Presidential Libraries Public Programs March 2017

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Presidential Libraries Public Programs March 2017 Presidential Libraries Public Programs March 2017 Above: Herbert Hoover Playing with his Son 1 2 3 4 Herbert Jr. in Australia, 1905. Herbert Hoover Truman National History Day Presidential Library and Museum. Regional Contest 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Ford Museum Carter Eisenhower Kennedy Showing of "WALL- Book Talk: Marjorie Film: Calamity Jane Celebrate! with E", the third in the Spruill, Divided We Ford Museum Themselves: An space film series to Stand: The Battle Lecture: Andy Boyan Immigrant's Story coincide with the Over Women's lecture ~ "Political temporary exhibit on Rights and Family Bias in American space. Values That News Media" Polarized American Politics George W. Bush Lecture: First Lady Florence Harding: Behind the Tragedy and Controversy 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Eisenhower Pat Nixon Book Talk: Good Born 1912 Land Eisenhower Film: Annie Get Your Gun Carter Book Talk: Benjamin Reiss , Wild Nights: How Taming Sleep Created Our Restless World 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Roosevelt Clinton Carter Roosevelt Carter Forum: Anne Frank: Student Forum: Forum: Listening to Book Talk: Jill Contemporary Program: Spring Countdown to the Roosevelt’s: Stuckey, Ossabaw Perspectives in the Break at the Zero: Guinea Eleanor Roosevelt, Island: A Sense of Arts and Humanities Center Worm "First Lady of Radio" Place 26 27 28 29 30 31 Hoover Carter Eisenhower Lou Henry Hoover Exhibit Closes: Book Talk: Sybil Book Talk: Ike Born 1874 America's Road The Morial, Witness and McCarthy Journey of Route 66 to Change: From Hoover Jim Crow to Lou Henry Hoover's Political Birthday Celebration Empowerment Carter Book Talk: Ganesh Sitaraman, The Crisis of the Middle- Class Constitution and Book Talk: Greg Iles, Mississippi Blood. Presidential Libraries Exhibits LIBRARY EXHIBIT EXHIBIT CLOSES HOOVER America's Road The Journey of Route 66 March 26, 2017 FORD MUSEUM A Journey to Our Future May 29, 2017 CARTER Countdown to Zero: Defeating Disease October 9, 2017 CLINTON Coca-Cola: An American Original TBD .
Recommended publications
  • Niall Palmer
    EnterText 1.1 NIALL PALMER “Muckfests and Revelries”: President Warren G. Harding in Fact and Fiction This article will assess the development of the posthumous reputation of President Warren Gamaliel Harding (1921-23) through an examination of key historical and literary texts in Harding historiography. The article will argue that the president’s image has been influenced by an unusual confluence of factors which have both warped history’s assessment of his administration and retarded efforts at revisionism. As a direct consequence, the stereotypical, deeply negative, portrait of Harding remains rooted in the nation’s consciousness and the “rehabilitation” afforded to many presidents by revisionist writers continues to be denied to the man still widely-regarded as the worst president of the twentieth century. “Historians,” Eugene Trani and David Wilson observed in 1977, “have not been gentle with Warren G. Harding.”1 In successive surveys of American political scientists, historians and journalists, undertaken to rank presidents by achievement, vision and leadership skills, the twenty-ninth president consistently comes last.2 The Chicago Sun- Times, publishing the findings of fifty-eight presidential historians and political scientists in November 1995, placed Warren Harding at the head of the list of “The Ten Worst” Niall Palmer: Muckfests and Revelries 155 EnterText 1.1 Presidents.3 A 1996 New York Times poll branded Harding an outright “failure,” alongside two presidents who presided over the pre-Civil War crisis, Franklin Pierce and James Buchanan. The academic merit and methodological underpinnings of such surveys are inevitably flawed. Nonetheless, in most cases, presidential status assessments are fluid, reflecting the fluctuations of contemporary opinion and occasional waves of academic revisionism.
