Issue
August 1964, Volume 15, No.5
Featured Articles
The Speech That Toppled A President
Author: Gerald Carson
How a Pennsylvania congressman dug Martin Van Buren’s political grave with a golden spoon
Ask The Man Who…
Author:
To endorse their products, early admen used even the President. Permission? They seldom bothered to
The Loneliest Place In The World
Author: Richard H. Rovere
The Camera Comes To The White House
Author: Roger Butterfield
The Highest Office
Author: D. W. Brogan
The Presidency has outlas fed the thrones of emperors and kings, shoguns and cxars, to become the world’s principal place of power
The Moment Of Decision
Author: Bruce Catton
When Harry Truman was President of the United States he kept on his desk a little sign with the reminder: “The buck stops here.” This was his way of telling himself that when the responsibility for decision conies to a President, he has to meet it all alone. He can ask for all kinds of advice, and any amount of briefing, but he has to make up his mind by himself. Once in a generation or so his decisions send powerful echoes down the years. They may take the country along a path never before followed, enlarge the powers of the American government itself, or commit the whole nation to a policy or a program that will have permanent and vital effect. At such moments the President has to have vision, courage, and a sense of historic mission. To illustrate the matter, we consider below five moments in time in which a President made a decision whose consequences to the republic still endure.
The President’s Lady
Author: Amy La Follette Jensen
As a national celebrity, only the Chief Executive himself outshines her. Within the awesome confines of the White House, some remarkable women have presided
How to Get Elected
Author: Bernard A. Weisberger
The American system of choosing a President has not worked out badly, far as it may be from the Founding Fathers’ vision of a natural aristocracy
A Gallery Of The Vice Presidents
Author:
Their job, said John Adams, was nothing in esse but everything in posse. Each of them went to sleep every night and …