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January 9, 2009

Dear Coalition Friends:

Happy New Year!

As the Inauguration of President-elect Obama draws near, the spotlight is on the National Mall in all its "magnificence and neglect," as reported in yesterday's Los Angeles Times.   Now, to do something about it...

The Los Angeles Times

COLUMN ONE

National Mall reflects magnificence and neglect

The sad decline of the historic promenade shows in trampled lawns and unfiltered pools. With 2 million visitors expected for the inauguration and 25 million yearly, the park service can't keep up.

By Faye Fiore
January 8, 2009

Reporting from Washington — Millions will cram shoulder to shoulder to watch Barack Obama take the oath of office this month as the nation's 44th president, another indelible snapshot of American democracy in full display on the National Mall.

But beyond the reach of the camera's lens, the historic promenade that stretches from the Lincoln Memorial to the U.S. Capitol -- the place often called America's Front Yard -- is itself a monument to neglect.

Patches of the once-lush lawn have been trampled to dust. Half of the underground sprinkler system doesn't work. The sea wall around the Jefferson Memorial is sinking, and lately, wildlife is dying in the unfiltered waterways.

Bill Line, spokesman for the National Park Service, which maintains the Mall, likes to say it has been "loved to death," an American treasure battered by 25 million visitors a year -- more than Yosemite and Yellowstone national parks and the Grand Canyon combined. As the crowds have grown, the budget has shrunk, and with $350 million in overdue care, the park service cannot maintain a standard that befits what many consider a national jewel.

"This is America. This is how we show ourselves to the rest of the world," said Line, 51, an encyclopedia of Mall trivia in pine-tree-green pants and a razor-brimmed hat.

If 700 acres in the shape of a kite can tell the story of a nation, the Mall is the embodiment of America. Its major monuments honor three wars and four presidents. It hosts the July 4 celebrations, contains war protests and oversees the nation's important conversations, including immigration, abortion and civil rights. It reminds us of where we came from and who we are.

Today, though, the Mall is a study in contrasts, glorious and broken all at once. The story of its place in history and its sad decline is best understood on foot, and so Line, who bikes past the monuments every day and walks the grounds every chance he gets, agrees to show us 23 of the nation's most treasured and timeworn blocks.

A cold December wind cuts sideways as Barry Porter looks out across the historic expanse for the first time in 30 years. He used to play hooky here, ditching junior high to check out the dinosaurs at the Natural History Museum or marveling at Abe Lincoln's big concrete feet.

This isn't the way he remembers it. Straight ahead is the elegant pool that is supposed to reflect the Washington Monument. It sometimes still does, when the water isn't fouled by algae and goose droppings. The grass borders around it are pitted and bald. A plastic grocery bag slaps at one edge.

"It just looks beaten down. This grass used to be so green," says a disappointed Porter, 56, a respiratory therapist who now lives in North Carolina.

The Lincoln Memorial towers behind us as visitors traipse its broad steps, mostly unaware of the history that has transpired here. Halfway down is the spot where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech in the summer of 1963. Only yards from there, 10 summers later, a frustrated Richard Nixon paid a surprise predawn visit to antiwar protesters camped out on the steps. And at the foot of the staircase is where African American contralto Marian Anderson sang at the invitation of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt on Easter Sunday in 1939, after the Daughters of the American Revolution barred her performance at Constitution Hall.

Dead ahead two miles, the U.S. Capitol dome gleams at the end of an unbroken vista lined with American elms where the iconic monuments unfold -- Lincoln, Roosevelt, Jefferson, Washington, Korea, Vietnam, World War II. This cherished view, inspired by the wide streets of Paris, is protected by an act of Congress. But lately Congress has been blind to the Mall's poverty. The park service budget has dwindled to $31 million, even as more attractions bring relentless wear and tear. A $100-million appropriation for repairs failed to pass last year.

"We welcome everybody, but it is reasonable to expect that 25 million visitors -- 50 million feet -- are going to take some sort of a toll. The challenge is how do we welcome those visitors and still keep it looking as nice as it can," Line says.