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  • Dead Last: the Public Memory of Warren G. Harding's Scandalous
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  • Team Players: Triumph and Tribulation on the Campaign Trail
    residential campaigns that celebrate our freedom to choose a leader by election of the people are events P unique to our country. It is an expectant, exciting time – a promise kept by the Constitution for a better future. Rituals developed over time and became traditions of presidential hopefuls – the campaign slogans and songs, hundreds of speeches, thousands of handshakes, the countless miles of travel across the country to meet voters - all reported by the ever-present media. The candidate must do a balancing act as leader and entertainer to influence the American voters. Today the potential first spouse is expected to be involved in campaign issues, and her activities are as closely scrutinized as the candidate’s. However, these women haven’t always been an official part of the ritual contest. Campaigning for her husband’s run for the presidency is one of the biggest self-sacrifices a First Lady want-to-be can make. The commitment to the campaign and the road to election night are simultaneously exhilarating and exhausting. In the early social norms of this country, the political activities of a candidate’s wife were limited. Nineteenth-century wives could host public parties and accept social invitations. She might wave a handkerchief from a window during a “hurrah parade” or quietly listen to a campaign speech behind a closed door. She could delight the crowd by sending them a winsome smile from the front porch campaign of her own home. But she could not openly show knowledge of politics and she could not vote. As the wife of a newly-elected president, her media coverage consisted of the description of the lovely gown she wore to the Inaugural Ball.
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  • Modern First Ladies: Their Documentary Legacy. INSTITUTION National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 412 562 CS 216 046 AUTHOR Smith, Nancy Kegan, Comp.; Ryan, Mary C., Comp. TITLE Modern First Ladies: Their Documentary Legacy. INSTITUTION National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC. ISBN ISBN-0-911333-73-8 PUB DATE 1989-00-00 NOTE 189p.; Foreword by Don W. Wilson (Archivist of the United States). Introduction and Afterword by Lewis L. Gould. Published for the National Archives Trust Fund Board. PUB TYPE Collected Works General (020) -- Historical Materials (060) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC08 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Archives; *Authors; *Females; Modern History; Presidents of the United States; Primary Sources; Resource Materials; Social History; *United States History IDENTIFIERS *First Ladies (United States); *Personal Writing; Public Records; Social Power; Twentieth Century; Womens History ABSTRACT This collection of essays about the Presidential wives of the 20th century through Nancy Reagan. An exploration of the records of first ladies will elicit diverse insights about the historical impact of these women in their times. Interpretive theories that explain modern first ladies are still tentative and exploratory. The contention in the essays, however, is that whatever direction historical writing on presidential wives may follow, there is little question that the future role of first ladies is more likely to expand than to recede to the days of relatively silent and passive helpmates. Following a foreword and an introduction, essays in the collection and their authors are, as follows: "Meeting a New Century: The Papers of Four Twentieth-Century First Ladies" (Mary M. Wolf skill); "Not One to Stay at Home: The Papers of Lou Henry Hoover" (Dale C.
