Name Norman Barry Education University of Exeter | Role Philosopher | |
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Date of birth (1897-12-25)December 25, 1897 Date of death October 13, 1988(1988-10-13) (aged 90) Died October 21, 2008, England, United Kingdom Influenced by H. L. A. Hart, Friedrich Hayek, John Jewkes Books An introduction to moder, On classical liberalism, Business Ethics, Welfare, The new right | ||
Areas of interest Political philosophy Schools of thought Classical liberalism |
A response to norman barry s differing foundations in libertarian thought lecture
Norman Christopher Barry (December 25, 1897 – October 13, 1988) was an American football coach. He was the head coach for the National Football League's Chicago Cardinals from 1925 to 1926. With Norman Barry as head coach the Cardinals outdistanced a field of 20 teams to win their first NFL championship in 1925 by virtue of the league's best record. In two seasons, he compiled a record of 16–8–2. Prior to his coaching career, he played in the early NFL for the Cardinals, Green Bay Packers and Milwaukee Badgers.
Contents
- A response to norman barry s differing foundations in libertarian thought lecture
- Norman barry differing foundations in libertarian thought
- References
Barry was George Gipp's teammate at the University of Notre Dame and was a three-term member of the Illinois State Senate and a Cook County judge for 25 years.
Norman barry differing foundations in libertarian thought
References
Norman Barry Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA