top of page

As Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev prepared to put pen to paper in a worldwide

television event to sign the document that would officially end the USSR and issue

in a new era in global history – his Russian-made pen didn’t work. That’s when a former Austinite, Tom Johnson, pulled his personal pen from his

pocket and said “Here, Mr. Gorbachev, use mine.” Tom’s Montblanc pen dissolved a global power and instantly became a historical artifact.


Mikhail Gorbachev and Tom Johnson's Mont Blanc Photo: REUTERS / Alamy Stock Photo

So how did this footnote to history come to pass? I detailed how this incident

occurred on pages 181 and 182 of my recent memoir, With the Bark Off. It is

timely to recall now because Gorbachev died August 30, 2022, at age 91.

Following service as a White House aide to President Lyndon Johnson, Tom came

to Austin in 1971 and became Executive VP of KTBC-TV, Channel 7. From there,

he had a meteoric rise to the top ranks of journalism with publishing stints at the

Dallas Times Herald and the Los Angeles Times Mirror.

Tom Johnson, Former LBJ White House aide, former publisher of Los Angeles Times, former CEO, CNN

He caught the eye of Ted Turner who had started a 24-hour cable TV venture called CNN. Tom took over as CNN CEO the day before Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990. CNN’s stellar coverage of the Gulf War, under Tom’s leadership, won virtually every award in TV News.


Gorbachev was well aware of CNN’s worldwide influence and its splendid coverage of the Gulf War. This enabled Tom to meet with Gorbachev in Moscow and to out-negotiate ABC’s Ted Koppel for exclusive rights to cover the dissolution of the Soviet Union live.


Fast forward to signing day in Moscow. All the pomp and circumstance of this

rare event was unfolding as CNN cameras carried it worldwide. Tom was standing

just off to Gorbachev’s side when, damn!, his pen didn’t work. When Tom

handed his pen to Gorbachev, the once-powerful world leader glanced at it,

looked at Tom and with a wry smile asked “American?”


That was it. He scribbled his signature. And quick-thinking Tom took back his pen

– the pen that after almost 75 years signified the end of the Union of Soviet

Socialist Republics.


“How important was that one little pen in Gorbachev’s hand? It dissolved a global

power that had dominated a scattering of small Eastern European nations since

World War II, promulgating an ideology that had fueled a dangerous Cold War

that had divided the world for decades,” I wrote in With the Bark Off. Now for the rest of the story, as broadcaster Paul Harvey used to say.


Tom donated the pen to a museum. Then, many years after Tom had departed CNN,

Tom invited Gorbachev to speak in Austin at the LBJ Library. At the end of the

program, I watched as Tom said “Mr. Gorbachev, you may remember that I took

my pen back on that historic day in Moscow. So I want you to have a new pen

exactly like that one.”


He presented Gorbachev with a new black Montblanc fountain pen.


You can learn more about Tom Johnson in hard cover, ebook or audiobook in my memoir With the Bark Off please Join My List.



Neal Spelce, joined by Cile Spelce Elley, will be talking about his novel


WITH THE BARK OFF TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2022

THE AUSTIN CLUB

5:00 PM

110 East Ninth Street Austin, Texas 78701


Join Neal for a Book Talk & Book Signing at Austin Club | Reservations Required

About this event:

5:00 PM Tuesday, September 13, 2022


The Austin Club

110 E 9th St, Austin, TX 78701


PARKING NOTICE:
Effective August 1, 2020 The Austin Club is no longer affiliated with the parking garage next door.
All parking is now self-parking.

Reservations required.

RSVP to info@austinhistory.net or by calling 512-270-0132


The event is free. Attendees will be asked to join or renew a membership Austin History Center Association, or make a donation if you are a current member. Also, attendees will be informed about the benefits of membership to The Austin Club.


There will be complimentary hors d’oeuvres, a cash bar, and a book signing will follow. If you would like to sponsor this event, please email info@austinhistory.net or call 512-270-0132.


About Neal Spelce

Neal Spelce’s six-decade career has been distinguished by successes in radio, television, journalism, marketing, advertising, public relations, broadcast program syndication, public speaking, and consulting.
His latest book, “WITH THE BARK OFF, A Journalist’s Memories of LBJ and a Life in the News Media,” is published by the University of Texas Briscoe Center for American History, with distribution by Tower Books, an imprint of the University of Texas Press.
Neal will be joined by his daughter, Cile Spelce Elley. Together, they’ll reprise their role as the nation’s only father-daughter TV anchor team and will share stories and never-before-seen photos taken by Neal over the years. Learn more about Neal on his website.

The harsh criticism leveled at the response by law enforcement to the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde May 24, 2022 brings to mind the response by officers to the first mass school shooting in the nation at The University of Texas Tower in Austin August 1, 1966.

The comparisons, and contrasts, are striking.

Uvalde Officers in Robb Elementary School (photo: Texas Tribune)

Though separated by almost exactly 56 years, the extent of both events was horrendous. Both were carried out by lone gunmen, who were killed by lawmen. In Uvalde, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos killed 19 students and two teachers, wounding 17 others.

In Austin, 25-year-old Charles Whitman shot and killed 15 people, wounding 31 others, after stabbing to death his wife and mother the night before.

Both events lasted more than an hour. Many law enforcement officers were involved at both locations. While there were other similarities, let’s focus on one stark difference – the response by law officers.

In Uvalde, many armed-and-armored local and state officers with high-powered weapons, waited and waited inside the school -- apparently deciding what to do, maybe awaiting orders to storm the classroom where the killing was occurring. One investigative report said as many as 376 law enforcement personnel were on the scene, though not all went inside the school. Frantic 911 calls were begging for help. Yet, the killing continued inside a small classroom. And many officers waited just steps away from the carnage.

Contrast that with what happened on the UT campus.

A few unarmored Austin police officers carrying only handguns, a rifle and a shotgun entered the Texas Tower – on their own, individually, without being ordered to do so.


They were even joined by a civilian who asked to be deputized and was handed a rifle after going to the top of the Tower.

Bear in mind, these men didn’t know how many shooters were involved but they had seen dead bodies and wounded students all around the campus, they were hearing continuous gunfire, ambulance sirens were wailing as they hauled victims to Brackenridge Hospital. And yet, these few men kept going, climbing over dead bodies near the top of the Tower, to confront the gunman. However, in Uvalde, lawmen waited an inordinate amount of time in the school hallway.

Think about what was going on in Austin in 1966. It’s difficult to describe the extreme courage it took for these few men to climb out onto the open UT Tower deck where they knew the killer lurked above. But they kept going. Until they were face-to-face with the gunman, just steps away. Two officers fired simultaneously as the killer turned to aim his weapon at them. They killed Charles Whitman.

Fifty-six years ago. (Long before SWAT teams. Long before too many mass shootings that have resulted with regular police training exercises to deal with similar events.) These were just individuals, acting on their own without orders and without a plan, doing what they felt they needed to do.


You can learn more about the Tower Tragedy in hard cover, ebook or audiobook in my memoir With the Bark Off please Join My List.



bottom of page