The city that pioneered free public libraries is facing an uproar over plans to close one of its reading rooms. |
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There is bound to be an ethical uproar when the advisory body reports its recommendations. |
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Imagine the uproar had a white European leader demanded the removal from power of anyone with Indian origins. |
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When the Government first began to publicly promote its agenda for full privatisation in 1998 there was a rural uproar. |
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It caused uproar at the time, but the wily Italian must be sitting back with a smug smile, puffing on that metaphorical cigar. |
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And imagine the uproar when we discover the standard issue boot doesn't come with a kicky little heel. |
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Still, that must be better than causing an uproar by taking the landed gentry by surprise? |
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Kylie yelped jumping up and down with that enthusiasm that only cheerleaders own as the audience was in an uproar. |
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White Fang does not make an uproar, but rather follows quietly, stalking the stranger. |
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But agents, both Loyalist and Revolutionary, were stirring up trouble among the Indians, casting the frontier into an uproar. |
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Replacing the tabernacle with an archbishop's throne in Armagh cathedral caused uproar among parishioners two years ago. |
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You caused a big uproar a few weeks ago when you suggested the U.S. should just simply take him out, should simply kill him. |
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After the first round of voting for the speaker resulted in a tied vote, the house descended into uproar. |
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Dr. Leaky started much of the uproar when he found his famous missing link, Lucy. |
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When the uproar finally died down, Eric heard the shrieking coming from the vent. |
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Free sandwiches would cause too much of an uproar, possibly resulting in the speedy removal of my beautiful sign painting. |
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This produced such an uproar that the initial selection process had to be scrapped and started over from the beginning. |
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There was an uproar in the audience while everyone tried to scream louder than the person next to him or her. |
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Suddenly, an uproar of shouts rang through the halls as both writers and editors alike came to see what was causing the commotion. |
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Accounts of this violence, made worse by exaggeration, created a national uproar. |
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You well know how these kinds of issues can almost get a life of their own, in terms of creating an uproar. |
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Only after an uproar from the public did he begrudgingly give the chairman of the residents' committee a few minutes. |
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Suddenly the public was in an uproar, and the producers in Hollywood took up their cause. |
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It took the intervention of the media, and the consequent uproar to stop what would have been a truly monumental blunder. |
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Or, perhaps they felt some guilt for the uproar that they had created in the first place. |
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If this had happened to a prominent citizen, it surely would have created an uproar. |
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All this at a time when the whole of Britain is in an uproar over obscene council tax rises and in a turmoil over pensions crises! |
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It caused an uproar, as I thought it would, but many people realized later that it was the right thing to do. |
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We asked star Dennis Franz how the show was able to overcome the early uproar. |
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Workers at Swindon Pressings caused such an uproar at plans to scrap its annual Christmas trees that the company will now be putting them up. |
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This started an uproar of public debate, so the reporters went after Joshua again. |
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In the late 1990s, the issue of potential mass sales of Canadian water to the U.S. caused an uproar. |
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Immediately, everyone sprawled around in an uproar, plucking edibles and foodstuffs from cabinets and shelves. |
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She was hanged three weeks later despite public uproar and thousands of people demonstrating in the street. |
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There is the inevitable clop-clop of a horse, the rumble of a motorised omnibus, the further ambient uproar of the great city's life. |
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Things are never dull when she stirs her stumps to create a mild uproar in that pompous little town. |
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Despite being ruled out of order on several occasions Dr Cowley continued to address the point and was eventually dismissed amid uproar. |
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The scheme, originally given council backing three years ago, has caused uproar. |
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Such high-handedness caused an uproar in the community and the atmosphere became even more explosive. |
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After being held under house arrest to international uproar, he was released to join the team in Guadalajara. |
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The attacks on democracy have created uproar among rank and file civil servants. |
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Puzzled anger at the sudden uproar crossed Henry's face, but his wife spoke first in clipped tones. |
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It is impossible to imagine the uproar that such peremptory and contemptuous words from him would provoke. |
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There was uproar in court when the magistrates agreed to adjourn the case to a date yet to be fixed. |
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A calendar picturing semi-naked men, shot in aid of a village school, has caused uproar after proving too hot to handle. |
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For we are in danger to be called in question for this day's uproar, there being no cause whereby we may give an account of this concourse. |
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Speculation that the inter-urban franchise has been handed to a controversial rail operator has caused uproar in the industry. |
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On his way to the US Open final he caused uproar when he yelled at a black linesmen who had foot-faulted him. |
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The ensuing national uproar led to punitive taxes on repatriated assets that took the fun out of that maneuver. |
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Certainly, a drawn-out international uproar should not be necessary every time. |
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Now, the day after I see uproar, furor and indignant articles across the various news sites I read. |
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She wasn't good enough, quite frankly, but she was one of the active whatsits, there were other pressures behind her, and she caused an uproar. |
