翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Tip clearance
・ Tip drill
・ Tip drill (basketball)
・ Tip en Tap
・ Tip Gan Lou Haau Yam
・ Tip growth
・ Tip Htila
・ Tip It On Back
・ Tip jar
・ Tip jar gaming
・ Tip jet
・ Tip Lamberson
・ Tip link
・ Tip Logan
・ Tip Marugg
Tip O'Neill
・ Tip O'Neill (American football)
・ Tip O'Neill (baseball)
・ Tip O'Neill (disambiguation)
・ Tip O'Neill Award
・ Tip of My Tongue
・ Tip of My Tongue (disambiguation)
・ Tip of the day
・ Tip of the iceberg
・ Tip of the Iceberg (EP)
・ Tip of the red-giant branch
・ Tip of The Thumb Heritage Water Trail
・ Tip of the tongue
・ Tip Off
・ Tip on a Dead Jockey


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Tip O'Neill : ウィキペディア英語版
Tip O'Neill

Thomas Phillip "Tip" O'Neill, Jr. (December 9, 1912 – January 5, 1994) was an American politician and Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. O'Neill was an outspoken liberal Democrat and influential member of the House of Representatives, serving for 34 years representing the northern portion of Boston, Massachusetts. He served as Speaker of the House from 1977 until his retirement in 1987, making him the only Speaker to serve for five complete consecutive Congresses, and the second longest-serving Speaker in U.S. history after Sam Rayburn.
==Early life and education==
O'Neill was the third of three children born to Thomas Phillip O'Neill, Sr., and Rose Ann (née Tolan) O'Neill in the Irish middle-class area of North Cambridge, Massachusetts, known at the time as "Old Dublin." His mother died when he was nine months old, and he was raised largely by a French-Canadian housekeeper until his father remarried when he was eight. O'Neill Sr. started out as a bricklayer, but later won a seat on the Cambridge City Council and was appointed Superintendent of Sewers. During his childhood, O'Neill received the nickname "Tip" after the Canadian baseball player James "Tip" O'Neill.〔Hodgson, G. (1994, January 7). Obituary: Thomas P. O'Neill. ''The Independent (London)'', pp. 14.〕 He was educated in Roman Catholic schools, graduating in 1931 from the now defunct St. John High School in Cambridge, where he was captain of the basketball team; he was a lifelong parishioner at the school's affiliated parish church St. John the Evangelist Church. From there he went to Boston College, from which he graduated in 1936. He lived on Orchard Street in Cambridge and had a vacation home near Banks Street Beach in Harwich, MA.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Biographical Note | Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Papergs | John J. Burns Library, Boston College )

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