12 books found
by Arthur Ryker Hall, Benjamin Ralph Stauber, Donald Jackson, Howard Archibald Turner, Hugh Hammond Bennett, Josiah Chase Folsom, Mary Aloysius Agnew, Myron Sallee Anderson, Oliver Edwin Baker, Oran Raber, R. T. Cotton, Albert Benjamin Genung, Mark Matthew Regan, Newell Emanuel Good, Wesley Moulton Noble
1936
The outlook is for further improvement in the economic position of American agriculture in 1937.
by District of Columbia. Supreme Court (1863-1936), Arthur MacArthur
1875
by District of Columbia. Supreme Court, Arthur MacArthur (Sr.)
1877
by Washington (State). Supreme Court, Eugene G. Kreider, Arthur Remington, William Henry Anders
1923
by Arno Carl Fieldner, Arthur Warren Ambrose, Carl Hugh Beal, Charles Edward Munroe, George Arthur Burrell, Horace Wadsworth Gillett, John H. Wiggins, United States. Bureau of Mines, Albert Hill Fay, Edward Lawrence Mack, James Ogier Lewis, Walter Alfred Selvig, James Washington Paul
1922
Woodrow Wilson was swept into the White House on the basis of a program characterized by the words "The New Freedom." The exciting story of his attempts to put this program into effect, in spite of a sometimes recalcitrant congress, makes up the body of this book, the second volume in Professor Link's monumental biography of Wilson. Covering the first two years of his presidency and concentrating on domestic issues, Professor Link shows Wilson meeting the complex demands of his new office, selecting his cabinet, paying political debts, organizing congressional support, seeking the approval of the public. Wilson was deeply committed to the reform program, and in the fight to put it into effect the personalities of the Wilson circle and its opponents appear vividly. The picture of Wilson as an astute politician adapting and shaping the forces around him is especially revealing in view of the popular stereotype of Wilson as an impractical, uncompromising idealist. The book also describes the Mexican intervention and the beginnings of the New Freedom diplomacy in Latin American affairs, taking the reader up to the brink of World War I. It is a worthy sequel to the famous first volume, Wilson: The Road to the White House, and will leave its readers eager for the next volume on the problems of neutrality. Originally published in 1956. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
by Douglas Arthur Wolfe
2000