Many people around the world who were once labelled as terrorists are now regarded as international leaders or even statesmen. |
|
The statesmen who run our fair country can't afford to worry about minor details like that. |
|
Unless U.S. statesmen can wangle the rights to their use, the U.S. will be left at the post. |
|
At least in recent years, statesmen have been reluctant to define national interests with anything other than Delphic ambiguity. |
|
Many statesmen were graduates of these schools and were regarded as Germanophiles. |
|
Nostalgia is not a forbidden fruit but astute statesmen never allow prudence to succumb to it. |
|
What was unexpected, amazingly, gloriously unexpected was the way the game's elder statesmen had one final fling. |
|
Portraits of famous Greek and Roman poets, orators, and statesmen filled libraries and peristyles. |
|
His is a startling claim that is inconsistent with the repeated declarations of U.S. statesmen. |
|
Minor world leaders get to be statesmen for a day, and tell their parliaments and electors that they are taking part in a world summit. |
|
He called for more effort on the part of all statesmen, politicians and church leaders to resolve the schism in the Orthodox church. |
|
The two statesmen signed an agreement to establish a bi-national commission between South Africa and Brazil. |
|
Responsible statesmen and stateswomen are not merely free, as sovereign rulers, to act in an expedient way. |
|
He frequently dined out and, over the years, entertained a great variety of guests, from fellow impressionist artists to statesmen. |
|
He would like to see state and federal elected officials become statesmen not politicians. |
|
For these are times when we expect our politicians to metamorphose into statesmen. |
|
From now on, our leaders, our politicians, our statesmen will be fair game too. |
|
It's the outlaws and rebels that history often prefers to remember rather than the statesmen and leaders. |
|
Not only politicians and statesmen have the opportunity to practice creative speech. |
|
Take one unpopular president, a brace of struggling statesmen and a couple of global summits. |
|
|
We assume that statesmen think and act in terms of interest defined as power, and the evidence of history bears that assumption out. |
|
Wars often come about as a result of aggressive, reckless, thoughtless, and deliberate acts by statesmen. |
|
In the exclusive backstage area, superstars and statesmen were falling over each other. |
|
Lord Somerset is one of the most important and influential statesmen to have lived in the nineteenth century. |
|
Peasants huddle terrified in hovels while ashen-faced statesmen race hither and thither before the storm clouds of history. |
|
It would be wrong, however, to whitewash him as the last of the old-school, voluntarily resigning statesmen. |
|
Thus perished one of the greatest statesmen of his age and of Dutch history. |
|
Northcliffe travelled widely and consorted freely with statesmen and politicians not to mention royalty. |
|
The grand effigies that typify civic sculpture invariably commemorate great statesmen, founding fathers or political icons. |
|
Far from being armchair utopians, jurisdictionalist and regalist writers collaborated with statesmen to bring about reform. |
|
Both are politically conservative Republican elder statesmen. |
|
He flatters, massages their egos, tells them that they are statesmen, hints at his own ability to further their careers, provided the gesture is reciprocated. |
|
European statesmen seized the opportunity to exploit these nationalist movements, while bringing them under a tight rein, in order to further the purposes of state power. |
|
The distinguished fellowship, with its scientists and statesmen, sets a high bar. |
|
Once revealed, these statesmen shockingly defended the move as part of their effort to streamline government. |
|
The problem is that self-appointed statesmen cannot create a nation. |
|
Something made me turn back, I had to talk to the man who makes politicians, generals, statesmen, policy makers, backroom boys, show biz people squirm, simper, and sob. |
|
There was a time when we admired genius, a time when we sang the praises of inventors, explorers, scientists, artists, writers and yes, even statesmen. |
|
He may be surrounded by ruthless war criminals and scandalously untruthful statesmen, but it's hard to believe that he wants other human beings to suffer. |
|
He was the subject of hagiographies in many languages, and was often bracketed along with Bismarck, Gladstone and Salisbury in the pantheon of world statesmen. |
|
|