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  • Ranking America's First Ladies Eleanor Roosevelt Still #1 Abigail Adams Regains 2 Place Hillary Moves from 2 to 5 ; Jackie
    For Immediate Release: Monday, September 29, 2003 Ranking America’s First Ladies Eleanor Roosevelt Still #1 nd Abigail Adams Regains 2 Place Hillary moves from 2 nd to 5 th ; Jackie Kennedy from 7 th th to 4 Mary Todd Lincoln Up From Usual Last Place Loudonville, NY - After the scrutiny of three expert opinion surveys over twenty years, Eleanor Roosevelt is still ranked first among all other women who have served as America’s First Ladies, according to a recent expert opinion poll conducted by the Siena (College) Research Institute (SRI). In other news, Mary Todd Lincoln (36 th ) has been bumped up from last place by Jane Pierce (38 th ) and Florence Harding (37 th ). The Siena Research Institute survey, conducted at approximate ten year intervals, asks history professors at America’s colleges and universities to rank each woman who has been a First Lady, on a scale of 1-5, five being excellent, in ten separate categories: *Background *Integrity *Intelligence *Courage *Value to the *Leadership *Being her own *Public image country woman *Accomplishments *Value to the President “It’s a tracking study,” explains Dr. Douglas Lonnstrom, Siena College professor of statistics and co-director of the First Ladies study with Thomas Kelly, Siena professor-emeritus of American studies. “This is our third run, and we can chart change over time.” Siena Research Institute is well known for its Survey of American Presidents, begun in 1982 during the Reagan Administration and continued during the terms of presidents George H. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush (http://www.siena.edu/sri/results/02AugPresidentsSurvey.htm ).
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  • NATIONAL CONSTITUTION CENTER to HOST FIRST LADIES: POLITICAL ROLE and PUBLIC IMAGE Last Stop on Exhibit’S Nationwide Tour
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Ashley Berke Public Relations Manager 215.409.6693 [email protected] Downloadable images and complete press kit available at: www.constitutioncenter.org/PressRoom/ChangingExhibits/ For additional images, please visit: ftp://siteguest:[email protected]/ (username: sitesguest, password: 9getfiles9) NATIONAL CONSTITUTION CENTER TO HOST FIRST LADIES: POLITICAL ROLE AND PUBLIC IMAGE Last Stop on Exhibit’s Nationwide Tour Philadelphia, PA – America’s first ladies have fascinated generations, influenced politics and style, advocated for social causes, and navigated an unpaid, unelected, and difficult role. From October 5 through December 31, 2007, the National Constitution Center will host First Ladies: Political Role and Public Image. From the exuberant Dolley Madison and troubled Mary Todd Lincoln, to the humanitarian Eleanor Roosevelt and the intriguing wives of our recent presidents, the exhibition celebrates the remarkable individuals who have occupied this demanding post. The showing of First Ladies at the National Constitution Center is the last stop on the exhibit’s national tour. First Ladies is based on one of the Smithsonian’s most visited permanent exhibitions and contains artifacts from the rarely traveled first ladies collection of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, Behring Center. Organized by the National Museum of American History and the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES), First Ladies is made possible by A&E Network. Macy’s is the local presenting sponsor and NBC 10 is the official media partner for the Center’s showing of First Ladies. -MORE- ADD ONE/FIRST LADIES EXHIBITION The exhibition features more than two centuries of elegant inaugural and evening gowns, clothing and jewelry, White House furnishings and china, photographs and portraits, and campaign and personal memorabilia.
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  • 65Th MEETING
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  • Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1995), 143–65
    NOTES Introduction 1. On the formidable mythology of the Watergate experience, see Michael Schudson, The Power of News (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1995), 143–65. 2. Adam Gropkin, “Read All About It,” New Yorker, 12 December 1994, 84–102. Samuel Kernell, Going Public: New Strategies of Presidential Leader- ship, 2nd ed. (Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 1993), 55–64, 192–6. 3. Michael Baruch Grossman and Martha Joynt Kumar, Portraying the Presi- dent:The White House and the News Media (Baltimore, Md: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981), 19–28. See also Stephen Hess, The Government- Press Connection (Washington, D.C.: Brookings, 1984). 4. Kenneth T.Walsh, Feeding the Beast:The White House versus the Press (New York:Random House, 1996), 6–7. 5. Thomas E. Patterson,“Legitimate Beef:The Presidency and a Carnivorous Press,” Media Studies Journal 8 (No. 2, Spring 1994): 21–6. 6. See, among others, Robert Entman, Democracy without Citizens: Media and the Decay of American Politics (New York: Oxford, 1989), James Fallows, Breaking the News (New York: Pantheon, 1996), and Thomas E. Patterson, Out of Order (New York:Vintage, 1994). 7. Larry J. Sabato, Feeding Frenzy: How Attack Journalism Has Transformed Poli- tics (New York: Free Press, 1991) is credited with popularizing use of the phrase. 8. See, generally, John Anthony Maltese, Spin Control:The White House Office of Communications and the Management of Presidential News, 2nd ed. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1994). 9. Jennifer Waber,“Secrecy and Control: Reporters Committee says Clinton Administration’s dealings with the press have become more antagonistic,” Editor and Publisher, 24 May 1997, 10–13, 33–4.
