any form, distributed or played for commercial purposes. It is made accessible because of one or more of the following situations: the rights are owned by State Board of Higher Education, on behalf of Portland State University; Portland State University has permission to make it accessible; it is made accessible for education and research purposes under "fair use"; or there are no known restrictions on use. In the event that previously unknown information is shared that may change the status of this item, it will be immediately removed from public view until pertinent rights issues are clarified.
Persistent Identifier
http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/11060
Recommended Citation
Pollard, Donald, ""The City as the Foundation for the Development of Subcultures"" (1967). Special Collections: Oregon Public Speakers. 1.
http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/11060
Description
Transcript added August 10, 2020.
PSU Library Special Collections and University Archives presents these recordings as part of the historical record. They reflect the recollections and opinions of the individual speakers and are not intended to be representative of the views of Portland State University. They may contain language, ideas, or stereotypes that are offensive to others.