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© 2004 Presidential Leadership
What makes a president great? Two of America's most prominent institutions, The Wall Street Journal and the Federalist Society, with the help of a wide array of eminent scholars, journalists, and political leaders, tackle this question in Presidential Leadership, the definitive ranking of our nation's chief executives.
Based on a survey conducted by the Federalist Society and the Journal, Presidential Leadership
examines presidential performance in this collection of provocative,
enlightening essays written by a distinguished and diverse group of
authors.
The survey
included seventy-eight liberal and conservative scholars, balancing the
sample to reflect the political makeup of the U.S. population as a
whole. It represents the first national survey in book form that
provides a complete ranking of the presidents, along with an appendix
that explains the methodology in detail and includes a wide range of
valuable data. The result is an important, fresh, and engaging book,
rating the presidents from Washington to Clinton and including an early
assessment of George W. Bush's presidency by Journal editorial
page editor Paul Gigot. Nearly fifty contributors provide their
insights, with one essay on each president or on a broader issue of
presidential leadership.
Their compelling
essays, packed with fascinating and often surprising insights, analyze
the best and worst of our commanders in chief. Presidential Leadership is the lively result, at once a valuable reference and a tremendously readable collection.
James Taranto has been editor of OpinionJournal.com, the website of The Wall Street Journal's editorial page, since its inception in 2000. He writes the site's "Best of the Web Today" column, the Journal's most popular online offering. He joined the Journal in 1996 as an editor of op-ed pieces, after spending five years as an editor at City Journal,
the Manhattan Institute's quarterly of urban public policy. He attended
California State University, Northridge, and lives in New York City.
Leonard Leo
serves as executive vice president of the Federalist Society, an
organization of 35,000 lawyers and other individuals committed to
limited, constitutional government as envisioned by the framers of the
Constitution. He has worked with the organization since 1991 and has
practiced law in Washington, D.C., and New Jersey. He has co-edited and
published several articles and monographs relating to presidential
power. A graduate of Cornell University and Cornell Law School, he
lives in Washington, D.C.
Embracing Your 40s. Part 2
Fit for Life Haddon also tells women not only to adopt positive attitudes, but also to live healthier lifestyles. The advice she doles out for staying fit is much of the same sensible recommendations women hear from their family doctors — exercise three times a week, eat healthy, stop dieting, stop smoking and drink lots [..]
Embracing Your 40s. Part 1
Flip through a few women’s magazines and you’ll notice the subtle changes. Forty-three-year-old Melanie Griffith touting cosmetic lines. Top models from three decades ago gracing the covers as sexy and vibrant women again. A profile on Madonna giving birth at age 41. And it’s not just the rich and famous who are embracing their 40s, [..]
Discovery Channel Moment
The next scene opens with a Discovery Channel moment, which impels me to… It is EXACTLY how I envisioned it. We see an eagle or a falcon soaring through the sky, high above the island, strong, graceful, the wind rushing through its wings. In my Freedom to Fly CD, I guide people to imagine doing [..]
Making Collected Club Information Useful
Clubs have collected lots of data on their club-oriented software. In some cases, hard copies are created with reams of printouts sitting on shelves — or worse, in offsite storage facilities. The data starts with club financials, and grows to membership data and then to usage. The lesson is that this data only becomes information [..]
Could Your Child Have Scoliosis. Part 2
Severity and Treatment The severity of the scoliosis is measured by degrees of curvature, which can range from extremely slight at 5 degrees, to extremely severe at 90 degrees. Slight curves do not send up warning flares to doctors. However, Carissa Havrilko’s curve reached 71 degrees, which is a very noticeable and progressing curve. “A [..]
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