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         Plunkitt George Washington:     more books (28)
  1. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall (Dodo Press) by George Washington Plunkitt, 2009-07-03
  2. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: A Politician's View on "Honest Graft" in Politics (Timeless Classic Books) by George Washington Plunkitt, 2010-09-23
  3. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall by George Washington Plunkitt, 2002-07-25
  4. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall by Washington George Plunkitt, 2008-05-12
  5. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall by George Washington Plunkitt, 2006-01-26
  6. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall; A Series of Very Plain Talks on Very Practical Politics, Delivered by Ex-Senator George Washington Plunkitt, the by George Washington Plunkitt, 2010-03-06
  7. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall by George Washington Plunkitt, 2010-09-14
  8. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: a series of very plain talks on very practical politics, delivered by ex-Senator George Washington Plunkitt, the Tammany philosopher, ... stand; Recorded by William L. Riordon by George Washington Plunkitt, 2009-10-04
  9. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall by George Washington Plunkitt, 2010-07-06
  10. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall by George Washington Plunkitt, 2010-09-24
  11. Honest Graft : The World of George Washington Plunkitt by William L. Riordon, James Olson, 1997-11
  12. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: A series of very plain talks on very practical politics, delivered by ex-Senator George Washington Plunkitt, the Tammany philosopher, ... stand, and recorded by William L. Riordon by William L Riordon, 1963
  13. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: a series of very plain talks on very practical politics, delivered by ex-Senator George Washington Plunkitt, the Tammany philosopher, from his rostrum-the New York County court house bootblack stand; Recorded by William L. Rior
  14. Plunkitt of Tammany Hall;: A series of very plain talks on very practical politics, delivered by Ex-senator George Washington Plunkitt, the Tammany philosopher, ... York County court-house bootblack stand-- by William L Riordon, 1905

61. Inventing America : Chapter 20 : Documents
George Washington Plunkitt Plunkitt of Tammany Hall A Series of Very Plain Talkson Very Practical Politics, Delivered by Exsenator George Washington
http://www.wwnorton.com/inventing/interface/ch20/ch20_documents.htm
Documents George Washington Plunkitt: Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: A Series of Very Plain Talks on Very Practical Politics, Delivered by Ex-senator George Washington Plunkitt; Chapter One: Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft (1905) The Cleveland Journal: Negroes Admitted to Labor Union (May 1908). William Jennings Bryan: Cross of Gold Speech (July 1896) - back to the top of the page

62. Biblioteca Virtual
Plunkitt, George Washington. Plunkitt Of Tammany Hall a series of veryplain talks on very practical politics, delivered by exSenator
http://www.bibvirt.futuro.usp.br/gutenberg/p.html
Obras por autor - P
Packard, Frank L. (Frank Lucius), (1877 + 1942) The Adventures Of Jimmie Dale(.zip - 347.91 Kb)
The White Moll(.zip - 189.08 Kb)
Page, Thomas Nelson (1853 + 1922) The Burial Of The Guns(.zip - 121 Kb) Paine, Albert Bigelow (1861 + 1937) The Boys' Life Of Mark Twain(.zip - 184 Kb)
A Biography Mark Twain Volume I, Part 1: 1835-1866(.zip - 203 Kb)

A Biography Mark Twain Volume I, Part 2: 1835-1866(.zip - 189 Kb)

A Biography Mark Twain Volume II, Part 1: 1886-1900(.zip - 197 Kb)
...
Widger's Quotations From The Project Gutenberg Editions Of Paine's Writings on Mark Twain(.zip - 28 Kb)
Paine, Ralph Delahaye (1871 + 1925) The Old Merchant Marine; a chronicle of American ships and sailors(.zip - 101 Kb) Paine, Thomas (1737 + 1809) Common Sense(.zip - 57 Kb)
Writings Of Thomas Paine Volume 1 (1774-1779): The American Crisis(.zip - 169 Kb)

Writings Of Thomas Paine Volume 2 (1779-1792): The Rights Of Man(.zip - 195 Kb)

