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Diana Rostow
December 9, 2017
Thank you for all your heartfelt condolences. Your words and support have been a comfort and source of strength for me and my family in this difficult time. Much Love - The Rostow Family
January 11, 2017
I was fortunate enough to know Walt and Elspeth Rostov when they came to Cambridge University to receive degrees, I was aged 11 years at the time and my mother was employed to cook meals for them when they entertained important guests. In 1969 they returned to Cambridge while on a world tour and I was 30 years then and expecting a baby who was due in Christmas Day, they suggested if it was a boy I called him Noel, it was a boy, born on Boxing Day and I named him Marc John. I recall they adopted two children Peter and Anne, like me I was also adopted. I was saddened to learn of their passing and hope the family are now enjoying happy memories RIP Walt and Elspeth from your friend June Noble in England, now June Over.
Dan McWiggins
February 7, 2008
I was lucky enough to have two classes with Mrs. Rostow's husband and one with Mrs. Rostow. He was a brilliant intellect; she, I think, was brighter than he was. I've never seen anyone with such a stunningly powerful combination of intelligence and dry, rapier-sharp wit. It was a great privilege to get to know them and I came to admire both of them immensely.
Mrs. Rostow told me I was the person who introduced her to George MacDonald Fraser, and that she had very much enjoyed reading his work. I'd like to think that I had been able to do something to pay her back for all the wonderful hours I spent spellbound listening to her. She was inimitable and I could certainly see why her husband was still madly in love with her right up until the day he died. Theirs was a truly classic love story.
I'm going to miss her more than I have words to express. Knowing she's no longer there, Austin, for me, will never be the same. Her children and surviving family have my deepest, deepest sympathy.
Bill Peresman
December 30, 2007
I knew Mrs. Rostow in the mid-fifties, when I was privileged to have her as my faculty advisor for a short time at MIT. She was a gracious lady and she made me laugh.
Tom Jackson
December 18, 2007
I was very fortunate to have Professor Rostow as a teacher in the fall of 1973 for a course called "The Politics of Presidential Elections". She never used notes in her lectures and yet all her thoughts were so well-organized. She also kept us on the edge of our seats by throwing in personal anecdotes that only she knew from her time in Washington. I went to her office a few times to ask for her help on papers that I was writing. I was a poor, naive young man from rural Texas. I didn't realize it at the time, but Professor Rostow saw this in me and went out of her way to make me feel like I had value as a human being. I will never forget her.
Eric Males
December 17, 2007
One Side of Elspeth Known by Few…
The LBJ School Class of 1981 created a Frisbee golf course around the LBJ School and Library building and grounds. A quick round became a very popular means of taking a break from studies. The first hole started just west of the entrance to the school, with the fairway extending along the side of the building. Unfortunately, the window of Dean Rostow’s office received more than a few sliced tee shots until we improved our skills.
Nevertheless, this pastime became so popular that near the end of the year the class sponsored an LBJ Frisbee Golf Tournament. But how to give such an event the gravitas it deserved? Of course, we asked the ever-approachable Dean Rostow to be the Master of Ceremonies for the Tournament and to throw out the First Frisbee. She enthusiastically accepted and the Tournament was a great success.
But there is a secret that few know: Elspeth had apparently never before thrown a Frisbee. According to her staff, after accepting our invitation to MC the Tournament, she spent a good deal of time learning and practicing Frisbee. And indeed, come the day of the Tournament, she was as poised and outwardly confident as in every other endeavor. What better a tribute to her affection for our Class and the School?
-- Eric Malès, LBJ Classes of 81 & 82
Stewart Crawford
December 17, 2007
I was privileged to be a student in one of Mrs. Rostow's humanities classes back in the '50's at MIT. She was a marvellous teacher, witty, understanding and extremely erudite - and down-to-earth too - she accepted an invitation to dine with us at our somewhat rowdy fratternity house - we had a fine time in her company. In her long and productive life, she graced many venues - a sad loss.
Burt Edwards (LBJ 1997)
December 17, 2007
It has been a challenge to decide what story to share about Professor Rostow, as I truly treasured all my chats with her and I wanted to come up with something truly worthy of her wit and insight into policy, politics and people.
