01 - 
            Of President Lincoln, H.L.Mencken writes (Selected Prejudices, 
            p.207), "His official portraits, both in prose and in daguerrotype 
            show him wearing the mien of a man about to be hanged; one never sees 
            him smiling. Nevertheless, one hears that, until he emerged from Illinois, 
            they always put the women, children and clergy to bed when he got 
            a few gourds of corn whiskey aboard..." 
          
            02 - “Kennedy carefully controlled the production of photographs 
              to ensure that he was always presented as the character he had chosen 
              to play. No photographs were allowed showing him eating, smoking cigars, 
              playing golf, or kissing his wife.” Hellman, pp 132-3. 
          
            03 - That the Nixon presidential campaign of 1968 was based on
                the still photographic work by David Douglas Duncan, a friend
                of the candidate, but Nixon’s face “would not be on the screen. Instead 
                there would be pictures, and hopefully, the pictures would prevent 
                people from paying too much attention to the words.” McGinnis,
                pp.84,ff.
          
            04 - The Sincerity Machine described by Max Atkinson, p.67 Ronald
          Reagan speaking at Westminster in 1982, “The words on the transparent 
                  screens can only be seen by the speaker and are invisible to the audience. 
                  They are reflected on to the screens from TV sets facing upwards from 
                  the floor… Behind the scenes an assistant winds the script
                  in front of the TV camera which relays it into the hall.”
            05. Interview with Cornell Capa who had photographed Adlai
            Stevenson on the Election Trail in 1952 and supported him politically.
        None of his photographs had the impact of another .. "the famous picture 
                  of the hole in Stevenson's shoe. Whether the photographer saw it or 
                  not, the Associated Press editor saw it and enalrged it. The most 
                  famous photograph of Adlai Stevenson was taken right in front of my 
                  nose and I didn't take it. For the next twelve years when I was photographing 
                  Stevenson, I kept on telling people about my great love for him and 
                  all he stood for and all the wonderful pictures I have taken... "Oh 
                  you must have taken the picture with the hole in the shoe." So 
                  there you are..." quoted in John Loengrad, LIFE photographers, 
                  What they Saw Bulfinch, Boston 1998, p.256, illustrated
                  p.255, see also editorial manipulation of photographs of Attleee
                  and Churchill 1951.06 -
                  Karsh, “here are Kruschev and Kennedy, architects of liberal 
                  transformation in their two great powers, who moved from mutual confrontation 
                  toward mutual understanding.”p.9 Portfolio. … Within each 
                  of them lies an essential element which has made them great. I acll 
                  it the ‘ inward power’…” In Karsh’s 
                  portrait of Churchill, his pugnacity was not his determination of 
                  purpose “defiant and unconquerable”, but was generated 
                  by the photographer’s sudden removal of the Prime Minister’s
                  cigar from his teeth. p.34)
          
            07 - Daniel Boorstine, written during Kennedy’s reign in 1961,
                     quotes Walter Lippman,’s influential book Public Opinion 
                     1922, “The pictures inside the heads of these human
                     beings, the pictures of themselves, of others, of their needs, purposes
                     and relationship, are their public opinions. These pictures are
                    acted  upon by groups of people are Public Opinion with capital letters.” P.233.
                    Boorstin sees the global drift from ideals (ideas even) to images
                    in the creation of Pseudo Events and Self-Delusion.
          08
              - Manchester above, MacArthur was ordered to meet Roosevelt in
              Honolulu and complained at being ordered away from the War Front,”for
                a political picture taking junket.” He nearly got more than
                 he anticipated when Roosevelt spotted that the General’s
                 flies  were undone. “Do you see what I see ?” the
                 President whispered  delightedly to one of the White House photographers. “Quick
                  get a shot of it.” The cameraman was focussing his lens
                  when  the General, giving him a look of icy disdain, crossed
               his legs....  
          09
              Peter Hurd's official portrait of Lyndon Johnson, meeting at the
              President's ranch in October, 1965, and driving around in a car, "And
                     we  had to tell them that that the President did not like -
                     indeed, hardly  any one liked - the portrait that Peter had
                     worked so hard on...When  Lyndon said he did not like the eyes,
                     Peter made a good case for the  dreamy expression in them. 'This
                     man was looking off into the future  - this man had vision." And
                     I did not like the background and  this he said he could change,
                     and would. He was the first to admit  that the body, and especially
                     the hands, were not good, and because  he had not enough sittings...
                     And the parapet that Lyndon was standing  against has no meaning
                     to me. It was a gruesomely uncomfortable half-hour.  But there
                     is one thing one has a right to express oneself on - and  that
                     is one's own portrait... The final conclusion was that Peter
                      would work again on the background, reduce the painting in
                     size so as to omit the hands, and perhaps just leave the Capital
                     dome lighted.  And we would look at it again." Lady Bird
                     Johnson, A 
                WHITE HOUSE DIARY, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, London
                1970, pp.331,332. 
          10
              Lady  Bird oversees Gilroy Roberts' design for the Presidential
              medal."I 
            think the hardest thing for a sculptor to capture is the eyes, and
               the eyes were wonderful and the brow and the shape of the head.
              (Lyndon,  I think, has a rather magnificently shaped head.) The
              ears were just  as big as Lyndon's are and I wouldn't have them
              the slightest bit  smaller. The mouth I didn't really like much...
              I suggested a slight  change to the mouth. Mr.Roberts made the
              change - and I liked it better." 
            DIARY as 09, pp. 17,18.