The Book Club Insider Monthly Newsletter

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The Book Club Insider Monthly Newsletter Volume 4, Issue 3 SYOSSET PUBLIC LIBRARY 225 South Oyster Bay Road, Syosset NY 11791 August 2015 The Book Club Insider Inside This Issue: - Romance Writers of Monthly Newsletter America National Conference Romance Writers of America National Conference - Celebrate The Romance Writers of America held their annual conference in New Int’l Women’s York City on July 22-25, 2015. After attending more than 150 work- Friendship Month shops the authors and industry professionals look forward to a mag- - A National Treasure nificent award ceremony where the following books were recog- nized as the Best Romance Books of 2015: Reopens Best Contemporary Romance (long): Baby, It’s You by Jane Graves - Runaway bride Kari Worthington gets more than she bargained for when her search for a job— To register your book club and a new life—brings her to the doorstep of a gorgeous winery owner in Texas hill and receive this newsletter country. straight into your inbox, contact any Best Contemporary Romance (mid-length): One in a Million by Jill Shalvis - Wed- Readers’ Services Librarian ding planner Callie, the founder of TyingTheKnot.com, returns home to Lucky Har- bor where she, after an encounter with her still sexy high school crush, rethinks her Upcoming Events decision to remain single. For Readers Best Romantic Suspense: Concealed in Death by J.D. Robb - When her husband discovers evidence of 12 murders while demolishing a former New York shelter for Evening Book Club will troubled teens, Lieutenant Eve Dallas tracks down the stories of each victim only to discuss Looking for Alas- realize that they are connected by someone Eve knows. ka by John Green on Tuesday, August 4, 2015 Best Historical Romance: Fool Me Twice by Meredith Duran - When Olivia Mather at 7:30PM. realizes that the Duke of Marwick might hold the secrets of her family's past, she does the unthinkable, infiltrating his household as a maid, and gets unexpected results. Afternoon Book Club will discuss The Ministry of The following link provides more information about the conference and a complete Special Cases by Nathan list of of winners: https://www.rwa.org/p/cm/ld/fid=1640 Englander on August 25 All summaries are from the publishers. - Evelyn Hershkowitz, Readers’ Service Librarian 2015 at 1:30 PM. A National Treasure If your Book Club would like to recommend a book Reopens to our readers, Sagamore Hill, home to our 26th President, please send us an email at Theodore Roosevelt from 1885 until his Readersservices death in 1919, reopened on July 12, 2015 @syossetlibrary.org after a 3 year 10 million dollar renovation. and we will share it in Dubbed the “Summer White House” while a future newsletter. T.R. was in office, this National Historic Site sits on 83 acres in beautiful Oyster Bay, NY. www.syossetlibrary.org The project included restoring the old mansion’s leaking roof and cracked foundation. Ap- proximately 13,000 items owned by Roosevelt including 10,000 books were removed from the 28 room home and repaired. The Visitor Center at Sagamore Hill is open 7 days a week 9:00 am – 5:00 pm; tours of T.R.’s home are also offered 7 days a week from 10:00 am – 4:00 pm and would make a great outing for your book club. For additional information regard- ing admission fees and tickets please visit www.nps.gov/sahi/. (continued on page 2) The Book Club Insider August 2015 Page 2 Celebrate International Women’s Friendship Month Sue Margolis, author of Coming Clean, Best Supporting Role and most recently Losing Me, offered a new per- spective on why being unhappy is sometimes okay and even warranted. “Having to be constantly happy is one pressure too many and I refuse to pretend anymore,” she recently stated in an article on the website http://dearreader.typepad.com/. Margolis also said, “So that’s what I’m trying to teach myself – to enjoy and remember small moments of happiness and to stop aiming for an all over happiness tan, which most likely isn’t there to be had...” Whether we agree with Margolis’ view or not, it is true that finding people to turn to in difficult times can really make a difference. For many people, friendships become the coping mechanism to help with the unhappy times life sometimes offers. Interestingly, September is International Women’s Friendship Month, and it might be a good time to have your book discussion read a book on the topic. Here are some suggested titles you may find interesting to commemorate International Women’s Friendship Month: Blue Stars by Emily Gray Tedrowe Ellen, a Midwestern literature professor whose legal ward is a Marine, and Lacey, a proud Army wife and young mother, form an unlikely friendship at the Walter Reed Army Hospital as they each care for their wounded soldiers. NW by Zadie Smith Growing up in the same 1970s urban planning development in Northwest London, four young people pursue independent and reasonably successful lives until one of them is abruptly drawn out of her isolation by a stranger who is seeking her help. Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah Inseparable best friends Kate and Tully, two young women who, despite their very different lives, To read a book for the have vowed to be there for each other forever, have been true to their promise for thirty years, until first time is to make events and choices in their lives tear them apart. the acquaintance of a The Interestings by Meg Wolitzer new friend; to read it a Forging a powerful bond in the mid-1970s that lasts throughout subsequent decades, six individuals second time is to meet an old one. pursue respective challenges into their midlife years, including an aspiring actress who harbors jeal- -Chinese Proverb ousy toward friends who achieve successful creative careers. The World We Found by Thrity Umrigar Follows four friends who met as university students in Bombay in the late 1970s as they struggle to reconnect and reunite at the deathbed of one of their group. - Jean Simpson, Readers’ Services Librarian A National Treasure Reopens (continued from page 1) Here are some noteworthy books on Theodore Roosevelt your book club may wish to explore: The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism by Doris Kearns Goodwin. Theodore Roosevelt and the Assassin: Madness, Vengeance, and the Campaign of 1912 by Gerard Helferich. Heir to the Empire City: New York and the Making of Theodore Roosevelt by Edward P. Kohn. The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey by Candice Millard Theodore Rex by Edmund Morris A Most Glorious Ride: The Diaries of Theodore Roosevelt 1877-1886 by Theodore Roosevelt, edited by Edward P. Kohn. The Roosevelts: An Intimate History by Geoffrey C. Ward (based on the documentary film by Ken Burns). - Lisa Jones, Readers’ Services Librarian “BULLY!” - Theodore Roosevelt .
Recommended publications
  • Beyond the Bully Pulpit: Presidential Speech in the Courts
    SHAW.TOPRINTER (DO NOT DELETE) 11/15/2017 3:32 AM Beyond the Bully Pulpit: Presidential Speech in the Courts Katherine Shaw* Abstract The President’s words play a unique role in American public life. No other figure speaks with the reach, range, or authority of the President. The President speaks to the entire population, about the full range of domestic and international issues we collectively confront, and on behalf of the country to the rest of the world. Speech is also a key tool of presidential governance: For at least a century, Presidents have used the bully pulpit to augment their existing constitutional and statutory authorities. But what sort of impact, if any, should presidential speech have in court, if that speech is plausibly related to the subject matter of a pending case? Curiously, neither judges nor scholars have grappled with that question in any sustained way, though citations to presidential speech appear with some frequency in judicial opinions. Some of the time, these citations are no more than passing references. Other times, presidential statements play a significant role in judicial assessments of the meaning, lawfulness, or constitutionality of either legislation or executive action. This Article is the first systematic examination of presidential speech in the courts. Drawing on a number of cases in both the Supreme Court and the lower federal courts, I first identify the primary modes of judicial reliance on presidential speech. I next ask what light the law of evidence, principles of deference, and internal executive branch dynamics can shed on judicial treatment of presidential speech.
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  • Doris Kearns Goodwin
    Connecting You with the World's Greatest Minds Doris Kearns Goodwin Doris Kearns Goodwin is a world-renowned presidential historian and Pulitzer Prize-winning author. Goodwin is the author of six critically acclaimed and New York Times best-selling books, including her most recent, The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism (November, 2013). Winner of the Carnegie Medal, The Bully Pulpit is a dynamic history of the first decade of the Progressive era, that tumultuous time when the nation was coming unseamed and reform was in the air. Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks Studios has acquired the film and television rights to the book. Spielberg and Goodwin previously worked together on Lincoln, based in part on Goodwin’s award-winning Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, an epic tome that illuminates Lincoln's political genius, as the one-term congressman and prairie lawyer rises from obscurity to prevail over three gifted rivals of national reputation to become president. Team of Rivals was awarded the prestigious Lincoln Prize, the inaugural Book Prize for American History, and Goodwin in 2016 was the first historian to receive the Lincoln Leadership Prize from the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation. The film Lincoln grossed $275 million at the box office and earned 12 Academy Award® nominations, including an Academy Award for actor Daniel Day-Lewis for his portrayal of President Abraham Lincoln. Goodwin was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in history for No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II, and is the author of the best sellers Wait Till Next Year, Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream and The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys, which was adapted into an award-winning five-part TV miniseries.
