They Also Ran: The Story of the Men who Were Defeated for the PresidencyDoubleday, Doran, 1945 - 427 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 81 筆
第 33 頁
... took no pains to conceal that he was breaking any and all laws that inter- fered with his pleasures , enabled a gang ... took a sane stand ; if he had been elected president he would have prevented the beatings , imprisonments , killings ...
... took no pains to conceal that he was breaking any and all laws that inter- fered with his pleasures , enabled a gang ... took a sane stand ; if he had been elected president he would have prevented the beatings , imprisonments , killings ...
第 135 頁
... took a defensive stand , letting the enemy attack . He fought no lost causes , he revolu- tionized no antiquated techniques , he whipped no bodies of raw recruits into scientifically trained militia . He did not understand the tactics ...
... took a defensive stand , letting the enemy attack . He fought no lost causes , he revolu- tionized no antiquated techniques , he whipped no bodies of raw recruits into scientifically trained militia . He did not understand the tactics ...
第 195 頁
... took to it the way Greeley took to journalism , Scott to soldiering and Hughes to law ; he became trained in the mechanics of political thinking the way other boys were being trained in the mechanics of carpentering or animal husbandry ...
... took to it the way Greeley took to journalism , Scott to soldiering and Hughes to law ; he became trained in the mechanics of political thinking the way other boys were being trained in the mechanics of carpentering or animal husbandry ...
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常見字詞
Alf Landon Alfred American army ballot battle became become believed Blaine Buchanan Buren campaign candidate career charge Charles Evans Hughes Civil Cleveland command Congress convention Coolidge Court Davis defeat Democratic party Dewey Dewey's dollars Douglas election electoral father fight fought Franklin D Fremont friends governor Grant Hancock Hayes Henry Clay Horace Greeley Horatio Seymour hundred James G James Middleton Cox John John Charles Fremont Kansas knew lawyer leader legislature letters Lewis Cass liberal Lincoln majority McClellan million nation never newspaper nomination Parker political popular president presidential railroad Rans reform refused Republican party Roosevelt Senate slave slavery Smith southern speeches Stephen thousand Tilden tion Tom Dewey took Union United victory voters votes waged wanted Washington Wendell Willkie Whig White House William Jennings Bryan Winfield Scott Winfield Scott Hancock wrote York young