Free Essays, Free Research Papers, Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers
Essay Express Free Essays, Free Research Papers,
Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers

FREE ESSAY ON TRUMAN

College Term Papers - Instant Download

(sponsored links)

"The Truman Show" and Free Will
Examines the theme of free will in the movie, "The Truman Show", directed by Peter Weir. -- 1,324 words; MLA

"The Truman Show"
This paper discusses and analyzes the film "The Truman Show", directed by Peter Weir. -- 665 words;

Truman and Johnson: Crisis in Asia
This paper examines the Korean and Vietnam wars as well as the various similarities shared by both President Harry S. Truman and President Lyndon B. Johnson during their terms in office. -- 2,958 words; APA

Truman and the A-Bomba
A critical analysis of Presidnet Truman's decision to use the atomic bomb in the Second World War. -- 3,400 words;

The Truman Administration
An analysis of the foreign policy developments of the Truman administration. -- 1,610 words; MLA

Click here for more essays on TRUMAN

TRUMAN

Harry S. Truman.
"Early Life Harry S. Truman, the oldest of three children born to Martha Ellen Young
Truman
and John Anderson Truman, was born in his family's small frame house in Lamar, Missouri,
in
1884. Truman had no middle name; his parents apparently gave him the middle initial S.
because two family relatives names started with that letter.
When Truman was six years old, his family moved to Independence, Missouri, where he
attended the Presbyterian Church Sunday school. There he met five-year-old Elizabeth
Virginia ("Bess") Wallace, with whom he was later to fall in love. Truman did not begin
regular
school until he was eight, and by then he was wearing thick glasses to correct extreme
nearsightedness. His poor eyesight did not interfere with his two interests, music and
reading.
He got up each day at 5 AM to practice the piano, and until he was 15, he went to the
local
music teacher twice a week. He read four or five histories or biographies a week and
acquired
an exhaustive knowledge of great military battles and of the lives of the world's
greatest
leaders.
Early Career 
In 1901, when Truman graduated from high school, his future was uncertain. College had
been
ruled out by his family's financial situation, and appointment to the U.S. Military
Academy at
West Point was eliminated by his poor eyesight. He began work as a timekeeper for the
Santa
Fe Railroad at $35 per month, and in his spare time he read histories and encyclopedias.
He
later moved to Kansas City, where he worked as a mail clerk for the Kansas City Star,
then as
a clerk for the National Bank of Commerce, and finally as a bookkeeper for the Union
National
Bank. In 1906 he was called home to help his parents run the large farm of Mrs. Truman's
widowed mother in Grandview, Missouri.
For the next ten years, Truman was a successful farmer. He joined Mike Pendergast's
Kansas
City Tenth Ward Democratic Club, the local Democratic Party organization, and on his
father's
death in 1914 he succeeded him as road overseer. An argument soon ended the job, but
Truman became the Grandview postmaster. In 1915 he invested in lead mines in Missouri,
lost
his money, and then turned to the oil fields of Oklahoma. Two years later, just before
the
United States entered World War I, he sold his share in the oil business and enlisted in
the
U.S. Army. He trained at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, but returned to Missouri to help recruit
others. He
was elected first lieutenant by the men of Missouri's Second Field Artillery.
World War I 
World War I began in 1914 as a local European war between Austria-Hungary and Serbia.
Though U.S. President Woodrow Wilson tried to remain neutral, the United States was
drawn
into the war in April 1917.
Truman sailed for France on March 30, 1918, and as a recently promoted captain was given
command of Battery D, a rowdy and unmanageable group known as the Dizzy D. Truman
succeeded in taming his unit, and the Dizzy D distinguished itself in the battles of
Saint-Mihiel
and Argonne. In April 1919 Truman, then a major, returned home, and on June 28 he
married
Bess Wallace.
The following November, Truman and Eddie Jacobson opened a men's clothing store in
Kansas City. With the Dizzy D veterans as customers the store did a booming business, but
in
1920, farm prices fell sharply and the business failed. In the winter of 1922 the store
finally
closed, but Truman refused to declare bankruptcy and eventually repaid his debts.
Entrance Into Politics 
Truman turned to the Pendergasts for help. Jim Pendergast, Mike's son, persuaded his
father
to give Truman permission to enter a four-way Democratic primary for an eastern Jackson
County judgeship, which was actually a job to supervise county roads and buildings. Mike
refused to support Truman. In addition, one of the other candidates was supported by the
Ku
Klux Klan. Truman was advised to join the Klan, but he objected to its discriminatory
policies
against blacks, Jews, and Roman Catholics. Nonetheless, by campaigning on his war record
and Missouri background, Truman won the primary and in the general election. In January
