Compiling glossy CSR reports and making speeches to the socially responsible converted is de rigueur.
All these formidable women are now criss-crossing the country making speeches and raising money.
Mr Titford said that he had started making speeches to audiences of 20 people five years ago.
In August of 1987 I was visiting the President of Mexico and making speeches about the importance of Latin America.
More than two years before the primaries begin, he is already making speeches in three or four states a week.
He journeys into America making speeches, he goes on TV but only for interviews the White House is confident will be soft.
Heller enjoyed being a public figure, making speeches and going to parties.
ECONOMIST: Joseph Heller and his fiction: The first cut is the deepest | The
Yet since Mr Blair is given to making speeches ruminating on the marvels of being British, he cannot ignore the subject of empire entirely.
While his counterpart at the NBC broadcast network, Benjamin Silverman, loves media attention, Gaspin is shy, unassuming and uneasy making speeches or otherwise calling attention to himself.
Reagan was able to disarm members of Congress through his one-on-one meetings and by making speeches to the public as legislative debates over a bill were taking place.
But since January 2003 Mr Badnarik has been criss-crossing the country, making speeches and teaching a freelance class on the United States constitution to anyone who will listen.
One man who didn't want to be named said Mr Obama should be in the White House doing his job and sorting out the mess, rather than making speeches and touring shipyards here.
At the count in Oldham West and Royton, where BNP leader Nick Griffen came third to Labour and the Tories, candidates were banned from making speeches for fear of sparking racial hatred.
Some influential Republicans, judging that outright hostility to public spending is failing to win support, have been making speeches of a New Democrat kind, saying that government is all right after all, as long as it is competent.
But Mr Obama is not, of course, running in 2010, although he has recently stepped up his efforts to rally the students, making speeches at a series of universities and even taking to the pages of Rolling Stone to scold apathetic liberals.
As Mr Hazare went on hunger strike in April 2011 to demand stringent anti-corruption laws, in particular a law to create an ombudsman to deal with allegations of corruption, Mr Kejriwal was by his side, making speeches, briefing reporters and formulating strategy.
Palm and Motorola chief executives will be attending CES, but they won't be making public speeches.
The Shenzhen Special Zone Daily says she is an only child with a penchant for making patriotic speeches.
But I have always tried to avoid making comfortable speeches to you.
The Democrats hope Mr Clinton will come to their aid again, not by making public speeches (which would be controversial) but by recording a telephone message for black households where he remains extremely popular.
Germany and France usually try to present a common position but that looks less easy this time, with Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, and Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, making separate speeches this week.
Professor GERALD STEINBERG (Bar Ilan University): There's a lot of criticism of Peretz as defense minister not only with no military capability but making grandiose speeches about capabilities about mission or war aims that just couldn't be met.
Republicans and Democrats both start making a lot of speeches.
He will be making a number of keynote speeches hosted by the Northern Ireland Chamber of Commerce and the University of Ulster.
New chair Charles Walker has a reputation as a keen parliamentary moderniser, and this inquiry may be the vehicle for a process that at least ends the weekly farce of Commons hired guns "talking out" bills by making interminable and unimaginably boring speeches - forcing ministers to kill unwelcome bills in the light of day, rather than by stealth.
Up-to-date info is essential during an election that sees candidates giving speeches, and potentially making mistakes, every hour of every day.
In 1966, former Vice President Richard Nixon seized the national spotlight, campaigning for Republicans across the nation, and making it clear, through his fundraising and speeches that he was a formidable candidate who could take on Lyndon Johnson, or any other Democrat.
"I was hoping there would be one more thing, " Laiho said, referring to Jobs's habit of making a dramatic, surprise announcement at the end of his keynote speeches.
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