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The 'M' in May Stands for Momentum at National Press Club
There is so much happening at the National Press Club in May that it is impossible to write about it all in one place. Yet I can at least scratch the surface. Here are 10 things: Brian Lamb. The Club's Broadcast Committee has been holding Legends nights. Who was a better fit than C-Span's Brian Lamb? This was a fun, unfiltered Lamb, who spoke with a lucky group of journalists and Club members May 12. His interview style? ``Minimalist. I just stay out of the way.'' What will it take to get cameras inside the Supreme Court? ``A bunch of young justices.'' Bernie Williams/Peter Yarrow. The…
Type: News
How is the Club Thriving in 2015? Let Us Count -- the Five -- Ways
I am a quarter of the way through my National Press Club presidency. How am I doing so far? More importantly, how is the Club doing? I suggest there are five ways to answer the question. But first, some background. Before the year began, I set some objectives derived from the Club's five-year strategic plan. I shared these at my inaugural in January -- we will boost press-freedom efforts, bring new media voices into the Club and renew ourselves in all we do. I took these intentions to Club leaders and committee chairs at our annual retreat in February. We brainstormed. How could we integrate…
Type: News
The NPC and the Art of the (Short) Speech
FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg, who retired this week, had just surpassed the 3,850th word of her speech at the National Press Club March 27 when she decided to change course. She had been reminded on a small white note card placed in front of her at the podium that her talk was running long. She needed to leave time in the one-hour program for reporter questions. "Though I’ve got lots more I had wanted to talk about," Hamburg said at the luncheon, "I've gotten the indication that I ought to be winding down." Such are the mini-machinations that accompany the most famous of Press Club…
Type: News
Next Disaster Government Prevents With Openness May Be Its Own
Note: The following article was written by National Press Club President John Hughes and David Cuillier, chairman of the Society of Professional Journalists' Freedom of Information Committee, for Sunshine Week. Last year, federal officials made a startling discovery in a storage room overseen by the Food and Drug Administration at the National Institutes of Health campus in Bethesda, Md. As reported by The Washington Post, the discovery included long-forgotten samples of smallpox along with boxes and vials of other pathogens, including the virus behind the tropical disease dengue. Close to…
Type: News
Attention NPC Members! Take a Moment To Help Free Jason
The National Press Club has long distinguished itself as the world's leading professional organization for journalists by speaking out for press freedom. We also hold programs and grant awards to defend the First Amendment. Now you must do something personally to further the cause. Sign a petition calling for the release of Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian from an Iranian jail here at http://chn.ge/1HOLUHz. Ask friends and colleagues to do the same by using your e-mail, Facebook page, Twitter feed, Instagram or word of mouth. Reach out to at least five people. Also, tell your friends to…
Type: News
This Truly Is The Place Where News Happens -- And I Mean Now
The National Press Club is the place where news happens. This year, so is the president's office at the Club. I am an editor at Bloomberg First Word, the breaking-news desk in Washington. Bloomberg has set up four large computer monitors at the president's office. These screens allow me to physically work at the Club during most of each work day. This has been tremendously valuable for juggling Club and First Word duties! As a result, the president's office has become a mini news bureau. The monitors allow me to be hard wired to hundreds of Bloomberg reporters and editors around the world.…
Type: News
MLK's Day at NPC -- and the Return Visit That Wasn't
The National Press Club is where titans have come to speak -- FDR, Kennedy, Mandela, Reagan, Gorbachev -- and of course Martin Luther King. It was July 19, 1962, when King walked into the Club's ballroom. This was eight days before he would be arrested a third time in Albany, Ga., at a prayer vigil, and spend two weeks in jail. It was a week after he was released from jail following his second Albany arrest, according to the Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute. His ``I Have a Dream'' speech would occur more than a year later. At the time it felt like a typical Club…
Type: News
One Week on the Job: Observations of a Rookie NPC President
My first seven days as the National Press Club's 108th president were a whirlwind. What have I seen and learned? I see young people. I've known for years we have an active group of young members at the Club. But when I began working every day at the Club on Jan. 20, I realized the young members' presence was much larger than I thought. When I step out of the president's office, I frequently see young members taking advantage of the Club workspace. They talk on their phones and write on their laptops. Seeing them makes me feel like I'm in a newsroom, which of course I love. On Jan. 22, I met…
Type: News
Happy New Year!
Dear NPC Members: On behalf of the Board of Governors, I want to extend to all of you our best wishes for a very Happy New Year – with thanks for all your support in 2014 and with renewed optimism about our profession and our 107-year-old National Press Club. Our unparalleled professional, educational and social programs make the National Press Club so unique and so extra special. The NPC also is fortunate to have among its members professional communicators who develop their special programs that further enhance the Club. The National Press Club also is lucky to have many volunteer…
Type: News
Please Thank Our Staff for Making the National Press Club so Extra Special
Throughout year, we all enjoy the immense benefits of the National Press Club through its wide diversity of professional, social and cultural events. There is an untold story behind the success of those events, and it is the strong dedication by our staff of more than 100 who provide invaluable support in all aspects of the Club’s operations. Without this staff, the National Press Club could not be what it is today. Thus, I would like to urge all members to please contribute to the annual employee holiday fund – to demonstrate your own special thank-you to those who work so hard on the…
Type: News