The LBJ School of Public Affairs Remembers Elspeth Davies Rostow
Elspeth Davies Rostow
The Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs is deeply saddened by the
passing of former Dean Elspeth Davies Rostow, Sunday, December 9, 2007.
"Elspeth Rostow, more than any single person, embodied all of the values and principles of public
service, penetrating analysis and love of teaching that we all cherish about the LBJ School," said Dean James Steinberg. "Words
cannot capture what she has meant to us all, for generations of colleagues and students. Our deepest
sympathy goes out to her family and friends along with our gratitude for all that she gave over an
extraordinary life."
An internationally recognized expert on national politics and U.S foreign policy, Rostow
served as Dean of the LBJ School from 1977 to 1983. Prior to that she served
as Dean of the UT Austin Division of General and Comparative Studies. She taught at Barnard, Sarah Lawrence, MIT, Georgetown, American
University, and the University of Cambridge. Rostow who most recently served as Stiles Professor Emerita in American Studies and Professor of Government at the LBJ School,
taught courses on the American Presidency and U.S. foreign policy.
"It is now 36 years and nine months since, with my family, I came from
Washington to Austin. It has been a wonderful period for me not only because
of the fact that I’ve been in this university and watched it change and
grow, but because it has given me a chance to live up to the very wise words
of the Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard when he said, “You live life
looking forward. You understand life looking backward.” These 36 years have
given me a chance to see what a university can be.
Rostow Receives the Texas Exes Distinguished Service Award
I am a child of academe. I was brought up in the atmosphere of Columbia
University, and I’ve been teaching now since the day that World War II
began. There is no connection between those two facts. But coming to Texas
has been the experience that I did not anticipate. I knew that I loved
teaching. I knew that I enjoyed being on the campus, but I didn’t realize
that to be in the University with such a dynamism, with such a capacity to
grow and to change, was an experience that I will treasure and that I will
share not indefinitely. I think it’s about time to stop teaching, but as
some of you know, I find it addictive. At this stage, I have a graduate
class of about 31. Six of them are lieutenant colonels in the Army; the rest
are civilians. But to watch them study national and international policy is
a privilege, because that’s what teaching is — it’s a privilege to share
with your students, with your colleagues, with your community whatever it is
that you have observed over the passage of time.
Benjamin Disraeli said that a university should be a place of light, of
liberty, and of learning. He can be forgiven for not putting in “and
football.” But this experience of watching light, learning, and the
experience of sharing with you, the graduates, of this great university has
been something for which I am eternally grateful. And this day, this
opportunity to thank The University of Texas, is something I looked forward
to, as it turns out now, for these past 30 years. I thank you, I thank the
University, and I am convinced now, as a historian, that I watch a work in
progress, and the progress is great. A work in progress, and the goal of
excellence is within reach. An experience that very few people are
privileged to have. And so I turn not to these distinguished graduates
alone, but to all of you, and say, thank you very much."
- The Texas Exes Association's Distinguished Service Award Ceremony -
October 14, 2005
Dean Rostow served as a member of the President's Advisory Committee for Trade
Negotiations and the President's Commission for a National Agenda for the
Eighties. In 1987, President Reagan appointed her to the Board of the United
States Institute of Peace, which she later chaired. Dean Rostow was a Trustee of
the Southern Center for International Studies (Atlanta) and a former member
of the Board of Advisors to the President of the Naval War College
(Newport). She also served as Trustee of the National Academy of Public
Administration. In 1983-84 she lectured in thirty-four countries under the
auspices of the Fulbright Program and the U.S. Information Agency. For five
years she was an editorial columnist for the Austin American-Statesman. In
1991 she cofounded The Austin Project, a comprehensive investment
program in children and young people.
Memorial Service Information
A memorial service for Dean Rostow was held on Friday, December 14, 2007 at the Weed-Corley-Fish Funeral Home. The same day the Texas flag was flown at half-staff on campus in her honor.
Dean Rostow's family has asked that in lieu of flowers, donations be made in
her name to The Austin Project, a nonprofit, human services agency founded
by her and her husband Walt in 1992 as a catalyst for social initiatives to
improve the lives of children and families. Donations can be made to The
Austin Project, 5221 Ledesma, Austin, Texas 78721 or via the organization's
web site, www.theaustinproject.org.
The LBJ School of Public Affairs along with the LBJ Library and Museum will
hold a special event in January '08 after classes resume to celebrate and
commemorate former Dean Rostow's lifelong commitment to education and public
service.
Links
News Release
Share your memories of Dean Rostow
Dean Rostow Photos
Humanities Texas - From the Director
Austin American Statesman - Former UT dean, presidential counselor dies
Washington Post - Elspeth Davies Rostow, 90; Presidential Adviser
Washington Times - Elspeth Rostow, 90, presidential adviser
Los Angeles Times - Dean of LBJ School advised two presidents
Dallas Morning News - Elspeth Rostow: UT dean, adviser to presidents
United States Institute of Peace - In Memoriam: Elspeth Rostow
Rostow in the News