The Vietnam Veterans Memorial alone draws 4 million people yearly, a moving chronicle of casualties etched in polished black granite. Ron Brooks, 63, of Atlanta, a Vietnam veteran making his first visit here, has just found the names of two of his buddies.

"It's beautiful," Brooks says, reaching for words to describe his emotions, his eyes still wet.

The wall sits in Constitution Gardens with a lovely little lake. It's a peaceful setting, except, like most of the Mall's waterways, the lake has no filtration system and smells so fetid in the hot months that families stay away. Last summer, dozens of dead fish floated up near a memorial to the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence.

We continue down the Mall's pebbled path toward the World War II Memorial, which opened four years ago and draws as many as 60,000 visitors a day in peak season, enough to fill Dodger Stadium. But no money was allotted for upkeep, not even to empty the trash.

Just south and slightly off the path stands the bronzed statue of Thomas Jefferson gazing across a churning Tidal Basin. This is one of the city's prettiest spots, where historic cherry trees bloom magnificently every spring. It's where one night in 1974 a stripper known as Fanne Foxe leaped from Arkansas Rep. Wilbur Mills' limo and into the water, ending his career and improving hers.

Today, a deteriorating sea wall around the memorial has sunk 9 inches in 18 months; the water breaches the wall twice a day at high tide. Metal barriers block off sections of a crumbling walkway to keep tourists from falling in.

We head back over to the Mall proper, at 15th Street, to the rocket-shaped Washington Monument, one of the city's most recognizable landmarks. There used to be flower beds near here, commissioned by Lady Bird Johnson. The park service tore them out years ago rather than watch them go to weeds.

The lawn that stretches 14 blocks from here to the Capitol serves as America's playground and cultural echo chamber, the site of fireworks and first lady book fairs and Jane Fonda where protested an unpopular war. But the stakes from all the festival tents have punctured the underground sprinkler system; maintenance crews now drag out water cannons. At the moment, half of it is cordoned off for reseeding, a futile effort. The grass won't have time to grow back before the inauguration crowds descend.

A man stops to ask Line for directions to the National Gallery of Art. "Right over there," he points. The most popular Smithsonian museums flank this end of the Mall, housing Julia Child's kitchen, Dorothy's ruby slippers and Lindbergh's plane. Orange cones surround a pool on the pathway where an underground pipe sprung a leak several weeks ago and has yet to be fixed.

We cross 4th Street, within shouting distance of the Capitol now. Someone has plastered "End the Fed" signs on every available surface. Their removal is another chore on the park service's to-do list. Crews are busy constructing the inaugural viewing stands on the West Lawn. This is where 1.2 million came to watch as Lyndon B. Johnson promised a still-grieving nation an end to tyranny and misery in 1965.

In another stagnant reflecting pond just below, dozens of ducklings died last summer from avian botulism.

The Capitol, meanwhile, glistens with fresh paint and manicured lawns. There is a mathematical explanation to the disparity: Congress employs 2,000 maintenance workers to tend 300 acres where 535 lawmakers and their staffs come to work. The park service employs 300 workers to care for 700 acres where 25 million visitors come to play. "You keep your lawn better than we keep this," fumes Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia's famously outspoken but nonvoting delegate, who for years has pressed for Mall repairs.

Though the 2 million people expected to attend Obama's Jan. 20 inauguration will do more damage than the park service can mitigate, advocates hope the historic ceremony will draw public attention to its little-noticed plight. The fact is, the Mall's magnificence still overshadows its decay. But for how long?

"We would call it a disgrace," said Caroline Cunningham, president of the Trust for the National Mall, a year-old group working with the park service to raise half a billion dollars for a face-lift. There are plans to fix the light posts, upgrade the waterways and shore up the sea wall -- if the money can be raised.

The Mall is probably its own greatest advocate; few who see it are unmoved by its majesty. Some, like Bentley Smith of Philadelphia, a first-time visitor, would even pay higher taxes to restore it, a sentiment seldom heard in Washington.

