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By the late 1990s new research building on Mack's insights was beginning to mature, and after 2004, the U. S. military began once again to seriously consider the problems associated with asymmetric warfare.
Mack's maternal grandfather was Morris Sheppard, U. S. Senator and Representative from Texas, and later his maternal step-grandfather was Tom Connally, the other U. S. Senator from Texas ( Sheppard's widow married Connally the year after Sheppard died ).
Mack's maternal great-grandfather was John Levi Sheppard, who was also a U. S. Representative from Texas.

Mack's and .
In Mack's the leader at camp, but Jack is here the is of the second main declarative represents is the leader and therefore has stress.
Mack's the leader at camp, but Jack's here, with this is deprived of stress, makes here the complement in the clause.
Somers, a wealthy industrialist and also co-owner of the Boston Americans, lent money to other team owners, including Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics, to keep them and the new league afloat.
Lightman escapes NORAD by joining a tourist group and, with Mack's help, travels to the Oregon island where the widowed Falken ( John Wood ) now lives under a new identity.
" In 1948, talent search shows Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour and Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts featured amateur competitors and audience voting.
At Ulm ( 25 September – 20 October ) Napoleon surrounded Mack's army, forcing its surrender without significant losses.
The popularity of the term dates from Andrew J. R. Mack's 1975 article " Why Big Nations Lose Small Wars " in World Politics, in which " asymmetric " referred simply to a significant disparity in power between opposing actors in a conflict.
Mack's analysis was largely ignored in its day, but the end of the Cold War sparked renewed interest among academics.
Mack's hypothesis presenting Jesus and the earliest Christians within the frame of Greco-Roman cynicism is controversial.
Incidentally, Bill Mack's programming was pre-recorded in Fort Worth.
The Church of the Brethren represents the largest body descending from Mack's Schwarzenau Brethren church.
In 1959, he performed on Ted Mack's syndicated CBS television show The Original Amateur Hour.
One of these, boxing legend Jack Dempsey, made continual use of these facilities until Mack's death in the mid-1930s.
During Mack's stewardship of this property, the famous Arabian Stallion " Broomstick ", sire of numerous Kentucky Derby and Triple Crown winning thoroughbreds, was also a temporary resident.
Hononegah, Steven Mack's wife, was so well-liked by the people of Winnebago County that virtually the entire county was in attendance at her funeral.
The last important development in instrumental rock before the British Invasion was Lonnie Mack's version of Chuck Berry's " Memphis ", which soared to # 5 on the Billboard Pop chart in June, 1963.
A full-length virtuoso guitar showpiece employing both the blues scale and distortion, Mack's " Memphis " ushered in the era of blues-rock guitar, a genre which reached its zenith in the later recordings of Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughan.
In the south, Charles and Kinsky remained almost completely inert, despite Mack's frantic orders for them to march to Lannoy.
He made an immediate impact by becoming Connie Mack's starting catcher in place of Cy Perkins, who was considered one of the best catchers in the major leagues at the time.
At the age of seven in 1952, she won Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour television show contest.

Mack's and Connie
Reiter claimed to have invented the overhead spiral pass while playing professional football as a player-coach for Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics of the original National Football League ( 1902 ).
In the World Series against Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics, Wilson's. 471 hitting performance was eclipsed by two fielding errors at Shibe Park.
Mack's father, Connie Mack, Jr., had worked as a public relations man for Leonard and Jack Rosen, the brothers who built Cape Coral from a wasteland into a waterfront wonderland.
He played for two decades in the major leagues as an outfielder, and had his best years as a member of Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics during the 1930s.
National League clubs contested the legality of contracts signed by players who jumped to the other league but eventually, Lajoie was allowed to play for Connie Mack's Athletics.
The 1931 Cardinals also triumphed in the World Series, defeating Connie Mack's defending two-time champion Philadelphia Athletics in seven games.
Davis was the starting first baseman and first captain of manager Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics from 1901 to 1910.
After Richards batted just. 160 in 1934, he was traded in May 1935 to Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics.
He settled on Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Shibe Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ( which was controlled by Mack's team and later renamed Connie Mack Stadium ) as the models for the new park.
He spent most of 1919 in the minor leagues after reporting out of shape in spring training, but quickly became one of manager Connie Mack's favorite players with his defensive versatility and easygoing manner, and remained with the club for the next 14 years, primarily at third base.
The Braves then went on to defeat Connie Mack's heavily favored Philadelphia Athletics in the 1914 World Series.
Having twice steered Connie Mack III to Senate victories in 1988 and 1994, Finkelstein was in demand for the 2000 Florida contest upon Mack's retirement.
He played as a catcher in Major League Baseball from to, most notably for Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics.
The Athletics of Philadelphia: Connie Mack's White Elephants, 1901 – 1954.
The Cardinals won the National League pennant but, eventually lost to Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics in the 1930 World Series.
Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics played an exhibition game with the Eagles at the park in the spring of 1939.
Cross jumped to the Athletics franchise in the new league and became one of the veteran leaders on Connie Mack's club.
He moved from Slippery Rock State College to an independent league in 1911, then to the American League in 1912 as a pitcher for Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics.
Duggleby was one of the " jumpers " who left the Phillies in 1902 for other teams, including ( in Duggleby's case ) Connie Mack's new American League team, the Athletics.
O ' Loughlin is well remembered for a call during the 1907 pennant race that went against Connie Mack's Athletics in a game against Detroit.
Somers ' money helped keep some American League teams afloat in their first years, including the St. Louis Browns, Charles Comiskey's Chicago White Sox and Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics.

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