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Show Memoirs ui u Ionian of pleasure Bean Soup I ,,,'ve always considered mem-, mem-, aspect, particularly those of I and politicians. Mrs. CJ Johnson's diary, released -1th with incredible ima-hi ima-hi as "A White House Di-""is Di-""is 'as you might expect, very 1'. and restrained and devoid i:'.is,crets from the smoke-filled I it would seem the first fwas never offered a cigar. I Rut however unsensationa!, ' book will be a solid seller. rev all are- these ladies' sou" '"'ts from administrations past. ifVarpenter, Lady Bird's press flourishes on us scarcely before 'he last horn had been sounded as !;!tason eft Washington. One of jj5 Kennedy Onassis' underlings isaso told some profitable but important tales out of the capi-!sl capi-!sl With the success of these and i's, we can only expect more ';j ibe'same unrevealing chronicles 's the future. efs anticipate them with the 'm malice toward none with Aich they might be released. A -Perhaps before she leaves Washington, Mrs. Frank Church will release her treatise on the separation of Church and State a biography and a sure hit in Idaho -The Mrs. Clement Haysworth and Harold Carswell have co-edited an anthology on race relations, rela-tions, That's What I Like About the South, with a foreword, afterword after-word and final word by Mrs. John Mitchell. (MM is also a consultant to AT&T in its new edition of the telephone directory.) -Another collaborative effort is The Old Folks at Home, a tale of Gelusil and geriatrics, from Mrs. Strom Thurmond and Mrs. William 0. Douglas. -Expect a new game book from Mrs. Ted Kennedy, How to Play Chappaquidack Bridge, or Crossing the Bar in the Senator's Car -J. Edgar Hoover's secretary will publish her boss's Knock, Knock, Who's There? jokes from his personal files, plus the amusing account of how Joe Scarpcllo and Willie the Creep were gunned aiial, that is to say, a uiascuiisi i;lows: 4irs. George Kennedy reveals it administration's economics asttr-plan in her forthcoming look, Pennies from Heaven-the Answer to Inflation. -Pat Nixon is said to be work-a work-a on an account of her hus-trfs hus-trfs career, a heart-warming ay of a boy and his dog coming it age in Whittier, Calif. ("It was ilristmas and Dick was all alone In the orphange. . . . ") Coming m to drugstores everywhere . -Mrs. Melvin Laird on self-ifense: self-ifense: ABM for the Millions, d arresting account on how to 's simple but expensive technics techni-cs in cold warfare. Inspired by toper by the Dozen. -Mis. Frank Moss is working 1 1 volume to tell you how to si out of the wilderness; Mrs. jJtence Burton on one telling sw to get out of the Congress; He latter is tentatively titled Ira Nixon and Other Cam-triers Cam-triers I Have Known. down one Saturday atternoon in '33 outside the Bijou Theatre. -A cookbook from the Capitol is being compiled right now with, oddly, more entries in the poultry section than any other. We have Mrs. Jacob Javits' 'Chicken in Every' Soup, plus recipes for Mrs. Albert Gore's Lame Duck, Mrs. Chas. Goodell's Cooked Goose, and Mrs. Eugene McCarthy's Cold Turkey, In the vegetable section is Mrs. Lester Maddox's White-Eyed Peas and Sen. Russell Long. Mrs. Hubert Humphrey gives us 'Pleased as Punch' Punch and Mrs. Richard Nixon has contributed a soup that is made perfectly clear. -Finally, may we anticipate a posthumous diary to end all diaries, di-aries, written by some first lady of the future, The Day I Pushed the Red Button and Didn't Get Roomservice. n |