YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Grover Clevelands Presidency
Essays 31 - 60
March 1970, for the first time in the history of the U.S. Postal Service, there was a walkout in Brooklyn which grew to include ov...
fact engaged in international political action and many believe that they did not consult Congress, as they should have. C...
ours to us" (Frost 90). Lincoln knew he was different from his contemporaries in both physical appearance and demeanor, but that ...
or another somehow was able to get out of the war on a technicality. War records are important and Teddy Roosevelt was as fierce i...
of the presidential office, inasmuch as media influence is fundamentally based upon the element of perception. Contemporary presi...
separate branches of the government: legislative, executive and judicial. With this framework in place, then, it was assured tha...
In perhaps one of the most dramatic shows of foreign support of human rights, in 1980 President Jimmy Carter cancelled the America...
power because he placed himself above the law in authorizing the Watergate break-in. The tapes from the Nixon White House show a m...
not try to mislead, the media sometimes does this. There are in fact people who do contend that the media has controlled many elec...
or liberal justice can change the odds of Roe v. Wade being overturned, for example. While many presidents have had to make the im...
are pervaded with a sense of innocence violated" (pp. 6). In fact, in a pre-release review presented in The New Republic, Lane com...
of both his campaign and presidency so that the vast majority of his adoring constituency had no idea how severe his condition act...
II, but once in office, he showed traits of being politically indecisive, inarticulate, and bumbling. He was considered by his cri...
was perhaps so impressive about Roosevelt is his willingness to introduce morality into the decision making process with which he ...
are many examples throughout his career of conflicts which transpired and his apparent effortless handling of them. The Life of ...
those who want to help the poor, such as in the 1930s. There was relatively little opposition to Roosevelts New Deal because times...
snuff, the idea that the presidents role should be expanded goes against everything that the Founders intended. First, what did th...
branch. It can propose and make laws and it can pass laws with a two thirds vote even if the President vetoes a bill, but at first...
the people", and that it was his responsibility and obligation to act on behalf of what was good for the nation - using whatever l...
term traditionally begins the first Monday in October, and so final opinions are issued in late June (Mears, 2002). Justices divid...
Petticoat Presidency? 2003). Edith Wilson was a woman who had grown up in a happy home, with protective parents who adored her (E...
said. I believe this was Nixons greatest downfall - not being true to his word. In the aftermath of Watergate, there...
Johnson entered hesitantly, he won the race (2003). During World War II, Johnson briefly did a stint in the Navy but returned to...
the "loyal opposition" that he believed is needed in order for the two-party system to work best. He opposed FDR seemingly at eve...
words were nothing more than vehicles of manipulation available for use at any whim, granting suggestion and persuasion with every...
A 5 page essay exploring the book by Pulitzer prize winning journalist David Mariniss. This book focuses on Bill Clinton's climb...
In five pages Bill Clinton's presidency is evaluated in an assessment of the man and the leader. Seven sources are cited in the b...
II. Faith Restored & Freedom Redefined - The Reagan Era "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" ~ Ronald Reagan, 1987 (Beichman A19...
institution of the presidency has greatly expanded over the course of the nations history (Pynn 304). An examination of the evolut...
a new nation. In its two-centuries-old existence, the office of President of the United States has held a total of forty-two diff...