1923 he was sworn into his first public office. A year later the Trumans' only child,
Mary
Margaret, was born.
United States Senator 
After a long, hard battle, Truman soundly defeated his Republican opponent. On January
3,
1935, Truman was sworn in as the junior senator from Missouri.
Truman's common sense and knowledge of government and history impressed two of the
Senate's most influential men. One was vice president John Nance Garner, and the other
was
Arthur H. Vandenberg, Republican senator from Michigan. With their aid, Truman was named
to two important committees, the Appropriations Committee and the Interstate Commerce
Committee. Truman also joined the subcommittee on railroads, becoming vice-chairman and,
later, acting chairman. Despite pressures from powerful railroad companies, including
the
Missouri Pacific Railroad, he recommended major regulatory changes that were embodied in
the Transportation Act of 1940.
1940 Election 
To no one's surprise, two Missouri Democrats challenged Truman for his Senate seat in
the
primary. One was Governor Lloyd Stark, whom Roosevelt supported, and the other was
Maurice Milligan, whose nomination for a second term as U.S. district attorney Truman
had
opposed in the Senate. Truman began his primary fight with no political backing, no
money,
and two popular reformers as opponents. He traveled the state, making speeches about his
record in short, simple language. He won the primary, and despite his Pendergast
association,
mentioned frequently by his Republican opponent, he won in November. His reelection was
so
unexpected that when he returned to the Senate, his colleagues gave him a standing
ovation.
Second Term 
In 1941 the United States government was preparing for World War II, a conflict that had
begun in Europe in 1939. The government was building army camps and issuing defense
contracts. Even before his second term began, Truman's constituents had written him
about
waste and confusion in the defense program. Truman toured the camps and defense plants
and discovered appalling conditions. Back in the new Senate he denounced the defense
program, demanded an investigation, and was named the head of the investigating
committee.
The Truman Committee 
During the next two years the Truman committee produced detailed reports on the defense
programs. Committee members frequently visited defense installations to substantiate the
testimony of contractors, engineers, and army and government personnel. Truman's success
in uncovering fraud and waste led the Senate in 1942 to give the committee $100,000, an
increase of $85,000 over the first year. It was estimated that the Truman committee saved
the
country $15 billion and spent only $400,000.
The committee also put Truman on the national stage. With increasing frequency, leading
Democrats mentioned Harry S. Truman as a potential 1944 vice-presidential candidate.
Vice President of the United States 
Before the Democratic National Convention opened in July 1944, it was assumed that
Roosevelt would run for a fourth term, but his health became a matter of great concern to
party
leaders, whose most difficult task was to name his running mate. The current vice
president
was Henry A. Wallace, a strong proponent of using the federal government to regulate big
businesses, protect the civil rights of minorities, and encourage labor unions. Wallace's
liberal
views offended many of the more conservative leaders of the Democratic Party, and they
encouraged Roosevelt to find someone more appealing to mainstream voters. Among the
leading contenders were Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, and Senators Alben W.
Barkley, James F. Byrnes, and Truman. Truman was nominated on the second ballot. After a
whirlwind campaign and overwhelming victory, Truman took the oath of office as vice
president
on January 20, 1945.
Truman then engineered the Senate confirmation of Roosevelt's appointment of Henry
Wallace as secretary of commerce and Federal loan administrator, attended the funeral of
Tom Pendergast despite wide criticism, and cast the tie-breaking Senate vote that ensured
that
the United States would continue delivering supplies to U.S. allies after the war was
over.
However, he saw very little of the president. Soon after the inauguration, Roosevelt
left
Washington for the month-long Yalta Conference, where the Allies discussed military
strategy
and political problems, including plans for governing Germany after the war.
When Roosevelt returned in March, he met with Truman in two short meetings. When
Roosevelt left for Warm Springs, Georgia, on March 30, Roosevelt had still not informed
his
vice president about the conduct of the war or the plans for peace. Thirteen days later,
Truman
was summoned to the White House, where Eleanor Roosevelt told him, "Harry, the president
is
dead."
President of the United States 
Wartime President 
Truman's first month in office was largely devoted to briefings by Roosevelt's aides. He
asked
the founding conference of the United Nations to meet in San Francisco on April 25, as
had
been planned before Roosevelt's death. When victory in Europe seemed certain, he
insisted
on unconditional German surrender, and on May 8, 1945, his 61st birthday, he proclaimed
