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717 Sentences With "make way"

How to use make way in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "make way" and check conjugation/comparative form for "make way". Mastering all the usages of "make way" from sentence examples published by news publications.

An entire neighborhood, Lightning, was razed to make way for that stadium, which was then demolished to make way for Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
Manafort was pushed out to make way for -- yup!
Make way Westeros, there's a new dream team in town.
Make way for the princess of all TV content: Netflix!
So it's important to make way for those new perspectives.
Villages have been flattened to make way for growing cities.
Forest was cleared to make way for the rubber crops.
Make way for more money into the startup investing pool.
And if it can't, make way for those who can.
It will make way for a supertall by Norman Foster.
Exhibition Review Make way for Tyrannosaurus rex, everyone's favorite killer.
And they're going to make way more money than you.
Traders tend to sell Treasuries to make way for fresh supply.
Make way for a week-long festival of gloating, folks. pic.twitter.
The outdoor theater was razed to make way for 182 condominiums.
And if not, she should make way for someone who will.
Others were booted off their land to make way for Arabs.
They were all displaced to make way for the new condo.
The old economy needs to make way for the new economy.
Thiem was ejected to make way for Williams, something he complained about.
Clashes have broken out over evictions to make way for Olympic projects.
Dozens of other sites were demolished to make way for the redevelopment.
His mission: convince homeowners to sell and make way for Mars missions.
Make way for more robots bearing lattes and doughnuts for college students.
Make way, Wiz Khalifa — your son may be coming after your career!
Be careful out there Angelenos and make way for our amazing firefighters.
Con will clear your history to make way for the next round.
The real estate had been gentrified to make way for bigger companies.
Humans also destroyed much of their habitat to make way for crops.
Teller building to make way for his flagship tower on Fifth Avenue.
He will make way for a younger Latina disruptor within progressive politics.
My favorite childhood book was "Make Way for Ducklings," by Robert McCloskey.
Buildings that get demolished, meanwhile, could make way for gardens and plazas.
Maybe someday they'll make way tothe best grocery store in every state.
Its teeth, stomach and intestine make way for an expanding esophageal gland.
One proposal calls for relocating the port to make way for housing.
Make way for regrets, recriminations and the basis for a lifelong hangover.
But top Republicans want the lieutenant governor to step aside and make way for Rubio, and many believe the candidate would drop out if the senator asked his close friend to make way for his re-election bid.
The structure is currently being demolished to make way for a new development.
His team was clearing rocks to make way for the new rail line.
They are burned to the ground to make way for farms and mines.
Well, then it's time to make way for the rest of Gen II...
Parliament is expected to dissolve next week to make way for the campaign.
Nueva Fuerabamba was the only community relocated to make way for Las Bambas.
Facebook says the removal of Trending will "make way" for future news products.
But to make way for our white forebears, the native people were slaughtered.
And ultimately, dairy and meat should make way for largely plant-based diets.
Therefore, AMZN was sold at $769 to make way for SBNY at $119.
Haslam, who leaves office next month to make way for incoming Tennessee Gov.
It was closed in January 2015 to make way for the Crossrail Project.
Make way for a hefty e-scooter that can take care of itself.
In 2003, Massachusetts designated "Make Way for Ducklings" as the official children's book.
N passenger was dragged from his seat to make way for crew members.
Kicking out homeowners to make way for another private owner sparked national outrage.
The cars raced through the streets, forcing traffic to halt and make way.
Soldiers burn country homes to make way for the battlefield, May 1, 1949.
This face alerts everyone within range to make way for the Pizza Queen.
Because the movies make way too much money to not bring them back.
The building was demolished in 2014 to make way for the apartment buildings.
Third, he should resign to make way for that person—and do so gladly.
Local residents facing eviction to make way for the projects have staged numerous protests.
Her progressive credentials, however, did not make way for an easy Democratic primary battle.
Old buildings in the neighbourhood are being demolished to make way for modern structures.
