Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Irish diaspora" ¶ 9
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Kennedy and argues
Kennedy argues that by far the main reason was London's fear that a repeat of 1870 — when Prussia and the German states smashed France — would mean that Germany, with a powerful army and navy, would control the English Channel and northwest France.
Bird argues evidence presented in The Color of Truth reveals the brothers " registered deep doubts about the American enterprise in Vietnam and did so far earlier than most historians had thought ," although they never ceased promoting it during their time with the Kennedy and Johnson administrations.
Gavin Kennedy, Professor Emeritus at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland, argues that its current use in modern economic thinking as a symbol of free market capitalism is not reconcilable with the rather modest and indeterminate manner in which it was employed by Smith.
In response to Kennedy, Daniel Klein argues that reconciliation is legitimate.
If the term is to be used as a symbol of liberty and economic coordination as it has been in the modern era, Kennedy argues that it should exist as a construct completely separate from Adam Smith since there is little evidence that Smith imputed any significance onto the term, much less the meanings given it at present.
In her book Hurricane Hazel, Betty Kennedy argues that in Canada, the impressions that Hazel was " the best-kept secret in town " and that it was a " fully documented meteorological event that should have taken nobody by surprise " both " paradoxically [...] contain a great deal of truth ".
The dissertation argues that The Killer Angels is a response to the Vietnam War and to a longing for the leadership of John F. and Robert F. Kennedy.
The other way to explain what has happened since Brown often has political liberals as its proponents ; it argues that the Court's decree in Brown II was insufficiently rigorous to force segregated localities into action, and that real success began only after the other two branches of the federal government got involved — the Executive Branch ( under Kennedy and Johnson ) by encouraging the Department of Justice to pursue judicial remedies against resistant school districts, and Congress by passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Civil Rights Act of 1968.
In The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers ( 1987 ), Kennedy argues that economic strength and military power have been highly correlated in the rise and fall of major nations since 1500.
Kennedy argues that by far the main reason was London's fear that a repeat of 1870 — when Prussia and the German states smashed France — would mean that Germany, with a powerful army and navy, would control the English Channel and northwest France.
In the book, Blakey argues that there was a conspiracy to kill John F. Kennedy.
His inability to talk loudly, Kennedy argues, was a psychological reaction to the gassing rather than a lasting toxic effect of the gas.
Kennedy argues that the strength of a Great Power can be properly measured only relative to other powers, and he provides a straightforward and persuasively argued thesis: Great Power ascendancy ( over the long term or in specific conflicts ) correlates strongly to available resources and economic durability ; military overstretch and a concomitant relative decline are the consistent threat facing powers whose ambitions and security requirements are greater than their resource base can provide for ( summarized on pages 438 – 9 ).

Kennedy and famine
Robert E. Kennedy explains however that this common argument of the mass emigration from Ireland being a " flight from famine " is not entirely correct.

Kennedy and was
In 1961 the first important legislative victory of the Kennedy Administration came when the principle of national responsibility for local economic distress won out over a `` state's-responsibility '' proposal -- provision was made for payment for unemployment relief by nation-wide taxation rather than by a levy only on those states afflicted with manpower surplus.
Mr. Truman has only to recall the `` hopeless '' campaign of 1948 to remember what a loyal partisan he was and the first experience of Mr. Kennedy with Congress would have been sadder than it was had not Mr. Sam been there.
Some reports say he was rescued from timely retirement by his friend, Congressman Walter of Pennsylvania, at a moment when the Kennedy Administration was diligently searching for all the House votes it could get.
During his aggressive campaign to win his present position, Mr. Kennedy was vitriolic about this country's `` prestige '' abroad.
As a result, your criticism of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and the Department of Justice was inaccurate, unwarranted and unfair.
What Mr. Kennedy, in fact, wrote was: `` It is the Department's view that no anti-trust enforcement considerations justify any loss of revenue of this proportion ''.
President Kennedy was right when he said, `` We shall never negotiate out of fear and we never shall fear to negotiate ''.
You remember the words of President Kennedy a week or so ago, when someone asked him when he was in Canada, and Dean Rusk was in Europe, and Vice President Johnson was in Asia, `` Who is running the store ''??
Once the full extent of this Russian military penetration of Cuba was clear, President Kennedy announced we would take whatever action was appropriate to prevent this, even if we had to go it alone.
He provoked outraged editorials when, after a post-Inaugural inspection of the White House with Mrs. Kennedy, he remarked to reporters, `` We just cased the joint to see what was there ''.
One of the vexatious problems to first confront President Kennedy was the property lying just across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House.
One Republican senator told this correspondent that he was constantly being asked why he didn't attack the Kennedy administration on this score.
The Republicans some weeks ago served notice through Senator Thruston B. Morton ( R ) of Kentucky, chairman of the Republican National Committee, that the Kennedy administration would be held responsible if the outcome in Laos was a coalition government susceptible of Communist domination.
It was the first in the series of `` Concerts for Young People by Young People '' to be sponsored by First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy at the White House.
She is vacationing at the Kennedy summer home in Hyannis Port, Mass., and in his welcoming remarks, the President said he was representing her.
One of the most interested `` students '' on the tour which the Brevard group took at the National Gallery yesterday following their concert at the White House, was Letitia Baldrige, social secretary to First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy.
One of the initial questions put to President Kennedy at his first news conference last January was about his attitude toward a meeting with Premier Khrushchev.
Thus when Premier Khrushchev intimated even before inauguration that he hoped for an early meeting with the new President, Mr. Kennedy was confronted with a delicate problem.
Mr. Kennedy was less troubled by that possibility than by the belief that a Geneva breakdown, or even continued stalemate, would mean an unchecked spread of nuclear weapons to other countries as well as a fatal blow to any hope for disarmament.
Mr. Kennedy was convinced that insistence on the demand would make international agreements, or even negotiations, impossible.