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  • General Management Plan, Sagamore
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior GENERAL MANAGEMENT PLAN 2008 o TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 DEDICATION 2 SUPERINTENDENT’S NOTE 3 BACKGROUND 7 THE PARK 21 FOUNDATION FOR PLANNING 27 THE PLAN 29 OVERVIEW 31 MANAGING THE PARK’S RESOURCES 40 PROVIDING A POSITIVE VISITOR EXPERIENCE 48 IMPROVING PARK OPERATIONS AND PARTNERSHIPS 52 PROJECTED COSTS 52 NEXT STEPS 53 APPENDICES 55 A: RECORD OF DECISIONS 64 B: PARK LEGISLATION 66 C: MANAGEMENT ZONING 69 D: SECTION 106 COMPLIANCE 71 E: LIST OF PREPARERS 2 o DEDICATION THE SAGAMORE HILL NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE GENERAL MANAGEMENT PLAN IS DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF DR. JOHN ALLEN GABLE. DR. GABLE SERVED AS THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE THEODORE ROOSEVELT ASSOCIATION (TRA) FROM 1974 UNTIL HIS DEATH IN FEBRUARY 2005. DURING HIS TENURE WITH THE TRA, DR. GABLE WAS DEEPLY INVOLVED WITH THE MANAGEMENT AND OPERATION OF SAGAMORE HILL AND WAS ACTIVELY ENGAGED IN THE PARK’S PLANNING PROCESS AT THE TIME OF HIS DEATH. WE APPRECIATED HIS CANDOR AND HIS WIT, HIS INTELLECT AND HIS COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE IN CONSIDERING THE FUTURE OF SAGAMORE HILL. 1 o NOTE FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT LTHOUGH I CAME TO SAGAMORE HILL LATE IN THE PROCESS OF DEVELOPING THE GENERAL MANAGEMENT PLAN, I WOULD LIKE TO EXPRESS MY SUPPORT FOR THE DIRECTION AND TONE THAT A IT SETS FOR THE COMING DECADES. THE PRIMARY AIM OF THIS PLAN IS TO ENHANCE THE OVERALL VISITOR EXPERIENCE AND MAKE IT EASIER FOR THE PUBLIC TO UNDERSTAND, APPRECIATE, AND KNOW SAGAMORE HILL AS THE ROOSEVELTS THEMSELVES WOULD HAVE KNOWN IT WHILE THEY LIVED HERE.
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  • Dr. Dennis Wolf
    Give the Gift of Medora for Christmas! INSIDE 2 1986 - 2016 president’s message 3 Theodore Roosevelt under harold’s hat Medora Foundation Turns 30 4 ask president roosevelt 5 ed schafer remembers 6-7 a trmf timeline 8 gift restores joe ferris store Optimism, Gratitude and Generosity…. edora will surprise people people of North Dakota in 1986. And for the next 15 Mwith its plans to continue a years, until he died in 2001, he guided us through the trend of record setting attendance restoration and reconstruction of this important place in and visitation in 2016. North Dakota’s history. My urge is to give you details about the upcoming season that “ It all started with Harold’s generosity, but explain why we are excited for the summer. Those details will have it continues today with yours ” to wait for our next newsletter. Randy Hatzenbuhler Instead I want to share the North Dakota would be a very different place today TRMF President source of our excitement. It is not if Harold had not created this foundation. I think often foolhardy or without consideration of the time I first realized how overwhelmed Harold of challenges. It is why the Theodore Roosevelt Medora was that people would be willing to give money to this Foundation is able to celebrate our 30th anniversary foundation he had created to take care of Medora. in 2016. It is part of our culture, our “DNA” that was His expressions of gratitude, given so graciously and given to us by Harold Schafer. Harold had “habits” often, were received as gifts.
