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skip specific nav links Home News Emily Summers Receives Oath of Office for ACHP Emily Summers Receives Oath of Office for the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation For more information, contact Bruce Milhans at (202) 606-8513 or bmilhans@achp.gov November 14, 2002, Washington, DCEmily Summers of Dallas, Texas, today was sworn in for a four-year term of office as a citizen member of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP). Clay Johnson, III, assistant to the President for presidential personnel, presided over the ceremony held at the Navy Museum in Washington, DC. "The President's selection of Emily Summers will provide the ACHP with a great asset," said Chairman John L. Nau, III. "Her professional expertise combined with her personal commitment make her a perfect addition to further and improve ACHP's role in advising the President and Congress on matters of historic preservation involving the Federal Government." Summers is the principal of Emily Summers Design in Dallas. She is a member of the American Institute of Architects, the American Architecture Foundation, the American Society of Interior Designers, and is registered as an interior designer in the State of Texas. She currently serves on the Foundation Advisory Council of the University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture. As part of her 34-year affiliation with the Dallas Museum of Art, Summers is on the Artists Awards Committee and the Marketing Committee, Building Committee, Education Committee, and Associate Committee. She is also a founding committee member of the Dallas Architectural Forum. An independent Federal agency, the ACHP promotes historic preservation
nationally by providing a forum for influencing Federal activities, programs,
and policies that impact historic properties by advising the President
and Congress, advocating preservation policy, improving Federal preservation
programs, protecting historic properties, and educating stakeholders and
the public. The ACHP is located in Washington, DC, with a field office
in Colorado. For more information, visit the ACHP's Web site at www.achp.gov. ###
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