Difference between revisions of "Dick Erickson"
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− | '''Dick | + | '''Richard "Dick" Erickson''' is a Houston businessman and author of the idea for a [[Counter Clinton Museum]] in Little Rock, Arkansas and a Counter Clinton Library or Archive in Washington, DC. Erickson had hoped to create a museum with sixteen rooms fulls of multimedia displays before the [[Clinton Library dedication]] in 2004. Erickson called the presidential center a "lie-brary." He founded the nonprofit company [[Counterlibe]] to achieve this goal, but the museum - to be designed by Southwest Museum Services of Dallas - never opened. |
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+ | Said Erickson in 2005, "I was very passionate about this, but also very naive as far as fundraising procedures go." In a letter to a supporter, former U.S. Representative Bob Barr of Georgia, Erickson wrote, "Nearly every dime raised has gone to professional fundraisers and lawyers. I cannot continue, in good conscience, to ask well-meaning people to donate to what they believe is a good cause, when the money will most likely be consumed in administrative and legal expenses." | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 23:44, 22 February 2008
Richard "Dick" Erickson is a Houston businessman and author of the idea for a Counter Clinton Museum in Little Rock, Arkansas and a Counter Clinton Library or Archive in Washington, DC. Erickson had hoped to create a museum with sixteen rooms fulls of multimedia displays before the Clinton Library dedication in 2004. Erickson called the presidential center a "lie-brary." He founded the nonprofit company Counterlibe to achieve this goal, but the museum - to be designed by Southwest Museum Services of Dallas - never opened.
Said Erickson in 2005, "I was very passionate about this, but also very naive as far as fundraising procedures go." In a letter to a supporter, former U.S. Representative Bob Barr of Georgia, Erickson wrote, "Nearly every dime raised has gone to professional fundraisers and lawyers. I cannot continue, in good conscience, to ask well-meaning people to donate to what they believe is a good cause, when the money will most likely be consumed in administrative and legal expenses."