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70 Sentences With "needler"

How to use needler in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "needler" and check conjugation/comparative form for "needler". Mastering all the usages of "needler" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And the Needler had the exploding swarm of bees thing.
Jason described the Needler as firing a swarm of exploding bees.
One of these weapons was the Needler, which fired crystal shards at an enemy.
If past is prologue, however, he will be a force and a needler at practices.
The search area moved slightly north because currents may have pushed Stewart toward Miami, Christy Needler added.
Even for the brazenly confident Mr. Wolff, a status-mad needler with a habit of being ejected from expensive restaurants, this is a new level of notoriety.
Arcade players will be able to man four turret-mounted machine guns, and be able to use original guns like the Needler and vehicles like the classic Warthog.
The tool, Goodman says, is essentially a sterile, gold micro-needler with a reservoir on one side to hold whatever customized ingredient cocktail she mixes for the patient's needs.
Allison Janney will reportedly voice the villain described as a nefarious reality TV makeover queen named Margaux Needler, who will be bent on cleaning up the creepy and kooky family.
The town of "Assimilation" (no points for subtly) is the brainchild of manically perky HGTV-eque designer Margaux Needler (Allison Janney), who plans to sell all 50 of its houses during a live TV special.
Clinton lost the election and they chose to marry during an administration they view as more friendly to gay rights than the one about to take office — particularly given the role Ms. Jarrett had played as needler in chief.
The company was incorporated on 27 October 1902 as Fred Needler Ltd., when the directors were Fred Needler (at £250 per annum), Alfred Thorpe (£160), and Joseph Cooper Wilson (£140). There were 6,000 shares, of which 5,416 were owned by Frederick Needler, and 1 by his wife. The first minute books also date from this time.
Many organisms have been named after them. Their daughter Alfreda Berkeley Needler (1903-1973) also became a zoologist as did Alfreda's daughter Mary Needler Arai (1932 – 2017). Edith died in Nanaimo, British Columbia.
In 1943, Needler was a Canadian delegate to the London Conference on the post-war international regulation of the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries. In 1949, Needler was a Canadian delegate to the Washington Conference, which resulted in the creation of the ICNAF. From 1948 to 1950, Needler served as assistant deputy minister of Fisheries and also served as the first chairman of the ICNAF's Standing Committee on Research and Statistics (STACRES). In 1954, Needler was appointed director of the Pacific Biological Station in Nanaimo.
During his time on the west coast, Needler served as a Canadian delegate to the International North Pacific Fisheries Commission (INPFC) in the late 1950s and early 1960s. In 1963, Needler was appointed to the most senior civil service appointment in the Department of Fisheries, becoming deputy minister of Fisheries. As deputy minister (and in retirement), Needler served as the Canadian commissioner to ICNAF from 1966 to 1977, and as the vice-chairman and then chairman of the ICNAF from 1967 to 1969 and 1969 to 1971 respectively. Needler retired from the civil service in 1971 to return to St. Andrews.
Needler's changes name after acquiring Blue Bird to become Needler Bluebird. In 2002 Needler Bluebird was purchased by Ashbury Confectionery and discontinued all lines previously made by Needler's and Blue Bird. Ashbury donated the company's collection of historic Blue Bird packaging to the Black Country Living Museum.
Born in Huntsville, Ontario, Alfred Needler attended the University of Toronto beginning in 1922, where he was influenced by the pioneer Canadian oceanographer and fishery biologist Professor A.G. Huntsman, who encouraged Needler to pursue a career in fishery research. Needler completed undergraduate and graduate studies during the 1920s; his doctorate research was based at the Atlantic Biological Station in St. Andrews, New Brunswick during the summers, although much of his work took him to fishing ports of Nova Scotia, where he boarded with fishing families and understood the economic and social impact of marine resources. Upon graduation, Needler entered public service, joining the federal Department of Marine and Fisheries and was appointed to head the oyster farming research centre at Ellerslie, Prince Edward Island. In 1941, Needler succeeded Huntsman as the director of the Atlantic Biological Station in St. Andrews.
In 1986, the company was bought by Hillsdown Holdings. Raymond Needler retired in 1987. In 1996, Needler's was sold by its owner, the Norwegian company Nidar, to Blue Bird Confectionery, a subsidiary of Singapore-based Jack Chia-MPH. The company was renamed 'Needler Blue Bird Confectionery' in 2000.