Victory-In-Europe Day (V-E Day).
Truman convinced the San Francisco conference delegation of the Union of Soviet
Socialist
Republics (USSR) that the general assembly of the new world peace organization should
have
free discussions and should make recommendations to the security council. On June 26 he
addressed the final conference session, and six days later he presented the United
Nations
Charter to the Senate for ratification.
From July 17 to August 2, 1945, Truman attended the Potsdam Conference in Germany,
meeting with Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and
Clement Attlee, Churchill's successor as British prime minister. The conference discussed
how
to implement the decisions reached at the Yalta Conference. As presiding officer, Truman
proposed the establishment of the council of foreign ministers to aid in peace
negotiations,
settlement of reparations claims, and conduct of war crimes trials. He also gained
Stalin's
promise to enter the war against Japan. In this first meeting with the other Allied
leaders,
Truman confirmed his earlier favorable impression of Churchill, while he called the
Soviets, in
one of his typically blunt statements, "pigheaded people."
On July 26, Truman issued the Potsdam Declaration, which called for Japan's
unconditional
surrender and listed peace terms. He had already been informed of the successful
detonation
of the first atomic bomb at Alamogordo, New Mexico, ten days earlier. Military advisers
had
told Truman that a potential loss of about 500,000 American soldiers could be avoided if
the
bomb were used against Japan. When Japan rejected the ultimatum, Truman authorized use
of the bomb. On August 6, 1945, at 9:15 AM Tokyo time, the bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima,
virtually destroying the city. The Supreme Allied Headquarters reported that 129,558
people
were killed, injured, or missing and 176,987 made homeless. Stalin sent troops into
Manchuria
and Korea on August 8, and the following day a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki.
About one-third of the city was destroyed, and about 66,000 people were killed or
injured.
Japan sued for peace on August 14. The official Japanese surrender took place on
September
2, 1945, aboard the U.S.S. Missouri anchored in Tokyo Bay.
Domestic Affairs 
Reconversion 
With the war ended, Truman turned to the problem of reconverting the country to
peacetime
production without causing the inflation and unemployment that followed World War I. His
message to the Congress of the United States on September 6, 1945, requested a permanent
Fair Employment Practices Commission to aid blacks; wage, price, and rent controls to
slow
inflation; extended old-age benefits; public housing; a national health insurance
program; and
a higher minimum wage. His program was met with bitter opposition by congressional
leaders
who felt he wanted to move too far and too fast.
Congress's price control bill was so weak that on June 19, 1946, Truman vetoed it, saying
it
gave a choice "between inflation with a statute and inflation without one." When he
finally
signed a bill the following month, prices had already risen 25 percent, and basic
commodities
had risen 35 percent.
Mounting Opposition 
Demobilization had proceeded smoothly, but increased prices led to strikes for higher
wages,
particularly in basic industries. Truman had always been on the side of labor, but he
would not
allow strikes to paralyze the nation. He used executive orders and court injunctions to
end the
strikes, offending labor unions in the process.
Truman was the central figure in three controversial issues concerning the military.
First, he
insisted on transferring control and development of nuclear energy from the military to
the
civilian Atomic Energy Commission and on placing authority to use the bomb solely with
the
president. Second, he persuaded Congress to unify the armed forces under a civilian
secretary
of defense. Third, Truman ordered the armed forces of the United States desegregated
after
Congress refused to do so. This decision, plus the military requirements of the Korean
War,
ended most discrimination in the U.S. Army and gave black men an opportunity for
economic
advancement denied them in many other areas.
Truman had at first retained Roosevelt's Cabinet, but he soon felt uncomfortable with it.
By
September 1946 only Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal remained. New Deal
supporters particularly objected to the removal of Secretary of Commerce Henry A.
Wallace,
although he had publicly criticized Truman's foreign policy, including its increasingly
hostile
attitude toward the USSR.
Congressional Election of 1946 
As the congressional campaigns began, even Democrats were divorcing themselves from
Truman's programs. By using the Democratic discontent and the issues of rising
inflation,
scarcity of meat, and labor unrest, the Republicans scored a resounding victory,
capturing both
houses of Congress.
In his 1947 State of the Union message, Truman requested a law to strengthen the
Department of Labor, establish a labor-management relations commission, and end
jurisdictional and secondary strikes. Instead, Congress presented him with its
