From henceforth the military and civil authorities, as represented by Kossuth and G�rgey, were hopelessly out of sympathy with each other, and the breach widened till all effective co-operation became impossible.
32.
The Senate will not want to repeat the experience of the federal government under Ronald Reagan, when people out of sympathy with civil rights law were in charge of the Justice Department.
33.
In the statement, the trust said Prince Charles thought that " the proposed Dracula Park ( is ) wholly out of sympathy with the area and will ultimately destroy its character ."
34.
According to his fellow-critic Martin Cooper, Howes's affinity with music in the " English Renaissance " tradition left him out of sympathy with the cosmopolitan outlook of composers after the Second World War.
35.
It is difficult to understand the action of Peterborough during this campaign, unless on the supposition that he was out of sympathy with the movement for placing an Austrian prince on the throne of Spain.
36.
In a back story, it is revealed that he has been out of sympathy with the Mercatoria for some time, particularly over their treatment of artificial intelligences, and has in fact been a Beyonder agent.
37.
In February 1910 Asquith was considering him as a possible Chief Whip but was dissuaded by the outgoing Chief Whip Jack Pease who felt he was out of sympathy with many leading Liberals over the Lords.
38.
Later, out of sympathy with the politicians of the time, he left public service and went into business, first joining his younger brother Atu and working as resident director of the Takoradi Flour Mills from 1975-81.
39.
To date, Lebanon's government has made no move against Hezbollah-- apparently for fear of reigniting civil war as well as out of sympathy with its aim of mounting what is seen as legitimate resistance to foreign occupation.
40.
He was ennobled in April 1753 and received the Order of Saint-Michel, an honour he had impatiently awaited, but he found himself out of sympathy with the new neoclassical style that was being developed by the Academy's pensionnaires.