In September 2009, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans announced invitations for contracts to replace several of the Coast Guard's research vessels, including Alfred Needler. In July 2016, Alfred Needler discovered the wreck of a ship while trawling the waters off Nova Scotia. The vessel had been conducting an annual survey of the Georges Bank for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. Alfred Needler began a $558,000 refit at St. John's Dockyard in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador in January 2018.
In his retirement, Needler served as the first executive director from 1971 to 1976 of the Huntsman Marine Laboratory, a joint-venture educational research facility in St. Andrews centred on the Atlantic Biological Station and funded by universities and governments. Needler served as a senior fisheries advisor to the Canadian Delegation at the third Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS-III) which resulted in coastal states extending fisheries jurisdiction to the Exclusive Economic Zone. Needler was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire, a Member of the Order of Canada, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. In 1982, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans named a fisheries research vessel after him which continues to serve the Government of Canada to this day as the CCGS Alfred Needler.
Thereafter, demand -- particularly for Glace fruit drops -- shot up. In 1958 Needlers became a publicly quoted company, although the Needler family retained a controlling interest. Percival Needler retired in 1970, age 70, and was succeeded by his son Raymond as Managing Director. He immediately bought the London-based toffee manufacturers Batgers, known for their "Jersey" brand, and for producing Sainsbury's own brands.
Alfred Walker Holinshead Needler (1906 – 4 September 1998) was a Canadian scientist, administrator, diplomat and statesman. Alfred Needler was instrumental in establishing research for estimating large migratory marine fish populations from small samples, as well as making contributions toward Canada's participation in the International Commission for the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries (ICNAF) and later chairing the new international convention that established the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO).
The business was sold to Tarmac plc in 1981, following which Needler continued his involvement in a number of private family businesses. In July 1997, when he relinquished his family's long-held control over the Hull City Football Club, the Needler family's control of the club was at an end. Once retired from all his previous businesses, in 2005 he began a debt counselling company called DebtWatchers.
Needler Hall was a hall of residence of the University of Hull, located on Northgate in Cottingham, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. Originally a large private house built in the 18th century, it was acquired, along with Thwaite Hall, by the newly established university college in 1928. It was named in honour of Frederick Needler, of Needler's (a Hull-based sweets manufacturer), who was a major benefactor of the university college.
Needler Hall, to the right part of the original house can be seen, to the left is the wing constructed . The oldest part of Needler Hall was formerly known as Northfields House and was built soon after 1780, it was extended with the construction of a south-facing wing around 1820.Bamford, p. 54. The house served as a private asylum for the insane in the early nineteenth century.
The campaign was played out amid growing unrest from the dwindling support. The abuse generated against Dolan and chairman Martin Fish led Christopher Needler – son of the former chairman – to sell his major shareholding. In July 1997, the Needler family's ownership of the club was at an end. David Lloyd, captain of the Great Britain Davis Cup tennis team and a multi-millionaire, was the new Hull City owner.
The original house was for most of its life stuccoed and painted white, however, it was hacked back to bare brick and stone in the 1990s. Needler Hall, the refectory, part of the wing built 1962–64. When created as a hall of residence, and for many years following, Needler Hall was a male-only residence, in the 1950s female visitors were only permitted between 4 and 9 pm at weekends.McGough, p. 78.
However, due to construction delays at the on-campus accommodation The Courtyard, Needler Hall temporarily housed students unable to move into The Courtyard until work was completed. By December 2016, the last students left the site and Needler Hall was closed permanently in the same month. In early March 2017, demolition work commenced. The original two bay-window fronted, former Northfields House, section of the old wing of the hall dating to the 1780s was preserved.
In 1984, under the wardenship of Scott Davidson, it was opened to both genders . As of 2012, it accommodated 167 students in single rooms with some meals provided, and included: two common rooms with TV, games room, music practice rooms, a library and senior common room. Needler Hall had extensive lawned grounds, including tennis courts. The university announced, in January 2015, the sale of the Needler Hall site for redevelopment, with plans to continue in its former function until summer 2016.
LiLiCo voices the character of Eric Cartman in the Japanese version of the American animated series South Park. She also voiced Margaux Needler in the dub of the 2019 animated adaptation of The Addams Family.
Alfred Needler was given the new prefix CCGS as a result. The ship is based at Dartmouth, Nova Scotia although she is often alongside at the Bedford Institute of Oceanography. She is one of several fishery research vessels operated by the Government of Canada to monitor migratory fish stocks in the North Atlantic. Alfred Needler is used by Canada and the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization (NAFO) to conduct fisheries surveys; as such, she retains the configuration of a commercial trawler, although her fish holds are converted to laboratory space.