In other words, Amazon doesn't have to fire people to make way for robots.
" And Natalia from Texas, who commented, "fuck white supremacy, make way for a queen.
Many old neighbourhoods in China have been bulldozed to make way for new development.
Many people in Yongqing Fang were moved to make way for the new zone.
"Make way for the dress, I need about ten feet (3 meters)," Musgraves warned.
But to make way for plantations, huge swathes of tropical rainforest have been razed.
Surgeons also separated some of the veins to make way for today's final separation.
At this point I'm starving, and I make way too much food for myself.
Myanmar officials have said the villages were bulldozed to make way for refugee resettlement.
Harry Reid from Nevada telling Vice President Joe Biden to make way for Marcelas.
Make way for Delilah Belle Hamlin, the daughter of Lisa Rinna and Harry Hamlin.
Fields once piled with debris have been cleared to make way for heavy machinery.
Right: A resettled village to make way for the Nam Ou cascade hydropower project.
Of course, that all depends on regulations shifting to make way for autonomous vehicles.
The cuts would shrink protected land and make way for mining and oil drilling.
Some had hoped she would step aside to make way for new Democratic blood.
The latter was controversially dismantled to make way for a luxury real estate development.
Demolition of historic structures to make way for Istanbul's urban development has angered residents.
The landlord is demolishing the building to make way for a high-rise condominium.
It was torn down a decade ago to make way for the rebuilt palace.
But recently she had cleared out to make way for workers to start renovations.
The buildings have since been destroyed to make way for the Lakeview apartment complex.
Some may have to give up land to make way for the model farm.
Kungfu Panda needs to hustle along to make way for Yoga Panda over here.
Yet the new E.P.A. is proposing to dismantle it to make way for industry.
And many of them are slowly disappearing to make way for new architectural projects.
In the 2000s, that frame was cleared to make way for Esperanza, a different condo.
It's life's change agent; it clears out the old to make way for the new.
Drivers politely make way for each other on the narrow lanes, waving as they pass.
On January 20th, President Barack Obama will step down to make way for Donald Trump.
Make way, Bixby: Samsung is opening up its 2019 TV lineup to other voice assistants.
In December he summarily dispatched Beata Szydlo to make way for Mateusz Morawiecki, her deputy.
More than 380,000 people had to be moved to make way for the rising waters.
Nueva Fuerabamba was relocated to make way for Las Bambas, which started production in 2016.
On the flip side, maybe removing the headphone jack will make way for something better.
Investors often push bond prices down, and yields up, to make way for new bonds.
Military schools have been closed to make way for a government-run national defence university.
Liu Huigen, for one, was forced to move twice to make way for the development.
They said that if Mr. Trump would not make way for his running mate, Gov.
Yes, she's thrilled when she sees flare-ups make way for calm and clear complexions.
The building was demolished to make way for a mixed-use development called The Central.
Police officers testified that Mr. Williams ignored repeated commands to make way for an ambulance.
About 10 years ago, it was almost destroyed to make way for a shopping mall.
To make way for the dams, Lat Thahae and dozens more villages are being demolished.
After 24 minutes on the field, Neymar left to make way for his new teammates.
Authorities have also been relocating the homeless to make way for VIPs visiting the city.
Miracle Strip Amusement Park closed in Florida in 2004 to make way for new condos.
"But I cannot force praying devotees to make way for them," Phra Sanitwong Wuttiwangso said.
The Democratic National Committee changed the rules to make way for the New York billionaire.
Line: "Make way for Katt"  Who said it: Katt  (220:07) Who the hell is Katt?
Power lines were down, and cars weren't allowed on roads to make way for emergency vehicles.
In the mayhem following the attack, Ross said he tried to make way for emergency responders.
Many others have been driven off their land to make way for commercial farms and factories.
So people have been moved to make way for the factory, and some construction has begun.
In London alone, 45,000 bodies are being dug up to make way for a new station.
