While you'd think the players union would be up in arms about such price fixing, it isn't.
But based on publicly available information, there is nothing for people to be up in arms about.
You might imagine that academics would be up in arms about this.
Any time that type of language is used it raises a level of an appearance of impropriety, and the public should be up in arms.
Of course, then the non-for-profit community will be up in arms.
If you looked at the number of people affected by domestic violence and applied it to other tragic circumstances like terrorism or gang violence, our country would be up in arms and it would be the front page story every single day.
Obama should be calling in chits and twisting arms in all possible directions, beefing up U.S. penalties on those who help Iran's regime, and urgently rallying a coalition to do the same.
"When we, a thousand miles away, debate over whether we should be in Afghanistan or draw a cartoon, the people in Nigeria take up arms and fight it out, " she says.
Privacy advocates were up in arms when Twitter revealed that it would be selling two years of archived tweets to UK-based Datasift to, well, sift through, reports the Mail Online.
Many politicians are up in arms, believing that the "public interest" should be whatever they want it to be.
So it could all be kicked off if Sadr fighters decide to really take up arms and start battling in the way that they used to.
The opposition that the company's 11 proposed coal plants galvanized was a wake-up call: New coal plants will not be welcomed with open arms, even in the face of a looming electric reliability crisis.
Since the mainly African Muslim rebels took up arms in 2003, in protest against what they felt to be years of discrimination and neglect at the hands of the Arab Muslims in Khartoum, as many as 300, 000 civilians have been killed and a further 2m or more forced to flee their homes.
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