Labor-Management Relations Act of 1947, the Taft-Hartley Act that greatly weakened the
position of labor unions. The act outlawed union-only workplaces; prohibited certain
union
tactics like secondary boycotts; forbade unions to contribute to political campaigns;
established loyalty oaths for union leaders; and allowed court orders to halt strikes
that could
affect national health or safety. Truman vetoed the bill, but on June 23, 1947, the bill
was
passed over his veto.
Instead of writing anti-inflation legislation, Congress voted a tax-cut bill giving 40
percent of the
relief to those with incomes in excess of $5000. The bill became law over Truman's veto.
The
president once again failed to gather support for his employment, national health, or
social
security measures.
Foreign Policy 
Truman Doctrine 
Although the United States and the USSR had been allies against Germany during the war,
this alliance began to dissolve after the end of the war, when Stalin, seeking Soviet
security,
began using the Soviet Army to control much of Eastern Europe. Truman opposed Stalin's
moves. Mistrust grew as both sides broke wartime agreements. Stalin failed to honor
pledges
to hold free elections in Eastern Europe. Truman refused to honor promises to send
reparations from the defeated Germany to help rebuild the war-devastated USSR. This
hostility
became known as the Cold War.
In 1947 British Prime Minister Attlee told Truman that a British financial crisis was
forcing
Great Britain to end its aid to Greece. At the time the USSR was demanding naval stations
on
the Bosporus from Turkey, and Greece was engaged in a civil war with Communist-dominated
rebels. The president proposed what was called the Truman Doctrine, which had two
objectives: to send U.S. aid to anti-Communist forces in Greece and Turkey, and to create
a
public consensus so Americans would be willing to fight the Cold War. Truman told
Congress
that "it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples who are
resisting
attempted subjugation by armed minorities or by outside pressures." Congress fulfilled
his
request for $250 million for Greece and $150 million for Turkey.
Marshall Plan 
Truman's trip to Potsdam and reports from former President Herbert Hoover (1929-1933),
who
headed a postwar food commission, gave him an intimate knowledge of the problems of
war-torn Europe. With General George C. Marshall, who was now secretary of state, Truman
drew up the European Recovery Plan for the economic rehabilitation of free Europe. This
act,
also known as the Marshall Plan, was designed to rebuild the European market, which
would
benefit U.S. trade, and to strengthen democratic governments in Western Europe. The
United
States wanted to counter the influence of the USSR, which it was beginning to see as its
main
rival. The U.S. government also believed that West Germany, the zone occupied by U.S.,
British, and French forces, would have to be rebuilt and integrated into a larger
Europe.
After careful planning, Marshall announced in June 1947 that if Europe devised a
cooperative,
long-term rebuilding program, the United States would provide funds. When the USSR
learned
that the United States insisted on Soviet cooperation with the capitalist societies of
Western
Europe and an open accounting of how funds were used, the USSR established its own plan
to
integrate Communist states in Eastern Europe. Under the Marshall Plan, the United States
spent more than $12.5 billion over a four-year period.
Berlin Airlift 
The Marshall Plan and the amazing postwar recovery of West Germany highlighted the
Soviet
Union's failure to stabilize the economy of the zone it occupied, East Germany. To
embarrass
the Allies the Soviets closed off all Allied access to the city of Berlin, which was
surrounded by
Soviet-controlled East Germany but the western part of which was under Allied control.
Truman recognized that an accessible Berlin was vital for European confidence in the
United
States. On June 26, 1948, he ordered a full-scale airlift of essential products into the
city that
continued until May 12, 1949, when the blockade was lifted.
Israel 
Since his early days in the White House, Truman supported the British Balfour Declaration
of
1917, which had promised the Jews support for a national homeland in Palestine. He
sympathized with the Jewish survivors of Nazi Germany, and in November 1947 he supported
the UN plan to partition Palestine into separate Jewish and Arab states. In the face of
sustained pressure from pro-Arab delegations and from those who feared the loss of
Arabian
oil, Truman recognized the State of Israel on May 14, 1948.
Presidential Election of 1948 
When Truman decided to run for a full term, he was faced with a major split in the
Democratic
Party. In 1948 Truman had asked for an end to Jim Crow laws, which maintained
segregation
in the South. He also proposed laws to punish those responsible for the hanging of
blacks
without trials, called lynching; laws to protect the voting rights of blacks; and a fair
employment
practices commission to end job discrimination. All of these angered Southern Democrats.
When Northern Democrats inserted these positions into the 1948 Democratic Party platform,
a