But one story sticks out in my mind and I think it says a lot about Professor Rostow and why she is so beloved among the LBJ family. And that story is from when I was working to organize what would become the first ever Barbara Jordan Memorial Forum. Although many may not know it, Professor Rostow was a key adviser throughout that process. Indeed, she was the first faculty member consulted after we decided that we wanted to name the event in Jordan's honor, and she was crucial in helping us to get approval from the family to use Jordan's name for the Forum.
One day, towards the final stretch of planning before the event, she stopped me in the hallway and asked me if the chosen theme of "Celebrating 25 years of diversity" meant the event was geared solely towards students, alumni and professionals of color. I clarified that wasn't our intent at all and that we really wanted any and all students and alumni interested in the topics of the various panel discussions to feel welcome and participate. To which she responded in classic Rostow fashion: "Good. I was at an alumni dinner last night and that's what I told them." And then she smiled, nodded and continued on to her office.
I'll never forget that nod of approval and I'll never forget the many lessons she taught me, the stories she shared. I was lucky not only to take her American foreign policy course at the LBJ School, but to have Professor Rostow as my Professional Report/Thesis supervisor. And the chats we would have on current affairs after she would give back her latest feedback on my research plan or a draft chapter are some of my fondest memories of my time at LBJ.
I know everyone in the LBJ family is saddened by this loss and my deepest condolences go out to Professor Rostow's family. But I hope the Rostow family is heartened by the knowledge that her spirit and insights will live on through the work of the students and other lives she touched for many, many years to come.
Valery Caselli-Dubov
December 16, 2007
hi Ann -
my condolences to you and peter. i have fond memories of chatting with both your parents at the Headliners Club. They were so gracious and always took time to ask after my family and well being. Also, the wonderful memory of skipping school with you and jean and alexandra to get a baked potato at the Night Hawk is one of the best i have. we got caught in a "snow storm" and a friend of your mother picked us up hitchhiking back to school. she dropped us at your house where your mother found out about our skipping and was patient enough to put up three girls for the night. i'm SURE she and Walt laughed about it later....V
Jon Whitmore
December 15, 2007
Elspeth Rostow was an elegant woman of great stature. She filled a large room. And she was a public intellectual of the highest order. When she spoke, we listened and learned.
Jon and Jennifer Whitmore
Mark Yudof
December 14, 2007
Elspeth was one of my absolutely favorite people. She combined erudition with marvelous judgment and an engaging sense of humor. One of my proudest moments was serving on the Dean selection committee that resulted in her appointment as Dean of the LBJ School. Judy and I will miss our good friend.
Phillis Jeffrey
December 12, 2007
My late husband and former Dean of the College of Communication at UT, Robert C. Jeffrey, was and I remain among Elspeth's greatest admirers. Please accept my condolences upon the death of your so kind, elegant and brilliant mother.
Cedric Suzman
December 12, 2007
Dear Ann:
My sincere sympathy to you and the family on the passing of your mother, Espeth. She was a great lady who left an indelible impression on all who had the privelege of meeting her.
I first met her and Walt in the 1980s when I invited Walt to give the luncheon address at a seminar on Europe. They subsequently attended many Southern Center for International Studies programs here in Atlanta and I accompanied them whenever I could, just for the experience of a conversation with them.
Elspeth joined our Board of Trustees and this provided further opportunities for me to get to know her. The path of a non-profit educational institution is never easy and her sage advice and pithy comments will be sorely missed. She was always there when we needed her most!
Sincerely,
Cedric L. Suzman
Vice President
The Southern Center for International Studies
Bryan Lewis
December 12, 2007
Elspeth Rostow was the best teacher I ever had. She encouraged me all along the way, and I will never forget her wisdom, kindness, and grace. My condolences to her family.
Steve Wisch
December 11, 2007
The University of Texas was indeed fortunate to be graced with Dean Elspeth Rostow, an inspiring, dynamic, gifted teacher, mentor to countless students. A gifted lecturer, with a commanding presence, she also had a gentle spirit. Those of us who were lucky enough to learn from her will never forget her. Her grace and wit, a wry subtle wit, and vast knowledge were truly inspiring.
I also was fortunate enought to take two classes from her husband, Walt Rostow, who served as National Security Adviser to President Johnson and also as Chairman of the State Department's Policy & Planning staff.
Both were great teachers, with great dignity and I feel so fortunate to be among the many who learned from them and revere them.