Writings Of Thomas Paine Volume 4 (1779-1792): The Age Of Reason(.zip - 149 Kb)
Palmer, Alice Freeman (1855 + 1902) Why Go To College? An address(.zip - 23 Kb)

63. Syllabus
Upton Sinclair, The Jungle. George Washington Plunkitt, Plunkitt of Tammany Hall.John F. Kasson, Amusing the Million Coney Island at the Turn of the Century.
http://hs1.hst.msu.edu/~hst203/syllabus.html
This course surveys United States history from the end of Reconstruction to the present. Our focus will
be economic and social development, political conflict, and the cultural responses of Americans to the
enormous changes over the past 120 years. Modern America: 1877-2001 Spring 2001: MWF 10:20-11:10, C102 Wilson Hall Instructor: Mark Kornbluh
Office: 310 Auditorium Bldg, 355-9300
Office Hours: Mon. and Wed 11:20-12:00, and by
appointment
E-Mail: Mark@mail.matrix.msu.edu Instructor: Melanie Shell-Weiss
Office: 310 Auditorium Bldg, 355-9300
Office Hours: Mon and Wed 1:40-2:30, and by appt.
E-Mail: Melanie@mail.h-net.msu.edu Graduate Assistant: Geoffrey Pippenger
Office: Room 1 Morrill Hall Office Hours: E-Mail: pippeng1@msu.edu Graduate Assistant: Piril Hatice Atabay Office: Room 1 Morrill Hall E-Mail: atabaypi@msu.edu Office Hours: Discussion Sections: Section 1: Friday 9:10-10:00 C100 Wilson Section 2: Thursday 9:10-10:00, 211A Berkey Hall Section 3: Wednesday 3:00-3:30, 319 Berkey Hall

64. History 147B Syllabus
Service Reform Website The Spectacle Of American Politics , from The AssociatedPress Website George Washington Plunkitt, Honest Graft Website Lincoln
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/history/waughj/classes/gildedage/h147syll/h147syll03.

Course Introduction
Required Readings Schedule of Classes Course Requirements Course Introduction In this class, students examine the era of history known as "The Gilded Age." This was a time of unparalleled economic expansion that profoundly altered political and social arrangements by the late nineteenth century. After the Civil War (1861-65) America completed a transportation and communications network, which in turn facilitated the tremendous growth of the industrial sector. Thus, identifying and understanding the causes of "industrialization," are a major focus of the reading and lectures in 147B. Additionally, the consequences are explored as well. Students will be required to analyze the impact of economic change on politics, society, and cultural practices, with special attention to the rise of protest movements against the emerging industrial capitalist system. Required Readings Robert C. McMath, Jr.

65. AnyBook4Less.com - Author: Peter Washington
Image, Title Plunkitt of Tammany Hall A Series of Very Plain Talks on Very PracticalPolitics by William L. Riordon, George Washington Plunkitt, William L
http://www.anybook4less.com/author/Peter Washington.html
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Title: Madame Blavatsky's Baboon: A History of the Mystics, Mediums, and Misfits Who Brought Spiritualism to America
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List Price: Amazon.com Price: Title: Eat, Drink, and Be Merry: Poems About Food and Drink by Peter Washington ISBN: Publisher: Everymans Library Pub. Date: 08 April, 2003 List Price: Amazon.com Price: Title: Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: A Series of Very Plain Talks on Very Practical Politics by William L. Riordon George Washington Plunkitt William L. Riordan Peter Quinn ISBN: Publisher: Signet Pub. Date: November, 1995 List Price: Amazon.com Price: Title: Friendship: Poems (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets) by Peter Washington Everymans Library Kevin Young Carolyn B. Mitchell ISBN: Publisher: Everymans Library Pub. Date: May, 1995 List Price: Amazon.com Price: Title: Love Letters (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets) by Peter Washington ISBN: Publisher: Knopf Pub. Date:

