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The Speeches Of Ronald Reagan chronicles his thirty-year-long
public conversation with the American people. Included are
thirty-five speeches that cover what Reagan had to say about
freedom, terrorism, the Beirut bombing, the Iran-Contra
controversy, the Evil Empire, the Star Wars initiative, the
fortieth anniversary of D-Day, the Challenger disaster, and drug
abuse. Also included is his touching Long Goodbye to the American
people.
"Criminal Justice Decisions of the United States Supreme Court"
contains the actual text of thirteen major United States Supreme
Court Criminal Justice Decisions edited into plain non-legal
English. Topics include the right to remain silent, preventive
detention, protecting children in court, illegal search and
seizure, the right to counsel, double jeopardy, the fruit of the
poisonous tree, coerced confessions, the fundamental right to a
fair trial, indigent defendants, the right to confront your
accuser, victim impact statements, and ineffective counsel.
No television, no internet, no twitter. 150 years ago public
opinion was shaped, not by 30-second sound bytes, banner ads, or
140-character messages. It was shaped by people climbing upon the
stage and speaking persuasively to audiences large and small. One
speech, carefully constructed, passionately given, and widely
circulated, could and did turn obscure politicians into national
figures. Civil War Speeches is a collection of passionate words
spoken by the people most intimately involved in the great debates
of their time. There is an unmistakable truth that one man's
traitorous zealot is another man's passionate patriot. The
difference is geography. To Southerners, Frederick Douglass and
William Garrison, proponents of the abolition of slavery, were
extremists threatening a cherished way of life. To Northerners,
firebrands like William Loundes Yancy and Robert Barnwell Rhett
were fanatics seeking to destroy the union of the states. Their war
of words soon devolved into the bloodiest war in American history.
These volumes chronicle the drama that was played out over the
15-year period (1850-1865) leading up to and comprising the Civil
War. Read chronologically, these speeches show the evolution of
public sentiment, molded by the speakers that placed great masses
on a collision course. There are no glorious, death-defying bayonet
charges to be found in these volumes. The weapons used by the
speakers were simple appeals to patriotism and the defense of home
and hearth; it was a question of whose flag was to fly over whose
country. Civil War Speeches is designed to be every reader's speech
reference and every librarian's resource. The editors have made
every effort to either obtain the original text, or to reconcile
differing texts, to provide the reader the authentic words of the
speakers. The only change we have made to the text is to carefully
edit the essential sections presented into modern spelling and
grammar. Civil War Speeches presents 37 important speeches (20 in
the North's volume, 17 in the South's volume) each placed in its
correct historic context by a biographical sketch of the speaker, a
history of the speech, and a thorough bibliography. Edited for
readers, writers, and researchers at all levels, Civil War Speeches
provides the user with a right-at-the fingertips, easy-to-access
speech reference. A century and a half after the guns have fallen
silent, and long after the speakers have gone to their graves,
their words still have power to stir the American soul, North and
South.
"The Speeches of Abraham Lincoln" is an anthology of twenty
memorable speeches and two famous letters from the life of Abraham
Lincoln. The history of the country's most turbulent time is
brought to us in the stirring words of our sixteenth president. An
easy-to-use authoritative collection of President Lincoln's most
memorable speeches, edited down to their essential elements, "The
Speeches of Abraham Lincoln" includes: "A House Divided Against
Itself," "The Cooper Institute Address," "The Emancipation
Proclamation," "The Gettysburg Address," "A Day Of Thanksgiving,"
"The Second Inaugural Address," and "The Last Speech."
Volume VI of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme
Court" covers ten cases on the Aaron Burr conspiracy, Dartmouth
College, women's work, the right to bear arms, the "sick chicken"
case, the law of war, un-American activities, "one person, one
vote," the Presidential line item veto, and the right to die.
A representative selection of thirty speeches by President John F.