Michael Vannoy Adams
December 11, 2007
Dear Ann and Peter,
I was very sorry to learn of your mother's passing. She was a great person. I vividly remember the very first time I heard your mother speak. It was in an American Studies graduate seminar that she was teaching in 1972 at UT-Austin. She spoke for three straight hours without notes. I had never experienced anything like it, and I still haven't. My life would be very different were it not for the many kindnesses that your mother and father showed me. It was their wonderful generosity toward me that I will always remember with the utmost affection. Ann, if you should care to get in touch with me, my e-mail address is [email protected].
Warigia Bowman
December 11, 2007
Dean Rostow was a powerful influence in my life. I will always remember--with both respect and admiration-- her elegance, her brilliance, her determination, her subtle sense of humor, her impeccable manners, and her grit.
There were two reasons I came to the Lyndon B Johnson School of Public Affairs as a student in 2001 despite receiving generous offers from Harvard and Princeton: the memory of Barbara Jordan, the and the persuasion of Elspeth Rostow. These icons reassured me that the LBJ School represented the best of the Great Society, the heights of academic standards, and the most compelling elements of Western populism.
Upon my acceptance of the 2001 Barbara Jordan Scholarship and my matriculation at the LBJ School, Professor Rostow took me to lunch at the Austin Club, overlooking the commanding heights of that Hill Country Capital. Despite her own formidable accomplishments and elite place in society, she had an amazing capability to make every person she met feel respected, valued, and "seen."
I had grown up as the daughter of a nuclear physicist in Los Alamos. The Cold War was a real presence in my life as a child. I grew up considering the perils and the power of conflict, nonproliferation and technological modernization at first hand. I remember Walt Rostow, Elspeth's husband, as a key political advisor to LBJ and JFK not from my own experience, (for I was far too young) but from stories around the dinner table from my father. Later in my academic career I would encounter academic articles written by Walt Rostow on modernization. What a gift of history to have met the man, Walter Rostow, in person, and to have been taught by his brilliant wife, Elspeth Rostow. I thank the LBJ School for that opportunity.
While at the LBJ School took a course from Professor Rostow on the topic of the American Presidency. We were privileged in her course to use the archival resources of the LBJ library. I worked on a project which allowed me to listen to the tapes of Lyndon. B. Johnson speaking about his commitment to civil rights with African-American leaders of the day. These tapes moved me to tears, as I realized that this complicated president whose name graced the school I attended, was also a person with strong passions, trying his best to walk through troubled times with an embattled nation. Indeed, that was Elspeth's legacy. She had the capability to engage students with history, and bring the passion and power of history along with her in her diminutive and elegant person.
When I considered whether to return after the LBJ School to the life of a practitioner, or to try my hand at academia, Dean Rostow took me to a very special lunch at the East Side Cafe. It was to mark the occasion of my acceptance to the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University as a doctoral student. It was a rainy gray day in Austin. I remember Dean Rostow dressed in her impeccable Chanel suit with her perfectly coiffed hair. I marveled at her elegance, and remarked to myself that I would like to emulate that quiet perfection. As we sipped our coffee after lunch, she told me a personal story of the travails she had had at Columbia as a doctoral student. She opened her life experience to me to encourage me to complete the path she had started. What greater legacy, what greater inspiration for a woman academic than to have Dean Elspeth Rostow quietly encourage me to continue forward on this long, and often difficult academic journey.
Dean Elspeth Rostow and I continued our formal relationship through the years, exchanging hand penned letters across continents. I wrote her a letter lamenting the passage of her dear, and truly beloved husband Walt Rostow. She wrote me a letter congratulating me on my marriage and the birth of my daughter in Africa,
My time with dean Elspeth Rostow was brief. I only spent two years with her. But that time was unforgettable and a profound time of personal and intellectual change. She changed my life profoundly. She inspired me, she encouraged me, she pushed me. I mourn her loss as I mourn the loss of a friend, a mentor, and a role model, and a symbol.
Thank you Elspeth for taking time out of your busy, important, and influential life to notice me, and care about me. I will never forget your memory and I will honor it in all that I do.
Marti Bier
December 11, 2007
Professor Rostow was not only one of the most inspiring people I had the honor of learning from while at the LBJ School (2005-2007)but was also one of the most inspiring people I've met in my life. I feel so fortunate to have spent the time I did hearing her stories and learning from her immense knowledge and experience. She will be greatly missed by me and so many others and will no doubt live on in the thousands of students she has touched in her amazing lifetime.
