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| | Theodore Roosevelt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Roosevelt appointed three Justices to the Supreme Court of the United States: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. |  | | Roosevelt appointed him to the Supreme Court on January 29, 1903. |  | | On August 11, 1902, while the Senate was in recess, Roosevelt appointed Holmes to the Supreme Court. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt
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| | MSN Encarta - Theodore Roosevelt |
 | | Roosevelt, Theodore (1858-1919), 26th president of the United States (1901-1909), one of the strongest and most vigorous presidents in United States history. |  | | To his son the elder Roosevelt was “the best man I ever knew,” but the younger Roosevelt was ashamed all his life that his father had not fought during the war. |  | | Roosevelt’s father, Theodore Roosevelt, Sr., was a New York businessman who married Martha Bulloch, a Southern belle from a prominent Georgia family. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761558578/Roosevelt_Theodore.html
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| | Theodore Roosevelt |
 | | Roosevelt further bucked the conservative leadership by cooperating with the Democratic governor Grover Cleveland and opposing the presidential nomination of James G. Blaine at the Republican convention in 1884. |  | | Roosevelt was elected to the New York state assembly in 1882 and allied himself with the Republican Party's reform elements. |  | | In 1896, Roosevelt campaigned vigorously for the Republican nominee, William McKinley, and pressed for an appointment after the election victory. |
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http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h959.html
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| | Teddy Roosevelt, Progressive Party, 1912 |
 | | Theodore ("Teddy") Roosevelt became president in 1901, and was elected to a second term in 1904. |  | | A final indication of Roosevelt's appeal and influence is that most of his agenda became law, in several cases through a strenuous constitutional amendment process. |  | | The league supported LaFollette for the Republican presidential nomination until, in February 1912, Roosevelt, who was frustrated with Taft and unenthusiastic about LaFollette, announced that he would seek the Republican nomination. |
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http://www.geocities.com/dave_enrich/ctd/3p.roosevelt.html
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| | Teddy Roosevelt - Uncyclopedia |
 | | Teddy Roosevelt died in 1991, when he was eaten alive by Norman Schwarskopf in a moment of rage. |  | | As President, Roosevelt acknowledged the influence Germany had on him in his early life, and became King of the Bullies. |  | | Teddy "Theodore" Roosevelt was a lite jazz singer (AKA "Teddy Roose-Svelte") and sometimes-President of the US in the late somethingth century. |
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http://www.uncyclopedia.org/uncyclopedia/index.php?title=Teddy_Roosevelt
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| | American President |
 | | Frail and sickly as a boy, Teddy Roosevelt (born in 1858) developed a rugged physique as a teenager and became a lifelong advocate of exercise and the "strenuous life." After graduating from Harvard, Roosevelt married Alice Hathaway Lee and studied law for a year at Columbia. |  | | Children: Alice Lee Roosevelt (1884-1980), Theodore Roosevelt (1887-1944), Kermit Roosevelt (1889-1943), Ethel Carow Roosevelt (1891-1977), Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt (1894-1979), Quentin Roosevelt (1897-1918) |  | | In 1904, Roosevelt was eager to be elected in his own right. |
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http://www.americanpresident.org/history/theodoreroosevelt
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| | Teddy Roosevelt |
 | | Tweed Roosevelt recently retraced the route of the 1914 Rio Roosevelt expedition and is a recognized authority on the President and the Roosevelt family. |  | | His certificate is signed by Tweed Roosevelt, the great grandson of the 25th president of the United States. |  | | "The original teddy bear, from 1903, was given to the Smithsonian by Teddy Roosevelt's grandson, Kermit. |
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http://www.bearhollow.net/teddy_roosevelt.htm
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| | Internet Public Library: POTUS |
 | | (1887-1944); Kermit Roosevelt (1889-1943); Ethel Carow Roosevelt (1891-1977); Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt (1894-1979); Quentin Roosevelt (1897-1918) |  | | Theodore Roosevelt -- from The Presidents of the United States of America |  | | Children: Alice Lee Roosevelt (1884-1980); Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. |
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http://www.ipl.org/div/potus/troosevelt.html
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| | Teddy Roosevelt Terrier |
 | | Teddy Roosevelt Terriers should not be sparred during conformation judging. |  | | The Teddy Roosevelt Terrier may be solid white, bi-color or tri-color but must always have some white, which may be of any size and located anywhere on the dog. |  | | The Teddy Roosevelt Terrier comes in solid white, other solid colors with markings, and white with a variety of colored patches. |
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http://www.ukcdogs.com/breeds/terriers/teddyrooseveltterrier.std.shtml
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| | Theodore Roosevelt - Biography |
 | | In 1904 Roosevelt was elected to a full term as president. |  | | Theodore Roosevelt (October 27, 1858–January 6, 1919) was born in New York into one of the old Dutch families which had settled in America in the seventeenth century. |  | | Dissatisfied with Taft's performance, Roosevelt bolted the regular Republican Party in 1912 and accepted the presidential nomination by the Progressive Party. |