Emma Brockes interview: Roger McGough The Guardian 14 November 2005 McGough lived in one of the university residences, Needler Hall, for three years from 1955 and served as hall librarian. Contemporaneously, the poet Philip Larkin became the university's librarian; newly arrived at Hull, he served as a sub-warden at Needler Hall, though he lived in private accommodation nearby.McGough, Said and Done pp. 78–81. Several years later McGough corresponded with Larkin about poetry, sending him some of his own poems as he still lacked the confidence to approach the man directly.
She went on to voice Parker Needler in the animated dark comedy film The Addams Family (2019). That same year, she appeared in a main role of the second season of the Hulu anthology horror series Castle Rock.
Bungie (2004), 13. Frank O'Connor, Bungie's former public relations head, hinted that there may be something more to the Covenant's weaponry, saying "the actual technology is not plasma as we know it, but something far more dangerous, arcane, and destructive." A few of the Covenant's weapons are not plasma- based, including the Needler, which fires razor-sharp pink needles capable of "homing in" on organic foes and exploding. A weapons expert noted parallels between the Needler and ancient Greek Amazons painting their daggers pink as a psychological weapon in an issue of gaming magazine Electronic Gaming Monthly.
University of California Press, 1978. Tabasco has been called a "socialist tyranny" by Martin C. Needler, Dean of the School of International Studies at the University of the Pacific in California.Needler, Martin C. Mexican Politics: The Containment of Conflict. 3rd ed. Greenwood Publishing Group, 1995.
On his marriage in 1651 with Marie, sister of Nathanael Culverwell, Needler resigned his fellowship at St. John's College. They had children, and the baptisms of six are recorded in the registers of St. Margaret Moses between January 1651–2 and May 1662, and the burials of two of them in 1658 and 1659 respectively. Culverwell Needler (fl. 1710), a son, (baptised 5 March 1656 at St. Margaret Moses), was appointed additional writing clerk to the House of Lords on 25 March 1679, and later on clerk-assistant to the House of Commons, a post he retained till December 1710, when he was disabled by palsy.
CCGS Alfred Needler, in St. John's Harbour, Newfoundland, Canada The research vessel was constructed for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans in 1982 by Ferguson Industries Limited at their yard in Pictou, Nova Scotia with the yard number 211. The ship entered service in August 1982. She was named after Canadian fisheries marine biologist Alfred Needler, a former Deputy Minister of Fisheries and Oceans who developed a method of accurate fish counts from small surveys. In 1995, in an effort to combine tasks, administration and making savings in both ships and funds, the Fisheries and Oceans and Canadian Coast Guard fleets were merged under the command of the Canadian Coast Guard.
In 2001 Jack Chia-MPH entered into negotiations to sell the subsidiary, and the sale of Needler Blue Bird to Ashbury Confectionery was completed in 2002. The factory in Sculcoates, Hull was subsequently closed, the site of the factory was redeveloped as a housing estate, 'Needler's Way'.
Poetry Foundation. Peter Coveney, the hall warden, looked after Larkin who was eventually diagnosed with a form of late-onset epilepsy.Larkin: Letters to Monica, p. 4 Needler Hall is directly referenced in Roger McGough's poem 'Aubade', itself referring to both Philip Larkin and Larkin's own poem of the same title.
Madison agrees to be a housewife and adjust to life on land. She also has to keep her mermaid side a secret, especially from their new neighbor, Mrs. Needler (Doris Belack). When Allen's work takes up more of his time and he breaks some promises to her, his relationship with Madison is strained.
Sweet Talk, Whittaker, Nicholas, Orion Books, London, 1998. He had become well known as a strong supporter of the Liberal cause, and as a local benefactor -- including the gift of a house in Cottingham to be used as a student hall of residence (Needler Hall) for the newly established Hull University College.
The samples collected are used to study the population and health of various species of ocean life. Alfred Needler experienced an engine room fire on 30 August 2003. There were no casualties although the ship sustained $1.3 million in damage. The cause of the fire was an oil leak in an incorrectly repaired turbocharger.
The vessel is also equipped with one Caterpillar 3306 emergency generator. This gives the vessel a maximum speed of . Alfred Needler carries of diesel fuel, has a range of at and can stay at sea for up to 30 days. The vessel has a complement of 21 composed of 7 officers and 14 crew and has 3 additional berths.
