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The museum tour starts with exhibits on Carter's childhood in segregated southwest Georgia and a model of a nuclear submarine where the president once worked as a young naval officer. It then tracks his political career, first as a state senator, then as governor and finally as president. The White House section includes a full-scale replica of the Oval Office
-- one of the few exhibits from the old museum that's largely untouched
-- and an exhibit depicting Camp David, where Carter's "cabin diplomacy" helped broker a peace deal between Egypt and Israel. Some 27 million pages of documents from Carter's term sit behind a glass wall in a nearby rotunda. Hakes said he sought to present Carter's term, warts and all. One area tackles his final year in office, with an exhibit on rising inflation rates, the Iran hostage crisis and other foreign and domestic issues that contributed to his defeat. Carter said he hopes the challenges and triumphs that he and his wife, Rosalynn, have faced will inspire visitors to do more to help others. "We want the visitors who come here to have an exciting and challenging opportunity to learn more about our nation and our world," he said. "It also shows how our lives have been tied into the most momentous things on
earth, and every single visitor who comes here will have the same feeling:
'My life can be meaningful.'" ___ On the Net:
[Associated
Press;
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