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These apprehensions are enunciated with characteristic eloquence in today's Wall Street Journal in an opinion piece by editorial board member and columnist George Melloan.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Center For Security Policy
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He may well have, but the eloquence was more in his tone, his body language, the tilt of his head.
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But top places in the bar and appeal-court examinations showed the intellectual muscle behind the eloquence, and helped to bring in a stream of corporate work.
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And there's the rub, because unless his eloquence has changed minds in Paris, Moscow and Beijing, the Security Council is unlikely to give its approval.
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Rabbi Mirvis, the son and grandson of rabbis, has been described by supporters as a good manager and great pastor, but critics claim he might struggle to match Lord Sacks's eloquence or intellectual performance in public life, our correspondent adds.
BBC: Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis announced as next UK chief rabbi
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And, look, I think we will be dependent on the eloquence and passion of President Sarkozy and others in rallying the world for what will move to the U.N.
WHITEHOUSE: Press Briefing
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But in the 1980s, he became the darling of white business, which found his cosmopolitan air and eloquence reassuringly familiar.
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Reading it afterward, though, I was struck by the intelligence, eloquence and subtlety of the first-person narrative, qualities that the screen version, in its mania for hurtling action, manages to bland out.
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We cannot duplicate King's eloquence, but his tirelessness, so visible that first day of the Selma march, can in some measure be ours as we struggle to maintain 21st century voter rights.
CNN: 48 years after MLK march, voting rights still vulnerable