Kennedy and considered
Eisenhower told Kennedy he considered Laos to be " the cork in the bottle " in regards to the regional threat.
Presidents Harry S. Truman and John F. Kennedy each considered dismissing Hoover as FBI Director, but ultimately concluded that the political cost of doing so would be too great.
President John F. Kennedy, an ardent foe of nuclear proliferation, considered sales of such weapons moot since " in the event of war the United States would, from the outset, be prepared to defend the Federal Republic.
O ' Donnell remembers being angry at what he considered a betrayal by John Kennedy who had previously cast Johnson as anti-labor and anti-liberal.
O ' Donnell remembers being angry at what he considered a betrayal by Kennedy who had previously cast Johnson as anti-labor and anti-liberal.
Other actors considered for the role were Glenn Ford, Arthur Kennedy, Henry Fonda, Ben Johnson ( later cast as Tector Gorch ) and Van Heflin.
Card considered running in the 2010 special election to fill the United States Senate held by the late Ted Kennedy.
His four-star military rank, experience at Strategic Air Command and presence advising President Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis were considered foreign-policy assets to the Wallace campaign.
Two leaders from the opposing parties, the Popular Democratic Party and the Puerto Rican Independence Party, charged that after a December 1979 meeting between the two, the Governor, then considered as a lifelong Republican, began campaigning to deliver the 41 Democratic Party convention votes of the island for President Jimmy Carter ’ s ( D ) nomination for the presidency ( ironically, Carter ’ s opponent for the nomination was Senator Kennedy ).
President John F. Kennedy was more successful in 1962 when he pressured the steel industry into reversing price increases that Kennedy considered dangerously inflationary.
This has never been used, although it was seriously considered for use at Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39 for the Saturn V. It was rejected for that application due to the instability of the top-heavy unfuelled rocket and gantry.
The Rose Kennedy Center for research and treatment to help persons who have developmental disabilities is considered a premier center in this type of work.
Alarmed, Kennedy considered various reactions, and ultimately responded to the installation of nuclear missiles in Cuba with a naval blockade and presented an ultimatum to the Soviets.
Zapruder considered himself a Democrat and was an admirer of President Kennedy.
The John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson administrations had considered attempting to destroy the Chinese program before it succeeded, but the USSR had refused to cooperate.
Many administration officials reported later that Clinton initially considered nominating the First Lady Hillary Clinton, a prominent attorney, professor, activist, and executive, for Attorney General ; however anti-nepotism laws put in place in 1967 after president John F. Kennedy successfully appointed his brother Robert F. Kennedy attorney general prohibited this.
Markey was considered a leading contender to run in the January 19, 2010 special election to fill the U. S. Senate seat left vacant by the death of Edward M. Kennedy.
The Commission is widely considered the most important independent U. S. government commission since the Warren Commission, which was charged with investigating the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and perhaps the most important in American history given its mammoth responsibility for investigating the causes of the first foreign attack on the U. S. mainland since the War of 1812, and recommending steps to defend the U. S. from future attacks.
Saluted by the Kennedy Center as a “ Living Jazz Legend ”, and appointed to the National Council on the Arts, Hamilton is considered one of the most important living jazz artists and composers.
In the 1950s, the World Bank considered building its international headquarters here and on the adjacent site ( which now houses the Kennedy Center ), but rejected the site for unspecified reasons in favor of its current location at 1818 H Street NW in Washington, D. C.
The Kennedy Center then argued that the DCZC had not properly considered its objections, and should delay its approval pending further hearings.
Rich's new producer, Jerry Kennedy, encouraged the pianist to emphasize his country and rock & roll leanings, although Rich considered himself a jazz pianist and had not paid much attention to country music since his childhood.

6.906 seconds.