Linda Watts
December 11, 2007
It was my pleasure having met your mother...such a lady of grace. I send my condolences and hope the memories of her over shadow your grief.
Eugene Clayborn
December 11, 2007
Ms. Rostow,
I will never forget the day we discussed my pursuit of a degree in public administration. Your words of encouragement are invaluable. Thanks for being kind, helpful, considerate, and compassionate.
Sincerely,
Brigitte Mendoza
December 10, 2007
My sincerest condolances, Anne. I am so sorry for your loss. With love and my deepest sympathy.
Regina Heise
December 10, 2007
I graduated from the LBJ School in 1996, and her Policy Development class was my favorite of my LBJ School Studies. While it has been over 11 years since I last saw her, she made a lasting impression on me to be a life long learner of history. She was regal, funny, and a person of awe-inspiring presence. She opened up her home to her students, hosting a class each semester. What a gift to have dinner with the Rostows, and on a very lucky occasion, to be joined by Lady Bird JOhnson. After more than a decade, I am brought to tears to learn of her passing. My deepest sympathies to her family and to my LBJ School family.
Adam Lenert (LBJ Class of '05)
December 10, 2007
Dean Rostow was my teacher and my mentor. I was greatly impressed by her wit and her dedication to teaching and to the students she taught. She would lecture for hours with no notes, quoting long passages from periodicals and Presidential papers, never missing a beat. She was so involved in one way or another with so much of the history and policy-making we learned about, that it became real to us through her lectures. I’ll never forget the comment she wrote on an early draft of my policy report (thesis) at the LBJ School in response to my carefully crafted 15 policy recommendations: “Wilson had 14 points; God 10. Does Lenert really need to propose 15?” She was right, of course! She truly was the epitome of elegance and intellect, and she will be greatly missed.
Joan Huntley
December 10, 2007
My parents, Charles & Josephine Huntley, were friends of the Rostows. When I returned to Austin to be part of my father's caregiving team after he experienced a stroke, I met Dr. Rostow many times at LBJ lectures. She was always so lovely, so warm, and had such a twinkle in her eyes, a ready smile and witty retort. It has been a privilege to know someone of her ability who, just by being who she is, inspires me to greatness also.
John Vernon (UT '75)
December 10, 2007
I had the pleasure of having both Elspeth and Walt as professors in the early 70's. They were quite the pair. Walt with his steadfast defense of the Vietnam War and Elspeth constantly challenging her students to ask the hard questions.
She was my academic advisor and I owe her a huge debt of gratitude for her encouragement and support. She had such an incredible memory. Occasionally, I would run into her at various university functions, airports, etc. and amazingly, she would not only remember my name, but reflect on topics we had discussed during class in 1973.
She was truly a very special lady and will be greatly missed by everyone she touched with her wit and wisdom. My heartfelt sympathy goes out to everyone in the Rostow family.
Christopher Bjornson (LBJ 1996)
December 10, 2007
Thank you Elspeth for all you taught us and the enthusiasm you inspired in us for all that you had seen firsthand about our nation's history.
Ellen de Kanter, Ed.D.
December 10, 2007
Please accept my deepest sympathies.
Marina Vishnevetsky
December 10, 2007
I first met Professor Rostow when I interviewed for the Texas Excellence Scholarship at UT. All of the interviewees had heard that Elspeth asked the toughest questions, and we were all scared to death of her. Fortunately, I got past the interview and was able to get to know Elspeth a bit during my time at UT. She was always fascinating to talk to, and deeply committed to her students. My condolences to the Rostow family.
Jan Reid
December 10, 2007
Elspeth was a professor of American studies when I passed through the university's graduate school in the early 1970s. (She would soon take on her responsibilities at the newly founded LBJ School.) I realize now that my first memories are of a woman in her early fifties. She was stylish, sensual, funny. I was a bit awed by her; she dispensed with that and put me at ease with a quickly raised eyebrow and one of her urbane mutters. I intimated once that I felt like some ill-grounded elmer from the sticks. "Oh, bosh," she responded. "You can read and write and think. Get on with it." Elspeth told me about the Algonquin round table of wits and writers in New York, about wartime Washington in the forties, about the time a screenwriter, marooned at her seaside house by a strike, produced the script of the comic wonder "The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming" on her basement Ping Pong table, typing pages that were judged suitable if he sailed them and they cleared the net. (One of the characters, Carl Reiner's wife in the movie, was named Elspeth.) She was the most generous, inspiring, and thought-provoking teacher I encountered during my time at UT. How I'll miss her wry, throaty wit when, over the years, we ran into each other and caught up in our neighborhood post office. I'm so fortunate to have known her.