It has something to do with national pride, like sending the queen out in public in a frayed coat. Nobody wants that.

"This is the face of our country, and we need to make it pretty again," Smith, 49, says, back at the Lincoln Memorial looking out at America's tired front yard.

"Is this the best foot we can put forward?"

faye.fiore@latimes.com

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Mall Updates

2011
• Dec. 28: Getting around the Mall after Tourmobile - Happy New Year!
• Nov. 29: The Washington Monument reimagined
• July 22: Six Winning Ideas Chosen for Washington Monument Competition
• Apr. 21: National Latino Museum plan faces fight
• Mar. 10: March 19 & 20 - Washington's Public Spaces symposium
• Feb. 7: Jury chooses 24 bold ideas for Washington Monument Competition

2010
• Dec. 6: Washington Monument security alternatives / Unified Mall management
• Dec. 3: NCPC & public comment on National Mall Plan
• Dec. 2: Coalition testifies on National Mall Plan
• Dec. 1: National Mall talk by Kirk Savage tonight
• Nov. 30: Registration closes tonight Midnight for WAMO Ideas Competition
• Nov. 22: More about the Mall flood control plan
• Nov. 19: A 20th-century idea ideal for today's Mall
• Nov. 17: Washington Monument levee / New juror for WAMO Competition
• Nov. 16: Shut out on Mall security
• Nov. 10: A public failure of monumental scale
• Nov. 9: WAMO Competition November 30th deadline
• Nov. 8: Iconic obelisk presents a monumental security issue
• Nov. 3: November 8th public scoping for Washington Monument security
• Oct. 29: Nov. 6th National Mall & the Design of DC
• Oct. 27: Coalition celebrates 10 years of service and advocacy
• Oct. 21: NPS Proposes Visitor Screening at Washington Monument
• Oct. 20: WAMO Competition Extends Registration to November 30th
• Oct. 7: NCPC hearing on Jefferson Security / Museum modifications
• Oct. 5: Distinguished jury announced for Washington Monument Grounds Ideas Competition
• Sept. 24: More on Washington Monument Ideas Competition
• Sept. 22: Smithsonian: Kirk Savage on National Mall
• Sept. 17: WiFi on National Mall
• Sept. 15: African American Museum concept reviewed
• Sept. 3: Burnham Documentary airs Sept. 6th on PBS
• Sept. 2: Washington Monument competition opens registration
• Aug. 31: Hearing on African American Museum on National Mall
• Aug. 26: Washington Business Journal: The museum of African-American history
• Aug. 24: Save Our Mall comments on East Potomac Park facility
• Aug. 23: Post's Kennicott on Supreme Court building security
• Aug. 10: National Park Service temporary office trailer
• Aug. 5: NPS Announces Completion of its "National Mall Plan"
• July 29: Post: Kennicott essay Latino Museum
• July 22: Blogs on National Ideas Competition
• July 20: Blogs on Latino Museum site selection
• July 19: Post: Kennicott on the Latino Museum
• July 16: Latino Museum site selection
• July 12: Post: Topic A letter
• July 6: Post: Topic A w/ Feldman
• July 2: Smithsonian Folklife Festival
• June 29: Latino American museum
• June 24: Smithsonian Mag: Kirk Savage
• June 21: Post and GGW: Mall traffic
• June 17: America's Great Outdoors initiative
• June 9: WAMO Competition
• June 4: Make No Little Plans screening on Mall
• May 27: Eisenhower Memorial design
• May 18: Artdaily.org: Kirk Savage wins award
• May 14: WalkingTown DC tour cancelled
• May 6: Post: Supreme Court doors closed
• Apr. 21: Post: Agriculture Department
• Apr. 20: GGW: "Monumentalism"
• Apr. 16: Eisenhower memorial: Post and notices
• Apr. 12: Post: McMillan Plan
• Apr. 7: Post: Feldman in Local Opinions
• Apr. 6: Examiner: Reflecting Pool
• Apr. 1: Post: John Kelly's Washington
• Mar. 29: Reflecting Pool and Hirshhorn Museum
• Mar. 18: Greater Greater Washington (GGW) on Mall
• Mar. 16: Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool meeting
• Mar. 12: American Latino Museum
• Mar. 2: NCPC reviews NPS Mall Plan
• Feb. 25: NCPC Event: Monument Wars
• Feb. 22: Post: NPS National Mall Plan meeting
• Feb. 17: NPS National Mall Plan meeting
• Feb. 1: NCPC 10th Street Corridor meeting
• Jan. 29: NPS Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool
• Jan. 26: Greater Greater Washington chat Kirk Savage
• Jan. 25: Reflecting Pool rehabilitation help
• Jan. 13: Northwest Current: NPS Mall Plan