66. Losing
Of course, it is. Well, that's honest graft.”. George Washington Plunkitt“Tammany Hall” ward boss New York City, 1905. “Honest
http://www.iamaw.org/publications/summer2002journal/summer_2002_journal_cover_st
Honest Graft Read the Stories:
Tracing the
Money Trail

The Internet Tax Moratorium
How 'Honest Graft' Killed Relief for Injured Workers
Buying the Right
to Maim
Security

Return to

Contents Page

Your Government is For Sale!
“My party's in power, and it's going to undertake a lot of public improvement. Well, I'm tipped off, say, that they are going to lay out a new park at a certain place. I see my opportunity and I take it. I go to that place and buy up all the land I can in the neighborhood. Then the board for this or that makes its plan public, and there is a rush to get my land, which nobody cared particular for before. “Ain't it perfectly honest to charge a good price and make a profit on my investment and foresight? Of course, it is. Well, that's honest graft.” George Washington Plunkitt “Tammany Hall” ward boss New York City, 1905

67. Riding With The King - The Best Washington Post Columnist You've Never Heard Of.
The feds are investigating Hemphill, Williams' reelection campaign co-chair,for engaging in what Tammany Hall's George Washington Plunkitt would call
http://slate.msn.com/id/2076555/
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press box Media criticism.
Riding With the King
The best Washington Post columnist you've never heard of.
By Jack Shafer
Posted Thursday, January 9, 2003, at 2:48 PM PT
What misguided journalistic convention compels op-ed editors to drain the ©lan vital from copy? Oh, a few well-known columnists run the blockade to blend blood with ink and animate newspaperdom's opinion pages: the pun-drunk warmonger William Safire ; the shiv-wielding Michael Kelly ; that Shecky Greene of the policy debate, Michael Kinsley ; desperate entertainer Maureen Dowd ; and a handful of others. But most op-ed pages prefer pieces painted with gray and dead words, if only to signal the seriousness of their page. Some writers require no such prodding and actually prefer the color of ash. The high exemplar of this form is syndicated columnist William Pfaff , whose last name conveniently works as a verb to describe the act of lifeless writing. Listen to this recent pfaffing The NATO debate has included warnings disconnected from real threats and policy proposals irrelevant to their solution. America wants help in carrying out a policy fatefully influenced by the notion that conquering Iraq will permit Washington and Israel to take control of the Islamic Middle East and its peoples—and that this will have a happy ending.

68. Medical Library Association: History Of MLA
Quoting George Washington Plunkitt, a Tammany Hall boss, Oppenheimer finishes hisinterview with Anyway, that's about all the advice I can give you 'See your
http://www.mlanet.org/about/history/g_oppenheimer.html
History of MLA
GERALD J. OPPENHEIMER
Interviewers: Diane McKenzie and
Janet Schnall
Dates of Interview: June 25, 1999
59 page interview, 3 tapes
Gerald J. Oppenheimer was Director of the University of Washington, chairing the Committee on the Status of Librarians and working with Budget, Serials, and Collection Development Committees and with the Management Review and Analysis Program. He was very active in MLA and served on the Board and Executive Committee from 1974 to 1977. He was the founding president of the Association of Academic Health Sciences Library Directors (AAHSLD) and had a long involvement with the National Library of Medicine. Born in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, Oppenheimer was 11 years old when Hitler came to power. At the age of 16, he "was required to act independently and to make decisions. That, I think, set the one for building some self-confidence." He says of his background, "I think…it has something to do with how I turned out eventually." His first job out of library school was at Seattle Public Library where he says he learned from "the head of the department, Edith Fry…to deal with the foibles of the staff." His next position was at the Fisheries/Oceanography Library at the University of Washington where he organized the huge collection of reprints and report literature. In 1960 he took over the library of the Boeing Scientific Research Laboratories (BSRL). The experience was valuable and he learned about "getting results while working with many levels of bureaucracy."

