Exactly how they would cope in the aftermath of the furore was exhaustively debated. |
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The stalling of the project has caused a public furore in Waitara, which has high levels of unemployment. |
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I believe it's necessary to point out some home truths regarding the furore surrounding our Governor General. |
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The publication of the government's submission provoked another public furore. |
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In the public furore that followed that comment, Abbott retreated from this position. |
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That was 12 years ago and Phil has long since forgotten the furore his unfortunate remarks caused. |
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The BBC news site today has a surprisingly long article on the current furore surrounding London postcodes. |
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Among the highlights were crowd trouble, arrests and the inevitable tabloid furore that accompanies such incidents. |
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The furore is over the referendum over the European constitution, and whether Britain should adopt the euro currency. |
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The public furore over the future of the road continued on Monday as residents voiced their views at a public meeting. |
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Hema returned home after media publicity led to a furore in the state legislature. |
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Many of the self-proclaimed experts admit no one really knows what convergent media is or what it will become in the furore. |
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The furore over organ retention and poor recruitment generally is turning histopathologists into a rare breed. |
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In the ensuing furore, the arguments put forward on both sides have gone from the sublime to the ridiculous. |
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A mongrel was said to have been creating a furore on the beach and made several tugs on the ropes. |
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Amid the furore, little has been heard from the emos themselves. |
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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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The whole furore happened when the public hadn't heard the song. |
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They chose to keep mum then and now are raising a furore over bad roads. |
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Both have maintained they have been hard-done by and both have stirred up a public furore over whether they are the victims of the justice system. |
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I share Rahul Verma's cynicism about the coverage of the Behzti furore. |
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It ended in furore and the mayor had to use her gavel to restore order. |
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There was a furore amongst senior conservative dons, outraged at the possibility that they might assist a former youth offender and performance poet. |
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Such was the furore that in 1981 the pine box was exhumed and his body examined. |
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Bob Jones III, the founder's grandson, calmed the furore by revoking the inter-racial dating ban. |
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In these cases the media furore surrounding the outbreak will probably have everyone turning into a web hypochondriac. |
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The divestment protestors however and particularly the students that are creating renewed furore at Oxford University, do have a next step. |
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But Goldman's reputation as a cutthroat international investment bank caused an overnight political furore. |
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The Kit Kat furore marks the latest in a series of bitter battles for chocolaty trademarks. |
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When Stanley Works, an American toolmaker, announced in 2002 that it was moving its headquarters to Bermuda, it caused a furore. |
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The Antwerp Six is a group of designers that made furore in the 1980s on the catwalks in Milan and Paris. |
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That is a major cause of the furore that we have experienced in the past and are now facing with Ireland. |
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The resultant international furore forced the Bank to finally withdraw from the project. |
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The citizens of the European Union do not want or need a furore about flags and anthems in Brussels. |
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These founders too enjoyed rapid success when its refuelling system caused a furore on the market. |
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Unfortunately, this distinction is rarely recognised in the ensuing media furore. |
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In 2003 the government had plans to change the law in this way, but the idea raised such a furore in parliament that it was shelved. |
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The furore surrounding Germany's Foreign Minister, Joschka Fischer, emphasises the need for this. |
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Mr President, the furore over the Danish cartoons rages in Europe and worldwide. |
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All this furore about same-sex marriages seems a storm in a teacup to me. |
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After all the furore about his pool parties lately, you couldn't have blamed Prince Harry if he'd missed the paralympic swimming. |
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But if she breaks her silence and says anything at all about the furore, it could take on a more serious hue. |
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The action by the local Council has created furore among ramblers, who say that the action was wrong and a mockery of consultation procedures laid down by law. |
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A furore over footpaths is brewing in a South Lakeland village after taxpayers learned it could be nearly 10 years before decaying routes are repaired. |
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No money bill had been rejected by Lords for over 200 years, and a furore arose over this vote. |
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When the cleaned pictures were exhibited to the public in 1946 there followed a furore with parallels to that of a century earlier. |
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Trawling for surfers Sweeping changes Question time in Japan The battle for the last mile ReprintsSo if sweepstakes have been running for three decades without causing a political furore, what has suddenly gone wrong? |
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Moreover, the furore created by this collapse was such that we did not perceive the frailties and weaknesses of a system which, while based on freedom, neglected equality and solidarity. |
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Umberto Bossi, the leader of the Northern League and a minister in Mr Berlusconi's coalition government, provoked a furore in June when he reportedly suggested that illegal immigrants should be shot at sea. |
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His interview in Der Spiegel caused a furore. |
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In your prizewinning book you tell the stories of people who died to get the truth out, like Anna Politkovskaya. In this context, how do you view the current furore over Julian Assange and WikiLeaks? |
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When it comes to matters sartorial, it's usually the Duchess of Cambridge who creates a fashion furore, as every style watcher on the planet analyses every thread, every seam, every button of her carefully chosen ensembles. |
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But even here Huntsman created a furore by his stubborn refusal to accept the idea that salmon migrate to and from their home streams, in spite of all the evidence to the contrary. |
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The furore is also likely to put further pressure on loyalist paramilitary leaders who have been arguing that loyalists refrain from retaliating over recent attacks by dissident republicans. |
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She rode out the furore that followed the 2014 Sewol ferry-boat disaster, and the ruling Saenuri Party consolidated its legislative majority in subsequent elections. |
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Needless to say, his arrival at the flight check-in counter at Roissy caused a furore, as hundreds of music fans crowded round to snap up one of the souvenir scarves Papa handed out as pre-Christmas gifts. |
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The 850 kilogram four-seater HY-LIGHT caused quite a furore in Shanghai. |
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And in the dramatic motet In furore, the solo soprano voice competes with the strings to depict both the boundless fury of the first air and the languishing sadness of the second. |
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Still, like the banking crisis which gave him a bounce last autumn, the expenses furore and the liminal feeling it has reinforced offer him a shot at redemption. |
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Just before the last election there was a bit of a furore in the newspapers about former Prime Minister Mulroney donating his personal papers to the National Archives. |
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The hearing was, of course, held in secret, and we would never have known about it had not the furore over Snowden led to some of this stuff being retrospectively declassified. |
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It was not a good idea and it didn't work. This statement caused a furore in Berlin, where politicians are even touchier than their Hungarian counterparts about references to the second world war. |
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Interestingly, what has been lost in the furore is that Blanc, albeit clumsily and misguidedly, had the future quality of French football as his priority. |
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Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble yesterday accused nationalists of overreacting as the furore over his scathing criticisms of the Irish Republic rumbled on. |
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The ruling aimed at recovering cash from banned athletes was introduced by the IAAF in January 2004 following the furore caused by the THG scandal. |
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He was sacked as captain amid much furore after the 1978 season. |
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