http://jeff.pasleybrothers.com/writings/showing_the_scars.htm One of the most literally gut-wrenching moments in the annals of presidential press conferences occurred on October 20, 1965. Twelve days earlier, President Lyndon Johnson had undergone a major operation to remove his gall bladder and a stone from his ureter. Unknown to the public and the press, Johnson's doctors had also been concerned about the possibility of more dangerous conditions, such as pancreatic cancer and a recurrence of his earlier heart troubles; true to their fears, the president actually developed a superventicular tachycardia (dangerously accelerated heartbeart) while undergoing anaesthesia. Trying to allay suspicions that Johnson was seriously ill, press secretary Bill Moyers "snowed
with details," including full-color anatomical slides, and the news media duly carried daily reports of Johnson's convalescence, including such minutiae as how well the president slept on particular nights, Lady Bird planting a tree outside the hospital room window, and his viewing of "Hello, Dolly!" on television. Unfortunately, Moyers had no idea how far the president was willing to take the full disclosure policy. On October 20, Johnson was holding forth to the press as he sunned himself on the Bethesda Naval Hospital grounds. "Apparently feeling words to be inadequate" in describing how he felt, the Baltimore Sun's Muriel Dobbin reported, "the President whipped up his blue knit sport shirt," and, as Time put it, "let the whole world inspect the ugly twelve-inch seam under his right rib cage" where the surgeons had done their work. Many newspapers and both major newsmagazines carried a photo that week of a squatting, squinting LBJ exposing his flesh for the press.
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...Despite providing a "staggering" amount of information in terms of clinical detail, labeled by columnist Roscoe Drummond "objectively one of the best reporting jobs in Presidential history," it soon came out that the Johnson administration had concealed key aspects of the situation. At a post-release news conference, Johnson's doctors and press secretary revealed several facts that contrasted sharply with the president's typically over-the-top efforts - such as vigorously circumnavigating the White House lawn with reporters in tow and signing copious amounts of legislation in his hospital bed - to prove that there was no emergency: Among these were: the doctors' concerns for Johnson's heart and their elaborate preparations to deal with it; a secret meeting with former president Eisenhower just before the operation, seeking advice on how to spin the crisis based on the experience of Ike's 1955 heart attack; and the fact that Johnson had been often been sedated, even long after the operation, something that the administration had previously denied. A front page story in the Sunday New York Times carried the headline "Johnson's Surgical Secret," under a photograph of Moyers and the doctors trying to explain themselves....
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Nor have the presidents or the press done much better in the cases where floods of information were released but the most serious problems were hidden, including Eisenhower's heart attacks and Reagan's various health problems. In Reagan's time, the media provided such niceties as front-page diagrams of the presidential colon, but missed bigger stories such as the signs of Alzheimer's that probably dated all the way back to his shooting in 1981.
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