LBJ storytellers sought for ‘Open Mic Night’

San Marcos September 06, 2008 03:44 pm

The Lyndon Baines Johnson Museum of San Marcos is seeking more area folks with LBJ memories, anecdotes, opinions and impressions for the first of two public “Open Mic Night” sessions at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 17.
The memories and impressions - which will be recorded and transcribed – will be added to the formal oral histories collected for the currently displayed Oral History Project Exhibit that was developed in collaboration with Texas State University-San Marcos. Partial funding for the exhibit was provided by a grant the university received from Humanities Texas, the state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
The theme of the exhibit is “Remembering LBJ and His Legacy: Local Recollections - An Oral History Project.” Museum Director Scott Jordan says the major components of the exhibit will remain in place until May 1, 2009.
The exhibit, which includes audio clips, photographs, memorabilia and selected text from transcripts of interviews with 48 individuals conducted by history graduate Barbara Thibodeaux, opened Aug. 24. The public opening followed a special invitational preview reception hosted by Texas State President Denise Trauth the afternoon before that attracted around 100 guests, including members of the late president's family.
Jordan said the idea for the “Open Mic Night” came after several people stopped by the museum's display at the community's Texas Natural and Swing Festival this past May. By then, it was too late to add individuals with stories to tell to the formal oral history project interview list, but it seemed important to collect their stories, too.
On Aug. 27, the nation celebrated President Johnson's centennial birthday. Although the national celebration culminated with the date of his birth, Texas State will keep the LBJ focus in academic work and special programming throughout the 2008-2009 academic year.
The university's unique Common Experience program, which has for the past four years adopted a specific theme for a cross-discipline academic and special event focus for the year, has chosen “Civic Responsibility: The Legacy of LBJ” for this year's focus. A working steering committee and an honorary committee composed of dignitaries closely associated with LBJ have led the planning for university's LBJ Centennial Celebration. Co-chairs of the committee are Becky Prince and Gene Bourgeois.

Copyright © 1999-2008 cnhi, inc.