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Outside Rabaa, however, the presence of so many children at the sit-in has caused an uproar. |
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First, the uproar seems confined to over-educated liberals alone. |
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There was frenzied uproar when she participated in a literacy program to encourage kids to read. |
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Her original statement caused an uproar from working mothers who argued Paltrow was out of touch and elitist. |
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While Kilmeade walked back the comment the next day after an uproar, he did not apologize. |
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The uproar denouncing Alice was so swift that ABC Family cancelled it before even shooting the pilot. |
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After an uproar that outdid any cases Monti ever had involving only humans, the case was eventually dropped. |
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These comments incited an uproar among Iroquois fans believing Kessenich had disrespected their tradition. |
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One wonders how the media will react to the next pro-Israel uproar at yeshiva University. |
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That decision caused uproar as the MPs refuse to swear the oath of allegiance to the queen, meaning they cannot take their seats, speak in debates or vote. |
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When The Mikado was premiered at London's Savoy Theatre the audience were charmed to the point of uproar, demanding that their favourite songs be encored four times. |
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Some will claim the latest uproar vindicates their forebodings. |
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He even seemed on his way to prevailing as the uproar died down and outrage sputtered into grudging acceptance. |
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The veteran infantry of the Consular Guard stood lounging in ranks as the vulgar uproar near the little hamlet grew in intensity and rolled slowly toward them. |
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The first small preview of the coming uproar came from an August gathering of one section of the Bund at another mountain retreat, Hirschberg, in Thuringia. |
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Christina Aguilera flubbed the lyrics of the national anthem, spawning a public uproar. |
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In his 2005 book about Paterno, The Lion in Autumn, sportswriter Frank Fitzpatrick described the uproar that followed. |
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The uproar that followed was both spontaneous and tremendous. |
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It's hard to believe the uproar that the first test-tube baby caused. |
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Next thing she knew Poochie was making an uproar of barks and growls. |
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Her simple answer headed an uproar and a flurry of activity. |
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In the same period, the portrayal of sexual relations out of wedlock in Hardy's Jude the Obscure and Ibsen's Ghosts was causing an uproar in polite society. |
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Can any judge throw those statements out knowing what the uproar would be? |
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Attracted by the uproar the master and the mistress of the house and their guests hurried to the scene and invited me to await the issue of this commotion. |
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When former Leeds player Harry Kewell moved to Galatasaray in 2008, it caused uproar with Leeds supporters. |
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Influenced by American culture and similar actions abroad, youth and students started an uproar against cultural norms. |
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This appointment was a result of the uproar that had been created by the publication of the 1847 Welsh Blue Book on Education. |
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Unfortunately, the uproar awoke Mr. Jones, who sprang out of bed, making sure that there was a fox in the yard. |
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But the killers clearly failed to anticipate the uproar that would follow. |
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The resulting uproar led to comments in the United States Senate about public funding of the arts. |
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Alexander, the 27th Brodie of Brodie, has caused uproar in the Nairn area by trying to put in a gate to deny cars access to a beach. |
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The town was in an uproar over the proposal to build a jail. |
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Now is the time for Twitter to react-how will it handle the uproar that has resulted in the enragement of millions of people? |
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People are numb to these comments because of the Phil Robertson uproar. |
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The uproar over Ferguson's off-the-cuff quip sent me back to reread it. |
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Ambrose went to the church where the election was to take place, to prevent an uproar, which was probable in this crisis. |
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Sinatra vowed not to back down in the face of the ensuing uproar. |
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Jimmy Clausen, a former Notre Dame quarterback, caused an uproar by tweeting a photo of a T-shirt sent to him that called the coming Notre Dame vs. |
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Steve Martin adapted this German farce about the uproar that ensues in a staid household when the wife accidentally loses her underthings at a public rally. |
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They caused an uproar because of his candid portrayals of the middle classes, complete with infidelity, unhappy marriages, and corrupt businessmen. |
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Disraeli caused an uproar in the congress by making his opening address in English, rather than in French, hitherto accepted as the international language of diplomacy. |
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On 5 August 1976, Clapton provoked an uproar and lingering controversy when he spoke out against increasing immigration during a concert in Birmingham. |
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The speaker's decision causes an uproar in the assembly, because many reformist deputies seek to call to account the television and radio networks which Ayat. |
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This provoked an uproar in Scotland, greatly aided by the inflammatory rhetoric of the company's secretary, a relentless enemy of the English named Roderick MacKenzie. |
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There was no serious exchange of views as each side would not move from their positions and the debates degenerated into an uproar, each side shouting abuse at the other. |
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Members of the mercantile community were in an uproar as they felt the ensuing confusion and inconvenience of having no local courts would disrupt commercial activity. |
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Mrs. Chow down the street, for instance, why did she look so sniffingly upon him when she heard the children, in the harmless uproar of their play, cry him aloud as Daddy? |
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Measle watches in horror as his new baby sister, Matilda, causes uproar when she unwittingly reveals herself to be a Mallockee, a magical being of almost limitless powers. |
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The picture has caused uproar in Holland, with the row over whether the tradition of Zwarte Piet ready to erupt again as the festive season approaches. |
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