2009
• Dec. 30: Examiner: NPS Mall Plan
• Dec. 29: Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool
• Dec. 28: NPS Draft National Mall Plan
• Dec. 16: Achievements 2009, Please Donate
• Dec. 7: Smithsonian: Museum African American History
• Dec. 3: National Capital Memorial Advisory meeting
• Dec. 2: Hearings, Mall and Memorials
• Nov. 24: NPS Jefferson Memorial
• Nov. 9: Post: Savage book review
• Oct. 28: Post: NCPS and MLK Memorial
• Oct. 22: 2009 Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool
• Sept. 17: 2009 Mall tours
• Sept. 15: 2009 Inter-School Design Competition
• Sept. 11: 2009 Inter-School Design Competition
• Sept. 10: Cultural Tourism DC's WalkingTown DC
• Sept. 9: WBJ: Forgey's Mall perspective
• Sept. 1: NCPC Lincoln Memorial
• Aug. 14: Northwest Current: Feldman letter
• Aug. 12: Post: Letter, Mall waste
• Aug. 11: CQ Weekly: Mall for the Masses
• Aug. 10: Northwest Current: Editorial, Mall signs
• July 20: Northwest Current: NCPC meeting
• July 13: DC Council & Committee of 100
• July 8: NCPC and NPS' Mall Plan meetings
• July 7: CBS News: Mall, Examiner: WWI Memorial
• June 15: Post: Kirk Savage, memorialize
• June 2: NCPC meeting
• June 1: NPS' Mall Plan
• May 29: Mall walking tours
• May 21: FREE Mall map and historical guide
• May 20: Post: Jefferson Memorial fixes
• May 14: FREE Mall tours
• May 6: NCPC Mall projects review
• Apr. 23: Post: Mall repair work funded
• Apr. 13: Atherton Memorial lecture
• Apr. 3: News coverage: Museums/Memorials
• Mar. 30: Post: African American Museum
• Mar. 28: Cherry Blossom Festival
• Mar. 17: Post: Mall signage program
• Mar. 13: Examiner: Mall repairs
• Mar. 11: NPS latest concept for Mall
• Mar. 9: NPR's Morning Edition
• Mar. 6: Post & Examiner: NPS' Mall Plan
• Mar. 4: NPS Mall meetings
• Feb. 24: LAT: Knight and Mall
• Feb. 23: Post: Editorial
• Feb. 18: NPS Mall Meeting
• Feb. 16: Presidents' Day roundup
• Feb. 11: Lincoln's 200th birthday
• Feb. 9: Post: Where's the Mall?
• Feb. 4: Post: Af-Am. History Museum design
• Feb. 2: Post: Editorial/Letter
• Jan. 29: Post: Mall in the stimulus bill
• Jan. 27: Significance of Mall
• Jan. 26: NPCA public forum
• Jan. 26: TWT: Mall repairs
• Jan. 22: Post: Editorial
• Jan. 21: Post: Feldman and Parsons' letters
• Jan. 19: LAT: Third Century Initiative
• Jan. 16: NYT: Ouroussoff reflects
• Jan. 16: Free, pocket-size monument guide
• Jan. 13: Free, pocket-size Mall guide
• Jan. 9: LAT: Inauguration and Mall