group of Southerners led by Governor J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina left the party
and
formed the States' Rights Democrats, or Dixiecrats. Henry Wallace and his supporters had
also left to form the Progressive Party, and in addition, some influential Democrats
thought
victory would be possible only if the popular General Dwight D. Eisenhower could be
drafted.
The prospects were dim as Truman and his running mate, Senator Alben W. Barkley, set out
on their campaign.
Truman received the Democratic Party nomination, and in his acceptance speech, he told
the
convention he would reconvene Congress on July 26 to give the Republicans a chance to
carry out their party's platform pledges. When the special session ended without passing
any
important legislation, Truman had his campaign weapon. He embarked on a cross-country
whistle-stop tour, defending his record and blasting the "do-nothing Republican 80th
Congress." No one knows who first shouted, "Give 'em Hell, Harry!" but the phrase became
the
campaign slogan of 1948.
While thousands publicly and privately conceded the election to the Republican
candidate,
New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey, Truman continued to campaign, making as many as 16
speeches in one day. A few hours after the polls closed on November 2, the Chicago
Tribune
issued an early edition with the headline DEWEY DEFEATS TRUMAN, but when the ballots
were counted, Truman beat Dewey by more than 2 million votes.
Second Term as President 
Foreign Affairs 
Truman's inaugural address proposed four points of action. The first was support of the
United
Nations, the second was a continuation of the Marshall Plan, the third was collective
defense
against Communist aggression, and the fourth was aid to underdeveloped countries.
North Atlantic Treaty Organization 
Truman's third point was developed into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), a
regional defense alliance, created by the North Atlantic Treaty signed on April 4, 1949.
NATO's purpose was to enhance the stability, well-being, and freedom of its members by
means of a system of collective security. The defense plan was greeted warmly by Western
Europe, which saw Stalin tighten the USSR's grip on the countries of Eastern Europe and
threaten the rest of Europe. The Senate ratified the treaty, but only after debating it
at length.
Truman then placed Eisenhower in command of the defense organization.
Korea 
At the end of World War II Korea was divided, and a Communist regime was established in
North Korea and an anti-Communist one in the South. Considerable civil strife in the
South and
growing opposition to South Korea's president, Syngman Rhee, persuaded the North Korean
leader, Kim Il Sung, that he would be welcomed by many South Koreans as a liberator
intent
on reuniting the two Koreas. At the same time, Kim would also undermine ongoing
opposition
to his own regime in North Korea.
A war began on June 25, 1950, when the North Korean army, equipped mainly by the USSR,
crossed the border and invaded South Korea. The United States immediately sent supplies
to
Korea and quickly broadened its commitment in the conflict. On June 27 the UN Security
Council, with the Soviet Union voluntarily absent, passed a resolution sponsored by the
United
States calling for military sanctions against North Korea. Three days later, President
Truman
ordered U.S. troops stationed in Japan to Korea. American forces, those of South Korea,
and,
ultimately, combat contingents from 15 other nations were placed under United Nations
command. The action was unique because neither the UN, nor its predecessor, the League
of
Nations, had ever used military measures to repel an aggressor. The UN forces were
commanded by the U.S. commander in chief in East Asia, General Douglas MacArthur.
Although the official policy of the United States and the United Nations was to limit the
war to
Korea to prevent the entrance of the USSR, early sucA war began on June 25, 1950, when
the
North Korean army, equipped mainly by the USSR, crossed the border and invaded South
Korea. The United States immediately sent supplies to cesses persuaded Truman to move
troops into North Korea. As UN soldiers approached the Chinese border, however, China,
after
several warnings to the United States, crossed into North Korea and began driving UN
forces
back toward the South. In response, MacArthur publicly requested an extension of the war
into
Communist China itself, but now Truman abandoned the idea of reunifying Korea by force
and
returned to the original goal of stopping the invasion of South Korea. When MacArthur
then
publicly attacked this policy, Truman relieved MacArthur of his command in April 1951
and
replaced him with Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway. Until July 1953 UN forces mostly
engaged in a series of probing actions known as the active defense.
Point Four 
Truman's Point Four-aid to underdeveloped countries-stemmed from his belief "that we
should make available to peace-loving peoples the benefits of our store of technical
knowledge
in order to help them realize their aspirations for a better life." Congress debated
Point Four for
nearly 18 months before approving it on June 5, 1950. By offering technical and
