Examples of Walter Mondale in the following topics:
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- In the 1984 presidential election, the Democrats had nominated Walter Mondale, a traditional New Deal-type liberal as their candidate.
- When Mondale was defeated in a landslide, party leaders became eager to find a new approach to win the presidency.
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- The contest was between the incumbent President Ronald Reagan, the Republican candidate, and former Vice President Walter Mondale, the Democratic candidate.
- Only three Democratic candidates won any state primaries: Mondale, Gary Hart, and Jesse Jackson.
- Mondale had the largest number of party leaders supporting him, and he had raised more money than any other candidate.
- Mondale gradually pulled away from Hart in the delegate count, and at the Democratic National Convention in San Francisco on July 16, Mondale received the overwhelming support of the un-elected super delegates from the party establishment to win the nomination.
- Mondale ran a liberal campaign, supporting a nuclear freeze and the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA).
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- Walter Kronkite is one of the iconic figures in television anchoring .
- In the early twenty-first century news programs, especially those of commercial networks, tended to become less oriented toward hard news, and often regularly included "feel-good stories" or humorous reports as the last items on their newscasts, as opposed to news programs transmitted thirty years earlier, such as the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite.
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- Journalists, like Walter Cronkite, generally use informational speeches to inform their viewers of news events.
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- Products that take advantage of current or fleeting trends (‘Industrial design is a field that was specifically invented to convince people that the washing machine, the car, or the refrigerator they had was out of fashion,' says Walter Stahel, ‘and fashion is something that can't be remanufactured.').
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- Despite its name meaning "house of construction" in German and the founder, Walter Gropius, being an architect, the Bauhaus did not have an architecture department during its first years.
- The school existed in three German cities: Weimar from 1919 to 1925, Dessau from 1925 to 1932 and Berlin from 1932 to 1933, under three different architect-directors: Walter Gropius from 1919 to 1928, Hannes Meyer from 1928 to 1930 andLudwig Mies van der Rohe from 1930 until 1933, when the school was closed by its own leadership under pressure from theNazi regime, having being painted as a centre of communist intellectualism.
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- That same year, Walter Sutton observed the separation of chromosomes into daughter cells during meiosis .
- (a) Walter Sutton and (b) Theodor Boveri are credited with developing the Chromosomal Theory of Inheritance, which states that chromosomes carry the unit of heredity (genes).
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- The term "anchorman" was used to describe Walter Cronkite's role at the Democratic and Republican National conventions.
- Walter Cronkite, the iconic anchor of CBS Evening News, on location during the Vietnam War.
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- Walter Palmer.
- Ely, Josiah Strong, Washington Gladden, and Walter Rauschenbusch.
- One of the defining theologians for the Social Gospel movement was Walter Rauschenbusch, a Baptist pastor of a congregation located in Hell's Kitchen.
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- Notable architects important to the history and development of the modernist movement include Frank Lloyd Wright, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Walter Gropius, Le Corbusier, Oscar Niemeyer and Alvar Aalto.
- Along with Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius and Frank Lloyd Wright, he is widely regarded as one of the pioneers of modern architecture.
- Frank Lloyd Wright was a major influence on European architects, including both Walter Gropius (founder of the Bauhaus) and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, as well as on the whole of organic architecture.