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[[underlined]] Also Rans [[/underlined]]
By Frederick S. Voss, Historian,
National Portrait Gallery

A look at various minor party candidates, including Victoria Woodhull, Belva Lockwood, James B. Weaver, Eugene V. Debs, and Theodore Roosevelt as Bull-Mooser.

[[underlined]] Change Presidents...and Waltz [[/underlined]]

A picture story about inaugural balls, with emphasis on thise staged in buildings associated with the Smithsonian Institution such as Arts and Industries and the original Patent Office (now NPG/NCFA).

Part Six. . . 

[[underlined]] The President as Progressive [[/underlined]]
By Arthur S. Link, Editor,
The Papers of Woodrow Wilson,
Princeton University

The preeminent Wilson scholar considers the activist, reforming Presidents of the first half of the 20th century, from Theodore Roosevelt and Wilson to Franklin Roosevelt and Truman.

[[underlined]] I Give You the Man Who [[/underlined]]. . .

A picture story on the origins, rites, rituals, and rhetoric of Presidential nominating conventions.

[[underlined]] Issues, or Images [[/underlined]]?
By Wilcomb E. Washburn, Director,
Office of American Studies,
Smithsonian Institution

An expert analysis of the transition from issue-oriented Presidential politics to politics whose prime focus is the personality of candidates and the image they project.

Part Seven. . .

[[underlined]] The President in the Age of PR [[/underlined]]
By Hugh Sidey,
Syndicated Columnist, Time, Inc.

A veteran Washington bureau chief details the making and selling of Presidential candidates from the 1950s until our own time.

[[underlined]] Presidential Cariacature [[/underlined]]

The evolution of an art form, from Thomas Nast to Garry Trudeau.

[[underlined]] Commemoration and Consecration [[/underlined]]

A pictorial reflecting the presence of the Presidency in Washington, D. C., from trinkets for tourists to solemn statuary.

[[underlined]] The Once and Future Presidency [[/underlined]]
By Stephen Hess,
Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution.

Author analyzes the changes in the nature and functions of the Presidency, considers various proposals for reforming the office and its duties, and ponders the potential for effective reassertion of Presidential leadership in the 1980s.