He has been at the club too long and had to shut out too many protests and boardroom wrangles to let it throw him now. |
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Since the attempts of the 70s, legal wrangles over ownership of the comic book hero had prevented production. |
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The wrangles and debates of modern theology have repeatedly stumbled around the doctrine of the Incarnation. |
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In 1999, council officers extended the school's capacity to three classes after wrangles with parents. |
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The most common wrangles are on a founder leader differing with others who troop out to form new churches. |
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As the crowd wrangles and shoves, the woman forces her unheeding way through the faces and chadors and disappears off the bottom of the screen. |
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The continuing wrangles over who should pay for a new play area at Barrow Green, in Chippenham, may have been resolved for the moment. |
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Until the legal wrangles are resolved, the houseboat residents are paying their rent directly into a bank account. |
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It is not as if agreements are reached without discussion: there are very frequent exchanges of opinion and sometimes even wrangles. |
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This work is too important to be caught up in procedural wrangles in this body. |
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His son, also a professor at Louis-le-Grand, had resounding wrangles with the board of public education. |
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Otherwise, there is a risk of legal wrangles that would upset the international civil liability and compensation regime. |
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The possibility would also arise of numerous legal wrangles that competitors could initiate for minor infringements. |
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That deal fell through, however, and the ferry was locked in Whitby harbour for three years while jurisdictional wrangles ensued over its fate. |
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Meanwhile, back in France, Cocciante was involved in legal wrangles with the Inland Revenue service. |
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Supply chain management and entrepreneurship training offers guidance on wrangles with partners and on the settlement of disagreements. |
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Talks over the scheme have been halted by legal wrangles, but drivers say that they will push for the systems to be in place within the next three to six months. |
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The launch of flights between Singapore and Jakarta, which has been stalled since May amid air traffic wrangles, is now scheduled for the end of this month. |
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The couple's ancient cottage was gutted by fire a year ago, but wrangles over insurance left them unable to rebuild it and as a result they have slipped into mortgage arrears. |
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After some wrangles and wrong turnings, we found Trish's place. |
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The election of the European Commission by 488 in favour to 137 opposed and 72 abstentions brings to an end almost 5 months of delay due to wrangles in the ratification of the Lisbon treaty. |
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But the US media is signalling this year that the platform documents will be more intensely scrutinised than before, in part due to the internal wrangles triggered by Todd Atkins. |
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The president was unusually relaxed and contemplative, buoyed by the recent economic numbers and looking towards his legacy as well as the mid-term elections and his wrangles with Congress. |
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Alas, by this time, the early co-operation between exponents of Chaos had given rise to legal wrangles, literary sideswipes, and even magical battles. |
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Referring to the endless wrangles over terms and conditions of British membership to the Community, Lord Cockfield said that the completion of the internal market gave Britain opportunity to assert her role in the Community. |
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But nineteen-twentieths of the people rejoiced that the country had escaped from the party wrangles which had threatened to make all government impossible. |
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External relations: practical measures rather than legal wrangles The creation of the single market has profoundly changed the economic basis on which bilateral relations with non-Community countries are conducted. |
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That dialogue was in fact initiated, and it is safe to say that, at times, it was fairly unrestrained with its demonstrations and its wrangles or, in any case, point-scoring. |
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This is just the kind of interference in the jurisdiction of provinces and territories that has caused a number of wrangles, and, in the past, one in which we cannot be and should not be a party. |
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Fertility and embryology have been relatively free of legal wrangles in Britain, despite such high-profile cases as Diane Blood's 1997 bid to obtain her dead husband's semen. |
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A by-product of the summit was the way it also resolved disputes over where to locate EU agencies, wrangles that had long been a source of irritation. |
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And that is why I must stress that it is also in Parliament's interest not to allow implementation of Agenda 2000 to be jeopardised by annual budget wrangles. |
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The Democrats are still sore from their experience there in the presidential election two years ago: after a six-week run-off involving bitter legal wrangles, the result in Florida tipped the balance in favour of Mr Bush. |
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