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Campus Notes is your one-stop shop for news and notes related to Triangle universities and community colleges. We'll cover it all here, from policy discussions to the silly things those crazy college kids are doing. Got an idea? Request? Criticism? Let us know. eric.ferreri@newsobserver.com.
On Jan. 4, a new window into the Clinton presidency will open at UNC Chapel Hill.
That’s when a trove of source material Pulitzer Prize-winning author Taylor Branch used to write his soon-to-be-released book on the Clinton presidency will become publicly available at the Southern Historical Collection at UNC-CH.
Branch, a 1968 UNC-CH alum, has a long relationship with the historical collection. The source materials — interviews, transcriptions, correspondence — that led to his prize-winning writings on Martin Luther King, Jr., are already in the university’s possession. Now, so too are the Clinton records.
“[Historians are] going to be looking at the first-hand reflections of a seasoned and wise historian on what was going on then. I think that's worth something,” said Tim West, the Southern Historical Collection’s curator. “It’s different from what President Clinton was saying himself. It's not just a sort of verbatim record that he was making of what he remembers hearing Clinton say, but also what he noticed happening around the White House. There's going to be interesting stuff.”
Clinton and Branch were friends as young politicos working the George McGovern campaign in Texas in 1972. They reconnected when Clinton won the presidency and wanted to do the interviews as a historical record. These materials are the result of dozens of clandestine meetings Clinton held with Branch during his presidency.
But they’re not the recordings of the interviews themselves, or even transcriptions. Clinton kept the tapes — squirrelled away in his sock drawer, according to a story this week in USA Today — and Branch was left to re-create the interviews and observations on his own audiotapes. He often did so immediately after leaving a meeting with Clinton as he drove back home to Baltimore, according to the USA Today report.
Read more in Wednesday's News & Observer.
GQ recently published an interview with Branch in which he talks about the book and the process of writing the Clinton book. Here it is.
Comments
Clinton research materials
Wed, 09/23/2009 - 15:07 — henryeToo bad he did not do more research on Global Trade. or what it would do to our own economy. It seems it has turned out to be a nightmare. many of us are now really wondering if our econo,y will ever be anywhere near where it was in the late nineties. if this country fails, he will be blamed forever for its demise.