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Keeping Kennedy's Promise

Keeping Kennedy's Promise
Author: Kevin Lowther
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 171
Release: 2019-09-17
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0429727259

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The conclusions in this book rest equally on four bodies of evidence that provide a comprehensive overview of the Peace Corps' major work from its creation in 1961, the first year of the New Frontier, to mid-1977, when the newly elected Carter administration was considering how best to restore the agency to prominence here and abroad.


The Promise and the Performance

The Promise and the Performance
Author: Lewis J. Paper
Publisher: New York : Crown Publishers
Total Pages: 424
Release: 1975
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

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In this analysis of the Kennedy presidency, Paper attempts to portray his strengths and weaknesses. He evaluates Kennedy's performance as against promises by examining Kennedy's concept of the presidency, methods of decisionmaking, education of the public, and whether he inspired support for his policies and confidence in his leadership. Paper paints the picture of a man, not a myth, who was President. He finds that the man made mistakes, was a politician, was both cautious and daring, and was clearly a product of America's historical past. ISBN 0-517-52342-6.


Keeping Kennedy's Promise

Keeping Kennedy's Promise
Author: Kevin Lowther
Publisher:
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2002
Genre:
ISBN: 9780965560184

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Promises Kept

Promises Kept
Author: Irving Bernstein
Publisher:
Total Pages: 342
Release: 1991
Genre: United States
ISBN:

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The Kennedy Promise

The Kennedy Promise
Author: Henry Fairlie
Publisher: Doubleday Books
Total Pages: 394
Release: 1973
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

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"For Americans life will be more difficult and more challenging in the 1960's than it has ever been in the past"--John F. Kennedy. For Americans in the 1970's, these words from John Kennedy's 1960 campaign have an eerily prophetic ring, since the past decade did indeed bring unprecedented difficulties and challenges to the American people. Henry Fairlie argues that these were a self-fulfilling prophecy, that the very rhetoric and style of the Kennedys were largely responsible for the unrest and disilussionment that marked the late 1960's. "One cannot blame the Kennedy's," writes Mr. Fairlie, "for the whole displacement of politics which took pace in the 1960's; and on cannot blame them only for any of it. But the fact remains that they had an unusual impact on the social imagination of the American people during the years in which they acted, beyond the meaning of anything which they did, and that the force of that impact was to persuade the people either that the limits of politics could be transcended, or that politics could transcend the limits of the commonplace world."


U.S. History

U.S. History
Author: P. Scott Corbett
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023-04-02
Genre:
ISBN: 9781738998432

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Printed in color. U.S. History is designed to meet the scope and sequence requirements of most introductory courses. The text provides a balanced approach to U.S. history, considering the people, events, and ideas that have shaped the United States from both the top down (politics, economics, diplomacy) and bottom up (eyewitness accounts, lived experience). U.S. History covers key forces that form the American experience, with particular attention to issues of race, class, and gender.


President Kennedy's Promises

President Kennedy's Promises
Author: Anna M. Carroll
Publisher: Independently Published
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2017-04-25
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781521116166

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In 1963, shortly before his assassination, President Kennedy promises Mariska Bakunin, a poverty-stricken Chicago Ukrainian child, he will find her father lost in one of the massive mental hospitals of mid-twentieth century America. Kennedy also promises the nation he will close these institutions as they have imploded into horror. Kegs Addams, wealthy daughter of a federal judge and a mentally-ill mother who disappeared when Kegs was six years old, shows up in Mariska's neighborhood as the Welfare worker. Kegs wants to escape the memory of her mother rather than find out what happened to her. She accomplished this as a child by mastering foreign languages. Now, graduating from college, she plans to enter President Kennedy's Foreign Service and move from country to country as an American diplomat. When her father's illness delays her plans to enter the Foreign Service, Kegs reluctantly takes the Welfare job to help her overburdened best friend, Maggie Cahan. Mayor Richard J. Daley's 1963 Chicago is ablaze with Kennedy's New Frontier, Puerto Ricans arriving in the first airborne migration, woman wanting their rights, African-Americans fleeing Jim Crow's South, hill people leaving the depleted coal fields of Appalachia for jobs in the city, and Gypsy roamers settling down. New waves of the uprooted are settling in the city with earlier refugees from war-ravaged Europe. Mariska Bakunin and her pals--ten-year-old Jesús Montez, a Puerto Rican boy trying to assume a man's responsibilities; and Nelda Anthony, a mute, failure-to-thrive Gypsy child of unknown age, who only wants to go to school--shadow Kegs as she becomes a part of their neighborhood. Among the other characters Kegs meets is Peaches Palloma, the iron-fisted African-American owner of the Polish tavern where John F. Kennedy makes a campaign stop. Peaches introduces Kegs to the brutal underside of Welfare, the medical underground, and Polish food. From those she comes to know in the neighborhood, Kegs learns the promise and price of flight from one's homeland. From the young psychiatrist, Dr. Dan Shannon, Kegs learns the cost of fleeing from oneself and how the human mind protects and sometimes fails its owner.


John F. Kennedy

John F. Kennedy
Author: Lewis J. Paper
Publisher:
Total Pages: 408
Release: 1979
Genre: United States
ISBN:

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JFK's Last Hundred Days

JFK's Last Hundred Days
Author: Thurston Clarke
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2013-07-16
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1101617802

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A Kirkus Best Book of 2013 A revelatory, minute-by-minute account of JFK’s last hundred days that asks what might have been Fifty years after his death, President John F. Kennedy’s legend endures. Noted author and historian Thurston Clarke argues that the heart of that legend is what might have been. As we approach the anniversary of Kennedy’s assassination, JFK’s Last Hundred Days reexamines the last months of the president’s life to show a man in the midst of great change, finally on the cusp of making good on his extraordinary promise. Kennedy’s last hundred days began just after the death of two-day-old Patrick Kennedy, and during this time, the president made strides in the Cold War, civil rights, Vietnam, and his personal life. While Jackie was recuperating, the premature infant and his father were flown to Boston for Patrick’s treatment. Kennedy was holding his son’s hand when Patrick died on August 9, 1963. The loss of his son convinced Kennedy to work harder as a husband and father, and there is ample evidence that he suspended his notorious philandering during these last months of his life. Also in these months Kennedy finally came to view civil rights as a moral as well as a political issue, and after the March on Washington, he appreciated the power of Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., for the first time. Though he is often depicted as a devout cold warrior, Kennedy pushed through his proudest legislative achievement in this period, the Limited Test Ban Treaty. This success, combined with his warming relations with Nikita Khrushchev in the wake of the Cuban missile crisis, led to a détente that British foreign secretary Sir Alec Douglas- Home hailed as the “beginning of the end of the Cold War.” Throughout his presidency, Kennedy challenged demands from his advisers and the Pentagon to escalate America’s involvement in Vietnam. Kennedy began a reappraisal in the last hundred days that would have led to the withdrawal of all sixteen thousand U.S. military advisers by 1965. JFK’s Last Hundred Days is a gripping account that weaves together Kennedy’s public and private lives, explains why the grief following his assassination has endured so long, and solves the most tantalizing Kennedy mystery of all—not who killed him but who he was when he was killed, and where he would have led us.