By the start of the 2017/2018 academic year, The Lawns was the last operating halls of residence site in Cottingham following the closures of Cleminson Hall in 2004, Needler Hall in 2016, and Thwaite Hall in the summer of 2017. Ferens, Downs, and Reckitt halls were closed at the end of the 2017-2018 academic year.
In 2012, Beverley hosted racing on 19 days. Its most prestigious races being two Listed races - the Hilary Needler Trophy for two-year-olds in May and Beverley Bullet Sprint over 5 furlongs in August for three-year-olds and up. The racecourse is a right-handed flat course, that is just over 1 mile 3 furlongs.
Alfred Needler is a stern commercial trawler design that is long overall with a beam of and a draught of . The ship is similar in design to , but with different machinery, power and speed. The ship has a and a . The research vessel is powered by one Caterpillar 3606 six-cylinder geared diesel engine driving one controllable pitch propeller creating .
He gave up two home runs to Babe Ruth in one game in New York on August 5, 1923. Ray Kolp was a stylish dresser with an assertive personality. On the field, Ray Kolp was cocky and vociferous, often taunting and scoffing at opposing players and advising umpires from both the pitching mound and dugout. He was an adept needler.
Needler published Expository Notes with Practical Observations towards the opening of the five first Chapters of Genesis, London, 1655, and three sermons which are reprinted in editions of Morning Exercises (cf. those of 1660, 1661, 1675, 1676, 1677, and 1844). He also wrote some verses on the death of Jeremiah Whitaker, published in Simon Ashe's funeral sermon on Whitaker, Living Loves between Christ and Dying Christians, London, 1654.
In the 2019 animated version of the same title, Wednesday retains her emotionless nature and sadistic tendencies, trying to bury Pugsley and tormenting a bully at school. However, she's also bored with her macabre and sheltered life, wanting to see the world despite Morticia's objections. This leads to her befriending Parker Needler and the two taking on several of each other's traits, with Wednesday at one point wearing colorful clothes.
Henry Needler (1685–1760) was a British musician and prolific music transcriber. He joined the Academy of Ancient Music in 1728 (shortly after its founding), and transcribed a number of works of what was then termed "ancient" music from the 16th and 17th centuries that was no longer contemporary. Twenty-six volumes of his manuscripts are in the British Library, among which are six volumes of works by Palestrina.
Christopher Needler is a businessman, entrepreneur and the former Chairman of Hull City. He was born on 4 September 1944, near Kingston upon Hull, England and attended Repton School in Derbyshire. He spent five years qualifying as a Chartered Accountant (CPA) and three additional years as a mature student at Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1971, he joined his father in the family business, Hoveringham Group Ltd., and took over as Chairman in 1975, following his father’s premature death.
Needler's owes its existence to Frederick Needler, who was born at Arnold, Skirlaugh, near Kingston upon Hull, England, on 12 December 1864. The family name appears to have been mis-spelt, as Frederick was the son of George Needley, a paint-factory employee, who died from typhoid in September 1872, age 37. Frederick attended St John's School, Newland, in Hull. His first job in about 1878, at age fourteen, was in a tea and coffee warehouse in High Street.
On 8 August he was appointed to the rectory of St. Margaret Moses, Friday Street, London. It is not known whether he was ordained into episcopal orders or not. He was one of the ministers in London who in January 1648–9 signed the Serious and Faithful Representation to General Thomas Fairfax, petitioning for the life of King Charles I and the maintenance of parliament. In August 1662 Needler was ejected from his rectory by the Act of Uniformity.
Davidson began his academic career as a Lecturer in Law at the University of Hull in 1979. From 1982-1989 he served concurrently as Warden of Needler Hall (University of Hull). In 1998, Davidson was appointed Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, becoming Associate Professor in 1995. From 2001-2003 Davidson held the posts of Professor of Law, Head of the Law School and Warden of Morgan Hall concurrently at the University of Hull.
For the last of these she received nominations at the Screen Actors Guild Award, and Critics' Choice Movie Award Best Acting Ensemble. Janney also voiced for the role of Margaux Needler in the animated version of The Addams Family.'Addams Family' Movie Scares Up Charlize Theron, Bette Midler, Allison Janney & More For Voice Cast Janney also appeared in Bad Education. Janney is currently in production with two films; Tate Taylor's comedy-drama Breaking News in Yuba County and J. J. Abrams's thriller Lou.
There are many artworks on the property, some of which are freestanding, but most are associated with gravesites. The National Cemetery contains a few memorials in addition to the individually marked graves. The Major Robert Anderson Women's Relief Corps Number 44, Auxiliary to Post Number 360, Grand Army of the Republic, Department of Indiana, erected a stone monument that was dedicated on May 30, 1889. The monument, which was created by Indianapolis stonecutter James F. Needler, is located near the south end of the National Cemetery.
