Sentences with phrase «created tumult»

Some proposed federal rules on the export of security tools created a tumult in cybersecurity circles — a tumult that's pushed...
The demise of Health Republic Insurance of New York has created tumult for hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers and headaches for the state's other insurance companies.

Not exact matches

What these people know — and what more Canadians need to understand — is that truly innovative companies tend to create more value as time goes on, as they shed the hype and tumult of the startup phase and gain the customers, experiences and processes needed to become global businesses.
Rory McIlroy took a breather from prepping for this week's Honda Classic by jumping into the Twitter tumult Tiger Woods created when he went all Rory with his home video response to those who dared believe the 14 - time major winner could barely walk.
The Buffalo Parks System was the first of its kind in the United States - a visionary attempt to create islands of tranquility amid a growing city's tumult.
Heastie was able to rise amid tumult created by that year's Democratic primary election.
Cuesta's reference to director Alan Pakula, killed on the L.I.E. and responsible for a trio of seminal paranoia thrillers in the seventies (Klute, The Parallax View, All the President's Men), gains an increased level of resonance as the cinema of that decade was a reflection of another generation's loss of innocence — one fuelled by the triple - assassinations of JFK, RFK, and Martin Luther King, the gulf created by the free - love and flower - power movements, and the psychological tumult of Vietnam.
It's really little more than fanciful imagery and disjointed bits of tumult, packaged together so that fans of the book can see the things they read about and compare how closely the images corresponded to the ones created in their own mind's eye.
By comparing notes left by artists and thinkers of the period, she hoped to create an exhaustive list of the Russian avant - garde since the Great Patriotic War — a difficult task, especially when one realizes that any documents that made their way through the Soviet tumult are now in private hands — hands wary to let them go, especially to a private museum bankrolled by one of new Russia's most visible billionaires.
Nearby, Jennifer Nichols works with thin, bright acrylic, creating abstract tumults of transparent brushwork and, more recently, calmer arrangements of letterlike shapes.
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