Andrew Johnson, who became president after Abraham Lincoln's assassination, did not have a traditional campaign slogan in the modern sense, as he was not elected to the presidency but rather assumed office. However, during his 1866 campaign for the Senate, he promoted the idea of "Restoration" to convey his vision of rapidly reintegrating Southern states into the Union following the Civil War. His approach emphasized reconciliation and leniency towards the South, contrasting with the more punitive measures advocated by some in Congress.
Because it was more of a slogan than a reality.
Presidentsusa lists slogans for Nixon in 1960 and 1968. 1960: For the future 1968: Nixon's the One http://www.presidentsusa.net/campaignslogans.html
"Bounces, molds, stretches, snaps & more!" -Slogan on Silly Putty case
The more recent slogan for Dairy Queen is "DQ something different." Previously, the slogan was "We treat you right!" and in the 90's the slogan was "Hot eats, cool treats."
The Crunch All You Want, We'll Make More was the slogan used by Dirotto's in the 90's
Four more lucky years was the campaign slogan of Franklin D Roosevelt. People use this in their everyday life to refer to the future.
Noun: My mother had prepared a healthy snack for me to eat. Verb: I tend to snack on junk food more often than I should.
There is probably not one specific day when he said this. Actually, it was part of his presidential campaign. When candidates are running for office, they try to come up with a slogan that will be catchy and also inspirational. When Mr. Obama, then a U.S. senator, was trying to become president in 2007-2008, he and his campaign created the "yes we can" slogan to represent that we (the American people) can make changes, get get things done, can do more than we thought we would be able to do.
To make a slogan about dragon's blood you must consider one or more of its qualities and impress those in your slogan.
Dolce and Gabbana has a motto more than a slogan or sales pitch. Their motto is to make stars look like stars.
Andrew Johnson, who became president after Abraham Lincoln's assassination, did not have a traditional campaign slogan in the modern sense, as he was not elected to the presidency but rather assumed office. However, during his 1866 campaign for the Senate, he promoted the idea of "Restoration" to convey his vision of rapidly reintegrating Southern states into the Union following the Civil War. His approach emphasized reconciliation and leniency towards the South, contrasting with the more punitive measures advocated by some in Congress.
Because it was more of a slogan than a reality.
"Choose to refuse plastic for a cleaner, greener tomorrow."
Obama used : Change we can believe in. That's just one example. If you look up previous slogans or ask an older relative then maybe you can find more.
the only way is to either play the campaign on a different difficulty, or cheat
Presidentsusa lists slogans for Nixon in 1960 and 1968. 1960: For the future 1968: Nixon's the One http://www.presidentsusa.net/campaignslogans.html