Marking Time

lincoln-2wax.JPG Strapped for Funds?

The budget struggle between Congress and the President may impact next year’s Lincoln Bicentennial.

lincoln-springfield.jpg Congressman Ray LaHood represents much of Lincoln’s old House district, and he’s been counting on an earmark he secured as an Appropriations Committee member. It may be a casualty of a Congressional tactic, knocking out earmarks to overcome an anticipated Bush veto:

There are a lot of people who were very disappointed last year when nobody got any earmarks. If they do it again for the second year in a row, it will be a very bitter pill to swallow,” said Rep. Ray LaHood (R-Ill.), an appropriator who complained that he could lose $400,000 he needs for the Abraham Lincoln bicentennial celebration, slated to begin Feb. 12.

The Bicentennial Commission looks like it could use some help. Their web page’s most “recent news” is from July, and they appear so starved for material that they repeat a quiz about Lincoln’s dog twice.

Flagging Interest

ford-allen-flag-painting.jpg Wrap It Up

The Ford Library in Grand Rapids is now commemorating, um, commemorations.

ford-allen-flag-photo.jpg They’ve unveiled a painting of long time Museum board fixture Marty Allen carrying the flag after it flew at half staff for 30 days after Ford’s death.

Not to be confused with 70s comedian Marty Allen. ford-2marty-allen-comedian-betty-ford.JPG

Funny Pages of History

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Dr. K’s 100-page Super Spectacular comic blog is digging deep, recalling 1976’s “Challengers of the Unknown” encounter with an as yet to be beloved Gerald Ford and the unaccountably still visible Henry Kissinger.

Dr.K sums up The Amazing Adventures of Kissinger & Ford:

President Gerald Ford calls on the Challengers of the Unknown to rescue Secretary of State, Nobel Prize winner, and war criminal Dr. Henry Kissinger from an island in the Bermuda Triangle inhabited by dinosaurs, cavemen, and samurai. I’m just going to stop writing now, forever, because I don’t think I’ll ever write a sentence as awesome as that.” ford-kissinger-super-team-family-8.jpg

Library Lady

bush-laura-first-ladies-coloring-book-library-reading.jpg Check It Out

Ladybird Johnson promoted wildflowers, Roslyn Carter mental health, and Nancy Reagan spurred us to victory in the War on Drugs. But they didn’t officially plaster their name on the issues while their husbands were on the federal payroll.

The federal Institute of Museum and Library Services is taking a more direct approach with the current First Lady. The “Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian” grants are now available!

The Institute has a Director with a string of Republican appointments to her credit.

Hurry! Applications due December 17th!

Meanwhile, liberal bastion Austin Texas is building “Laura’s Librarybush-lauars-library.jpg

Off Menu

landau-2reagans.JPG OK, but why Shelly Winters?

Presidential Helpmate Barry Landau has taken his cavalcade of dubious presidential history to the Martha Stewart show.

landau-the-presidents-table-cover.gif Landau is out and about promoting his compilation of White House and other menus, The President’s Table, spinning gossamer tales of place settings into THE STUFF OF HISTORY.

Let Me Show You My Etchings landau-coat.jpg

He began by telling Stewart a whopper. Landau showed her a papaya-sized belt buckle, which he claims was presented to President Grant by grateful Indian tribes. He described Grant as a great advocate of the Indians, and says “Grant had fought in the Indian Wars.”

That never happened.

When he isn’t making stuff up, Landau’s method is to take an object and buff it up by association with something totally unrelated, or to ascribe vast import to what’s really ephemera.

“When you get these little facts, it’s a rush. I just go floating around. It provides the missing links to presidential history

He talks up a menu:

“Theodore Roosevelt’s Copper Menu, 1903
Given to Barry Landau as gift from President Roosevelt’s daughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth, this menu was for a dinner held in Roosevelt’s honor, given by the mayor of Butte, Montana, on May 27, 1903. The dinner followed Roosevelt’s address at the Minnesota State Fair, in which he called for America to assume its responsibilities as one of the great nations of the world.”

Well.

The State Fair speech was a big deal, launching the “walk softly and carry a big stick” catchphrase which has spawned a thousand editorial cartoons. roosevelt-t-big-stick-cartoon.JPG

And “assuming” our responsibilities has certainly paid off with Cuba, fount of Roosevelt’s glory and subject of much of the speech.

Roosevelt went to Butte on the same tour, didn’t get the ink there.

Landau rushes to share the secrets only he knows, which are pretty much about nothing.

“The one piece Landau describes as the most important in the whole book is a menu on which the wife of the postmaster general wrote the guest list for a secret dinner held by President Ulysses S. Grant as he handed over power to incoming President Rutherford B. Hayes….“Until I found that at a flea market for $10 no one knew who was at that dinner,” Landau says.”

And they would be right not to care.

Landau is looking for the history of great white men and their appetizers, and in this instance especially it is utterly beside the point.

Hayes succeeded Grant in the 1876 election only with spectacular plotting and intrigue. The Democratic winners of the popular vote went along with a dubious Republican Electoral College victory. In return, federal troops abandoned African Americans in the South to their fate. An era of enlightenment did not follow. reconstruction-ends-the_union_as_it_was.jpg

Dups

Along with his dubious history Landau serves up some, shall we say, fanciful numbers.

I have about 26,000-plus White House menus alone,” said Landau, who keeps most of his collection in a Washington, D.C., storage facility.

As Barry explained, “Menus didn’t really come into use until 1839 or 1840,” which means he’s collected roughly 155 annually for each year since.

landau-barry.jpg But whether you are piling up those “26,000 menus,” or “24,000 pieces of presidential memorabilia,” or “ about 1 million items,” or “1.2 million pieces,” you’re bound to have a few duplicates.