He states clearly that his work is not aimed at mathematicians, rather at statesmen who need to know about the customs of the people and the natural resources of the land. |
|
To test how accountable our international statesmen are in this electronic age, the Standard looked up their email addresses and home pages on the internet. |
|
History is replete with instances of misguided leaders believing they were statesmen and entering into parleys and talks with intractable and cunning enemies. |
|
It used to be statesmen and academics who delivered commencement speeches. |
|
We recognize that wise statesmen resist the temptation to use power promiscuously, and we stress the virtues of prudence, and self-restraint, in foreign policy. |
|
The locations for gravesites of many statesmen are well-known, whether it be President Kennedy at Arlington Cemetery or Grant's Tomb in New York City. |
|
Owen attempted to gain support for his socialist vision among American thinkers, reformers, intellectuals, and public statesmen. |
|
Our constitution had begun to exist in times when statesmen were not much accustomed to frame exact definitions. |
|
A variety of methods were proposed by statesmen such as Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and Daniel Webster. |
|
Ancient Roman historians wrote pragmatic histories in order to benefit future statesmen. |
|
Napoleon Bonaparte was one of the world's most famous soldiers and statesmen, leading France to great victories over numerous European enemies. |
|
English statesmen William Cecil and the Earl of Leicester had worked to obtain Darnley's licence to travel to Scotland from his home in England. |
|
The effectiveness of this professional financial body stands behind the success of many great Ottoman statesmen. |
|
This, in turn, means that our statesmen, our businessmen, our everyman must take on a science fictional way of thinking. |
|
Wise words from one of advertising's elder statesmen, who has seen the industry evolve from TV, radio, and print to today's splinternet. |
|
As a Firm, we are investors, not statesmen or policy makers. |
|
The strenuous conflicts and alternate victories of two rival confederacies of statesmen. |
|
His judgement was trusted by all who knew him, and in later years statesmen went to him for counsel and advice. |
|
This diplomatic victory over Russia established Disraeli as one of Europe's leading statesmen. |
|
One of the largest assemblages of statesmen in the world was gathered for the service. |
|
|
William would not invade England without assurances of English support, and so in April, he asked for a formal invitation to be issued by a group of leading English statesmen. |
|
Upon his death aged ninety in 1965, Elizabeth II granted him the honour of a state funeral, which saw one of the largest assemblies of world statesmen in history. |
|
These parties were led by such prominent statesmen as Lord Melbourne, Sir Robert Peel, Lord Derby, Lord Palmerston, Gladstone, Disraeli, and Lord Salisbury. |
|
Eton has educated 19 British prime ministers and generations of the aristocracy and has been referred to as the chief nurse of England's statesmen. |
|
Owen met with many of the rulers and leading statesmen of Europe. |
|
Social reformers, statesmen, and royals, including the future Tsar Nicholas I of Russia, visited New Lanark to study its operations and educational methods. |
|
I waited for him to take it up, to unravel once again his tale of plotting statesmen and deluded public, his great joke, his private toe hold on the world. |
|
Following the American Revolution, statesmen from Delaware were among the leading proponents of a strong central United States with equal representation for each state. |
|
Mercantilism was an economic doctrine that flourished from the 16th to 18th century in a prolific pamphlet literature, whether of merchants or statesmen. |
|
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a great soul has simply nothing to do. |
|
American statesmen of Scottish descent in the early Republic included Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of War Henry Knox, and President James Monroe. |
|
All the same, maintaining an adequate gradation of mollifiers helped aristocratic statesmen defend the integrity of the existing status hierarchy. |
|
These parties were led by such prominent statesmen as Lord Melbourne, Sir Robert Peel, Lord Derby, Lord Palmerston, Benjamin Disraeli, William Gladstone, and Lord Salisbury. |
|
But when he entered the halls of Congress and tried the same spectacularisms upon some of the thoughtful statesmen of the time he met with ridicule. |
|