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Answering Your Questions About the Rockwell Sale
Thank you members for your comments about my announcement a week ago that the National Press Club and non-profit National Press Club Journalism Institute plan to sell our Norman Rockwell painting, Norman Rockwell Visits a Country Editor. The sale will occur Nov. 19 at a Christie's auction, and Christie's has said the piece is expected to bring in $10 million to $15 million. Seventy percent of the proceeds will go to the Club, 30 percent to the Institute. More than 90% of comments via e-mail and at the General Membership Meeting have been positive. Several people have also asked questions, and…
Type: News
Rockwell Sale Is Legacy for the National Press Club
Norman Rockwell Visits a Country Editor originally appeared in The Saturday Evening Post on May 25, 1946. The boards of the National Press Club and non-profit National Press Club Journalism Institute voted last night to sell our Norman Rockwell painting, Norman Rockwell Visits a Country Editor. The sale will occur at an auction at Christie's on Nov. 19. Christie's expects the artwork to sell for $10 million to $15 million. Seventy percent of the proceeds will go to the Club, 30 percent to the Institute. This is wonderful news for the Club and the Institute because we will have additional…
Type: News
Mentoring Our Way to a Fabulous Future
Veteran National Press Club members -- listen up! This opportunity is for you! Your Club needs you. We want you to share your experience with the next generation of journalists and communicators through our NPC Mentorship Program. At the Club, we are fortunate to be able to marry our rich history with our cutting-edge programs. Is there a better way to connect the wisdom of our past with the vibrancy of our present than the NPC Mentorship Program? In decades past, mentoring occurred informally at the Club. It happened in our lounges as journalists relaxed between morning and afternoon print…
Type: News
5K: This Year We Run for Freedom
The first time I ran on Pennsylvania Avenue in the National Press Club's ``Beat The Deadline'' 5K, I was struck by the beauty of the Capitol dome ahead of me. The dome is one of the greatest symbols of freedom in the world. At this year's 5K, on Sept. 5, we won't just look at freedom -- we'll run for it. We'll have race t-shirts depicting Jason Rezaian. He is the Washington Post reporter who is unjustly jailed in Tehran. Jason is one of three journalists being held in foreign jails whose causes we adopted in a special way this year. Race proceeds will support the fight for press freedom. The…
Type: News
July 29 -- An Evening for Journalism to Shine
Most people active at the National Press Club know the key dates we build our year around. There's the gala inaugural, which was held Jan. 24, and Spring Hoot, which was May 1. Looking ahead, there's the 5K on Sept. 5, Fourth Estate dinner with Gwen Ifill on Oct. 15 and the Book Fair and Authors' Night Nov. 17. Yet one of the best, and most special, nights of the Club year is only days away -- the Journalism Awards Dinner on Wednesday, July 29. This is a tradition that began in the 1970s that the Club proudly carries on -- now in its 42nd consecutive year. It has always been a personal…
Type: News
News Happens at the National Press Club -- Thanks to Us
Bernie Williams, left, joined singer Peter Yarrow at a NewsmakerPhoto: Noel St. John The National Press Club is the place "where news happens." Our famous Speaker Luncheon series is the best example of this. Yet some "news" that "happens" is not through programs the Club sponsors. That is because, to generate revenue to support our mission, we rent space to outside organizations. Sometimes clients use our space for weddings, Bar and Bat Mitzvahs or training seminars. Sometimes they use it to get their point of view out to the public. This dual use of our space can cause confusion.…
Type: News
Why Press Freedom? Because We Are The National Press Club
We have worked hard in 2015 for the cause of press freedom. Thanks to Congressional Quarterly's John Donnelly, and the excellent work of his NPC Press Freedom Committee, we have drawn special attention to three journalists who are being held in captivity for practicing their craft. They are the Washington Post's Jason Rezaian, held in Iran; freelancer Austin Tice, detained in Syria; and Khadija Ismayilova, jailed in Azerbaijan. On May 26, we opened the doors of the National Press Club's broadcast center to Ali Rezaian, the brother of Jason. We extended to him staff support, food and other…
Type: News
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