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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-05-26
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<text id=94TT0523>
<title>
May 02, 1994: To Our Readers
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TO OUR READERS, Page 4
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Elizabeth Valk Long
</p>
<p> It should come as no surprise that men who served as President
of the U.S. have appeared more than 200 times on our cover--some more often than others. Herbert Hoover was the only occupant
of the Oval Office since TIME began in 1923 who was not on our
cover, although he was portrayed there before and after his
presidency. Franklin D. Roosevelt, who won an unprecedented
four presidential elections, was our cover subject a mere nine
times. By contrast, two-termer Ronald Reagan was pictured on
44 of our domestic covers.
</p>
<p> Richard Milhous Nixon lay near death for four days last week
in a Manhattan hospital, after suffering a severe stroke. But
even before he died on Friday, we had decided to put him on
the cover. Nixon has now appeared there 56 times, more than
any other man or woman. This issue contains excerpts from his
10th book, Beyond Peace, to be published by Random House on
May 18. In his six most recent works, beginning with The Real
War in 1980, the former President dealt primarily with East-West
relations. In what he called "probably my last book," Nixon
focuses on domestic issues like health care, education and urban
decay, arguing that communism's defeat makes it imperative that
America live up to its promises. Beyond Peace is the second
work by the former President that we have been privileged to
excerpt.
</p>
<p> Our cover stories on Nixon have reflected both the highs and
the lows of his amazing political career. Early on, Nixon caught
the eye of TIME's editors as a zealously anticommunist Republican
Congressman with a promising future. In August 1952 he first
appeared on our cover as the G.O.P. candidate for Vice President.
We described him then as a "good-looking, dark-haired young
man" who "seems to have everything."
</p>
<p> Three times Time Inc. expressed its support for Nixon as President,
with endorsements that appeared in LIFE. Twice we chose him
as Man of the Year: in 1972, primarily for his historic opening
of China, and the following year (in tandem with Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger) for forging stable links with the U.S.S.R.
and China. In 1973 and 1974, Nixon was on our cover 14 times
as TIME meticulously traced the unraveling of the Watergate
plot. In November 1973 we published our first editorial, which
called upon Nixon to resign for the good of the country.
</p>
<p> TIME's coverage of Watergate put the magazine, for a while,
on Nixon's ever-expandable enemies list. But he--and we--mellowed during his years in self-imposed exile. As he gradually
emerged as an elder statesman of the Republican Party, several
of our editors, writers and correspondents were invited to intimate
dinners, featuring good beef and vintage red Bordeaux, at Nixon's
house in Saddle River, New Jersey, where the host talked sagaciously
about domestic politics and foreign affairs.
</p>
<p> Hugh Sidey, our Washington contributing editor, estimates that
he spent nearly half his career observing and reporting on the
former President. "Nixon was most comfortable talking about
foreign policy," Sidey recalls. "During the Bush Administration,
I did a series of television interviews with the four living
ex-Presidents, and, no question, Nixon's knowledge and enthusiasm
for these issues was far greater than that of the others. He
once told me, `I have always felt that the country can more
or less take care of itself. A President's first job is dealing
with peace and war.' "
</p>
<p> Surely that last sentence deserves to be part of Richard Nixon's
epitaph.
</p>
<p> Most copies of this week's issue contain, on the opening page
of the Chronicles section, an ambitious experiment in customized
printing. With the aid of ink-jet technology and the research
services of Congressional Quarterly Inc., we have enabled each
individual subscriber in the 50 states to read how his or her
U.S. Senators voted in last week's controversial approval of
full, four-star retirement for Chief of Naval Operations Admiral
Frank B. Kelso 2nd. It is intended as the first of many customized
congressional features through which we hope to engage TIME's
readers more closely in the democratic process.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>