It was a speech President Franklin D. Roosevelt didn't expect to give. On a Sunday afternoon on December 7, 1941, our nation's 32nd president had just finished his lunch in his second-floor study in ...
2017-01-22T18:00:40-05:00https://ximage.c-spanvideo.org ...
pt. 1. Political oratory from the Revolution to the Civil War -- pt. 2. Political oratory from Abraham Lincoln to Bill Clinton v. 1. Political oratory from the Revolution to the Civil War -- Argument ...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X HYDE PARK, N.Y. — On March 13, 1933, nine days after a newly elected Franklin D. Roosevelt ...
The broad bosom of the Pacific Ocean enfolded Franklin Roosevelt last weekend. To its gusts he could throw the heavy cares of the Presidency, to its rollers the carking complications of politics.
Each week, The Spokesman-Review examines one question from the Naturalization Test immigrants must pass to become United States citizens. Today’s question: Who was president during the Great ...
This article examines the rhetorical leadership of reconstructive presidents: how they use political principles and ideology in an attempt to moderate and integrate diverse groups within their ...
In other words, the creation of the American-led international system we live in today did not simply drop out of the sky. It came about by design—a design animated by Roosevelt’s profound belief in ...