Crossword clues for agnew
agnew
- Nixon VP
- Nixon vice president
- Late-'60s Maryland governor
- He resigned October 10, 1973
- He resigned in October 1973
- He resigned in 1973
- He ran with Nixon
- Former Vice President Spiro
- Disgraced VP
- '70s vice president
- '60s-'70s veep
- '60s veep
- Winner over Shriver
- Whom Ford succeeded in '73
- VP who resigned in 1973
- VP who resigned
- Vice President who wrote the book "Go Quietly ... or Else"
- Vice president who said "nattering nabobs of negativism"
- Vice President succeeded by Ford
- Veep who resigned in disgrace
- Veep who resigned in 1973
- Veep who resigned during Nixon's second term
- Veep who resigned
- Successor to H. H. H
- Spiro who wrote, "If you've seen one city slum, you've seen them all"
- Spiro who served with Nixon
- Sometime name in golf
- Resigner of October 10, 1973
- Resignee of 1973
- Politico who called the press "nattering nabobs of negativism"
- Nixon's vice president Spiro
- Nixon's temporary Veep
- Nixon's first No. 2
- Humphrey's replacement
- His resignation triggered the first use of the 25th Amendment
- He served with Nixon
- He resigned on October 10, 1973
- He resigned Oct. 10, 1973
- He complained of "nattering nabobs of negativism"
- Former V. P
- Former US vice president Spiro T. ___
- Ford replaced him as VP
- Figure in a 1973 scandal
- Disgraced veep Spiro
- Capitol name
- A Vice President under Nixon
- A Nixon V.P
- 39th VP
- 39th V.P
- 1973 resigner
- 1973 political resignee
- 1972 winner
- 1970s subject of a Maddow podcast series
- 10/10/1973 resignee
- "Nixon" player
- "Nattering nabobs" veep
- "Hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of history" speaker
- '70s veep
- Vice president before Ford
- Only Veep from Maryland
- 39th Veep
- Discredited Veep
- Resigner of 10/10/73
- "Nixon" character
- Veep before Ford
- 1973 resigner Spiro
- Ford predecessor
- 1973 resignee
- Running mate of '68
- 10/10/73 resignee
- Ford replaced him in 1973
- Ford's predecessor in 1973
- Vice President Spiro
- Ford succeeded him
- Nixon's 1968 running mate
- Predecessor of Ford
- For whom Safire wrote the words "nattering nabobs of negativism"
- Only U.S. vice president born in Maryland
- First Greek-American vice president
- Vice president under Nixon
- He called his critics "pusillanimous pussyfooters"
- Nixon's number two
- 39th vice president
- Nixon's veep Spiro
- Former Veep Spiro
- V.P. before Ford
- A Nixon V.P.
- Objector to "nattering nabobs"
- Nixon running mate
- Vice President after Humphrey
- Nixon Veep
- Resigned Vice President
- D.C. dropout: 1973
- One of Nixon's V.P.s
- Humphrey's successor as vice president
- V.P. who resigned
- 39th V.P.
- One of Nixon's vices?
- Humphrey successor
- Washington name
- Vice president who resigned in 1973
- Nixon's first veep
- Veep after Humphrey
- Nixon's running mate
- Nixon's first vice president, Spiro ___
- Vice president who resigned
- 1970s veep
- VP under Nixon
- Vice President who resigned in disgrace
- Veep under Nixon
- Veep replaced by Ford
- Veep elected in 1968
- U.S. veep, once
- Resigner of '73
- Resignee of '73
Wiktionary
n. (surname)
Wikipedia
Agnew may refer to:
Agnew is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Alex Agnew (born 1973), Belgian stand-up comedian
- Billy Agnew (1898-?), Scottish football player
- Chloë Agnew (born 1989), Irish singer
- Crispin Agnew of Lochnaw (born 1944), 11th baronet QC
- David Agnew, BBC television drama pen name
- David Hayes Agnew (1818–1892), American surgeon
- Frank Agnew (born 1964), American punk rock musician
- Fraser Agnew, Northern Irish politician
- Gary Agnew (born 1960), Canadian hockey coach
- George B. Agnew (1868–1941), New York politician
- Harold Agnew (1921–2013) American physicist
- Jack Agnew (1922–2010), inspiration for the novel and film The Dirty Dozen
- James Agnew (1815–1901), Australian politician
- James Agnew (British Army officer) (died 1777), killed in the American Revolution
- Jim Agnew (born 1966), American hockey player
- John Agnew (Prince Edward Island politician) (1854-?)
