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White House
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The White House serves as both the physical residence of the United States president and a symbol of executive power, making it a central subject in political science, history, and public policy courses. Students write about it to understand how the American presidency functions, how individual leaders shape the office, and how the executive branch interacts with the broader government and the nation. The recurring focus on the presidency, the role of the office, and its relationship to Americans and their country reflects how deeply this institution shapes domestic and foreign policy alike.

The archived papers approach the White House from a wide range of angles. Many focus on individual presidents and their administrations, including figures such as Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush, Ulysses S. Grant, and Jimmy Carter, examining how each shaped or was shaped by the office. Others take historical and scandal-driven approaches, such as analysis of the Teapot Dome Scandal involving Albert B. Fall. Some papers address security planning, global terrorism, and policy frameworks, while others explore the democratic nomination process and comparative analysis of federal and state governments.

A strong essay on the White House benefits from a clearly scoped thesis — focusing on a specific president, policy era, or institutional function rather than attempting to survey the office broadly. Evidence drawn from executive decisions, legislative relationships, and historical outcomes tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating the presidency as isolated from Congress, the courts, and public pressure, which underestimates the institutional constraints that define how power in the White House is actually exercised.

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Paper Undergraduate
Presidential Scandal Speeches: Rhetoric and Responsibility
Presidential scandal speeches should be considered a unique form of discoursed that follow a common pattern and have similar elements. All of these may not be found in every single speech but most certainly will, including Richard Nixon's Second Watergate Speech (1973), Ronald Reagan's Iran-Contra Speech (1987), and Bill Clinton's Monica Lewinsky Speech (1998). All the presidents used strong, direct and active voice when making these speeches, with Clinton seeming to be particularly prone to narcissism and use of the first-person singular.
Paper Undergraduate
Comparison of media outlets and their characteristics
¶ … TV news channels and online media for breaking the latest and hottest news first and taking the credit of being more alert and efficient. This paper compares the news delivered by different news channel websites…
Research Paper Doctorate
Government systems and structures
Luther Terry was the Surgeon General of the United States during the Kennedy Administration and the first part of the Johnson Administration, from 1961 to 1965. Terry changed the nature of the office, which until that…
Paper Undergraduate
Military Technology -- Civil War Leadership What
The Civil War has been written about, analyzed extensively, and many books have been published about the Civil War as well. But there hasn't been an abundance of literature on the technologies that were devised and used in the Civil War. This paper reviews and critiques some of the more important technologies that impacted the war and in fact helped the North to win the war.
Paper Doctorate
Effectiveness of the United Nations a Historical Look
United Nations - The UN has been effective Thesis: The UN has succeeded in some of its international responsibilities but has failed in others; and according to the UN Charter the UN may not intervene in matters essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state… ONE: The UN has achieved many "remarkable accomplishments" (Encarta.msn.com) • The UN has negotiated 172 peace settlements that ended regional conflicts • The UN has participated in more than 300 international treaties • The UN's "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" (adopted in 1948) has been helpful in raising the consciousness of the need for human rights • Over 3 million children a year have been saved from polio, measles, whooping cough, tuberculosis thanks to immunization programs by the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF)
Essay Doctorate
Secure After 911? Is the United States
Is the United States more secure or less secure following the attacks of September 11, 2001? The position of this paper is that the U.S. is in fact more secure. Even after the bombing at the Boston Marathon in April,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Minorities and leadership in organizational contexts
Make it Easier for Minorities to Advance to Leadership Roles in Business?
Paper Doctorate
Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois
Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois present opposing representations of the diametrically opposed philosophies that came to define African-American culture in the United States during the upheaval of Reconstruction.
Essay Doctorate
Historical debate on Apollo 11 moon landing authenticity and significance
Apollo Moon Landing Introduction It is interesting that when a researcher types in "Apollo Moon Landing" on Google, the second link that comes up is "Moon landing conspiracy theories"; and entering the site the shocking revelation is that up to 20% of Americans surveyed believed that the moon landings were faked. The Fox News TV network even ran a documentary with a conspiracy theory as its editorial backbone ("Did We Land on The Moon?"). Of course such a huge undertaking would be very difficult to fake, and in this case there was no fakery. Notwithstanding assertions to the contrary by Fox News and others, American astronauts did in fact land on the moon on six occasions; this paper delves into the first landing by Apollo 11.
Paper Doctorate
Letter Advising President on Public
Letter Advising President on Public Policy and Political Science