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Tempers and flared
Tempers soon flared, and a huge number of nationalist Hindus from all parts of India razed the mosque in late 1992, causing nationwide communal riots.
Tempers flared immediately, not the least between Faile and Berelain.

Tempers and during
Tempers are non-plastic materials added to clay to prevent shrinkage and cracking during drying and firing of vessels made from the clay.

Tempers and low
Tempers were already at a low ebb following a string of umpiring decisions that had gone against England, and the England team were unhappy that Rana was wearing a Pakistan sweater under his jacket.

Tempers and when
Tempers boiled over when the NHA added a second Toronto team in 1916 – 17, representing the 228th Battalion of the Canadian army.

Tempers and for
On July 31, Rave was given the opportunity to wrestle for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship, but was defeated by Adam Pearce in the four – way match, which also included Chance Prophet and Shaun Tempers.

Tempers and .
Shortly afterward, his second book of poems, The Tempers, was published by a London press through the help of his friend, Ezra Pound whom he met while studying at the University of Pennsylvania.
* The Tempers of Hazard ( 1993 ; pulped same year ) Thomas A. Clark and Chris Torrance
He ( Soane ) was on Monday morning in one of his amiable Tempers.
The current champion is Shaun Tempers who defeated Ace Rockwell to win the vacant title on June 25, 2011.
Tempers flare at the base as Soda seduces Horton, and Sandee finds a new significant other in Griff.

flared and during
On 26 August, during the period known as the First Fronde, Anne ordered the arrest of some of the leaders of the Parlement of Paris ; violence flared as a result, and the 27 August became known as another Day of the Barricades.
Criticism of the Sydney Mardi Gras was perhaps at its strongest during the early years of the AIDS crisis, and flared again when in 1994 the national broadcaster, ABC, telecast the parade for the first time.
It was called the " city of a thousand fires ", for the flames of mine gasses being flared during the nights.
Tensions flared during the final league match, where Palmeiras ' opponent was the São Paulo Futebol Clube ( SPFC ) which was laying claim to the assets of the former Palestra Italia.
Dispute has " flared up " on a number of occasions, such as during the time in office of Saint Oliver Plunkett and in the late 18th century.
The hood also flared up in " Boomtown " when Prince became angry during Duke's siege.
The blunderbuss used by the British mail service during the period of 1788 – 1816 was a flintlock with a 14 inch long flared brass barrel, brass trigger guard, and iron trigger and lock.
The role of the Vatican during the Holocaust remains a controversial issues and has repeatedly flared up.
In the spring of 2008 racial tension flared up in a few blocks ; however, it never reached the level of tension that occurred during the Crown Heights Riot of the early 1990s.
Yet social revolution had flared briefly in Barcelona, during the Tragic Week of 1909.
Sales of his " Reddy Tee ," a simple wooden peg with a flared top, took off after Lowell hired professional golfers Walter Hagen and Joe Kirkwood, Sr. to promote the product during exhibition matches.
Prison riots, which had plagued Tennessee for decades during this era, flared again.
Controversy flared during the 2005 season when a visiting law professor, along with other university faculty and students protested the pink coloration as demeaning to women and homosexuals.
It was during his term as governor that the Sakdal uprising flared up on May 2, 1935, in Santa Rosa and Cabuyao, Laguna.
Tensions between the Queensland and federal governments flared up a number of times, including during and after a federal police raid on the Queensland Government Printer's Office.

flared and battle
In the earliest black-and-white Mirage Comics, Raphael was the most violent turtle and had a tendency for going berserk either in battle or when his temper flared up.

flared and reached
A match flared, and he reached above his head to light a lantern which hung from a wire loop.
The precarious international situation reached a crisis point in June 1967 when the Six Day War flared in the Middle East and six days later China tested its first H-bomb.

flared and low
They came with Black and Silver Paint, a plaque inside the door stating styles by Farina, sports steering wheel, flared arches and low profile wheels.

flared and March
* Ethnic violence has occasionally flared ( most notably in March 2004 );
However, no sooner than the dispute over St. Thomas settled, than acrimony flared up again over St. John, when the Danes purported to settle it on 23 March 1718.

flared and 2001
The fighting flared again in 2001 after the UPDF replaced the governor with a Hema appointee.

flared and when
In 1954, the conflict flared up again, when the Treaty of Seeb was broken by the sultan after oil was discovered in the lands of the Imam.
Conflict between the states flared up again in 465 BC, when a helot revolt broke out in Sparta.
He also noted his ability to calm the young king when his temper flared.
The Mexican authorities grudgingly went along with it, but the issue continued to flared up, especially when slaves ran off.
His temper flared when he felt that others did not give their best, but in later reunions they admitted that Lord's hard driving force had made them better actors and made Hawaii Five-O a better show.
Fighting flared up around 1700 when the Russians began operating in the Kamchatka Peninsula and needed to protect their communications from the Chukchis and Koryaks.
Other notable structures include the 37-story Wells Fargo Center ( with its distinctive flared base making it the defining building in the Jacksonville skyline ), originally built in 1972-74 by the Independent Life and Accident Insurance Company, and the 28 floor Riverplace Tower which, when completed in 1967, was the tallest precast, post-tensioned concrete structure in the world.
As evidence, they showed that when violence flared up in September 1996, Palestinian police turned their guns on the Israelis in clashes which left 61 Palestinians and 15 Israeli soldiers dead.
The disagreement again flared in 1980 when the Garden again challenged its tax bill.
The sparse civilian population practically abandoned the area when the Second Seminole War flared up in late 1835.
Goodman said that he " used marijuana sparingly when symptoms of Crohn's Disease, a chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract, flared up.
A major controversy flared up in 2005-07 when the mayor and many others pushed unsuccessfully for construction of a luxury residential development on public land in Ogden's foothills and a new ski resort in the mountains above the city, to be accessed by a pair of aerial gondolas.
This flared up into violence on several occasions, notably in October 1975, when the Provisionals sought out and shot Official IRA members in Belfast — 11 republicans on either side were killed in the feud ; a nine year-old girl was also shot dead by the Provisionals when they tried to shoot her father.
Trouble flared in 1840 when radical agitators seized control of the town, and troops were stationed to maintain order.
Maimonidean controversy flared up again at the beginning of the fourteenth century when Rabbi Shlomo ben Aderet, under influence from Asher ben Jehiel, issued a cherem on " any member of the community who, being under twenty-five years, shall study the works of the Greeks on natural science and metaphysics.
In 1984 a long-simmering dispute between the majority of the leadership and a anti-Eurocommunist faction ( associated with party industrial and trade union activists ) flared up when the London District Congress was closed down for insisting on giving full rights to comrades who had been suspended by the Executive Committee.
The bird's white eyebrows become flared and more prominent in an aggressive display, and settled and more hidden when in a submissive or appeasement display.
In 1914 Pierce-Arrow adopted its most enduring styling hallmark when the headlights of the vehicle were moved from the traditional placement on either side of the radiator into flared housings molded into the front fenders of the car.
Active warfare between the groups flared when the Dutch East India Company enclosed traditional grazing land for farms.

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