scientific aid
to those who requested it, Point Four helped reduce famine, disease, and the economic
hardships of 35 African and Asian nations by 1953.
Domestic Affairs 
Fair Deal 
Although he had a Democratic Congress, Truman's Fair Deal domestic program again met
stiff
opposition. Congress approved his public housing bill, expanded social security
coverage,
increased minimum wages and passed stronger farm price support bills, as well as
flood-control, rural electrification, and public power measures. However, the
legislators
rejected his request to have the Taft-Hartley Act repealed, his plans for agricultural
stabilization, for construction of the Saint Lawrence Seaway, and for the creation of
public
hydroelectric companies in the Missouri Valley and Columbia Valley. They also rejected
his
civil rights proposals. However, he strengthened the civil rights section of the Justice
Department by executive orders, and he appointed blacks to a few high offices.
Cold War at Home 
There was also a Cold War at home. Some of Truman's opponents considered MacArthur's
removal to be evidence that the administration was lenient on Communism. This was
despite
the fact that Truman had begun investigating applicants for government jobs in 1946; that
he
had led the fight to aid Greece and Turkey when the British could no longer do so; and
that
Truman had used that issue to create new security and intelligence agencies such as the
Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Council.
Some Republicans nevertheless believed that Truman had not done enough. In 1948
American writer and editor Whittaker Chambers testified before Representative Richard
Nixon
and the House Committee on Un-American Activities that he had been a Communist in the
1920s and 1930s and a courier in transmitting secret information to Soviet agents. He
charged
that State Department member Alger Hiss was also a Communist, and that he had turned
classified documents over to Chambers to be sent to the Soviet Union. Hiss denied the
charges but Chambers produced microfilm copies of documents that were later identified
as
classified papers belonging to the Departments of State, Navy, and War, some apparently
annotated by Hiss in his own handwriting. The Department of Justice conducted its own
investigation, and Hiss was indicted for perjury, or lying under oath. The jury failed to
reach a
verdict, but Hiss was convicted after a second trial in January 1950 (see Hiss Case).
In China the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek, which had been supported by the
United States, was unable to withstand the advance of Communist forces under Mao Zedong
(Mao Tse-tung). By the end of 1949 government troops had been overwhelmingly defeated,
and Chiang led his forces into exile on Taiwan. The triumphant Mao formed the People's
Republic of China. Truman critics charged that the administration had failed to support
Chiang
Kai-shek against the Communists. Many people were also alarmed in September 1949, when
Truman announced that the USSR had developed an atomic bomb.
In February 1950 Wisconsin Senator Joseph R. McCarthy charged in a speech in Wheeling,
West Virginia, that the State Department knowingly employed 205 Communists. He later
reduced the number to 57, and after an investigation all of the charges were found to be
false.
McCarthy continued to accuse other officials of Communist sympathies. Without any
evidence,
he was eventually discredited, and the word McCarthyism came to refer to accusations of
subversive activities without any evidence.
These incidents and others convinced Congress to pass the Internal Security Act of 1950,
called the McCarran Act, over Truman's veto. The act forced the registration of all
Communist
organizations, allowed the government to intern Communists during any national
emergencies,
and prohibited Communists from doing any defense work. The act also prohibited the
entrance
into the United States of anyone who was a member of a "totalitarian" organization.
Seizure of the Steel Mills 
Despite the administration's efforts to prevent a strike that would close the country's
steel mills,
a strike date was set for early April 9, 1952. Just hours before the scheduled strike,
before a
nationwide radio audience, Truman directed Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer to seize
the mills to ensure their production to support the war efforts. However, on June 2,
1952, the
Supreme Court of the United States in a 6 to 3 decision on Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co.
v.
Sawyer declared the seizure unconstitutional. The Court held that Truman 

Use the Search box at the top to find Term Papers for Sale by keywords or browse Free Essays page by page
(sorted alphabetically by Essay Title):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
For college-level Term Papers, Essays, Research Papers and Book Reports, please go to the Term Papers for Sale Website


This Free Essays Web Site, is Copyright © 2008, Essay Express. All rights reserved.




Partner websites: Interior Decor Art :: Immigration Lawyer Toronto :: Laser Clinic Toronto :: Original Abstract Paintings :: Learn Violin in Thornhill :: Learn Violin in Toronto :: Buy used Yamaha piano in Toronto