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American Heritage MagazineFebruary/March 2001    Volume 52, Issue 1
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Cover Story


So it has happened again. A close presidential election has led to recriminations, cries of fraud, and talk of tainted mandates. Just as predictably, the 2000 election has inspired calls to reform the Electoral College—predictably, that is, because such proposals have followed every close presidential contest since the beginning of the Republic. The only difference is that this time no one asked why there’s such a long delay between election and inauguration.

The controversy goes back to America’s first contested presidential election, in 1796, when John Adams edged Thomas Jefferson by three electoral votes. On January 6, 1797 — a month before the votes would officially be counted, though the results had already been leaked — Rep. William L. Smith of South Carolina introduced the first constitutional amendment to reform the Electoral College. Between Smith’s initial sally and 1889, the centennial of the Constitution’s adoption, more than 160 such amendments were introduced in Congress. From 1889 through 1946 there were 109 proposed amendments, from 1947 to 1968 there were 265, and since then, virtually every session of Congress has seen its own batch of proposals. Still, the Electoral College simply refuses to die.

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Feature Stories 
 
Children of Monticello
In Virginia, a quarrel is going on about who can be allowed to lie in a family graveyard. Because the family is Thomas Jefferson’s, the outcome of the dispute is important to every American.
By Lucian K. Truscott IV
Flipping the Meat Train
One of the last veterans of a dangerous, violent, exhilarating way of life tells of a youth spent on the Road.
By Dale Wasserman
When Pop Turned the Art World Upside Down
Andy Warhol and friends oversaw the death of a centuries-old tradition and the birth of the postmodern.
By Tony Scherman
A War Against History
It’s the tenth anniversary of the Gulf War. America certainly didn’t lose, but what else do we know about it?
By Roger J. Spiller
 
 
 
Departments 
 
History Now
G.I. JFK; the making of Lonesome Dove; calendar clocks; the 10 greatest jazz records; a Lincoln facelift; eating the past; women on wheels; W vs. Q; and more.
In the News
Getting a Life: What’s an ex-President to do?
By Kevin Baker
The Business of America
Uncle Scrooge’s Father: Walt Disney gave us Donald Duck, but another man gave him his character— and his family.
By John Steele Gordon
Behind the Cutting Edge
The Myth of Artificial Intelligence: Computers that could think were once right around the corner. Now they’re far off.
By Frederick E. Allen
History Happened Here
Ancient City: St. Augustine, settled in 1565, flaunts its Spanish origins.
By Carla Davidson
My Brush With History
Our Armageddon. An Afternoon With the Shadow. The Camera Enthusiast.
By the Readers
Time Machine
By Frederic D. Schwarz
 
 
 
 
 

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