Hints and tips:
...Fortunately for the UK’s reputation, prime minister Rishi Sunak distanced himself from Wallace’s crass remark....
...The beautiful Wallace drinking fountains still work, unlike London’s, which are mostly dry and clogged up with leaves and fag-ends....
...The poet Wallace Stevens wrote: “You touch the hotel the way you touch moonlight” in Arrival at the Waldorf. It sounds romantic but, of course, you cannot touch moonlight....
...Roosevelt’s New Deal....
...The trail of blue blood leads back to Franklin Roosevelt and the Kennedys....
...It was Teddy Roosevelt’s Great White Fleet that simultaneously embodied both American liberty and empire....
...America’s national parks have been lauded by writers such as Wallace Stegner, who called them “the best idea we ever had....
...Here is a brief history of white working-class voters in America: between 1932 and 1964, they were diehard Democrats, core constituents of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal....
...Roosevelt carried just six states and received 27.4 per cent of the popular vote....
...George Wallace’s campaigns for president in the 1960s were exercises in the worst kind of prejudice. No country is perfect....
...To answer the question, Farmelo assembles a glittering cast of scientists, politicians and military men – Leó Szilárd, Otto Frisch and Rudolf Peierls; Wallace Akers, Henry Tizard and Patrick Blackett; J...
...Having lived through the Depression, and the devastation it brought to the farmbelt, McGovern abandoned his nominal Republicanism and became an admirer of Wallace, Franklin Roosevelt and Adlai Stevenson...
...The Columbia University professor recounts how powerful Southern congressmen rescued US capitalism by passing Franklin D Roosevelt’s reforms – at the price of reinforcing racial segregation....
...William Wallace 7. Lord Mountbatten – in an IRA bombing 8. He was the pilot of Enola Gay, which dropped the atom bomb on Hiroshima 9....
...to change all this, believing that the powers of reason and civil discussion would engender the sort of bipartisanship that triumphed over, even discredited, entrenched extremes in the times of Franklin Roosevelt...
...This point is made well in an excellent soon-to-be-published essay by William Wallace and Christopher Phillips*....
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