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There are also the distinct lifestyle advantages of setting up shop in the hurly-burly of real urban districts.
WSJ: Why High-Tech Companies Are Moving to the City
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Such attacks are not unusual in the hurly-burly of Philippine politics, where personalities matter much more than policies.
ECONOMIST: The Philippines
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But even in the hurly-burly of 20th-century "isms, " some artists preserve traditional values.
WSJ: Nature in America | A Landscape in Evolution | By Barrymore Laurence Scherer
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In his defence, Mr Gadkari was new to the hurly-burly of national politics.
BBC: Profile: Nitin Gadkari
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The electorate is entitled to gauge candidates in the hurly-burly of a full-blown campaign, not in the equivalent of a snap election.
FORBES: The Bear Market
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Sitting in graceful, tradition-minded Baltimore, far from Wall Street's hurly-burly, T.
FORBES: Price Is Right
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Judges, including Supreme Court justices, often act as if they were philosopher-kings, arbitrarily handing down decisions on issues that should be left to the hurly-burly of the political process.
FORBES: Fact and Comment
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Stockholm's opinion-shapers take his frequent absences from the capital, and from some of the main parliamentary debates, as evidence that Mr Bildt has lost interest the hurly-burly of politics.
ECONOMIST: Sweden
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They have created a carefully staged entrance, ensuring that the hurly-burly of the everyday world is left behind so the visitor enters the collection in the proper frame of mind to absorb its riches.
WSJ: Barnes Collection | Albert C. Barnes | Ensemble: Albert C. Barnes and the Experiment in Education | Saving Dr. Barnes's Vision| By Eric Gibson
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However, Sir Fred and Dr Wickramasinghe took it to ridiculous lengths, proposing not only the arrival of organisms from outer space, but that those organisms (such as influenza viruses) are somehow already adapted for life in the hurly-burly of the terrestrial ecosystem.
ECONOMIST: Sir Fred Hoyle
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This was, with a further sad irony, the only period in which Daumier, having toiled all his life to make a meagre living and now almost blind, managed to fulfil the conventional role of the fine artist far removed from the moral hurly-burly and commercial exigencies of the city.
ECONOMIST: Honor�� Daumier