Apparently knives and shotguns had just been wielded during a fracas in the bar and the local constabulary were called in to help out. |
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The fracas seems to be primarily the work of one person, presuming to speak for the entire class, when in fact he spoke only for himself. |
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The fracas is typical of the miniscule Liberal Party, which has been mired in internal disputes for seven years. |
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The fracas, in which punches were traded and others were knocked to the ground, lasted about four minutes. |
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There were fights and fracas where I saw guns, knives, baseball bats and the rest, but nothing I couldn't handle. |
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Spectators who witnessed the fracas summoned police who arrived within minutes to find the incident had fizzled out. |
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The fracas over his cabinet appointments provides further evidence of a style of leadership that could be described as detached at best. |
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She suffered a suspected fractured cheekbone and claimed to have had blurred vision and numbness in her face following the fracas. |
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The full video of the fracas was shown and all of the personnel caught on camera making physical contact were identified. |
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His friend was also treated for minor injuries after he was knocked to the floor during the fracas and has been discharged from hospital. |
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Fowler also suffered a suspected broken nose in April 1999 during a fracas outside a Liverpool hotel. |
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A cocaine dealer who got into the trade to make easy money was caught after he got involved in a drunken fracas outside a nightclub. |
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Jeff lost his footing at one point in the fracas, with a dogpile quickly forming near the first-base bag. |
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A few players from each side got involved in a fracas, but thankfully common sense prevailed. |
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Some of the more literate ones did write down a few particulars soon after the fracas in letters to friends and relatives. |
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However, the lowlight of the tournament was a fracas between a player and an umpire. |
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In the ensuing media fracas, McAvoy's bust has rivalled Jordan's for the number of column inches generated. |
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Angry scenes and ugly fracas are commonplace as people scramble for the few available taxis. |
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He then joined the fracas, slipping in two or three good blows before the blue was broken up. |
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Norris, who is also an actor, turns the characters' dance of civility into a fracas of fulmination. |
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In many ways the 1970s saw the heyday of attempted harmonisation for its own sake, epitomised in the famous fracas over the Euro-sausage. |
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Bennett is part of the rightwing bloc, which is not, as a whole, weakened by the fracas. |
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However exactly the timeline unfolded, the fracas is emblematic of the White House's lack of political savvy. |
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The fracas began when one author boasted to the fashion blog Racked about Isabella's family members attending her book party. |
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I look like I've been involved in a drunken fracas with a broken bottle around the nose area with mucho stitching and loads of dried blood smeared around my face. |
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The damage and assault charges were connected with that incident when the shopkeeper locked the door, brought out a baseball bat and there was a fracas, he said. |
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His understanding of the situation was that a fracas had spilled over from the field of play to where substitutes were sitting and they got involved. |
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A chef on trial for killing a man in a fracas outside a pub told the jury yesterday he had just been trying to defend himself from a group of people who had set on him. |
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I'm giving it to you straight: somebody had to take the rap for this fracas. |
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There was a row and fracas between the two women and all were thrown out. |
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The passage of this bill led to a fracas in the House, where even the Speaker's chair was broken, due to the intensity of the passions aroused. |
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In the ensuing fracas, a number of people had to be arrested and placed in police vehicles. |
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Its penetrating tone could carry far and rise above the fracas. |
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The fracas between Harvard's new president and its top Afro-American studies profs highlights black academia's fixation on victimhood and double standards. |
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About 50-60 drunken and disorderly people spilled on to the Market Cross as police units from two counties and seven towns were called to the fracas. |
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It wasn't pretty, although it had its own intramural dog-fight charm, the kind of ridiculous, bareknuckled fracas that can now be found almost exclusively on the Internet. |
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Then some jumped-up English playwright wrote about this whole fracas. |
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Jonathan Franzen is in a fracas over his comments deploring our literary culture, Amazon, and social media. |
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The fracas around the removal of the Bronze Soldier in Tallinn, Estonia, which also triggered this report, is a good example of such divergence of sentiments. |
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Canadian officials were determined to play an independent role within that empire but without becoming involved in every minor fracas that Britain engaged in. |
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So, first let's take a stroll all the way back to the debt ceiling fracas. |
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Instead he unsportingly hammered it into the Blues net causing a fracas between the players and coaching staff. |
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A Birmingham man, Kalonji Stewart, 32, of Harborne, was charged with affray following the fracas but was cleared. |
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Madam President, I did not see the incident with regard to the handicapped or disabled people going into the stadium yesterday, or the supposed fracas with the Italian journalists. |
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At the height of the fracas Principal Wallace came down from his office in the library and tried to address the sciencemen, only to be struck on the shoulder by a flour-bomb. |
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The host's surname has been bleeped out and his face pixelated, however, in a nod to the recent real-life controversy over Jeremy Clarkson's fracas with a producer. |
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Former Great Britain rugby league captain Shaun Edwards walked free from a court yesterday after the prosecution offered no evidence about an alleged fracas at a pizza shop. |
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