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http://nobelprize.org/peace/laureates/1906/roosevelt-bio.html
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| | Teddy Roosevelt in Political Cartoons |
 | | Roosevelt returned from the Spanish-American war to run for Governor of New York. |  | | Roosevelt often found himself faced with a difficult path leading the Republican party against opposition to his reforms. |  | | After losing the Republican nomination, Roosevelt ran as a "Bull Moose" Progressive party candidate. |
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http://www.vw.cc.va.us/vwhansd/HIS122/Teddy/TRCartoons.html
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| | The manliness of Theodore Roosevelt by Harvey Mansfield |
 | | The manliness of Theodore Roosevelt by Harvey Mansfield |  | | And Teddy Roosevelt was more a philosopher than he knew. |  | | But Roosevelt would not use government to reduce the effort required of the poor. |
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http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/23/mar05/mansfield.htm
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| | The American Experience/TR's Legacy/Environment |
 | | In 1882, after being elected to the New York State Legislature, Roosevelt donated the bulk of the Roosevelt Museum of Natural History to the Smithsonian Institution. |  | | Fueled by Theodore's curiosity, the Roosevelt museum grew. |  | | Year by year, act by act, proclamation by proclamation, Roosevelt built his natural empire. |
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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/tr/envir.html
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| | Theodore Roosevelt on Film - (American Memory from the Library of Congress) |
 | | Theodore Roosevelt was the first U.S. president to have his career and life chronicled on a large scale by motion picture companies (even though his predecessors, Grover Cleveland and William McKinley, were the first to be filmed). |  | | Besides containing scenes of Roosevelt, these films include views of world figures, politicians, monarchs, and friends and family members of Roosevelt who influenced his life and the era in which he lived. |  | | Four sound recordings made by Roosevelt for the Edison Company in 1912 in which he states his progressive political views are also included. |
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http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/troosevelt_film
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| | On Safari With Theodore Roosevelt, 1909 |
 | | During WWI, Kermit Roosevelt fought with the British army in Mesopotamia. |  | | Theodore Roosevelt's account appears in: Roosevelt, Theodore, African Game Trails (1910); Morris, Edmund, The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt (1979). |  | | The Roosevelts Move Into the White House, 1901 |
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http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/tr.htm
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| | Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site (National Park Service) |
 | | After Roosevelt's death in 1919, the site was purchased by the Women's Roosevelt Memorial Association, rebuilt and decorated with many of its original furnishings by Roosevelt's sisters and wife. |  | | Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th President of the United States, lived at this site from his birth on October 27, 1858 until he was 14 years old. |  | | After graduating from Harvard, Roosevelt pursued his boyhood dreams, as a rancher, naturalist, explorer, author and Colonel of the Rough Riders. |
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http://www.nps.gov/thrb
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| | The Panama Canal |
 | | In 1900, Republicans nominated Teddy as President McKinley's running mate. |  | | At age 42, Theodore Roosevelt became the nation's youngest president. |  | | Roosevelt assumed the office with the same vigor with which he charged up Kettle Hill. |
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http://www.smplanet.com/imperialism/joining.html
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| | HistoryBuff.com -- Teddy Roosevelt Shot by Anarchist - Manuscript of Speech Saves His Life |
 | | Roosevelt reached Milwaukee shortly after 5 o'clock and making his way through the crowd which had gathered at the station, entered an automobile and was driven to a private dining room on the main floor with the members of the party on his private car. |  | | After dinner Col. Roosevelt stood up, waving his hat in answer to the cheers of the crowd. |  | | Henry F. Cochems, former athlete and Chairman of the Progressive Party speaker's bureau, and Albert Martin, Roosevelt's stenographer, seized the man and held him until policemen came up. |
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http://www.historybuff.com/library/refteddy.html
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| | Teddy Roosevelt Terrier - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Teddy Roosevelt Terrier is a dog breed. |  | | When the types were separated, the new breed was named in honor of US President Theodore Roosevelt as it is believed that he owned this type of ratting terrier. |  | | The Teddy Roosevelt Terrier was recognized by the United Kennel Club on January 1, 1999. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teddy_Roosevelt_Terrier
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| | Amazon.com: Books: Bully for You, Teddy Roosevelt |
