Sentences with phrase «tumults over»

Also striking is how at least some of the people who actually appraise species for a living have made peace with the perpetual tumult over defining just what it is they get up in the morning to study.

Not exact matches

The tumult underscored the frustration of stakeholders over Cryan's inability to blaze a path toward a profitable future.
There is the change of the perishable nature when the sensual man must step aside, when dancing and the tumult of the whirling senses are over, when all becomes soberly quiet.
At the sound of the ball hitting the bat, in the broadcast booth the chief voice of the Atlanta Braves rose against the tumult to describe the event over the air to his part of the outside world.
Heading into the final days of the presidential campaign, Hillary Clinton is holding an edge over Donald Trump after a month of tumult, with most voters saying their minds are made up and late revelations about both candidates made no significant difference to them, according to the latest New York Times / CBS News poll.
That seemed to constitute Mr. de Blasio's only certainty about how the Trump administration would affect the city's finances, although he also predicted tumult in health care funding and expressed confidence that the city would withstand Mr. Trump's threat to strip billions in federal funding from the city over its refusal to cooperate with federal immigration authorities.
Out of the tumult of history and the psychic torture that is the legacy of slavery, Steven Spielberg forged his most accomplished film since Schindler's List: a ruminative epic that used America's 16th president as a totemic figure against which a nation's progress over the centuries since could be gauged.
Klein and Mayor Bloomberg have countered that all the tumult in the street is nothing but posturing over a contract dispute.
Parents are choosing «free» public schools over the heavily subsidized tuition they would pay at private and parochial schools because times are desperate; so desperate parents must make a near life - or - death decision about whether to feed their children or brave the tumult of their locally assigned school.
Now, imagine him sitting up there in the rain, with storm clouds rolling over, thunder pressing down, and the ominous flash of lightning a strobe in the black tumult above.
Destined to be the world's tallest skyscraper for a little over a year, it jutted above the noonday tumult, twenty - eight stories of Bessemer steel, terracotta, and glass.
The Academician can capture a sense of absolute stillness — a full moon at sunrise over a flat sandy spit — as easily as a one of tumult, such as a high tide engulfing a beach.
In a couple of hundred years, historians will be comparing the frenzies over our supposed human contribution to global warming to the tumults at the latter end of the tenth century
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