george marshall造句1. George Marshall wrote this article for Climate Action.
2. George Marshall is director of the Oxford, England - based Climate Outreach and Information Network ( COIN ).
3. I would liken him to General George Marshall during the Second World War.
4. And I think a lot about George Marshall and Harry Truman and the Marshall Plan.
5. Likewise, General George Marshall, the army chief of staff, did not telephone the army commander.
6. President Harry Truman and Secretary of State George Marshall understood this when, in the wake of the Second World War, they laid out a plan to rebuild Europe.
7. George Marshall started in 1942 working on a 1945 problem. You're starting in February working on what's probably a March or April problem.
8. Sixty years ago, George Marshall came to this commencement and announced a plan to assist the nations of post-war Europe.
9. George Marshall, then Secretary of State in President Truman's administration, had publicly stated that there was no evidence of Russian interference in China's civil war.
10. Personality and core values are key to how people will respond to a warming world, writes George Marshall in Carbon Detox.
11. Eisenhower did not criticize McCarthy, even when the senator accused Eisenhower's good friend, and fellow World War Two hero, General George Marshall, of being a traitor.
12. Although Mr. Burleigh has his heroes— Winston Churchill above all, but also George Marshall—there is nothing romantic in his description of the war.
13. He would turn out to be one of my best appointments, probably the finest secretary of defense since General George Marshall.
14. It has been assumed by some people, especially those with an interest in discrediting George Marshall and the Truman administration, that this truce prevented Chiang from conquering Manchuria .
15. Lawrence Solomon may well be a great communicator, but the author of The Deniers also is a frontline voice for a disturbingly large and influential denial industry, writes George Marshall .
16. Third was the grueling experience of Secretary of State George Marshall in the Moscow Conference of Foreign Ministers, dedicated to the future of Germany, in March-April 1947.