(Source: girlwithapumpkintattoo, via tiny-librarian)
blua:
The spice girls performance at the London 2012 Olympics closing ceremony
(Source: bitchesaloud, via tiny-librarian)
Congress in the Archives will feature monthly staff posts on our blog. Today’s post comes from Center intern Steven Robles.
Today marks the anniversary of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s nomination of Keith Glennan as NASA’s first administrator. Eisenhower submitted the nomination to the Senate for confirmation on August 8, 1958. Glennan’s appointment ended a tumultuous year during which Americans and their government struggled to respond to the Soviet Union’s unprecedented achievement of 1957, the launch of the satellite Sputnik. Between Eisenhower’s stoic leadership and Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson’s deft political maneuvering in Congress, Americans soon had their own civilian space program, NASA, with heady goals to surpass the Soviets. But the work had hardly begun.
In its first tempestuous years, the young NASA incorporated many disparate pieces and had to devise a structure that put hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to efficient use. Some of the early plans for the new civilian space program were modeled off its predecessor, the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics. But quickly, politicians and policymakers realized that the daunting tasks facing the new space program would require a single authoritative administrator rather than a committee of advisors, like the one that had presided over NACA. Equally important to this decision about core structure, then, was the appointment of the first Administrator himself. Glennan’s successful presidency of Case Institute of Technology in Cleveland, his involvement as member of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, and his history of service made him an ideal candidate for the post.
After Eisenhower submitted his nomination of Glennan, the Senate had the task of either confirming or denying the appointment. The poll sheet, shown above, documents an important step in the Senate’s process. Here the Senate Special Committee on Space and Astronautics, chaired by Lyndon Johnson, unanimously voted to recommend the nomination’s confirmation to the Senate at large, which accepted the recommendation and confirmed Glennan just five days later on August 19. In the three short years that Glennan served as Administrator at NASA, he oversaw the incorporation of installations such as the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Goddard Space Flight Center, and Marshall Space Flight Center into NASA. Glennan’s contribution helped to ensure the space program’s success throughout the 1960’s and to secure NASA’s place in the history of great scientific achievements.
Nomination of T. Keith Glennan to be Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 8/8/1958, Records of the U.S. Senate (ARC 306360)
Poll Sheet of Members of the Senate Special Committee on Space and Aeronautics relating to Nominations of T. Keith Glennan, 8/14/1958, Records of the U.S. Senate
Lou Henry Hoover’s Report on the Boxer Rebellion
In this letter, Lou Henry Hoover chides college friend Evelyn Wight Allen for her failure to come to China in time for the Boxer Rebellion in June, 1900. The Hoovers — along with 800 European and American citizens — had suffered through a 45 day siege by 30,000 Boxers who had surrounded Tientsin. After an international relief force drove off the Boxers, Mrs. Hoover found time to write an extraordinary letter in which she proudly compared their ordeal with the experiences of Kimberly and Mafeking, two English settlements that had been surrounded for several months during the recent Boer War in South Africa.
Boxer Rebellion observations by future First Lady, Lou Henry Hoover, 08/08/1900
via DocsTeach
On November 28, 1789, the deputy Armand Camus denounced to the Assembly the existence of the “Red Book”, which contained information on pensions granted by the king. The “Red Book” was given to the Pension Committee of the Constituent Assembly in March 1790 and was published on April 1. The Controller-General of Finances Jacques Necker, aware of the scandal and the political consequences of such a revelation, tried to dissuade the king to deny publication.
The red morocco binding is the origin of the name “Red Book” given to the “Register of bearer of orders from 1773 to 1788” which was published in 1790. Emblematic of royal splendor, these three sumptuous bindings made during the reign of Louis XV, are unique creations and among the finest in the eighteenth century. The royal bookbinders Pasdeloup Antoine (1685-1758) and Pierre-Paul Dubuisson (d. 1762) could be the creators. The gilt bindings catches the light and gives each volume a fascinating glow.
The “Red Book” is not a book of accounts, but a record of disbursements ordered by the king, who all received the royal signature “L” (for Louis). Published in 1790, the Red Book caused a public outcry in the press who reproduced and commented largely by mocking and insulting cartoons. Disclosure of the names of pensioners shocked. Most of them were rich nobles and several people from the court received pensions, often without any real reason. These disproportionate favors of the royal family, in order to favorite courtiers and noble families, were deeply shocking, given the deficit and popular misery.
The publication of the “Red Book” highlights the abuses of absolutism, the financial disorder and the need for reform.
Disclosure of beneficiaries of royal largesse further discredited the aristocracy and even produced an immense effect both in Paris and the provinces.
This case also reveals the weakness of Louis XVI, who procrastinated but could not find a solution in time to prevent the scandal.
According to popular mythology, the publisher Allen Lane, founder of Penguin Books, formulated his idea for a press dedicated exclusively to paperbacks while visiting a railway station. Having spent the weekend visiting his friend Agatha Christie, the famed author of Murder on the Orient Express, Lane arrived at the Exeter railway station and realized he had forgotten his book. Frustrated and facing the boredom of a long train trip, Lane tried to buy a novel at the station but found that there was nothing available that he felt worth reading. Bookless for the next few hours, he sat on the train and planned a new line of cheap, pocket-sized, and travel-worthy books, which could be sold at railway stations, grocers, and department stores. Penguin Books—and the paperback revolution—were born.
A fascinating article (and slideshow) on how Penguin revolutionized the paperback.
A Dictionary of Despicable Words
awesome. ”The worst word on the planet is awesome. It appears to be the only surviving adjective denoting approval or admiration. Beautiful, good, admirable, excellent, amazing—all dead as a doornail. Of course, it’s even more dreadful when preceded by the word like, as in ‘I saw that movie last night. It was, like, AWESOME!!’”
epic. “You mean to tell me epic wasn’t even considered?” Our epic mistake, man.
hate. For reasons having to do with the definition. Especially ”when used in a manner such as ‘You are just so full of hate.’”
hipster. See above.
Read more. [Image: Flickr/Greeblie]
Paying For College: Financial Aid In America, In 2 Graphics
Tuition has gone through the roof in the past decade. But so has financial aid.
Grants — scholarships and other money that doesn’t have to be paid back — have risen by more than 50 percent, to nearly $7,000 per student per year. (That’s after adjusting for inflation.) Student loans have risen by a similar amount.
Happy Birthday, P. L. Travers (9 August 1899 – 23 April 1996) Travers was the author of Mary Poppins