decent conduct

  • 51Civic virtue — Civility redirects here. For the Wikipedia policy on civility, see Wikipedia:Civility. Jacques Louis David s 1784 painting The Oath of the Horatii, illustrating a dramatic moment from Livy s history of Rome, embodies eighteenth century ideas… …

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  • 52The Law of Peoples — is American Philosopher John Rawls s work on international relations. First published in 1993 as a short article (1993: Critical Inquiry , no.20), in 1999 it was expanded and joined with another essay The Idea of Public Reason Revisited (1997:… …

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  • 53Millard Fuller — Born January 3, 1935(1935 01 03) Lanett, Alabama, USA Died February 3, 2009(2009 02 03) (aged 74) near Americus, Georgia Nationality American …

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  • 54Stokely Carmichael: Black Power (1966) — ▪ Primary Source       What has been called the Civil Rights Revolution took many forms in the twenty two years between the end of World War II and 1967. At first a movement to obtain such reforms as desegregation of the armed forces, it quickly… …

    Universalium

  • 55proper — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. correct, fastidious; suitable, becoming; decorous, demure, chaste, delicate; individual, special, limited, own, appropriate, pertinent, apropos, meet; seemly, befitting; equitable, fair, right, just …

    English dictionary for students

  • 56decency — /ˈdisənsi/ (say deesuhnsee) noun (plural decencies) 1. the state or quality of being decent. 2. conformity to the recognised standards of propriety, good taste, modesty, etc. 3. something decent or proper. 4. (plural) the requirements or… …

  • 57Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia — (Spanish) Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia [1] Participant in Colombian Armed Conflict   …

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  • 58Etiquette — For other uses, see Etiquette (disambiguation). For Wikipedia s guidelines on etiquette, see Wikipedia:Etiquette. In High Change in Bond Street, ou la Politesse du Grande Monde (1796), James Gillray caricatured the lack of etiquette in a group of …

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  • 59Philip Yorke, 1st Earl of Hardwicke — PC (December 1, 1690 – March 6, 1764), English Lord Chancellor, son of Philip Yorke, a barrister, was born at Dover.BackgroundThrough his mother, Elizabeth, daughter and co heiress of Richard Gibbon of Rolvenden, Kent, he was connected with the… …

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  • 60Benedict Arnold — For other people named Benedict Arnold, see Benedict Arnold (disambiguation). Benedict Arnold V …

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