Angry residents are up in arms over a proposal to site a giant mobile phone mast near their homes. |
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Activists are up in arms over a Bush proposal to allow nuclear reactors in spacecraft. |
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However, some cabbies are up in arms over plans for them to wear clip-on ties instead, which they say still represent a danger. |
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Angry road hauliers in Laois are up in arms about the costs associated with their businesses. |
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Angry residents are up in arms following new proposals to build 14 flats on a former petrol station site in Rawdon. |
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Hunt's efforts brought about a fashion in Boston for French paintings, causing the local devotees of British Pre-Raphaelitism to rise up in arms. |
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Now before all you old school Emmers go up in arms about how I can sommer get a new contributor without your permission, etc. |
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Pupils at an Upper Hutt school are up in arms after being told not to hug each other at school. |
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The implications are profound, which is precisely why the right-wing scapegoaters are up in arms. |
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Residents and parents who reside on the Mountain Road are up in arms over the dangers posed by speeding traffic. |
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Traders in Havefordwest's top of town are up in arms at the lack of notice given to them over the closure of Market Street to traffic. |
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Parents and teachers are up in arms over whether a peace banner is political, and whether peace should be promoted in schools. |
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The moral majority types, many of whom had never even seen the film were all up in arms against it. |
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I guess if he did have to suffer that indignity, Amnesty International would be up in arms. |
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The good citizens were so enraged that they rose up in arms, figuratively at least, and founded the civic society. |
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Residents in Willington are up in arms over a building development plan which, they say, will triple the size of the village. |
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Angry farmers are up in arms after plans to build a new livestock market were thrown out. |
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At the other extreme, Manchester United fans are up in arms at the idea of Malcolm Glazer buying their club and running it as a business. |
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Journalists working on the rag are up in arms over a series of anti-Gypsy stories printed over the last few weeks. |
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This is why many are up in arms to defend their interests, with others willing to go all the way in their call for reform and change. |
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The residents of Castledermot continue to be up in arms over plans to turn an area of the village known as The Green into a car park. |
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Portlaoise town councillors are up in arms over what they perceive as a diminution of the powers of the town council. |
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People are up in arms about Amazon being awarded a patent for their affiliates program. |
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Angry residents are up in arms after railway engineering works caused sleepless nights. |
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Punters who had backed the horse were, with good reason, up in arms. |
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Now, the Labour Party is up in arms against a Thatcher state funeral. |
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Monday The Mountaineering Council of Scotland adds to the furore over the controversial Cairngorm funicular which already has many skiers and conservationists up in arms. |
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Major news outlets are hardly inclined to be up in arms about the government's record of deception when they remain so dainty about critiquing their own. |
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The broadband Internet Service Provider is under fire for its poor customer service with punters up in arms at being left without phone and broadband. |
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The residents are also up in arms against a handful of householders who are using public green areas adjacent to the estate as a tip for domestic refuse. |
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Yet this has happened recently to stores and companies and people have been up in arms that they have not been notified. |
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All of the opposition, not just the official opposition, rose up in arms over this. |
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That is so unfortunate and I am sure the people in Sudbury would be up in arms to know that we are even considering this type of trade agreement. |
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Unfortunately, the Commissioner is once again up in arms against the milk fund. |
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In fact, whenever there is a project to develop such an industry, the locals almost rise up in arms. |
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We've heard from some members that customers and Canadians are up in arms about the fees. |
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They are all up in arms over these changes to the Navigable Waters Protection Act. |
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The government does not have to worry so much about industry getting up in arms because industry adapts. |
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Do not be surprised that in countries like Belgium, where demonstrations rarely happen, thousands of people are up in arms. |
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Are we in this House not the very people who are up in arms when a populist like Haider or Schwarzenegger suddenly wins elections? |
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And that had the sports writers up in arms right from the beginning. |
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It has people up in arms because it does not come to this question honestly. |
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It would appear that the same applies to some parts of France, where the producers concerned are understandably up in arms. |
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The people who organized the exchanges were up in arms, but I'm sure it made them raise their game. |
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This is good news at a time when employees who are up in arms are joined by a public which disapproves of unilateral action by employers. |
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Commissioner, producers are up in arms in Extremadura, the region I represent. |
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Passengers are up in arms, with the unanimous support of Parliament and politicians in general. |
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A sobering article on gang rape inside a UVA fraternity has Wahoo alumni like myself up in arms. |
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Democrats are up in arms about several policy riders attached to the cromnibus. |
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Why aren't the liberal classes up in arms about Zimbabwe and Darfur? |
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The greens are up in arms against allowing construction so close to lakes. |
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I have to tread carefully, because certain persons who might claim to have been there too are liable to be up in arms the moment I stray more than an inch from the truth. |
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The shires are up in arms, with many staging a campaign of passive resistance, only prepared to pay reasonable inflation-linked increases to their bills. |
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But parishioners at St Laurence's, the town's parish church, just a stone's throw away, were up in arms because their own vicar's house is Chorley's official rectory. |
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Becoming up in arms against the ACLU and others who are PCing Christmas really will amount to nothing in the end. |
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In the early 1980s, America was up in arms about drunk driving. |
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It seems that women's libbers everywhere are up in arms, calling her a traitor to the cause of a woman's right to maternity leave. |
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As the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice so aptly put it, why does this one teeny-weeny, itsy-bitsy two-word phrase in a 30-page bill have people up in arms? |
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It is true that the Liberals and Conservatives get up in arms over potential job losses, but not over the jobs that are actually being lost every day. |
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The regions of France and Europe are up in arms against a draft communication from Brussels which would plan to renationalise European funding after 2013 and restrict it to the poorest regions. |
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The Duma, the Communist-dominated lower house of the Russian parliament, up in arms at this sophism, has asked the Constitutional Court for a ruling. |
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If a zookeeper was caught on video treating a tiger this way, PETA and other animal-rights groups would be up in arms in a second, screaming for better treatment. |
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The whole exercise has shades of Heath Robinson about it. The banks are up in arms, this week bearding the Basel committee for its latest draft rules, which get ever more complicated and prescriptive. |
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It did not appear that anybody was up in arms with the main thrust of the book which was that Canada intercepts communications for intelligence purposes. |
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If that were to happen in the Northwest Territories, or if it were suggested that the Northwest Passage would be subject to those kinds of rules, people would be up in arms around the country. |
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Villagers are up in arms after the new bypass for Minffordd, Porthmadog and Tremadog was built without a bridge to the popular park. |
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In 2012, when Muslims were up in arms over a film, Charb responded with a cover showing a cretinous Jew pushing a cretinous Muhammad in a wheelchair. |
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Seniors are up in arms because drug company control of distribution and pricing of pharmaceuticals is eating away hard-earned nest eggs. |
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I also realize it probably won't fly because the Canadian public would really get up in arms if they heard the military was subsidizing spouses for not working. |
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The theatregoing public are up in arms over the new public performance tax. |
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Heritage activists were also up in arms against the proposed move to shift the secretariat as both the present and proposed site have heritage buildings built by the Nizams. |
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Employees of grameen banks in the Congress-ruled state were up in arms and staged protests in several districts and stopped disbursal of loans under government schemes. |
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According to Maine's Kennebec Journal, a concrete plant is seeking a zoning change so it can blast and extract rock, a prospect which has many neighbors up in arms. |
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I'm sure that statement will have the zaftig zealots up in arms and the do-gooders pointing out her other more cerebral plus points, but I don't give a cheesy stuffed crust. |
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News was brought him, that the Scythians, and barbarous nations of the North, were again up in arms, and invading the empire with furious impetuosity. |
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