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Jeane Kirkpatrick was educated in the 1940s at Stephens College (Missouri) and Barnard, then took post-graduate courses at Columbia University where she studied under German historian Franz ...
What invested Jeane Kirkpatrick’s U.N. years with special drama was not that she, a woman of thought in an arena of action, exemplified the unity of theory and practice. Quite the contrary.
With the sad passing of Jeane Kirkpatrick yesterday, the United States lost a true champion of liberty and freedom whose valorous efforts were indispensable to victory in the Cold War. The "Reagan ...
Jeane Kirkpatrick was later asked if she felt betrayed when Britain, having received American support during the Falklands campaign, opposed the American intervention in Grenada. "Yes," she replied.
Its title: Political Woman: The Big Little Life of Jeane Kirkpatrick (Encounter Books, 2012). The heroine of the book died on December 7th, 2006.
Jeane Kirkpatrick spent her life studying — and fighting — totalitarianism. Reading Peter Collier’s illuminating new biography, Political Woman: The Big Little Life of Jeane Kirkpatrick, I ...
Jeane Kirkpatrick, the U.N. ambassador during the Reagan administration, was a strong supporter of forceful dealings with the Soviet Union. In the wake of Kirkpatrick's death, Thomas Mann, senior ...
THERE IS something at once ironic and strangely apt about the fact that Augusto Pinochet, the former Chilean dictator charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity, died within days of Jeane ...
Jeane Kirkpatrick was an enormous force for honesty, liberty, candor, straightforwardness, and sheer moral bravery. She was a valiant woman, and a gallant soul.
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