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  1. With the death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt on April 12, 1945, Vice President Harry S. Truman assumed the Oval Office. He surely knew he faced a difficult set of challenges in the immediate future: overseeing the final defeats of Germany and Japan; managing the U.S. role in post-war international relations; supervising the American economy's transition from a war-time to a peace-time ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fair_DealFair Deal - Wikipedia

    Liberalism portal. Philosophy portal. v. t. e. The Fair Deal was a set of proposals put forward by U.S. President Harry S. Truman to Congress in 1945 and in his January 1949 State of the Union Address. More generally, the term characterizes the entire domestic agenda of the Truman administration, from 1945 to 1953.

  3. The “Fair Deal” was an aggressive agenda for social reform legislation proposed by President Harry Truman in January 1949. Truman had initially referred to this progressive domestic policy reform program as his “21-Points” plan after taking office in 1945. While Congress rejected many of Trumans Fair Deal proposals, those that were ...

  4. Mar 19, 2015 · Harry S. Trumans early life provided few hints that he would become the leader of the free world. Born in 1884 to a farm family of modest means in Missouri, he did not attend college (he was the only twentieth-century president who did not graduate from college), failed to save his family’s heavy-mortgaged farm, and lost money in mining and oil investments.

  5. Harry Truman claims to be a friend of civil rights. More pitiable than a man without legs is a President without firm principals” I.F. Stone—“The Case of the Legless Veteran” 10-22-48 “Mr. Trumans inaugural address… was shallow, naïve, childishly arrogant, and self-righteous, a call for war thinly masked as a pledge of peace. Mr.

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  7. ?policy prescriptions and choices.1 With this in mind, let us take a closer look at the role played by Harry S. Truman's beliefs in these two 1948 crises. But, first, a few definitions. A belief system is composed of "all the beliefs, sets, expectancies, or hypotheses, conscious or unconscious, that a person at a given time accepts as true in ...

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