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  • Doris Kearns Goodwin
    DORIS KEARNS GOODWIN Doris Kearns Goodwin is a world-renowned presidential historian, public speaker and Pulitzer Prize- winning, New York Times #1 best-selling author. Her seventh book, Leadership in Turbulent Times, was published in September 2018 to critical acclaim and became an instant New York Times bestseller. A culmination of Goodwin’s five-decade career of studying the American presidents focusing on Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Baines Johnson, the book provides an accessible and essential road map for aspiring and established leaders in every field, and for all of us in our everyday lives. Goodwin’s career as a presidential historian and author was inspired when as a 24-year-old graduate student at Harvard she was selected to join the White House Fellows, one of America’s most prestigious programs for leadership and public service. Goodwin worked with Johnson in the White House and later assisted him in the writing of his memoirs. She then wrote Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream, which became a national bestseller and achieved critical acclaim. The book was re-released in Spring 2019, with a new foreword highlighting LBJ’s accomplishments in domestic affairs that have stood the test of time. Goodwin was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II. The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys was adapted into an award-winning five-part television miniseries. Her memoir Wait Till Next Year is the heartwarming story of growing up loving her family and baseball. Her sixth book, The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism, won the Carnegie Medal and is being developed into a film.
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  • The Myth of the Bully Pulpit
    Chapter 26 The Myth of the Bully Pulpit Whole-Book PDF available free At RippedApart.Org For the best reading experience on an Apple tablet, read with the iBooks app: Here`s how: • Click the download link. • Tap share, , then • Tap: Copy to Books. For Android phones, tablets and reading PDFs in Kindles or Kindle Apps, and for the free (no email required) whole-book PDF, visit: RippedApart.Org. For a paperback or Kindle version, or to “Look Inside” (at the whole book), visit Amazon.com. Contents of Ripped Apart Part 1. What Polarizes Us? 1. The Perils of Polarization 2. Clear and Present Danger 3. How Polarization Develops 4. How to Depolarize a Cyclops 5. Three Political Traps 6. The Crime Bill Myth 7. The Purity Trap Part 2. Charisma Traps 8. Smart People Get Sucked In 9. Good People Get Sucked In 10. Jonestown: Evil Charisma 11. Alex Jones: More Evil Charisma 12. The Charismatic Progressive 13. Trump: Charismatic Sociopath Part 3. Populism Traps 14. What is Populism; Why Should We Care? 15. Trump: A Fake Jacksonian Populist 16. ‘Our Revolution’ Meets the Jacksonians 17. Economics vs. the Culture War 18. Sanders’ Populist Strategy 19. Good Populism: The Kingfish 20. Utopian Populism 21. Don’t Be the Enemy They Need Part 4. Mythology Traps 22. Socialism, Liberalism and All That 23. Sanders’ Socialism Myths 24. The Myth of the Utopian Savior 25. The Establishment Myth 26. The Myth of the Bully Pulpit 27. The Myth of the Overton Window Part 5. Identity Politics 28. When the Klan Went Low, SNCC Went High 29.
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  • Theodore Roosevelt, Idealistic Reformer Or Conservative in Disguise? a Reinterpretation of the 26Th President of the United States
    Theodore Roosevelt, idealistic reformer or conservative in disguise? A reinterpretation of the 26th President of the United States MA Thesis Elsbeth van der Ploeg 313000 [email protected] Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication Erasmus University Rotterdam July 2014 Supervisor: dr. F.M.M. de Goey Second reader: dr. D. van Lente The cover photograph is derived from http://www.uncompromisingcommitment.org/articles/2012/11/theodore- roosevelt/ (accessed July 1 2014). Content Acknowledgements 4 1. Introduction 5 1.1 Debate and main question 6 1.2 Concept and theory 7 1.3 Design of my thesis 10 1.4 Method and sources 11 2. The Progressive Movement 13 2.1 Origins 14 2.1.1 Economic progress 14 2.1.2 Immigration and urbanization 19 2.2 Historiography 23 2.3 Conclusion 29 3. Theodore Roosevelt: Biography and historiography 30 3.1 Biography 30 3.2 Historiography 35 3.3 Conclusion 41 4. The Rough and Tumble: Roosevelt as Reformer 43 4.1 Merit and morals 43 4.2 Trust-busting and public health 54 4.3 Conclusion 58 5. The Unstable Jingo: Roosevelt the Conservative 60 5.1 Labor and trust-busting 60 5.2 Race and Imperialism 63 5.3 Conclusion 67 6. Conclusion 68 Primary Sources 72 Secondary literature 73 Websites 76 Acknowledgements I would like to express my gratitude to the following people for the numerous ways in which they helped and supported me during the planning and writing of this thesis: To dr. De Goey, for his help in pointing me to the right direction.