TJ Costello (LBJ '03)
December 10, 2007
Professor Rostow was so articulate, awe inspiring, and thought provoking... to have the opportunity to work with and learn from such a person was a privilege and an honor. Professor Rostow will be missed but never forgotten.
Kate Holody, LBJ Class of 2008
December 10, 2007
Dean Rostow,
You inspired me with your grace. I regret not having had the chance to directly learn from you and experience your legendary wit. I do believe, however, that you have impacted all who have been in your presence.
Pat Davies Ford
December 10, 2007
I was fortuante enough to have been the American History class Walt and Elspeth taught in the mid 70's at UT. They brought in world renowned leaders for discussions including question and answer periods. What an incrediable experiance. She was such a strong influence on me; teaching me to love history and to believe that any American can impact history.
I saw her just a couple of months ago while we were both looking for chairs, we had a nice talk, her mind was as sharp as ever. She always loved visiting with current and former students.
We have lost a great teacher and a great American.
Deece Eckstein
December 10, 2007
I had the pleasure of interacting with Dr. Rostow over many years. I admired her formidable intellect and warm graciousness equally.
Rob Stephens (Class of 93)
December 10, 2007
She was a brilliant teacher and will be sorely missed. She personified with great elegance the women of the greatest generation -- those shaped by the depression and WWII and those who lived up to JFK's call to serve her country. Serve she did, in matters great and small and always with great flair and class.
Kevin Williams
December 10, 2007
Dean Rostow set a standard of excellence in service and academics for her students and colleagues. Her presence will be sorely missed in the LBJ community. It was an honor to have her as a teacher and mentor.
Jim Lollar
December 10, 2007
I was a student at the LBJ School in the early 80's. The only time I spoke to Dean Rostow on a one-on-one basis was when I was disputing a grade I had received. I had done a lot of work for this class was very frustrated to get a B instead of an A; and I got the feeling that she heard that and sympathized with my plight. The grade didn't change, but my estimation of her did, for the better. She was just a very kind and gracious lady. My deep condolences to her family.
Pat Cuthbertson
December 10, 2007
We were so lucky to have The Quintessential Dean join the Class of '82 for our 25-year reunion just six short weeks ago! Elspeth was resplendent in blue as her trademark purple had become "so 20th Century." She always shared her wit and wisdom generously, and with an obvious love for teaching and her students. I will remember her with awe and a smile every time I think of her. My sincere condolence to her family.
Doug Whitworth
December 10, 2007
Elspeth Rostow was one of a kind-- her intellectual gravitas, warm dedication to her profession, and keen sense of comic irony were without parallel. She will be sorely missed.
Travis Allen LBJ '08
December 10, 2007
I feel lucky to have learned from such a wonderful teacher. Deepest sympathies to the Rostow family.
Barry Crook
December 10, 2007
I was lucky enough to have had a class taught by Elspeth Rostow when I was a senior at UT in 1973-74 -- it was hands down the best undergraduate class I ever had. She was a great teacher!
Steve Keeling
December 10, 2007
We have lost a wonderful woman who brought so much to me and the University. What a joy to have been with her. My sympathy to her family
and close friends.
Cindy Ellis
December 10, 2007
I worked at the LBJ School Library while a grad student at UT in the early 90's, and thoroughly enjoyed knowing Dr Rostow. She was a truly delightful lady and will be greatly missed.
Tim O'Brien
December 10, 2007
Professor Rostow had a mythical grasp of issues and the history surrounding our American government and the people that affected it. She was a mentor to me and my life has been enriched by her presence and the lively-long discussions we had. She will be missed.
Kevin Matthews
December 10, 2007
I had the great honor and priviledge of having both Walt and Elspeth as teachers while at the LBJ school. My education would not be complete without them and Elspeth personal guidance on career opportunities. I also recall a wonderful evening in their home with our class. As someone else stated it was like being in by-gone era of elegance, but also a genuine degree of warmth.
