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1992 and speech
Kildall was particularly annoyed when the University of Washington asked him, as a distinguished graduate, to attend their computer science program anniversary in 1992, but gave the keynote speech to Gates, a dropout from Harvard.
On May 19, 1992, Quayle gave a speech to the Commonwealth Club of California on the subject of the Los Angeles riots.
The " Murphy Brown speech " became one of the most memorable incidents of the 1992 campaign.
Denis Healey, a member of parliament from 1952 to 1992, later said this speech was " the greatest parliamentary speech I ever heard ... it had all the moral passion and rhetorical force of Demosthenes ".
Powell's opinion of Thatcher had declined after she endorsed John Major at the 1992 election, which he believed to be a repudiation of her fight against European integration after the Bruges speech.
Clinton gave his acceptance speech on July 17, 1992, promising to bring a " new covenant " to America, and to work to heal the gap that had developed between the rich and the poor during the Reagan / Bush years.
Perot denounced Congress for its inaction in his speech at the National Press Club in Washington, D. C., on March 18, 1992.
Many theatre critics in 1992 read the production as a critic of Thatcherite Conservative politics, with Goole ’ s final speech reading as a direct rebuttal of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher ’ s well-known statement “ There is no such thing as society ”.
Hayakawa ( 1906 – 1992 ), speech professor Wendell Johnson, speech professor Irving J. Lee, and others assembled elements of general semantics into a package suitable for incorporation into mainstream communications curricula.
He officially accepted the 1992 Consensus in his inauguration speech which resulted in direct semi-official talks with the PRC, and this later led to the commencement of weekend direct charter flights between mainland China and Taiwan.
) At the 1992 Democratic National Convention in New York City, Clinton ended his acceptance speech by saying, " I still believe in a place called Hope.
The Faith Fourth achieved national visibility in 1992, when President George H. W. Bush not only made a speech praising small town virtues, but also participated in the traditional Fourth of July softball game.
v. City of St. Paul ( 1992 ), the Court overturned a statute prohibiting speech or symbolic expression that " arouses anger, alarm or resentment in others on the basis of race, color, creed, religion or gender " on the grounds that, even if the specific statute was limited to fighting words, it was unconstitutionally content-based and viewpoint-based because of the limitation to race -/ religion -/ sex-based fighting words.
A speech to the Eleventh IHR Conference in October, 1992, included the following remark:
In September 1992, he made his maiden speech as party leader, about the Government's ERM debacle eight days earlier, saying that John Major was " The devalued Prime Minister of a devalued Government ".
In the same speech, Smith also attacked the Tories ' broken election promises ( in particular Lamont's recent Budget decision to impose VAT on domestic energy bills )-claiming he possessed the last copy of a 1992 policy document " to escape the Central Office shredder ".
In 1992 the Ulster-Scots Language Society was formed for the protection and promotion of Ulster Scots, which some of its members viewed as a language in its own right, encouraging use in speech, writing and in all areas of life.
He was elected to the House of Commons at the 1992 general election for Ashfield, making his maiden speech on 20 May 1992, following the retirement of the sitting Labour MP, Frank Haynes.
Buchanan later threw his support behind Bush and delivered a keynote address at the 1992 Republican National Convention, which became known as the culture war speech, in which he described " a religious war going on in our country for the soul of America.
He received a prime time speech slot at the 1992 Republican National Convention, which is sometimes dubbed the "' culture war ' speech ".

1992 and candidate
Finally in 1992, President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, then candidate to the Presidency, declared that in its plan of government the quarrel for creation of the Ministry of Defense was foreseen.
After redistricting, he won a three candidate primary election in 1992 with a plurality of 48 %.
In 1992, with H. Ross Perot mounting a formidable campaign, Kemp was again considered a Vice Presidential candidate.
On June 8, 1992, Alpha Oumar Konaré, the candidate of ADEMA, was inaugurated as the president of Mali's Third Republic.
Perhaps the most prominent candidate running on the NLP platform was John Hagelin, who campaigned for U. S. president in 1992, 1996, and 2004.
In the 1992 general election, held on 9 April, 310 candidates stood for the NLP in the UK, garnering 0. 19 % of the vote, with every candidate losing their deposit for failing to receive at least 5 % of the vote.
The NLP ran 16 candidates in the 20 by-elections held between 1992 and 1997, with every candidate losing their deposit.
The Natural Law Party ( United States ) ran John Hagelin as its presidential candidate in 1992, 1996, and 2000.
The publicity generated put the policy on the front burner in 1992, thrusting the issue into the presidential campaign ," with every Democratic candidate and independent Ross Perot publicly promising to end the ban.
He was the only candidate in Turkmenistan's first presidential elections in 1992.
The U. S. version of the Natural Law Party ran John Hagelin as its presidential candidate in 1992, 1996, and 2000.
John Hagelin, a 37-year old physics professor at Maharishi University of Management ( MUM ), was the NLP candidate for president of the United States in the 1992.
Businessman Ross Perot ran as candidate for the Reform Party with economist Pat Choate as his running mate ; he received less media attention and was excluded from the presidential debates and, while still obtaining substantial results for a third-party candidate, by U. S. standards, did not renew his success of the 1992 election.
Phillips was the party's candidate in the 1992, 1996 and 2000 presidential elections.
James Stockdale, the choice of third-party candidate Ross Perot in 1992, was seen as incompetent by many, but the Perot-Stockdale ticket still won about 19 % of the vote.
* November 29 – E. Harold Munn, American temperance movement leader and presidential candidate ( d. 1992 )
The 1992 campaign also marked the entry of Ralph Nader into presidential politics as a candidate.
On July 9, 1992, Clinton chose Tennessee Senator and former 1988 Presidential candidate Al Gore to be his running mate.
Anderson's finish was still the best showing for a third party candidate since George Wallace's 14 % in 1968 and the sixth best for any such candidate in the 20th century ( trailing Theodore Roosevelt's 27 % in 1912, Robert LaFollette's 17 % in 1924, Wallace, and Ross Perot's 19 % and 8 % in 1992 and 1996, respectively ).
In the 1992 election, he received 18. 9 % of the popular vote, approximately 19, 741, 065 votes ( but no electoral college votes ), making him the most successful third-party presidential candidate in terms of the popular vote since Theodore Roosevelt in the 1912 election.
Presidential elections were held on November 25, 1992, after the High Constitutional Court had ruled, over Hery Velona objections, that Ratsiraka could become a candidate.
The Republican candidate has won by more than 13 % in every Presidential election since 1992 and George W. Bush won the county by over 40 % both times he ran.

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