Public Programs
Symposia
In cooperation with The Churchill Centre, Washington, D.C., the
Library of Congress will present two symposia.:
- February 19,
2004 - Churchill
and the Three Presidents (Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Harry S. Truman, and Dwight D. Eisenhower) - view program
for full-day symposium
- June
1, 2004 - a half-day symposium will explore new
scholarship on Sir Winston Churchill.
Please call 202-707-9203 for further
information.
Tours
To schedule group tours of the exhibition, please contact the
Visitor Services Office at 202-707-8816.
To schedule school tours of the exhibition, please contact the
Interpretive Programs Office, 202-707-9203.
Churchill and the Three Presidents - FULL
PROGRAM
Thursday, February 19, 2004
The Mumford Room,
James Madison Building
Symposiarch: James W. Muller
James Muller is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Alaska,
Anchorage, where he has taught since 1983, and Academic Chairman of The Churchill
Centre. Educated at Harvard University, he served as a White House Fellow in
1983-84.
Program
9:00–9:15 a.m. - Welcome
Prosser Gifford, Director of Scholarly Programs, Library of
Congress
William C. Ives, President, The Churchill Centre
9:15–10:45 a.m. - Churchill and Roosevelt
Piers Brendon: "Churchill, Roosevelt, and Empire"
Piers Brendon served for six years as the Keeper of the Churchill
Archives Centre, Cambridge, U.K., which holds the papers of Sir
Winston Churchill, Margaret Thatcher, and other eminent figures.
Brendon is a Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge. He is currently
writing a history of the British Empire.
Warren Kimball: "Churchill
and Roosevelt: Joined at the Hip, by History, or Historians?"
Warren F. Kimball is the Robert Treat Professor of History at
Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey and, for 2002-2004,
is the Mark Clark Visiting Distinguished Professor History at
The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina.
10:45–11:15 a.m. - Morning coffee
11:15 a.m.–1:00 p.m. - Churchill and Truman
Arnold A. Offner: "Churchill Without Tears: President
Truman and the Ambivalence of Anglo-American Relations"
Arnold A. Offner is the Cornelia F. Hugel Professor of History
at Lafayette College and past president of the Society for Historians
of American Foreign Relations.
David Reynolds: "Churchill
and Truman: The Struggle for History"
David Reynolds is a Professor of International History
at Cambridge University. He is completing a study of Churchill’s
memoirs of the Second World War, to be published in 2005.
1:00–2:30 p.m. - Luncheon break
2:30–4:15 p.m. - Churchill and Eisenhower
Klaus W. Larres: "Unequal Relations: Churchill and
Eisenhower during the Cold War"
Klaus W. Larres holds the Royal Holloway Chair in International
Relations and Foreign Policy at the University of London. In 2002-03
he was the Henry A. Kissinger Professor in Foreign Policy and International
Relations at the Library of Congress.
John Ramsden: "Old and Dear Friends, Old and New Worlds"
John Ramsden is Professor of Modern History at Queen Mary, University
of London, where he has taught since 1972, and Director of the
Graduate School in Humanities and Social Sciences. Ramsden is
a member of The Churchill Centre Board of Academic Advisers,
serving as vice chairman since 2003.
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