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  • Also Inside This Issue of the Rough Rider Review
    New Starting Time For The Medora Musical —Details on Page 2! Also Inside This Issue of the Rough Rider Review: Page 3: Medora’s Summer Calendar of Events Page 4: Under Harold’s Hat: letters From Harold Page 6: where are they now: Tweed Roosevelt Page 9: Volunteers Corner: A Wild Ride In A 1929 Roosevelt Page 10: A New Marketing Campaign And Website Photo by Bill Kingsbury A Letter From The President The Times, They Are A’Changin’ in Medora is part of the inevitable t is March. We are 7:30 good that comes from good. Ithinking about the “big Maybe that is the definition of a things” in Medora for the 7:30 legacy. Harold Schafer’s generosity upcoming summer season. did not just benefit the TR Medora Hiring, construction projects, Foundation. It impacted people selecting cast members and 7:30 who visit Medora. And others do specialty acts, fundraising, the same. The gift from the Browns filling the irrigation ponds for 7:30 and Andersons to bring new the golf course, selecting over activities for families (see article on Randy Hatzenbuhler 600 volunteers and more. We 7:30 page 5) affected not only the kids TRMF President are thrilled to let you know, that enjoyed the family fun center, though, that one of the biggest and best changes Mountain but also the volunteers who is a new starting time for the Medora Musical that worked there. Margo Helgerson is more family friendly, kid friendly, and senior Daylight was one of those volunteers. She friendly. wants us to do more for kids and When the cast takes the stage on opening night, Time is helping make that possible June 7, the show will start at 7:30 p.m.
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  • The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism
    The Bully Pulpit: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Golden Age of Journalism Discussion Questions 1. Name several comparisons between the Progressive Era and today. Would you rather be a member of the working class then or now? Who is a contemporary robber baron in your opinion? 2. What was the role of the press then? What is it now? How do they compare? Who is doing the muckraking (reform minded journalism) of today? 3. Talk about the women in this book. What roles did they take on and play at home and in politics? 4. How has your view of Theodore Roosevelt changed since reading this book? Could a modern president do what he did while in office? 5. This is a story of friendship and rivalry. Which other US presidents have experienced both friendship and rivalry? 6. Goodwin could not have written such an intimate portrait of the two men without their letters to each other and to their wives. How will history be recorded for historians in the next 100 years? 7. Doris Kearns Goodwin has noted that Ida Tarbell knew how to make people come to life on the page. How does Goodwin manage to do the same? 8. Steven Spielberg and Dreamworks, the makers of the movie Lincoln, based in part on Goodwin’s Team of Rivals, have acquired the rights to make a film based on The Bully Pulpit. How different would this movie be from Lincoln? Whom would you cast for the parts of Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Alice Hathaway Lee Roosevelt, Edith Roosevelt, Nellie Herron Taft (she sneaks cigarettes!), Ida Tarbell, Sam McClure? What scenes from Bully Pulpit stick out in your mind as particularly cinematic? 9.