2008
• Dec. 23: End-of-year donations
• Dec. 18: Post: Inauguration and Mall
• Dec. 8: Post: Lewis' Mall column
• Dec. 2: Post, NYT & WSJ: Visitors Centers
• Dec. 1: NBM panel & Post: Visitors Centers
• Nov. 24: National Building Museum panel
• Nov. 21: Post & NYT: National Museum of American History
• Nov. 19: NYT: Smithsonian Board of Regents
• Nov. 17: Post: Smithsonian Board of Regents
• Nov. 6: Post: Mall and Obama
• Nov. 4: Eisenhower Memorial & NCPC
• Oct. 22: Help meet the grant
• Oct. 20: Rethinking Washington's Monumental Core
• Oct. 15: NCMAC meeting
• Oct. 9: National Mall quiz
• Oct. 7: Mall memorial projects & NCMAC
• Oct. 3: Rethinking Washington's Monumental Core
• Sept. 19: Walking tour: What the Memorials Don't Tell You
• Sept. 8: WalkingTown DCÊtours
• Aug. 28: NCPC' MLK Memorial review
• Aug. 14: Examiner & Wash Times: MLK Memorial
• Aug. 2: Permits on the mall?
• Aug. 1: Suggestions for Reflecting Pool
• July 31: Examiner: Mall Sprawl and Norton
• July 29: Examiner: Capitol Reflecting Pool
• July 18: Newsweek: Mall Overhaul
• July 13: Post: Editorial
• July 10: Post: NCPC
• July 8: NPS & NCPC update
• July 7: Rethinking Washington's Monumental Core
• July 4: WMAL-AM & WDCW TV: Feldman
• July 4: Dallas Morning News: Mall
• July 2: CBS News: Gone to Seed reaction
• June 27: CBS News: Feldman
• June 20: Post: Toles' toon
• June 18: Post: Trust for Mall
• June 16: Smithsonian Program
• June 5: National Mall Conservancy
• May 29: NPS meeting on levee system
• May 26: Post: Editorial on National Mall
• May 21: Post: Hearing on the National Mall
• May 19: Hearing on The Future of the National Mall
• May 15: Hearing on The Future of the National Mall
• May 8: Walking Tour: I Have A Dream
• May 6: Post & LA Times: Smithsonian
• May 1: Post: Fisher column
• Apr. 29: Atherton Memorial Lecture
• Apr. 25: WalkingTown, DC
• Apr. 11: WalkingTown, DC
• Apr. 9: Cleveland Park Citizens meeting
• Apr. 7: Cherry Blossoms
• Mar. 27: Guide to Mall Rec
• Mar. 11: Fox 5: Feldman
• Mar. 10: Post: Fisher column
• Feb. 29: Mall items of note
• Feb. 28: Raw Fisher Radio: Feldman
• Feb. 26: Listen Raw Fisher Radio: Feldman
• Feb. 25: NCMAC meeting
• Feb. 18: President's Day links
• Feb. 12: NBM hosts Judith Dupre
• Feb. 10: Kojo Nnamdi Show: Feldman
• Feb. 8: Bloomberg: critic Russell
• Feb. 6: Post: NCPC
• Feb. 4: Post Magazine: Lincoln Memorial
• Jan. 27: Where Magazine: Editorial
• Jan. 25: Tom Sherwood comments
• Jan. 24: Post; FEMA maps
• Jan. 21: Mall management plan