They had a horse and cart for making deliveries. There were many firms of this type in Hull at the time, usually operating within a geographical range determined by the stamina of their horses. Frederick Needler soon moved into wholesaling, occupying various premises to the north of Paragon Station until he bought 9 and 11 Spring Street in 1898, which is when company records started to be produced. In 1899-1900 there was a turnover of about £15,000 and profit of £781 (about 5%).
She was from the sixth crop of foals sired by Dutch Art, a British stallion who won the Prix Morny and the Middle Park Stakes in 2006. As a breeding stallion his other progeny have included Slade Power, Garswood (Prix Maurice de Gheest), Caspar Netscher (Nearctic Stakes), Dutch Connection (Jersey Stakes), Baccarat (Wokingham Handicap) and Producer (Topkapi Trophy). Mabs Cross's dam Miss Meggy won three races for Armstrong including the Listed Hilary Needler Trophy. She was a distant, female-line descendant of the Epsom Oaks winner Mrs Butterwick.
The son of Thomas Needler, of Laleham, Middlesex, he was born on 29 November 1620. He was admitted to Merchant Taylors' School on 11 September 1634, and was elected to St John's College, Oxford, on 11 June 1642, matriculating on 1 July. He was elected fellow of his college in 1645, but appears to have been non-resident, as his submission is not registered. Joining the presbyterian party, he was summoned to assist the parliamentary visitors of the university in 1648, and was by them created B.C.L. on 14 April of the same year.
The refit was scheduled to be completed in six weeks on 14 February, but additional steel work pushed the completion date to 1 April. was scheduled to replace Alfred Needler on the Department of Fisheries and Oceans' fisheries survey off the coast of southern Nova Scotia in late March. During the annual summer fisheries survey on the Scotian Shelf in 2018, the ship had several mission critical equipment failures, forcing the cancellation of the survey. This marked the first time in 48 years that the survey was not completed.
Associated researchers study the marine climate and environment, marine and diadromous fish, shellfish, mammals and plants. The institute operates four research vessels, CCGS Matthew acquired in 1990 along with the famous CCGS Hudson (1964), CCGS Navicula (1968) and CCGS Alfred Needler (1982).Web site, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, www.bio.gc.ca/Welcome-e.html At the Maurice Lamontagne Institute established in 1987 near Mont-Joli, Quebec, on the St. Lawrence Estuary, more than 400 staff undertake research relating to the protection of the marine environment and the conservation of aquatic plants and animals.
The flexibility in enforcement meant that even though the constitution prohibited any worship outside of a church building, which made Pope John Paul II's outdoor masses and other religious celebrations during his 1980 and 1990 visits illegal acts under the law,Needler, Martin C., Mexican politics: the containment of conflict, p. 50. Greenwood Publishing 1995Coerver, Don M., Suzanne B. Pasztor and Robert Buffington, Mexico: an encyclopedia of contemporary culture and history, p. 432, ABC-CLIO the government turned a blind eye. The anticlerical articles remained in the Constitution until the reforms of 1992.
The 18 stores that were closed and liquidated included four Marsh stores in Indianapolis; two Marsh stores each in Kokomo and Muncie; single Marsh stores in Beech Grove, Carmel, Noblesville, Anderson, Connersville, Lafayette, Logansport, and West Lafayette. Also included in the list of 18 closed stores were the lone O'Malia's in Carmel and the only unpurchased Ohio location in Hamilton, Ohio. On June 15, Marsh stopped new food shipments to and started liquidation sales at the 18 stores scheduled to be closed and the 11 stores that were purchased by Topvalco. In late August 2017, Michael Needler Jr., CEO of Fresh Encounter, Inc.
Boyle was the son of Richard Boyle, Archbishop of Tuam, and his wife Martha, daughter of Rice Wight of Brabouef Manor at Artington in Surrey and his wife Elizabeth Needler. On 11 September 1649 Boyle was captured during the storming of Drogheda at the end of the siege. Five days later he was having dinner with Lady More (sister to the John Gordon, Earl of Sutherland) when an English Parliamentary soldier entered the room and whispered something to him. Boyle stood up to follow the soldier, his hostess inquired where he was going, he replied "Madam, to die".