- John A. Agnew (born 1949), British-American political geographer
- John Hume Agnew (1863–1908), Canadian politician
- Jonathan Agnew (born 1960), English cricket broadcaster and former professional cricketer
- Judy Agnew, (1921–2012), Second lady of the United States
- Lee Agnew (born 1971), Scottish drummer and percussionist
- Paddy Agnew (Irish republican) (born 1955)
- Paddy Agnew (Stormont MP) (1878 – fl. 1958), early 20th-century Irish politician
- Paul Agnew (born 1964), Scottish operatic tenor
- Pete Agnew (born 1947), bassist for the rock band Nazareth
- Peter Garnett Agnew (1900–1990), British Royal Naval officer and politician
- Ralph Palmer Agnew American mathematician
- Ray Agnew (born 1967), American football player
- Ray Agnew III (born 1991), American football player
- Rikk Agnew (born 1958), American guitarist
- Robert Agnew (1899–1983), American movie actor
- Roy Agnew (1891–1944), Australian composer and pianist
- Sam Agnew, nicknamed "Slam", professional baseball player
- Spiro Agnew (1918–1996), 39th Vice President of the United States
- Steve Agnew (born 1965), British soccer player and coach
- Steven Agnew (born 1979), Green Party politician in Northern Ireland
- Stuart Agnew (born 1949), UKIP MEP for the East of England
- Todd Agnew (born 1971), Christian musician and songwriter
- Troy Agnew (1890-?), American baseball player and manager
- Vince Agnew (born 1987), American football player
- William Agnew (footballer) (1879–1936), Scottish football player
Usage examples of "agnew".
With Spiro Agnew and his guests looking out from the elegant museum on the eve of his inauguration as Vice-President of the U.
Ford had been selected, by Nixon, to replace Spiro Agnew, convicted several months earlier of tax fraud and extortion.
And so will I, unless Jaworski can nail the bastard on enough felony counts to strip him not only of his right to vote, like Agnew, but also his key to the back door of the Federal Treasury -- which is not very likely now that Ford has done everything but announce the date for when he will grant the pardon.
Vice-President, Spiro Agnew, was indicted in Maryland for receiving bribes from Maryland contractors in return for political favors, and resigned from the vice-presidency in October 1973.
In the November 1972 presidential election, Nixon and Agnew had won 60 percent of the popular vote and carried every state except Massachusetts, defeating an antiwar candidate, Senator George McGovern.
First it was Agnew with the tax evasion and then it was Dukakis with the tank.
I may not know what I think about Nixon or Agnew or Watergate, but at last I know what I think about the American Indian.
One day at about this time Lady Agnew, who lived opposite in Northmoor Road, told him that she was nervous about a large poplar tree in the road.
Even the most conservative betting in Washington, these days, has Nixon either resigning or being impeached by the autumn of '74 -- if not for reasons directly connected to the "Watergate scandal," then because of his inability to explain how he paid for his beach-mansion at San Clemente, or why Vice President Agnew -- along with most of Nixon's original White House command staff -- is under indictment for felonies ranging from Extortion and Perjury to Burglary and Obstruction of Justice.
The Space Task Group was a committee, headed by Vice President Agnew, which Nixon had set up to formulate post-Apollo goals for the space program.