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INTIMATE LOOKS AT THE MEN WHO
RAN AMERICA
Story and photography
by Margaret & Eric Anderson
Political scientists now rank the Truman performance
as near-great, showing an honesty and directness in his decisions
that we've missed in recent decades. Truman was the last self-educated
man we've had in the presidency: widely read, with a command of
history and a detailed knowledge of affairs that astounded those
around him. No longer is Truman seen merely as the man who beat
Dewey, dropped an atomic bomb and fired MacArthur.
His simple library situated in a park six blocks north of the Truman
home contrasts with the stark beauty of the John F. Kennedy Library
in Boston which contains the details of his Presidency and its fearful
ending, something forever etched in every American who remembers
the chill of November 1963.
Kennedy's term of 1.000 days was a time when
the White House had grace, style and wit; and after his light was
snuffed out and a nation mourned and a son saluted, there came briefly
to America a sense of majesty.
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There was no majesty to Richard Nixon's
departure from the presidency and his place in history will be forever
controversial. But clear from his library in Yorba Linda, just 15
minutes north east of Disneyland, nixonfoundation.org
is that, for all his purported faults, he loved America and he achieved
much particularly in foreign affairs. The display of his personal
life is quite touching. He surely loved Pat, his wife, as did Ronald
Reagan his Nancy and their libraries show those love stories. Both
libraries also reveal men in command, who seemed to understand the
role, power and value of the presidency. It was the prestige of that
office that brought four presidents together for the grand opening
of the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace. But even as the cameras
caught Nixon visiting soldiers and going to China despite a serious
blood clot in his leg, the photograph of President Nixon most requested
by the American public is the one when Elvis came to visit!
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The library shows Pat Nixon's contributions to her
husband's life. Her loyalty to him is well documented. Well it should
be: It seems in retrospect the only difference between Nixon's actions
in power and those of other presidents is that he got caught and
paid the price.
The bumper stickers his campaign staff gave out in
the New Hampshire primaries, "Nixon's The One!" now have
a prescient touch. The Library building has behind it the very birthplace
of the president and visitors can still hear the same train whistles
from downtown he described in his childhood memoirs.
The birthplace exhibits the bed he was born in, showing
that it wasn't just Abraham Lincoln who lived in a simple home.
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