IDDM
IDDM n. insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. See
diabetes.
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Churchill's memorable first visit to the Province.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland); 2/2/2002; 700+ words
; ...Rule] has begun in Ulster." Augustine Birrell, the Chief Secretary for Ireland...responsibilities. More importantly, Birrell feared Churchill's intervention...Liberals, with some prompting from Birrell, decided to hold their meeting...
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Twentieth-Century Britain: A Political History.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Albion; 6/22/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...only thirty-eight. Minor and forgotten figures like Augustine Birrell, Asquith's hapless Chief Secretary for Ireland...subjected to the kind of character sketch, and in Birrell's case withering scorn, largely reserved for prime...
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The Easter Rising
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 4/26/1999; 696 words
; ...of Dublin after 24 hours of most serious fighting, Augustine Birrell, chief secretary for Ireland, announced in the house...there has been rioting in other parts of Ireland Mr. Birrell did not say. But there is no doubt that the Dublin...
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Guinness to get stamp of approval; 250TH YEAR.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Mirror (London, England); 2/25/2009; 340 words
; ...Ryan to issue a new stamp to mark the centenary of the Birrell Land Act. It allowed tenants to buy large tracts of land from landlords and is named after Liberal MP Augustine Birrell who served as chief secretary for Ireland from 1907...
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The Gladstone Diaries.
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 10/1/1994; 700+ words
; ...labours) is that of April 10th 1890: Wrote to Mr Noble--Mr W. Mitchell. Walk & conversation with Mr Birrell [Augustine Birrell, 1850-1933; barrister, author and liberal MP Fife 1889-1900; later Irish secretary]. Read "The Absentee...
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How touch-feely Mo blunted the Tony charm
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 7/10/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...changed to Bloody Balfour; he was on a trajectory which took him to the premiership. A later Chief Secretary, Augustine Birrell, arrived in post with a greater reputation than the young Balfour had enjoyed, but lost it and his political career...
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Not great but definitely good
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 3/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...subject of a hefty, pious Victorian biography, since when she has been pretty much forgotten. The Edwardian wit Augustine Birrell buried 19 volumes of her collected works in his garden for compost. She owes her disinterment to the fashion for...
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A Woman of Masterful Persuasion
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 7/16/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...the masterpieces. An understandable mistake. After all, there were so many similar litterateurs of that era -- Augustine Birrell, Edmund Gosse, Alice Meynell, Robert Lynd, Logan Pearsall Smith. In truth, Repplier is old-fashioned, approaching...
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INSIDE POLITICS.(Nation)(Inside Politics)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 2/11/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...CHANGE "If the U.S. had a parliamentary system, the Clinton presidency would already have been consigned, in Augustine Birrell's felicitous phrase, to the great ash heap called history," writes Kent Weaver, a senior fellow in governmental...
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Origin of a trading species
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 3/21/2008; 700+ words
; ...Liberalism was in fact elitist. In the 1890s, four MPs climbed Raith. "Is it not an intriguing thought," said Augustine Birrell to Munro Ferguson, RBS Haldane and HH Asquith, "that in this vast and varied landscape, there is not an acre...
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Augustine Birrell
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Augustine Birrell , 1850-1933, English essayist and public official. As chief secretary for Ireland (1907-16) his failure to end the plotting...
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Birrell, Augustine
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to Irish History
Birrell, Augustine (1850–1933), Liberal politician and Ireland's longest...After 1910 Irish policy was directed by Asquith and Lloyd George , Birrell's wife's terminal illness being part of the explanation. His achievements...
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Catholic University of Ireland
Book article from: A Dictionary of British History
...catholic university. It opened in 1854 with 20 students but could make little progress without government assistance. Augustine Birrell, chief secretary in the Liberal administration of 1906, introduced the major reconstruction of 1908, which established...
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Irish council bill
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to Irish History
...Secretary James Bryce hoped that a modest version of the scheme might pass the House of Lords. Under Bryce's successor Augustine Birrell , in 1907, there was more consultation with the Nationalist leaders, and the proposed assembly became more powerful...
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MacDonnell, Sir Antony Patrick
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to Irish History
...a university settlement based on a second college in Dublin University with a Catholic ethos, was implemented. Augustine Birrell and the Nationalist leaders both found his autocratic style irksome and his faith in ‘moderate landlords...
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