Front cover image for "Liberty under law" and selected supreme court opinions

"Liberty under law" and selected supreme court opinions

William Howard Taft’s presidency (1909-1913), succeeding Theodore Roosevelt’s, was mired in bitter partisan fighting, and Taft sometimes blundered politically. However, this son of Cincinnati assumed his true calling when President Warren G. Harding appointed him to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1921.
eBook, English, ©2004
Ohio University Press, Athens, ©2004
1 online resource (xxxiv, 441 pages) : portraits
9780821441718, 9780821415641, 082144171X, 0821415646
133162185
Four aspects of civic duty and present day problems / edited with commentary by David H. Burton and A.E. Campbell
Political issues and outlooks / edited with commentary by David H. Burton
Presidential addresses and state papers / edited with commentary by David H. Burton
Presidential messages to Congress / edited with commentary by David H. Burton
Popular government and the Anti-Trust Act and the Supreme Court / edited with commentary by David Potash and Donald F. Anderson
The president and his powers and the United States and peace / edited with commentary by W. Carey McWilliams and Frank X. Gerrity
Taft papers on League of Nations / edited with commentary by Frank X. Gerrity
"Liberty under law" and selected Supreme Court opinions / edited with commentary by Francis Graham Lee
Includes index