Kennedy, looking back on his life and times, not in the words of
others, but in his own. In "John F. Kennedy: Word for Word" you
will find the Acceptance Speech, the Presidential Debates, the
Inaugural Address, the Berlin Wall, the Space Race, the Cuban
Missile Crisis. In addition, read Kennedy's words on the State of
the Union, the United Nations, Berlin, Cuba, Vietnam, civil rights,
and nuclear war. Finally, read the Ungiven Speech scheduled in
Dallas on November 22, 1963.
Volume VIII of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme
Court" covers ten cases decided from 2006-2010 on
physician-assisted suicide, execution by lethal injection, the al
Queda detainee, partial birth abortion, crack cocaine, age
discrimination, reverse discrimination, campaign finance reform,
sexually dangerous persons, and the right to keep and bear arms.
Volume V of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme Court"
covers ten cases on the slave ships, religious liberty, treason,
military justice, marijuana, birth control, baseball, equal pay for
equal work, child abuse, and the "Son of Sam" law.
Volume IV of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme
Court" covers ten cases on federal supremacy, the Trail of Tears,
Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus, separate but equal, trust
busting, child labor, the atomic spies, libel, conscientious
objection, and hate crimes.
Volume III of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme
Court" covers ten cases on executive privilege, clear and present
danger, forced sterilization, mob justice, the Pledge of
Allegiance, illegal search and seizure, interracial marriage,
monkey trials, sexual harassment, and separation of church and
state.
Volume II of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme
Court" covers ten cases on slavery, women's suffrage,
Japanese-American concentration camps, bible reading in the public
schools, the book banned in Boston, rights of the accused, the
death penalty, homosexuality, offensive speech, and the right to
die.
No television, no internet, no twitter. 150 years ago public
opinion was shaped, not by 30-second sound bytes, banner ads, or
140-character messages. It was shaped by people climbing upon the
stage and speaking persuasively to audiences large and small. One
speech, carefully constructed, passionately given, and widely
circulated, could and did turn obscure politicians into national
figures. Civil War Speeches is a collection of passionate words
spoken by the people most intimately involved in the great debates
of their time. There is an unmistakable truth that one man's
traitorous zealot is another man's passionate patriot. The
difference is geography. To Southerners, Frederick Douglass and
William Garrison, proponents of the abolition of slavery, were
extremists threatening a cherished way of life. To Northerners,
firebrands like William Loundes Yancy and Robert Barnwell Rhett
were fanatics seeking to destroy the union of the states. Their war
of words soon devolved into the bloodiest war in American history.
These volumes chronicle the drama that was played out over the
15-year period (1850-1865) leading up to and comprising the Civil
War. Read chronologically, these speeches show the evolution of
public sentiment, molded by the speakers that placed great masses
on a collision course. There are no glorious, death-defying bayonet
charges to be found in these volumes. The weapons used by the
speakers were simple appeals to patriotism and the defense of home
and hearth; it was a question of whose flag was to fly over whose
country. Civil War Speeches is designed to be every reader's speech
reference and every librarian's resource. The editors have made
every effort to either obtain the original text, or to reconcile
differing texts, to provide the reader the authentic words of the
speakers. The only change we have made to the text is to carefully
edit the essential sections presented into modern spelling and
grammar. Civil War Speeches presents 37 important speeches (20 in
the North's volume, 17 in the South's volume) each placed in its
correct historic context by a biographical sketch of the speaker, a
history of the speech, and a thorough bibliography. Edited for
readers, writers, and researchers at all levels, Civil War Speeches
provides the user with a right-at-the fingertips, easy-to-access
speech reference. A century and a half after the guns have fallen
silent, and long after the speakers have gone to their graves,
their words still have power to stir the American soul, North and
South.
Volume I of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme Court"
covers ten cases on school desegregation, obscenity, school prayer,
fair trials, sexual privacy, censorship, abortion, affirmative
action, book banning, and flag burning.
Volume VII of "Landmark Decisions of the United States Supreme
Court" covers fourteen cases decided from 2000-2005 on violence
against women, the contested Presidential election; partial-birth
abortion, the gay Boy Scout leader, executing the mentally
retarded, internet pornography, affirmative action, sodomy, the Al
Qaeda cases, medical marijuana, private property rights, and the
Ten Commandments cases.
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