Mainebiz

April 29, 2024

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V O L . X X X N O. I X A P R I L 2 9 , 2 0 2 4 32 3 0 T H A N N I V E R S A R Y F O C U S P R E F A B R I C A T I O N Interstate: Innovation & Excellence in Prefabrication Prefabrication is the cornerstone of Interstate's lean construction strategy. Our UL Certified 100,000 sq. ft. Operations Center incorporates innovative disciplines, expertise and technology that encompasses state-of-the-art electrical assembly. Enhanced safety, ergonomics & reduced site waste Ability to accommodate scope & schedule changes Greater efficiency of installations by skilled workforce onsite UL certified quality & certified assembler apprentice program Advanced technology & lean construction methods Valued Partner. Trusted Employer. 855.500.IESC | www.iesc1.com MASSACHUSET TS | CONNEC TICUT | RHODE ISLAND | NEW HAMPSHIRE | MAINE | VERMONT W ith the 30th anniversary of Mainebiz, staffers got to reminiscing about where they were in 1994. Seems like a long time ago — especially when you think back to days before the internet, iPhones, Google and hybrid workplaces. We've gathered some of their stories. Adventures in Hungary B y R e n e e C o r d e s Daily life was an adventure in post- Communist Hungary, where I broke news from insider trading to an ambu- lance shortage as a reporter for the Budapest Business Journal, an English- language startup weekly newspaper. e internet was in its infancy and phones were unreliable, so the only way you got stories was out on the beat. Once, while I was en route to interview a diplomat in the Buda hills, a driver in a myste- rious vehicle pulled up to me, rolled down the window and said, "Are you Renee Cordes? … Get in the car!" I did, and got the story. 'One day you'll just read stories on your computer' B y P e t e r V a n A l l e n In 1994, I was living in Philadelphia, was married, had one young child at that point and a mortgage. Life was moving fast. I was excited to be promoted from business reporter to business editor at the Courier-Post, a Gannett daily newspaper that cov- ered southern New Jersey. I had been Mainebiz staffers recall where they were in 1994 B y M a i n e b i z S t a f f I N S I D E T H E N OT E B O O K trained by a drill-sergeant of a men- tor, Jim Walsh, who taught me how to write short, write "tight" and pack a lot of information into a small space — and get it done on deadline. Now, as busi- ness editor, I reported directly to the executive editor, Ev Landers, who was a big scary guy with a shaved head and impeccable suits. e promotion was great but meant longer hours. Landers coached me that instead of longer hours I needed to "work smarter." A constant challenge was the fickle newsroom computer system, which would routinely go dark, resulting in hours of lost work. Yet around us, the world was chang- ing. Later that year, a reporter friend of mine, Steve Keating, got a job at the Denver Post, a big step up. He stopped by my house, and I still remember him telling me about the internet — which was, in 1994, as foreign to most people as nuclear physics. "One day," he said, "there won't even be newspapers or magazines. You'll just read stories on your computer." I thought of our dodgy newsroom computer system and shook my head. "You're crazy, man." Keating went on to write a book called, "Cutthroat: High Stakes & Killer Moves on the Electronic Frontier." Interactions with the national media B y W i l l i a m H a l l I was living in Boston, editing a magazine and other publica- tions for a Harvard teaching hospital. I also helped the hos- pital manage press inquiries, since I had previously worked for several years as a business reporter and felt I knew a thing or two about the news world. However, the experience of routinely interacting with national media was an education in itself. I ended up learning a lot about journalism by simply having to deal with CNN, the Wall Street Journal and "60 Minutes." High school and a job making $3.75 an hour B y A n d r e a T e t z l a f f I was a freshman at Gorham High School, participat- ing in cross country, indoor track and outdoor track. I was sneaking rides in cars with upperclass- men and figuring out the hierarchy of high school life. I worked at the laundromat in Gorham folding laun- dry and was paid $3.75 an hour under the table. Little did I know within 12 months my family would be moving to West Virginia, where I ended up living for 15 years before returning to Maine. Diploma in hand — and wedding plans B y A l l i s o n S p i e s I had just graduated from the University of Maine with a degree in commu- nications and was looking for my first "real job,"which, looking back, seemed a lot more challenging without the help of the internet. After an up and down search, I was thrilled to land a posi- tion at the Portland Press Herald in the advertising department. I was also planning my wedding which was to be the following year and, if you're doing the math, we are still together and will be celebrating our 29th anniversary this year. The internet was in its infancy and phones were unreliable, so the only way you got stories was out on the beat. — Renee Cordes

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