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  • The Progressive Era (Chapter 9) I
    The Progressive Era (Chapter 9) I. Origins of Progressivism (Section 1) A. Progressive Movement: not a single movement but a total movement that sought to return control of the government to the people, to restore economic opportunities, and to correct injustices in American life—mostly dealt with urban life B. Four Goals of Progressivism 1. Protecting Social Welfare a. Social Gospel and settlement house movements continued: they helped poor through community centers, churches, social services, etc. b. Other organizations with similar goals were established: 1. Youth Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) opened libraries, sponsored classes, and built recreational centers 2. Salvation Army fed people, cared for children in nurseries, sent ―slum brigades‖ to teach immigrants about hard work and temperance, etc. c. Florence Kelly—a reformer who worked tirelessly for new laws that would prohibit or limit child labor and improve conditions for female workers 1. She helped gain passage of the Illinois Factory Act in 1893 which prohibited child labor and limited women’s working hours 2. She helped organize the National Child Labor Committee 2. Promoting Moral Improvement a. Reformers believed power could uplift themselves by improving their personal behavior b. Prohibition—banning of alcoholic: manufacturing, selling, and transporting of alcoholic beverages 1. Reformers believed that prohibition would reduce crime and the breakup of families 2. Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)— founded in Cleveland in 1874—and the Anti-Saloon League (ASL), led the movement 3. Frances Williard was head of the WCTU for sometime and made the group a national force for temperance, moral purity, and the rights of women 4.
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  • Teddy Roosevelt Jim Kratsas
    Grand Valley State University ScholarWorks@GVSU Features Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies 11-1-2005 Teddy Roosevelt Jim Kratsas Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/features Recommended Citation Kratsas, Jim, "Teddy Roosevelt" (2005). Features. Paper 59. http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/features/59 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies at ScholarWorks@GVSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Features by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@GVSU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Teddy Roosevelt, A Singular Life - The Hauenstein Center for Presidential Studies - Gran... Page 1 of 6 Teddy Roosevelt A Singular Life By Jim Kratsas Vibrant America at the dawn of the Twentieth century was poised yet hesitant to step onto the world stage. A man embodying the energy and promise of the New World came at this opportune time. In eight years, he made America's presence felt across the globe, looked out for the common man, fought injustice wherever he saw it, and took on the political bosses and industrialists. And, if his two heroes, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln, had defined the presidency, he modernized it to fit a changing world. Theodore Roosevelt barely survived childhood. Illness might have slowed his body but his mind raced. He transformed his sickly frame into an athletic, rugged body. He not only became a great president, he made himself a world authority on wildlife, wrote prodigiously, fought to expand America's armed forces and became a rancher in the Wild West.
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  • Mastering the Power of Grit: Works Cited & Notes
    1 MASTERING the Power of GRIT STRATEGIES, TACTICS, AND TOOLS FROM THE HEROES OF TENACITY, RESILIENCE, AND GUTS Timeless Lessons from the Legends of Making Things Happen and Getting Things Done John C. Welch IV, Ed.D., M.T.S., M.B.A. By the People Books, San Diego, CA 2 Works Cited & Notes The following references are for the book Mastering the Power of Grit, by Johnny Welch, available at Amazon at: https://www.amazon.com/Mastering-Power-Grit-Strategies-Resilience-ebook/dp/B01HYFI276/ “The ideas I stand for are not mine. I borrowed them from Socrates. I swiped them from Chesterfield. I stole them from Jesus. And I put them in a book. If you don’t like their rules, whose would you use?” –Dale Carnegie (1888—1955) 1. Helferich, Gerard (2013). Theodore Roosevelt and the Assassin: Madness, Vengeance, and The Campaign Of 1912. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot Press. Pg. 169. 2. Knokey, Jon (2015). Theodore Roosevelt and the Making of American Leadership. New York: Skyhorse Publishing. Pg. 406. 3. Knokey (2015), Pg. 406. 4. Klein, Christopher (2012, October 12). “Shot in the Chest 100 Years Ago, Teddy Roosevelt Kept on Talking.” History.com, A&E Television Networks, LLC. http://www.history.com/news/shot-in-the-chest-100-years-ago-teddy-roosevelt-kept- on-talking 5. Morris, Edmund (2010). Colonel Roosevelt. NY: Random House. Pg. 244. 6. Wolraich, Michael (2014). Unreasonable Men: Theodore Roosevelt and the Republican Rebels Who Created Progressive Politics. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Pg. 250. 7. Morris, Edmund (2010). Colonel Roosevelt. NY: Random House.
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