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  • Newsletter Spring 2005-2
    Spring/Summer 2005 News from the Tenth “Diamond” Anniversary Dear Friends: It hardly seems like ten years ago that I invited 13 of you to lunch at the Hilton Hotel (now the Marriott McKinley Grand) and asked you to help me raise $100,000 to hire a bibliographer to research all the First Ladies and help me put a complete annotated bibliography on line. “There is a void in American History”, I told you, “and we can help fill it.” Little did I then dream that it was an idea whose time had come. With the financial help originally of ten major American corporations, as well as community and national foundations, we raised our first million. Three major fundraisers in Washington and one in Pittsburgh would add another million as we reached out to generous donors throughout the nation. The opening of our website from the East Room of the White House in February 1998 was the highlight of the project. First Lady Hillary Clinton accessed her bibliography in a video conferencing session, reaching out to a number of schools here and abroad. When former First Lady Rosalynn Carter came in June 1998 to dedicate the Saxton House, I thought we had reached our goal. We had, however, only just begun. The Marsh Belden Family’s gift of the City National Bank Building, built in 1895, in the year 1999 overwhelmed us with possibilities for the future. The “Save America’s Treasures” national matching grant took the possibilities and made them realities. Many of you will remember the then First Lady Hillary Clinton standing on a platform in the center of Market Street in front of the old bank building making us an Official Project of “Save America’s Treasures” in July 1999.
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  • Group 27 (2 Members)
    1 Group 27 (2 members) Professor Groeling Times over Time Project March 6, 2010 The First Lady: 7KH0HGLD¶V&RYHUDJHRIWKH3UHVLGHQW¶V:LIH Research Question & Hypothesis Through our research we will attempt to answer one primary question: Over time, has the presidential FDQGLGDWH¶VZLIH¶V role HYROYHGDVZRPHQ¶VULJKWVKDYHLQFUHDVHG" We expect to see the role and coverage of the First Ladies expand as time goes on. We HVSHFLDOO\H[SHFWWRVHHJURZWKLQWKHLUUROHVDIWHU ZRPHQ¶VVXIIUDJH DQGGXUing the 1960s (the feminist movement). Introduction When Harry S. Truman left the White House, he addressed the American people and XUJHGWKHPWR³WDNHWLPHWRHYDOXDWHWKHWUXHUROHRIthe wife of the president and to assess the many burdens she has to bear and the contributions she makes´1. 7KH ILUVW ODG\¶V SROLWLFDO influence is unequivocal as one of the few individuals that has direct and intimate access to one of the most powerful persons in the world. For voters, knowing about a presidential candidatH¶V family and personal life allows them to conjecture about their character and thus about his viability as president. The way in which a president uses or manages the political and cultural assets that a first lady provides says a great deal about the style and impact of an administration. 1 "Source Material": Toward the Study of the First Lady: The State of Scholarship.Robert P. Watson. Presidential Studies Quarterly, Vol. 33, No. 2 (Jun., 2003), pp. 423-441. Blackwell Publishing on behalf of the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27552493. 2 Beyond the political arena, increasing fascination with the first lady has spread into mainstream society.
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  • Zoom in on America American First Ladies the Office of the First Lady Did Not Formally Exist Until the Presidency of Jimmy Carter in the 1970S
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