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At such a divisively partisan time, a lighter tone could help.
Apart from anything else, they divisively create social problems for workers in the shipping industry and residents of island regions.
Consequently, until the highest court involved with this matter has spoken, neither campaign should prematurely and divisively proclaim victory.
Maybe it was unavoidable that it was going to end so divisively for this Jets' staff.
The difference is that one candidate is using the issue divisively as a weapon to divide pro-choice voters."
Mr. Koch has of course been accused of acting abrasively and divisively.
It will not be easy to repair all the damage that Pres. Obama has done to the country, financially, morally and divisively.
But he has, far from drumming divisively on race, worked to win the interest of poor, minority voters who are often wholly alienated from politics.
Hopefully, his account will replace the divisively harmful version of papal neglect, and even collaboration, that has held the field for far too long".
Those oddballs represented the complex decade's most exciting and creative urges, cultural vectors that would appear more fully and divisively during the 60's and 70's.
Mr. Hoffa later ousted Mr. Murphy from the local's helm, saying he ran it too divisively.
Mr. Le Pen's party has divisively portrayed third-world immigrants as the scapegoats for France's economic ills.
The last issue of Rayat ash-Shaghilah was published in mid-June 1956, in which the group expressed self-criticism over having acting divisively in the communist movement.
One of them is Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the National Front, which has divisively painted third-world immigrants as the scapegoats for France's ills.
But the issue emerged so divisively precisely because NATO has been sitting on its thumbs for a couple of years now, while Moscow keeps flashing signals about changing the security climate.
At first this looks merely like an odd piece of legacy-management, a late attempt to impose cohesion on four books that have been more divisively received than almost anything else in the author's career.
Then Ms. Rosen thought better of the sarcasm, deleted it, and composed a more measured message, asking Ms. Horovitz, "Why fan the flames on these issues so divisively?"
Not only has the Melville-Farmingdale community's gathering place suddenly taken away, but never has a P.T.A. council been so divisively organized as to completely polarize an entire school district.
The play's other relationships are more convincing, especially those centered on Ms. Ryan's firmly grounded, warmly drawn Stella, who does indeed seem to belong divisively to the worlds of both Stanley and Blanche.
In respect to equal protection, a more literal approach could have read the Equal Protection Clause divisively, impeding rather than furthering the democratic unity needed to make the Constitution's institutions work as intended.
The bandwagons about to get a lot more crowded, and The Carpenter is divisively overt enough to give past fans just enough pause to get off before the Avett's play their first stadium shows."
The new people might ask why Grunfeld and Van Gundy were squabbling so divisively, and why Checketts didn't bang their heads together and say, "Get it together, you knuckleheads."
The religious developments sketched in chapter 1 also in part expressed these tensions while providing a framework - without offering simply and divisively political answers - within which anxieties expressed through the issues of the slave trade and slavery could be handled.
So - divisively in Norway, submissively in Sweden, reluctantly in France - history has become news in the broadening of an old question: not just what did you do in the war, but what did you really do?
Until now, Mr. Chávez has managed to hold off a referendum through legal challenges while determinedly, and divisively, buttressing the powers of his presidency and building up his support by shifting his country's oil wealth toward the poor of a highly polarized society.