Some dilapidated structures around the building will be removed to make way for other Muslim facilities.
A black community called Seneca Village was razed in 1855 to make way for Central Park.
The neighborhood was later flattened to make way for the 101 Freeway—way to go, L.A.!
To meet it, Indonesian farmers set fires to clear forest and make way for new plantations.
Then he heard someone tell a grinning man to move and make way for the kid.
Much of that land was slash-and-burned to make way for cattle and other livestock.
He signaled that party president Gerry Adams was also preparing to make way for a successor.
Some 1.2 million people were resettled to make way for the Three Gorges Dam. Game-changer?
Make way for progress — even if that means pushing back against a herd of dinosaurs...again!
In the mid-thirties, Robert Moses evicted the remaining residents to make way for Marine Park.
We can't sit by and allow this administration to make way for the next financial crisis.
Clear-cutting neighborhoods in South Los Angeles to make way for the 10 Freeway in 1961.
The building will be demolished next year to make way for several more company office buildings.
Sick people midway through their recoveries are shown the door to make way for new patients.
More of the same on Friday, but all to make way for an absolutely exquisite weekend.
The mall was finally demolished in 2017 to make way for a golf and entertainment complex.
I just started thinking that I might as well make way more money as an escort.
It's time to make way for Nubya Garcia, the city's other major voice on the instrument.
The remains of an Indonesian rain forest that was cleared to make way for oil palms.
Isco started over him, and now departs to make way for him in the 61st minute.
This installation will soon be destroyed along with the garage to make way for a cinema.
Vast areas were turned over to make way for subway tunnels, apartment buildings and highway networks.
The government, including Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, has dutifully resigned to make way for the changes.
Zeus and Odin had to wage total war on their forebears to make way for man.
The building itself is slated to be demolished to make way for a 13-story condo.
" Thiem said getting ejected from a press conference to make way for Williams "shows a bad personality.
The orange grove next to Ms Mahfouz's home was chopped down to make way for apartment blocks.
" It was then that they were told to "make way for an exclusive performance by DESTINY'S CHILD!!
In 1997, the venue and its grand facade were demolished to make way for more NYU dormitories.
Then there are other questions, like whether sidewalks should be expanded to make way for charging stations.
First though, Fortuna's current owners would have to dilute their stakes to make way for Sonagas' entry.
Make way for another startup that wants to shake up the world of music and audio technology.
Nearly 300 households were cleared to make way for the promenade, and were adequately compensated, he said.
But many were filled in to make way for cars, while squatter settlements have encroached on others.
The DIY Network will shutter in 2020 to make way for Chip and Joanna Gaines's new channel.
His mother, a lawyer who had been his C.E.O., stepped down to make way for professional management.
Cadillac ended the production of the CTS to make way for the CT5, according to Cadillac Society. 
Those cost-cutting measures along with a high-level executive departure could make way for another deal.
Farmers bulldozed and torched the forests where the penguin lived to make way for cattle and sheep.
Police pushed them aside to make way for Maurya's gleaming white SUV and clanged the gates shut.
All three are now stepping aside to make way for the latest trendy confection: the luxury eclair.
The mall is now being demolished to make way for a new part-commercial, part-residential development.
Whatever misunderstandings we may have had in the past, let these make way for a new beginning.
The developer had torn down an accessory building on the lot to make way for the tower.
In Jackson, I have cleaned abandoned warehouse after warehouse alongside other artists to make way for studios.
Villages have been cleared to make way for drilling and to distance their residents from toxic pollution.
Money spent in some areas will be untethered to make way for new needs in other areas.
Landmark buildings have been torn down to make way for nondescript towers, and graffiti envelops many structures.
Cohen said the milestone was a natural time to make way for a new type of leader.
Investors often sell existing bonds to make way for new ones, putting upward pressure on bond yields.
However, these days, many other the dhows are forced to make way for more modern means of transportation.