2007
• Dec. 28: Public meetings
• Nov. 28: Vietnam Center review
• Nov. 16: Trust for the Mall
• Nov. 12: USA Today: Vietnam Center
• Nov. 5: AP: Arts & Industries Building
• Nov. 1: Help meet the grant
• Oct. 31: St. Elizabeths Hospital
• Oct. 29: Help meet the grant
• Oct. 22: NCMAC meeting
• Oct. 19: Post; Vietnam Center
• Oct. 18: Wash Times; Mall expansion
• Oct. 17: Vietnam Center approval
• Oct. 15: NPS Ranger lecture
• Oct. 12: Wash Times; Vietnam Center
• Sept. 25: Walking tours
• Sept. 17: NPS Announces Mall EIS
• Sept. 6: Lecture: Designing the Capital
• Aug. 2: New Mall Recreation Guide
• June 25: Post: "shortsighted planning"
• June 19: Post: Jefferson Memorial
• June 6: DCPL Most Endangered Places
• June 12: Senator Craig Thomas passing
• May 30: Post: Historical Society defunding
• May 26: Memorial Day coverage
• Apr. 29: Post: The Awakening
• Apr. 17: Coverage of April 11 Symposium
• Apr. 16: Post and Wash Times coverage
• Apr. 13: WalkingTown, DC
• Apr. 11: Read Feldman's NCPC symposium talk
• Apr. 4: NCPC symposium
• Mar. 22: NPS Listening Session
• Mar. 8: NCPC extends comments
• Mar. 7: Atherton Memorial Lecture
• Mar. 5: NW Current piece
• Mar. 2: NCPC flood draft
• Feb. 17: National Mall Plan meetings
• Feb. 15: America's Favorite Architecture
• Feb. 13: History Lecture postponed
• Feb. 6: San Fran Chron: Letters
• Feb. 2: NMAAHC comments
• Jan. 19: National Mall Plan comments
• Jan. 15: Overbeck History Lecture
• Jan. 12: Feldman on CBS Sunday Morning
• Jan. 3: NCPC public meeting
• Jan. 2: NMAAHC meeting

2006
• Dec. 28: Comments deadlines
• Dec. 22: Donate to help
• Dec. 7: Wash Times and Post coverage
• Dec. 6: Post: Editorial
• Nov. 21: NPS Environmental Assessment
• Nov. 16: Future of the Mall Symposium
• Nov. 7: Post: Fisher
• Nov. 6: SM welcomes NPS Symposium
• Nov. 4: Feldman on NPR
• Oct. 31: Peter Penczer lecture
• Oct. 19: Help meet the grant
• Oct. 12: LA Times; Whalen Obit
• Sept. 27: Slate; Visitor Center
• Sept. 26: Smithsonian Associates Program
• Sept. 25: Wash Times; Eisenhower memorial
• Sept. 18: Post; Eisenhower memorial
• Sept. 12: Contact Congress
• Sept. 9: LA Times: Christopher Knight
• Sept. 5: Open Park on Mall
• Sept. 4: Post: Roger K. Lewis
• Aug. 14: NYT; Editorial
• Aug. 9: WETA's "The Intersection"
• Aug. 7: Post/Examiner on Visitor Center
• July 20: NCPC Framework Plan
• July 17: LA Times: Tyler Green
• July 11: July Study Tour
• July 6: Washingtonian: Arthur Cotton Moore
• June 13: Dallas Morning News coverage
• June 3: Atherton tribute
• June 1: Post; Mall expansion
• May 31: Comment on the EA
• May 29: WWI Memorial
• May 27: Wash Times; Dietsch piece
• May 19: Roll Call; Visitor Center
• May 18: NCPC & Norton expansion
• May 12: Visitor Center mandate
• May 9: Post; Smithsonian endangered
• May 8: 2005 Annual Report
• Apr. 11: Immigrants rally coverage
• Apr. 1: Project for Public Spaces
• Mar. 31: Post; Dvorak on Wall
• Mar. 30: Cherry Blossoms
• Mar. 10: Hawkins at NBM
• Mar. 9: Visitor Center on Mall
• Feb. 6: NYT; Clemetson piece
• Jan. 31: NYT, Post, WTimes, Examiner
• Jan. 13: Mall map progress
• Jan. 9: NBM invite
• Jan. 7: GW Speakers Series invite

