Nixon in Fantasyland
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JOSEPH N. BELL
The Yorba Linda branch of Disneyland is being given a makeover, thus
depriving me of my favorite place to take visitors. First-timers
always want to visit Disneyland, and when I explain to them that
Fantasyland has set up shop at the Richard Nixon Library and
Birthplace in Yorba Linda, they want to go there, too -- especially
the retired editors from Manhattan with whom I used to work.
They have never been disappointed, surfing with wonder through the
Watergate exhibit, which made it clear that it was the media and not
Nixon that should have resigned; listening to the “smoking gun”
recording, in which the interpretation of Nixon’s words took up a
great deal more time than the words themselves; and exchanging bon
mots with the Talking Nixon, which might be the only quiz show extant
-- except, perhaps, for questions about the existence of weapons of
mass destruction -- in which the answers preceded the formulation of
the questions.
Now, the feds are going to move in and turn this imaginary land
into a reality show and thus destroy the innate charm of the place
that our guests have always enjoyed. The Nixon Library is the only
presidential museum or library that was created and has remained
staunchly in the hands of personal and political supporters. This has
led to some fascinating spins on history that contributed heavily to
its site rejection by UC Irvine and its enthusiastic embrace by
elderly Republicans and liberal journalists looking for an idea for a
column.
That will all be changed when federal archivists arrive in Yorba
Linda with several tons of presidential papers held, until now, in
Washington. These papers will be converted into a true library rather
than a spin factory by the archivists and will eventually be
accessible to scholars, historians and members of the general public
who would like to know what really took place during the
administration of our only president ever to resign his office.
It’s not clear at this point what will happen to the Talking Nixon
when the archivists take over. In case you haven’t met up with him, I
urge you to visit the Nixon Museum before the feds impose some sense
of dull objectivity on the proceedings there. The Talking Nixon holds
forth in a small theater where a computer in the rear starts you with
a list of 22 categories of questions. Each time you select a
category, a bunch of subcategories come up until you finally get down
to specific questions.
When I asked, for example, “Was your first political race [against
Jerry Voorhis for a seat in Congress] a mudslinging campaign?” --
Nixon biographer Howard Morris called it “Red-baiting” -- the Talking
Nixon answered earnestly: “No, it was very gentlemanly.” That’s the
way it goes.
I have a list of questions in a desk drawer that I still want to
ask him, and I jot down additions occasionally. For example: Why, oh,
why, didn’t you destroy those tapes when it was still possible? Did
you really believe that Helen Gahagan Douglas was a communist? Who
advised you not to shave before the Kennedy TV debate? Did you ever
visit any of your associates who went to prison after Watergate? What
is Henry Kissinger really like? Stuff like that I hoped to find
answers to buried in the tapes of the Talking Nixon.
I admit to being a presidential museum and library junkie. I’ve
visited eight of the dozen listed by the National Archives and
Records Administration and hope to catch up with the rest one day.
The most splendid I’ve seen is the Eisenhower spread in Abiline,
Kan.; the most pretentious, Warren G. Harding’s tomb in Marion, Ohio;
the most self-serving, Herbert Hoover’s museum in West Branch, Iowa;
and the most fascinating, the Franklin Roosevelt home and library in
Hyde Park, New York. In general, the Democrats are more interesting
because their museums include heavily critical and often humorous
material that offers a real sense of the political climate in which
they served.
All of these facilities have been under varying degrees of control
by federal archivists from the beginning. Only Nixon’s wasn’t -- and
now soon will be. It’s ironic that this is happening under arguably
the most secretive administration in our history. Nixon, who also ran
a tight ship, must be oscillating in his grave at the thought of
bureaucrats -- even if they are respected historians -- running his
library. It would not reassure him to know that, according to a
National Archives official, future visitors will soon be able to
expect “a more objective, historical point of view.”
That might exclude our house guests who are looking for fun and
games. So I’m probably going to have to replace the Nixon Library and
Birthplace on our visitor’s itinerary soon.
The newly re-named Angel Stadium is a possibility, especially
since the acquisition of Vladimir Guerrero, but that is seasonal.
Attending any Costa Mesa City Council meeting (or a Newport Beach
Council session if Greenlight is on the agenda) might work. So would
checking out the John Wayne statue at our airport. Or sitting in on a
Robert Dornan campaign speech, but that is seasonal ... and currently
non-existent.
I suppose we could even have a look at the ocean, but if you have
some other ideas, let me know. We have people coming in March and
April.
Meanwhile, I’ll try to get out to Yorba Linda for a last look
before the feds mess up all that creativity with facts. Or before
John Ashcroft finds out what the archivists are up to and sends them
all to Guantanamo.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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