First come the loggers; clear-cutting and burning follow, to make way for palm-oil or timber plantations.
"We've had to make way to let every other country come and fish in our waters," he said.
They were happy to take the money, and go and make way for progress, as they put it.
GoPro had to adjust the gadget's design to make way for all the seals necessary for this waterproofing.
Stores were forced to aggressively discount these items to make way for spring goods, cutting into their margins.
Losing such an iconic part of modern tech to make way for a better screen is inevitable, however.
Innocent Tumwebaze, one of 7,000 people displaced to make way for a refinery, is already disillusioned with oil.
It sheds a layer of its entertainment treasure chest in order to make way for even more delights.
Today, vast swaths of rainforest are actively deforested to make way for crops and provide land for cattle.
Ethiopian government officials have denied people are being forced from their homes to make way for large farms.
Like, move over Jon Snow, with your sad, sleepy eyes, and make way for this new hottie, cute.
The resulting standoff could force May to rethink her flawed policies - or make way for someone who will.
It may seem hazy for your morning commute, but that'll make way for some golden rays before long.
Sandy Hook was razed to make way for a new school that is slated open in the fall.
However, Google retired these blobs in 2017 to make way for human emoji with various skin tone options.
All the books in "Avid Reader" do make way for some pages about the author's non-print life.
The country's rapid urbanization has led to groups of villages' being razed to make way for high-rises.
Then a letter came: 96 Hudson was to be razed to make way for a new public school.
Mr. Jia's three-story home was destroyed in May 2013 to make way for a new property development.
His allies have been increasingly vocal in pressing for the president's retirement to make way for Mr. Mnangagwa.
Baron Hill ended his long shot bid for a U.S. Senate seat to make way for former Sen.
He worries that local residents will be evicted from their homes to make way for the new infrastructure.
Here's what else is happening: Morning clouds will make way for afternoon sunshine, with a high around 89.
Particularly telling is the fact that racially integrated communities were razed to make way for Jim Crow housing.
Mr. Senard was scheduled to step down from Michelin in May to make way for a successor there.
Most of the buildings were demolished around 1940 in order to make way for a public housing project.
The legislation forced the large utilities to make way for smaller decentralized entrants, foremost those in renewable energy.
Our forty-fourth president, dignity incarnate, leaves office this week to make way for a reality-TV star.
The Nets, having traded D'Angelo Russell to make way for Kyrie Irving, were expected to be better than .
Verses dissolve into instrumental interludes or make way for entirely different melodies; most songs end on ambiguous chords.
The tower was imploded to make way for a mixed-use development called The Central, Mr. Stevens said.
That should make way for attractive returns when it comes to equities relative to fixed income, Hyzy said.
India has abolished its big currency notes to make way for new and visually more appealing currency notes.
The boys' growth has slowed since they were removed from the incubators to make way for other babies.
These are common on Wall Street when executives are shuffled or depart to make way for younger managers.
To make way for factory changes, the tours were bumped, but now the visits will just be modified.
Why not just retire happily after a (very) long political career, and make way for a new generation?
Ms. Grady has told colleagues that she has no intention of resigning to make way for Mr. McAleenan.
The Big Slice, a Yonge Street institution 45 years strong, was closing to make way for a new tower.
Forests have to be cleared to make way for the mines — more than 256 square miles as of 2011.
But in May that year its residents were evicted from their cottages to make way for an international airport.
According to Eurogamer, this decision was taken at least partly to make way for production on the mini SNES.
Now overflowing with indoor street art, it's set to be demolished in June to make way for apartment buildings.
In other instances he has sought to force innocent landowners off their properties to make way for his developments.
The goal: Make way for developing a potentially world-changing spacecraft called Starship and, eventually, build a Mars spaceport.
It's time for us old folks to leave and make way for the next generation of hungry young capitalists.
What he did was remove 50 service members out of the country's north to make way for Turkey's incursion.
ABC No Rio announced plans to demolish its existing building to make way for a new, environmentally friendly structure.
