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Ingenious as it is, this many-sided presentation cannot go on pleasing everyone for ever.
ECONOMIST: Defence policy
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"The prime minister discussed the full range of our interests during his visit, reflecting the many-sided dialogues we have with the Chinese government, " he told peers.
BBC: Tebbit warns UK not to 'impose views on foreign states'
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The dramatic development of the material pushes beyond simplicities, and the portrait of Zuckerberg is many-sided and endlessly ambiguous (no two viewers will see him quite the same way).
NEWYORKER: The Social Network
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Presidents struggle to get laws through a many-sided legislature.
ECONOMIST: Visible disorder, hidden progress
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The opposition is many-sided.
ECONOMIST: Water in the West (1)
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"These are meant to be the showcase events for our game, yet they contain many lop-sided matches that were never going to be a contest, " added Ponting.
BBC: The quality of elite competition must be preserved
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Now, it will not be news to you that many see this view as dangerously one-sided.
BBC: Plan B for the eurozone?
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At a time when many believed that the Harvard faculty had gotten a little one-sided in its viewpoint, she sought to recruit prominent conservative scholars and spur a healthy debate on campus.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama Nominates Elena Kagan for Supreme Court
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That is a one-sided caricature, of course, and one of the many good things in this year's fine Proms season is to be able to parade so much French music in all its rich diversity.
ECONOMIST: The London Proms
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With so many touchpoints, brands must move away from the traditional 1960s formula of one-sided information and start having conversations with consumers.
FORBES: Why Consumer-to-Consumer Communication Wins