快好知 kuaihz


president mckinley造句
1 In September, nineteen-oh-one, President McKinley made a major foreign policy speech at the Pan-American Fair in Buffalo, New York. 2 During the early weeks of eighteen ninety-eight, President McKinley waited for Spain to act on its promises to Cuba. He saw little progress. 3 President McKinley, without waiting for the Senate to act, ordered the American military government in Manila to extend its control throughout the Philippines. 4 President McKinley welcomed Spain's policy statements. He felt Spain should be left alone to honor its promises to the Cuban people. 5 Acme president McKinley is so nervous not even his beautiful secretary Harriet can calm him. 6 President McKinley felt Spain should be left alone to honor its promises. 7 When President McKinley sent a delegation of commissioners to the islands, Ka'iulani invited them to a lavish, grand luau at Ainahau. 8 President McKinley said it was his responsibility to protect the lives and property of Americans living there. So,[www.] he sent the battleship "Maine" to Havana. 9 At first, President McKinley wanted Spain to give up only Luzon, the main island. 10 After President McKinley had finished his address that afternoon he was immediately surrounded by a dense crowd. 11 After shooting President McKinley, Czolgosz explained why he had done it. 12 The next day, President McKinley went to the fair's temple of music. He planned to spend several hours meeting the public and shaking hands. 13 He was proposed for the difficult mission by the chief of the Bureau of Military Intelligence when President McKinley requested the name of a suitable envoy. 14 With this dispute ended, the peace treaty was quickly completed and signed. But trouble developed when President McKinley sent the treaty to the United States Senate for approval. 15 Hurricanes laid waste to so many powerful armadas that, during the Spanish-American War, President McKinley declared that he feared the storms more than the Spanish navy. 16 The pope endorsed the wine in ads, and it was also favored by Queen Victoria and President McKinley. 17 Another classic example of his influence occurred when; merely months after he advocated political assassination in an editorial, American President McKinley was assassinated .