It's always sad when your favourite Doctor leaves the show to make way for a newly-regenerated Time Lord.
If she doesn't take on board the fundamental changes required, then she must make way for those who can.
Communities in Nigeria's southern swampland often complain about oil pollution and houses being moved to make way for drilling.
They brutally smashed the past to make way for the future: an unholy pop-up dive called GWAR Pub.
He will leave in mid-June and make way for John Williams, currently head of the San Francisco Fed.
When word came several years ago that Yumingzui would be razed to make way for a resort, villagers protested.
Unlike Americans, Italians don't tear down historical homes and buildings to make way for parking lots and shopping malls.
Their permit allowed them three hours, after which they had to make way for a protest for Palestinian rights.
The British forced Africans off prime agricultural land and into native reserves, to make way for white settler farmers.
That one thin figure meant that she hadn't been asked to make way for anyone, and so she remained.
Nga Tsin Wai Tsuen, Hong Kong's last walled village, will be demolished to make way for a new development.
Historically, these communities have been evicted to make way for cash crops like sugar or coffee, Ms. Isaacs said.
But to make it work, the old school 'slash and burn' must make way for a more sophisticated approach.
Sometime in the next two years, its wall will be torn down to make way for a new pavilion.
To turn things around, it sold off slow-moving merchandise at clearance prices to make way for new products.
The destruction of forests to make way for plantations is also threatening the survival of wildlife such as orangutans.
It was a crowded room and I attempted to move the man along to make way for other people.
Skies will stay mostly sunny today, and a chilly morning commute will soon make way for highs near 50.
Trash cans were emptied, the detritus of the regular day tossed to make way for the crush to come.
Villagers are often evicted from farmland to make way for industrial or residential projects linked to state-affiliated companies.
State governments and developers have been descending on these settlements recently, clearing them out to make way for development.
A forest was felled to make way for the 740,000 people purged from Myanmar over just a few months.
After the 1956 Highway Act, the same process displaced communities to make way for the construction of urban thruways.
This isn't the first time executives have had to shuffle board slots to make way for the streaming wars.
Earlier on Monday, the official who led that investigation stood down to make way for the new anti-corruption regime.
Any early showers are expected to make way for a cloudy but manageable afternoon, with the high climbing near 50.
Fainting goats and teacup pigs need to move aside so you can make way in your heart for babydoll sheep.
However, these upgrades don't come without a cost, as older, classic Disney attractions must sometimes make way for the new.
Or maybe it'll just make way for an ever-evolving iPad powered by the more sophisticated iPadOS coming this fall.
There's been a steadily increasing trend of heels being left by the wayside to make way for more practical shoes.
Spending has to be cut, after all, to make way for Congress's enormous tax cut for corporations and the wealthy.
Davis speculated that that developer will likely retain the façade but demolish the interior to make way for its reincarnation.
Thousands of memories are demolished before our eyes, in order to make way for a large number of identikit flats.
But also, your boss knows they make way more money than you so it's pretty shitty to not spot cash.
Further, some provincial governments have demolished refugee housing to make way for urban development and infrastructure, according to the letter.
Forests around the world are being cleared to make way for soy beans, African palms, rubber trees and beef cattle.
Without formal property deeds, residents are at risk of eviction to make way for private or government-backed development projects.
The blog post contains more videos and nitty-gritty info, but I'm already convinced: Make way for our robot overlords.
In Sumatra and Borneo, forests have been pulped to make way for palm oil plantations, with devastating consequences for orangutans.
Pellegrini is now coaching City but will leave in the off-season to make way for the Bayern coach, Guardiola.
Farmers are pushing deeper into forests, cutting down more trees to make way for grazing land for cattle and agriculture.
Andrew Cuomo and his allies to bow out of the race to make way for their preferred candidate, Lt. Gov.
Last month, Tsvangirai said it was time for the older generation to step back and make way for "new hands".
