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unusual facts about J.W. Buckley


J.W. Buckley

For many years J.W. has been a close friend of, and collaborator with, writer/director Elgin James.


Andrei Navrozov

In all over $1 million was raised from alumni supporters, whereupon some 16 lavishly produced and extravagantly priced issues were published, with the participation of such contributors as E. M. Cioran, Philip Larkin, Lewis Lapham, Henri Peyre, G. S. Fraser, Roy Fuller, Martin Seymour-Smith, Ernst Gombrich, A. L. Rowse, Boris Goldovsky, Annie Dillard, William F. Buckley, Jr.

Charles A. Buckley

He was chairman of the House Committee on Pensions in the 78th Congress and 79th Congress and chairman of the Committee on Public Works in the 82nd Congress and from the 84th Congress through the 88th Congress.

Charles Garside

After the war, he returned to private practice and ran for office against Charles A. Buckley in 1946.

Constantine W. Buckley

Buckley was born January 22, 1815 in Surry County, North Carolina, but had moved to Georgia by 1828 where he began working as a store clerk.

While Buckley worked there, he was tutored in law by Attorney General John Birdsall, which allowed Buckley to be admitted to the bar in November 1839.

Czechoslovakia 1968

In 1972, Senator James L. Buckley (New York) obtained a copy of Czechoslovakia 1968 to show on New York television stations.

F.H. Buckley

Buckley is a senior editor of The American Spectator, and has also published in the Wall Street Journal, the National Post and the New Criterion, and has frequently been a guest on NPR and other talk programs.

F.H. Buckley (born Aug. 4, 1948) is a Foundation Professor at George Mason University School of Law, where he has taught since 1989.

G. B. Buckley

Buckley was born in Saddleworth, Yorkshire the son of Arthur and Jane Buckley, his father was a solicitor.

Harold Hayes

As an editor, Hayes appreciated bold writing and points of view, favoring writers with a flair for ferreting out the spirit of the time—writers like Gay Talese, Tom Wolfe, Norman Mailer, Michael Herr, John Sack, Gore Vidal, William F. Buckley, Garry Wills, Gina Berriault, and Nora Ephron.

James Buckley

James L. Buckley (born 1923), American Senator from New York, corporate director and federal judge

James R. Buckley

Buckley was elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth Congress (March 4, 1923 – March 3, 1925), representing Illinois 6th District.

James V. Buckley

He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1950 to the Eighty-second Congress.

-- A grammar fix may be needed here. -->During the Second World War was active in war-plant production service and was elected president of Local Union 714, United Automobile Workers.

Michael Uhlmann

Dr. Uhlmann is a frequent contributor to the Claremont Review of Books, most recently with the articles, “The Supreme Court v. the Constitution of the United States of America”, and “The Right Stuff”, a panegyric of the life, writings, and talent of William F. Buckley, Jr..

Obstructing the field

The information was recorded by G. B. Buckley who found it in the Sheffield Advertiser dated 31 August 1792.

Paul Boutelle

Boutelle toured throughout the United States during that campaign and appeared on numerous radio and television shows, including William F. Buckley, Jr.'s Firing Line, and in interviews with Joey Bishop and Dick Cavett).

Peter Buckley

Peter J. Buckley, Oregon State Representative, District 5 (2004–present)

Staffordshire County Cricket Club

G. B. Buckley, Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket, Cotterell, 1935

The Churchill Centre

Speakers span the political and cultural spectrum: William F. Buckley, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr, Alistair Cooke, William Manchester, members of the Churchill family, and many others.

The God that Failed

Writers who subsequently picked up the term have included Whittaker Chambers, Clark Kerr, David Edgar, William F. Buckley, Jr., and Norman Podhoretz.

The Naked Public Square

Its social impact was somewhat comparable to William F. Buckley, Jr.'s God and Man at Yale, which denounced similar socio-political phenomena at major American universities.

The Park, Burley-on-the-Hill

G. B. Buckley, Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket, Cotterell, 1935.

United States Senate election in Massachusetts, 1952

The nationally-known and Catholic Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin refused to campaign for his fellow Republican due to his friendship with the Kennedy family; William F. Buckley, Jr. believed that Lodge probably would have won with McCarthy's help.

Wick Allison

In 1985, Allison was asked by William F. Buckley, Jr. to join the board of directors of the National Review, and in 1980 he became its publisher, succeeding William A. Rusher.

William Buckley

William F. Buckley, Jr. (1925–2008), American author and conservative commentator


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