69. Chapter 10
Justify your position. George Washington Plunkitt, a Tammany Hall politician,stated this, “ A reformer can’t last in politics.
http://billingswest.billings.k12.mt.us/murphys/chapter1.htm

Forms
The Shame of the People
Giving the Child A Chance

Honors of the Meat Packing Industry
...
Louis Brandeis
  • As you read section 1 of the chapter write down six phrases summarizing important characteristics of progressivism or the progressive movement. Define or identify the following: home rule, progressivism, social welfare program, muckraker, Henry George, Edward Bellamy, and Florence Kelley. What is reform? In what ways did the progressive movement resemble the populist movement? Compare the ideas of Henry George and Edward Bellamy. How did George want the government to act to eliminate poverty? What actions did Bellamy think the government should take to transform American society? The Shame of The People Giving the Child a Chance Horrors of the Meat Packing Industry Research and write a short report on the reforms suggested and implemented by progressive educator John Dewey. Include your thoughts regarding examples of progressive elements in your own education. Chat Room: At what other points in American history have reformers helped bring about social or political change?
  • 70. High Country News -- August 16, 1999: Never Underestimate A Working Majority
    Whereupon the Republicans, armed, in George Washington Plunkitt’s words, with aworking majority and no conscience to speak of, abruptly abolished Rule 16.
    http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=5179

    71. TAP: Vol 13, Iss. 1. The Roots Of Treason, Explained;. .
    From Tammany boss George Washington Plunkitt, as recorded by reporter William L.Riordan in his 1905 classic Plunkitt of Tammany Hall, discoursing on The
    http://www.prospect.org/print/V13/1/devil.html
    Politics:
  • Still Wrong: James K. Galbraith on why liberals should keep opposing the war. Presidential Quarantine: Jeremy Mayer on why Bush can't leave America and why that matters. Lebanon Redux? Gershom Gorenberg watches the war unfold from Jerusalem. Channel Changer: CNN gives Connie Chung the boot, a decision Mary Lynn F. Jones hopes will presage a back-to-the-news movement. Morning After: Rumsfeld and Myers lower war expectations (retroactively); Baker masks his war ambivalence (badly). Gabriel Wildau on the Sunday talk shows. Remember Yorktown: Pierre Taminiaux on the French-American alliance that once was and could be again. Conference Call: The Fund for American Studies responds to TAP Online ; our author counters. Senator's Senator: Mary Lynn F. Jones on why Daniel Patrick Moynihan was a rare kind of politician. Send a letter to the editor Bonfire of the Verities: Mark Greif on Don DeLillo's Cosmopolis The Co-Presidency: E.J. Dionne says if Karl Rove did not exist, George W. Bush would not be president. Divisional Playoff: Garrett Epps on two new plays that ask how America became divided into "red" and "blue" regions and which one is winning.
  • 72. The American Prospect Advertisement Advertisement
    In 1905 George Washington Plunkitt, the Tammany Hall leader and sidewalk politicalphilosopher, observed to journalist William L. Riordan, The fact is that a
    http://www.prospect.org/print-friendly/print/V11/10/kuttner-r.html
    advertisement:
    Volume 11, Issue 10. March 27, 2000 - April 10, 2000.
    Print-Friendly Version
    Dirty Windows Robert Kuttner E very great political theorist from Aristotle to Madison to Martin Luther King, Jr., has understood the paradox that liberty requires rules and rules require governments. But Internet libertarians have assumed that the Net is a unique realm of benign, self-regulating anarchy. The problem with anarchy is less the inconvenience of chaos than the risk that someone will soon attempt to bring order, at the expense of someone else's liberty. A second threat is the consolidation now occurring among cable companies, phone companies, and other Internet service providers. In their infancy, these access paths functioned as true common carriers, with no commercial stake in which destinations users chose. Now, however, the emerging model is one that packages the common carrier and the preferred destinations of its business partners. One antidote to Microsoft's monopoly is the open-source movement, discussed in this special double issue of The American Prospect . Open-source software, unlike Microsoft Windows, gives competing programmers access to its code and requires that information to remain public so that the best refinements can win in the marketplace in a fair fight. But for the open-source movement to realize its promise, the structure of public rules needs to favor openness. Antitrust enforcement needs to rein in Microsoft. And other public policies need to make sure that those companies who connect users to Web sites continue to function like true common carriers. There are also security, privacy, and intellectual property concerns unlikely to be resolved by market forces without balkanizing the Net.