 | | An excellent chidren's biography of theodore roosevelt, which will be enjoyed by people of all ages.My only criticism is that the books title should be 'Bully for you, theodore roosevelt,' instead of 'Bully for you, teddy roosevelt,' a name which to him was anathema. |  | | Concluding her first chapter with the death of Roosevelt's father while Roosevelt was still at Harvard, Fritz includes a telling quote (``I felt stunned...he was everything to me''), then telegraphs her theme in her uniquely lucid, succinct style: ``In his distress, Teddy may have felt that...his boyhood was gone. |  | | I had no idea that Teddy Roosevelt had an affliction that he overcame, thanks in part to his ambitious father. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/039921769X?v=glance
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| | Children's Corner from the Theodore Roosevelt Association |
 | | Even Theodore Roosevelt, who became a very famous President of the United States, was a child once. |  | | Theodore Roosevelt's face was carved into the side of Mt. |  | | Theodore Roosevelt thought much about future generations of children. |
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http://www.theodoreroosevelt.org/kidscorner/trchildrens.htm
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| | Teddy Roosevelt vs. WorldCom csmonitor.com |
 | | Roosevelt's expansive view of democracy and economic justice was far ahead of his times. |  | | Almost a full century after Teddy Roosevelt called for sweeping regulation and reform of business and a new communitarian ethos, we are still waiting for results. |  | | Laissez-faire Republicans contemptuously rejected his proposals, but many of his ideas a graduated tax on inherited wealth, a securities and exchange commission, the right of labor to organize, social security ultimately found favor among Democrats Woodrow Wilson and especially Franklin Roosevelt. |
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http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0711/p09s02-coop.html
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| | How Teddy Roosevelt Fathered the Bush Doctrine: Newsroom: The Independent Institute |
 | | In his Annual Message to the Congress on December 6, 1904, Roosevelt stated that in keeping with the Monroe Doctrine, the United States was justified in exercising international police power to put an end to chronic unrest or wrongdoing in the Western Hemisphere. |  | | In the case of Panama, of course, Teddy Roosevelt acknowledged that he took the area while the Congress debated. |  | | Cartoon: Theodore Roosevelt behind big cannon stares down a small sombrerod Columbia. |
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http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1435
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| | Theodore Roosevelt: A tribute |
 | | The Roosevelts - F.D.R. and T.R. - Compares the families of F.D.R. and T.R., two Roosevelt "dynasties" that were related by blood, but often atodds with one another. |  | | The Great Tradition Continues!: Theodore Roosevelt IV, great-grandson of the president, addressed the GOP Convention in Philadelphia on August 1, 2000 on protecting the environment. |  | | This site is a tribute to Theodore Roosevelt. |
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http://users.metro2000.net/~stabbott/tr.htm
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| | Amazon.com: The Indomitable Teddy Roosevelt (1983): DVD |
 | | The life of Theodore Roosevelt, America's 26th president, makes any fiction pale by comparison. |  | | Biography - Theodore Roosevelt: Roughrider to Rushmore (AandE DVD Archives) DVD ~ Theodore Roosevelt |  | | It's an ethereal moment and makes the viewer think they are in the room with Roosevelt. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B00000IYRC?v=glance
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| | Teddy Roosevelt |
 | | A hunting trip President Roosevelt made into the swamps of Mississippi in 1902 became legendary when he refused to shoot an exhausted black bear, which had been run down by a pack of hounds and roped to a tree. |  | | The bear, however, received no executive clemency; Roosevelt ordered someone else to put the creature out of its misery. |  | | Clifford Berryman elected to keep the bear alive in his cartoons, and it evolved, ever more cuddly, as a companion to Roosevelt, ultimately spawning the Teddy Bear craze. |
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http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/roosevelt/tbear.htm
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| | Roosevelt, Theodore. 1899. The Rough Riders |
 | | Colonel Roosevelt's Report to the Secretary of War of September 10th |  | | Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Nonfiction > Theodore Roosevelt > The Rough Riders |  | | No man was allowed to drop out to help the wounded. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/51
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| | Theodore Roosevelt Collection at Bartleby.com |
 | | From 1884 to 1886, Roosevelt records the joyous experiences on his ranch in the Dakota Territories. |  | | This endearing collection contains more than twenty years of Roosevelts loving correspondence with his children. |  | | Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Authors > Nonfiction > Theodore Roosevelt |
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http://www.bartleby.com/people/RsvltT.html
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| | Theodore Roosevelt Quotes |
 | | The government is us; we are the government, you and I. Theodore Roosevelt |  | | The first requisite of a good citizen in this republic of ours is that he shall be able and willing to pull his own weight. |  | | The human body has two ends on it: one to create with and one to sit on. |
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http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/t/theodore_roosevelt.html
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