2005
• Dec. 20: Post; Correction
• Dec. 16: Wash Times; Letter
• Dec. 12: Post; Editorial
• Dec. 9: Post; Dvorak piece
• Dec. 6: Post; Atherton passing
• Nov. 28: Dallas Morning News coverage
• Nov. 28: Post; Cooper letter
• Nov. 22: Free Map mailing
• Nov. 10: Examiner; DeWitt piece
• Nov. 8: Interactive maps online/Post piece
• Oct. 20: Corcoran presentation
• Oct. 5: Future of Mall video online
• Sept. 22: Architectural Record piece
• Aug. 31: Mall tour sold out
• Aug. 29: Smithsonian Mall tour
• Aug. 22: Weekly Standard available
• Aug. 10: Weekly Standard piece
• Aug. 7: Post; Metro piece
• Aug. 7: Post; Metro piece - PDF
• Aug. 7: Weekly Standard
• July 22: Post; Editorial
• June 16: Free Mall Map/Guide
• May 13: Smithsonian WiFi
• May 9: Kojo Nnamdi Show
• Apr. 13: Fax to Senate
• Apr. 12: Coalition Senate Testimony
• Apr. 11: Post; Feldman Letter
• Mar. 23: Mall oversight hearing
• Mar. 21: Post; Hiatt Op-Ed
• Mar. 4: Mall PowerPoint at NCPC
• Feb. 18: Mall PowerPoint at CFA
• Feb. 16: CFA public session
• Feb. 14: Contact Congress
• Jan. 26: Bloomberg; Ferguson column
• Jan. 13: Post; Letters/NBC 4
• Jan. 10: Post; Hiatt column
• Jan. 9: Post; Letter
• Jan. 5: Post; Letters
• Jan. 4: Post; Editorial
• Jan. 2: Post; Hsu piece

2004
• Dec. 30: Post; Oberlander letter
• Dec. 26: Year end greetings
• Dec. 9: AP; Hartman piece
• Dec. 7: NW Current piece
• Nov. 29: Post; Lee/Hsu pieces
• Nov. 22: National Mall invite
• Oct. 15: USA Today; Dietsch piece
• Oct. 2: Post; Moore/Cooper letters
• Sept. 21: WWII Mem; Knight/Mill's book
• Sept. 15: Post; Trescott piece
• Sept. 9: Post; Milloy column
• Aug. 14: Passonneau book
• Aug. 11: Workshop reports
• July 3: Judy on ABC
• June 30: NBM Mill's talk info
• June 28: NBM Mill's talk
• June 24: WWII Mem; Knight
• June 22: City Museum Lecture
• June 21: WWII Mem; Wise
• June 18: WWII Mem; Ivey
• June 14: WWII Mem; Gopnik
• May 10: Wash Times; column
• May 7: Workshop II
• May 4: Post; Fisher WWII Mem.
• Apr. 6: Wash Times' Hudson
• Apr. 1: Post; Hsu on fence
• Mar. 27: Post; front page
• Mar. 19: Workshop prep
• Mar. 2: Mall Conservancy news
• Feb. 19: Judge Collyer decision
• Feb. 15: Post; Berard letter
• Feb. 3: Meetings/WWII Mem. stories
• Jan. 27: Post; Reel piece
• Jan. 15: Post; Reel piece
• Jan. 13: Mall Conservancy forum
• Jan. 12: 2004 Scholars Program

2003
• Jan. 7
• Jan. 9
• Jan. 10
• Jan. 20
• Jan. 30
• Feb. 3
• Feb. 25
• Mar. 10
• Mar. 17
• Apr. 4
• Apr. 20
• May 2
• June 6
• June 16
• June 23
• July 2
• July 20a
• July 20b
• Aug. 28
• Sept. 4
• Sept. 5
• Sept. 14
• Sept. 23
• Sept. 28a
• Sept. 28b
• Oct. 2
• Oct. 5
• Oct. 6
• Oct. 14
• Oct. 17
• Oct. 19
• Oct. 22
• Oct. 23
• Oct. 27
• Nov. 8
• Nov. 10
• Nov. 13
• Nov. 14
• Nov. 20
• Nov. 21
• Dec. 6
• Dec. 28

2002
• July 1
• July 4
• July 19
• July 23
• July 24-a
• July 24-b
• July 30
• Aug. 2
• Aug. 10
• Sept. 11
• Sept. 20
• Oct. 17
• Nov. 11
• Nov. 26
• Dec. 6


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