Word: sforza
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...even Sforza yields at last to Balfour and concludes with praise for his "double personality," calling its results the patriotic and therefore praiseworthy acts of a man who had "only one rule and one formula: 'My country, right or wrong...
...flood conditions in Harvard Square have abated enough to make navigation practical as far as the Yard, the Vagabond has several lectures of special interest to visit today. Count Carlo Sforza, formerly French Ambassador to Italy, will speak in Harvard 6 at 2 o'clock on "The New Fascist State", and the opportunity to add to his knowledge of this great experiment from a first-hand authority should not be missed by any vagabonder...
Among several other prominent men who will address the course in the near future are: Count Sforza, former Italian Ambassador to Paris; Charles A. Beard; R. G. Hawtrey, Assistant Secretary to the Treasury, Whitehall, London; and Professor M. O. Hudson...
Post-Versailles. Woodrow Wilson remains the hero of the War's aftermath, sane among a confusion of tongues, a maligned solitary. .... Franco-German friendship needs patience, faith. Goethe believed it possible. So may we believe.?Count Carlo Sforza, one-time (1920) Foreign Minister of Italy, later (1922) Italian Ambassador to Paris, in rehearsing post-War diplomacy in Europe...
...Born at Florence in 1469 at the apogee of Florentine glory under Lorenzo de Medici ("The Magnificent"), Niccolo Machiavelli remains the most celebrated commentator on the brilliant and ruthless statesmanship of the Borgia, Sforza and Medici. When the Prince was translated into English many an Anglo-Saxon was appalled that so many truths about the baseness of men and how to play upon it should ever have been set down in type. Machiavelli was suspected by simple souls of having been the devil himself, and the adjective "Machiavellian" was introduced into English with the connotation "diabolic." Machiavellian maxims...