December 10, 2007
God did his best work when he created Elspeth Rostow. We miss you. (Former Student)
Sarah Ozkan
December 10, 2007
I had the great privledge of being her student and am a much better public servant because of her. She challenged me every day and taught me to challenge myself. Her passing is a huge loss. My deepest sympathies to her family.
Rebecca Christie, LBJ 2000
December 10, 2007
Mrs Rostow is my hero. She has been such an inspiration, and such a wonderful teacher of politics, policy and life. I am incredibly grateful to have known her. My thoughts and sympathy go out to her family.
Carey Fitzmaurice
December 10, 2007
The LBJ School has lost one of our last links. You will be missed.
David Berteau
December 10, 2007
Professor Rostow changed my life in more ways than I can count, from our first class in 1977 to our last conversation this past fall. She will live on through countless thousands of those whose lives she also changed. We will all miss her deeply and strive to honor her memory with our daily endeavors and life's goals.
David Berteau, LBJ '81
Kim Smith Unberhagen
December 10, 2007
I had a number of excellent professors at the LBJ School, but among those who had the most profound impact on me was Elspeth Rostow. I am grateful to have had an opportunity to know her and to learn from her. My hearfelt condolences go to her family and friends.
Manfred Schmiemann
December 10, 2007
A very impressive personality, a brilliant mind, a great loss. A privilege having known her.
former EU fellow to the LBJ School
Jimmy Alan Hall (LBJ 1982)
December 10, 2007
I had the great pleasure of taking her and Walt's course as an undergraduate. It inspired me to go to the LBJ School. She was a caring and perceptive teacher, leader, and mentor. All those whom she touch are better.
John Jacobs (LBJ Class of '05)
December 10, 2007
Dean Rostow inspired her students through her own actions and selfless devotion to making the world a better place by educating the future leaders of our society. She was a great teacher and an inspirational mentor.
Jennifer Kim
December 10, 2007
I am thankful that I had a chance to meet Elspeth and Walt. I was a senior at A&M and not sure if I should go to LBJ or get some work experience and apply to the Woodrow Wilson School. Honestly I don't recall what her advice was, but I did appreciate her generosity in sharing with me her company. I also enjoyed getting to know Walt and his passion for the Austin Project.
George Purcell
December 10, 2007
I am so sorry to hear of her passing. Dean Rostow and her husband were responsible for so many of my very best memories at the LBJ School--from Walt's small seminar on demographics to Dean Rostow's stories about Ledbelly at Radcliffe and her grandfather's clipper ship. They were both a living, elegant testimonial to a more refined age.
God bless you, Dean Rostow.
John Adkins
December 9, 2007
Thank you, Mrs. Rostow. You were the best teacher I ever had, and certainly one of the best friends the University of Texas and its alumni ever had.
S M
December 9, 2007
What an intellectual force and fine steward of public education she was. We will long miss both her integrity and keen wit.
E R
December 9, 2007
Thank you for being the greatest mentor
Caroline O'Connor
December 9, 2007
I had the honor of taking her last class, and for that I'm extremely grateful. She was an absolute highlight of my first semester at the LBJ School. Her depth of thought and character regarding public affairs is something I hope to achieve a fraction of one day. She had a great mind, a great sense of humor, and a great ability to teach, challenge, and push her students. Thank you, Dean Rostow, for all you gave us.
Ramiro Canales, UT LBJ '94, UT Law '98
December 9, 2007
My condolences to the Rostow family. She was a great professor and taught me how to think like a statesman. I will miss her.
Kit Pearsall
December 9, 2007
Pete, Katie, Diana and Ann,
Pete, your mom was alway very kind and patient with me. A wise role model to H and H and myself. May God's love fill all of you with strength during this difficult time.
Eve Richter
December 9, 2007
Professor Rostow was an amazing woman. I am so grateful to have known her, learned from her, tapped into the amazing resource that is her life and experience. We were lucky to have her at LBJ, and I was lucky to benefit from her wit, wisdom and insight. It's hard for me to imagine her gone for good . . .
Mark Adams
December 9, 2007
As a former student of hers, I would like to share my admiration and appreciation for her sharp mind, generous spirit, devotion to the LBJ School, and love for her husband. A truly great lady has passed, and the world is a better place for her service.
Jennifer
December 9, 2007
Elspeth and her service to this country will never be forgotten.
-Former student
Marcus
December 9, 2007
My condolences Pete.
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