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The Story--you know what Story we are not talking about--has been denied by Senator Kerry et al., and there it will likely rest, pending further developments.


* The Story--you know what Story we are not talking about--has been denied by Senator Kerry et al., and there it will likely rest, pending further developments. Should such stories see the light of day? The responsible answer is no: Privacy must be protected, issues are more important. Yet allegations of sexual misbehavior have been a theme of American politics for centuries. The election of 1828 was enlivened en·liv·en  
tr.v. en·liv·ened, en·liv·en·ing, en·liv·ens
To make lively or spirited; animate.



en·liven·er n.
 by allegations that Andrew Jackson was a party to bigamy bigamy (bĭ`gəmē), crime of marrying during the continuance of a lawful marriage. Bigamy is not committed if a prior marriage has been terminated by a divorce or a decree of nullity of marriage. . A recent Jackson biographer concedes that Mr. and Mrs. Jackson knowingly married before her divorce to her first husband was final, though, given the delays of frontier justice, their behavior was normal. So bigamy was irrelevant. Yet Old Hickory Hickory, city, United States
Hickory, city (1990 pop. 28,301), Burke and Catawba counties, W N.C., at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mts.; inc. 1870. It is a processing and trade center for an abundant agricultural region (grain, soybeans, poultry, hogs,
 was an impulsive, as well as an effective, leader. Just ask the Cherokees, whom he uprooted, or Martin Van Buren, who had to clean up the economic mess he left. So maybe his jump-the-gun wedding was relevant after all. The president is the most powerful officeholder of·fice·hold·er  
n.
One who holds public office.

Noun 1. officeholder - someone who is appointed or elected to an office and who holds a position of trust; "he is an officer of the court"; "the club elected its officers for
 in the land, and now in the world. He is also Elective Surrogate King. Every clue to his nature will be considered fair game, and such clues will be revealed, and distorted, with the caprice ca·price  
n.
1.
a. An impulsive change of mind.

b. An inclination to change one's mind impulsively.

c.
 that necessarily marks all journalism.
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Title Annotation:The Week; sexual harassment
Publication:National Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 8, 2004
Words:202
Previous Article:Now we understand Ted Kennedy's enthusiasm.(The Week)
Next Article:The flap over President Bush's National Guard service shrinks daily, but does not disappear.(The Week)(Brief Article)
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