    73. Managing Urban America - Wikipedia
    The authors quote millionaire George Washington Plunkitt, There's onlyone way to hold a district. Here's how I gather in the young man.
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Managing_Urban_America
    Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
    Log in
    Help
    Managing Urban America
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Managing Urban America is a book originally written in by David R. Morgan and Robert E. England . There have been four subsequently updated editions printed since. The 5th Edition was printed in and contains 402 pages. The topic is urban management
    Improved Urban Management Needed Now More Than Ever
    The authors begin, "Until recently, many assumed that city governments would continue to grow and prosper. A report from the International City Management Association had suggested that the inevitability of growth was so widely accepted that it functioned as fact. Federal aid began to shrink in the . Then came Reagan's New Federalism , which brought major reductions. Between

    74. Books.reviewindex: Washington, George,
    Plunkitt of Tammany Hall A Series of Very Plain Talks on Very Practical Politics(William L. Riordon) $5.95. Meet George Washington (Landmark Books) (Joan
    http://books.reviewindex.com/reviews/?q=washington, george,&mode=books

    75. APUSH Web Links-Immigration & The Rise Of Big Cities
    1905 Honest Graft George Washington Plunkitt. 1905 “I Seen My Opportunitiesand I Took ‘Em” - An Old-Time Pol Preaches Honest Graft.
    http://www.historyteacher.net/APUSH-Course/Weblinks/Weblinks17.htm
    The 1901 Tenement House Act by Andrew Dolkart (Lower East Side Tenement Museum) Alfred Stieglitz: New Perspectives featured photographs of NYC (1892-1917) The American Immigration Home Page Andrew Carnegie: The Richest Man in the World (PBS) ... >"Immigrants to the United States: 1890" (User Name: George ; Password: Washington) "The Myth of the Melting Pot" - Washington Post Nativism, Socialism, and the Populist Demise The New Americans- The Immigrant Experience (PBS) ... Charities Review late 1890s: "Why Our Cities Are Badly Governed" - political cartoon in The Ram's Horn late 19c-early 20c: "Examination of Immigrants at Ellis Island" (photo) "The Tenement-House Exhibition of 1899" - Lawrence Veiller Charities Review ... (entire text)

    76. 20th Century Interactive: To Boss Or To Manage?
    Plunkitt, George Washington. Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft. Writing NewYork A Literary Anthology. New York Library of America, 1998, 34749.
    http://www.20thcenturyinteractive.org/webunit/resources.html
    Overview Getting Started The Boss System Progressive Government Reform ... Handouts
    To Boss or To Manage?
    Resources Books Chambers, John Whiteclay. The Tyranny of Change: America in the Progresive Era, 1890-1920 . New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2000. Diner, Steven J. A Very Different Age: Americans of the Progressive Era . New York: Hill and Wang, 1998. Dingilian, Arlene. "The Political Education of a Saloonkeeper." The Bulletin of the Cincinnati Historical Society vol. 24 (1968): 313-21. Gould, Lewis L. America in the Progressive Era, 1890-1914 . New York: Longman, 2001. Kennedy, David M., ed. Progressivism: The Critical Issues . Boston: Little, Brown and Co, 1971. [See especially the chapter by Samuel B. Hays, "The Politics of Reform in Municipal Government in the Progressive Era."] Link, Arthur Stanley. Progressivism . Arlington Heights, IL: Harlan Davidson, Inc, 1983. Oates, Stephen B. Portraits of America . Vol. 1. 3rd ed. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1987. [See especially the portrait of Jane Addams.] Plunkitt, George Washington. "Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft."