Devon Ditty made her racecourse debut in a maiden race over five furlongs at Sandown Park Racecourse in April, and finished fifth, sixteen lengths behind the winner Carrie Red. She then won a minor race over the same distance at Pontefract at odds of 9/2 and then defeated Songorella by one and a half lengths in the Hilary Needler Trophy at Beverley Racecourse in May. In June she was stepped up in class for the Queen Mary Stakes at Royal Ascot in which she was ridden for the first time by Greville Starkey, who became her regular jockey. She finished strongly and took third place behind Greenland Park and Kilijaro.
Although Stone had been a mainstream journalist in the 1930s, appearing on shows like Meet the Press (then a radio show), in 1950 he found himself blacklisted and unable to get work, possibly because Stone publicly admitted to his "fellow traveler" tendencies.According to Guttenplan, "They liked him on Meet the Press, the original producer of Meet the Press told me, because he was a good needler. He was very good at getting under the skin of sort of pompous guests." One of the people he needled was Dr. Morris Fishbein, the editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, who accused those supporting national health insurance of being Communists.
All depends on the air-scouts, and we must hold our positions > until the battle-planes arrive. The variant "ray projector" was used by John W. Campbell in The Black Star Passes in 1930. Related terms "disintegrator ray" dates to 1898 in Garrett P. Serviss' Edison's Conquest of Mars; "blaster" dates to 1925 in Nictzin Dyalhis' story "When the Green Star Waned;" and "needle ray" and "needler" date to 1934 in E.E. Smith's The Skylark of Valeron.Winchell Chung, "Introduction to Sidearms", Project Rho: Atomic Rockets (accessed 3 March 2016) Ray guns were so common on magazine covers during the Golden Age of Science Fiction that Campbell's Astounding was unusual for not depicting them.
Although Needle first coined the term fan sourcing, there are now at least five main companies offering solutions that offer a fan sourcing model for businesses: Needle, BzzAgent, Zuberance, BoldChat, LivePerson, and WildFire by Google. When potential customers browse on a company's e-commerce website, they have the opportunity to connect with a representative—what Needle calls a Needler—who answers product questions and gives them recommendations. "Essentially, [fan sourcing] puts your existing customer base—those who've used and know your product or service firsthand and are avid fans—to work as active brand advocates." A case study of Skullcandy released in 2011 revealed an increase of 15% in average order value, 186% in return on investment, and 20% in overall conversion rate within one year of using fan sourcing.
Ehler, Sidney Z. Church and State Through the Centuries p. 579-580, (1967 Biblo & Tannen Publishers) Needler, Martin C. Mexican Politics: The Containment of Conflict p. 50, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1995 One political scientist stated that the gist of the 1917 constitution was to "effectively outlaw the Roman Catholic Church and other religious denominations";Toft, Monica Duffy, Daniel Philpott and Timothy Samuel Shah, God's Century: Resurgent Religion and Global Politics, p. 171, W.W. Norton & Co. 2011 it also emboldened Communist labor unions, paving the way for anti-religious governments.Ehler, Sidney Z. Church and State Through the Centuries p. 580, (1967 Biblo & Tannen Publishers) Recent President Vicente Fox stated: "After 1917, Mexico was led by anti-Catholic Freemasons who tried to evoke the anticlerical spirit of popular, indigenous President Benito Juarez of the 1880s. But the military dictators of the 1920s were a lot more savage than Juarez."Fox, Vicente and Rob Allyn Revolution of Hope p.
Maier, Hans and Jodi Bruhn Totalitarianism and Political Religions, pp. 109 2004 Routledge The Constitution of 1917 proscribed the Catholic clergy from working as teachers and as instructors in public and private schools; established State control over the internal matters of the Mexican Catholic Church; nationalized all Church property; proscribed religious orders; forbade the presence in Mexico of foreign-born priests; granted each state of the Mexican republic the power to limit the number of, and to eliminate, priests in its territory; disenfranchised priests of the civil rights to vote, and to hold elected office; banned Catholic organizations that advocated public policy; forbade religious publications from editorial commentary about public policy; proscribed the clergy from wearing clerical garb in public; and voided the right to trial of any Mexican citizen who violated anti-clerical laws.Ehler, Sidney Z. Church and State Through the Centuries p. 579-580, (1967 Biblo & Tannen Publishers) Needler, Martin C. Mexican Politics: The Containment of Conflict p. 50, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1995 During the Mexican Revolution (1910–20), the national rancour provoked by the history of the Catholic Church's mistreatment of Mexicans was aggravated by the collaboration of the Mexican High Clergy with the pro–U.

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