    77. Money And Politics
    Politicians have tried to distinguish between bribes and campaign contributions, and even (with George Washington Plunkitt, a pol associated with Tammany
    http://www.arts.mcgill.ca/programs/history/faculty/TROYWEB/MoneyandPolitics.htm
    MONEY AND POLITICS
    The Oldest Connection
    by Gil Troy Wilson Quarterly Summer 1997-Feature Article Newspaper and Journal Articles-Written Newspaper and Journal Articles-Quoted Main Mr. and Mrs.President ... See How They Ran The story of the president prostituting himself and his office to secure re-election seems all too familiar. During the campaign, reports came from all over the country that his men "were paying out money like water" to bring about the desired result. "All has been done that can be done here," a crony in New York assured the chief executive shortly before the election. "Every Wardhere [in Manhattan] and in Brooklynand every Election District, is abundantly supplied with 'material aid.'" To justify their efforts, the president and his men denounced their rivals' "aristocratic party," filled with "millionaires." In the United States of Americaand everywhere elsepolitics is about power, and money is a form of power. Despite the best efforts of reformers, past, present, and future, it is impossible to remove all influence of money in politics. Running for elected office costs money, and it must be raised somehow. And as former senator Russell Long (Huey's son) once observed, "The distinction between a large campaign contribution and a bribe is almost a hairline's difference."

    78. History 203
    An essay comparing the political views of George Washington Plunkitt,a Termini Hall politicians, and Jane Adams, a feminist reformer .
    http://www.uoregon.edu/~history/courses/archive/syllabi/203.htm
    Spring Term 1999, History 203 Professor Bill Toll History of the United States Download Word97 09:00-09:50 MWF / 138 GIL Download Text-Only CRN: 33033 Office Hours COURSE DESCRIPTION This course will examine how the United States, between 1900 and the 1990s, grew from one of many industrial powers into the world’s predominant continental nation and financial power. The basic themes will contrast the domestic agenda of America’s people with the nation’s growing international commitments and changing place among nations. For the early 20th century, we will examine immigration, the ethnic and racial diversity of the American people and the concomitant internal migrations in response to industrialization that led to conflicts among us. We will examine how government expanded to meet economic and social crises, like the Great Depression, and especially World War II. We will look particularly at how intellectuals debated the issue of moral responsibility in the face of war. For the post-World War II period, we will examine how America became economically predominant and how our economic and military policies have had vast international implications.

    79. Hyperhistory Article Display
    George Washington Plunkitt of Tammany Hall, New York's Democratic politicalmachine, distinguished between honest and dishonest graft.
    http://www.gliah.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=211

    80. Untitled Document
    Take, for example, the colorful words of George Washington Plunkitt, a powerful DemocraticParty ward boss in New York City’s infamously corrupt Tammany Hall
    http://www.free-times.com/archive/coverstorarch/litsup121300/speeches.html
    A Century in Words A review of In Our Own Words: Extraordinary Speeches of the American Century , edited by Senator Robert Torricelli and Andrew Carroll. Washington Square Press, 450 pages (paper), $17.95. By Dan Cook “As far back as the days of old Rome, Tacitus lamented that the great orators were all gone and that oratory had declined, and yet we have ever seen that, when occasion called it forth, it is followed in as pure and strong a stream as in the days of Cicero himself.” This is the premise of In Our Own Words , as laid out by Virginia state Sen. Don P. Halsey in a speech he gave repeatedly during the late 1890s and early 1900s. It was Halsey’s contention — as it is the editors of this volume — that words matter, and that extraordinary times will inevitably produce the gifted individuals needed to interpret, express and embody the spirit of the era. Edited by U.S. Sen. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J., and Andrew Carroll — founder of the Legacy Project, which preserves historically significant correspondence — In Our Own Words is an engaging and thoughtful effort to document the words that have mattered in American life during the 20th century. The excerpts of more than 150 speeches included here are weighted predictably toward matters of politics and the words of politicians. But there are also the words of poets, artists, activists, preachers, soldiers and even Chicago mobster Al Capone (maintaining that he, a “public benefactor,” has been unfairly maligned).

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