Boris Johnson could soon be forced out as prime minister to make way for the Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn.
Developers routinely raze our architectural heritage to make way for hideous super towers, with the impotent consent of our lawmakers.
The groundbreaking will make way for the anchor retail tenant, Bass Pro Shops, to build a 200,000-square-foot store.
The U.S.-Russia proposal being discussed would make way for a political transition but does not elaborate on Assad's future.
Last year, actor Robert de Niro was reportedly in talks to close the place to make way for a hotel.
But as property values soared, SRO stock plunged, many demolished to make way for higher rent lofts and luxury development.
Even the Open Door is a memory, torn down to make way for the Bobst Library at New York University.
Plaxall's first factory, in Flushing, was bulldozed to make way for the James A. Bland Houses, a public housing development.
There is little doubt that huge areas of rain forest are being leveled to make way for palm oil plantations.
Unable to live off the sea, desperate fishermen have been burning protected coastal jungle to make way for rice fields.
But over the years, all except for the Queen Victoria Market closed or were demolished to make way for development.
At predetermined times, the seven pacemakers would make way for another group of seven to slide in and take over.
But the research facility that was torn down to make way for his new home was "not attractive," he said.
This cloudy morning should make way for sunshine by the afternoon, with a light breeze and the high nearing 80.
The wood paneling inside the residence was largely made from the trees cut down to make way for the home.
Ordinary Thais, meanwhile, gripe about the traffic jams caused when the streets are cleared to make way for royal motorcades.
Most male basketball Olympians play in the Games once, maybe twice, then bow out to make way for younger players.
Small landholders across the continent are increasingly getting priced out or even evicted to make way for big commercial farms.
And across Baghdad, many Iraqis fear that a US withdrawal would make way for greater Iranian dominance in the country.
In central Africa, though, fires in August are common, as farmers burn their fields to make way for new crops.
Even the country's National Stadium is being torn down to make way for a 65,000-seat soccer arena by 2019.
The company's chief executive officer, Michael Pearson, stepped down this month to make way for Perrigo chief executive Joe Papa.
Millions of acres of rainforest, particularly in Indonesia and Malaysia, have been destroyed to make way for oil palm plantations.
Brian Wilkie's scheduled appearance on ITV's This Morning was cut from the show to make way for the royal wedding news.
We don't recommend driving because of parking limitations and road closures to make way for the crowds and the inaugural parade.
Review were slowly moved into the background to make way for new features, including the current thumbs up/thumbs down offering.
Philadelphia's iconic "East Coast Humpbacks" mural (1993) at 2400 Market Street is being demolished to make way for Aramark's new headquarters.
The London Legacy Development Corporation plans to demolish the former tire factory in order to make way for a new footbridge.
The city of Hayward removed the offset curb, which lies at an intersection, to make way for a wheelchair accessible ramp.
Bourgeois had to clear out of the Brooklyn studio at the end of 2005 to make way for the Barclays Center.
They're soft and stretchy to make way for your food belly but fitted and luxe-looking enough to fit the occasion.
It was demolished in 25 to make way for a Rem Koolhaas-designed residential tower that has not yet been built.
Eventually, though, all the OG styles will be phased out to make way for the pre-treated boots, per Footwear News.
The curved TV is being quietly shuffled away from the limelight to make way for newer, and better, fads in televisions.
The institute's room of pine paneling came from a Connecticut farmhouse that was torn down to make way for a reservoir.
He has dismissed calls from opponents and activists to step down and make way for a full inquiry into the scandal.
You can watch as self-driving cars eliminate the need for street signs, and parking lots magically make way for parks.
That building was demolished in the 225s to make way for the current structure, which has been expanded over the years.
The city moved the monument to its current position to make way for the construction of the San Francisco Public Library.
EACH summer in a collection of remote fields in rural Hampshire, sheep and cattle make way for a vast tented camp.
But even many ardent supporters think Mr Sisi should step aside after his second term and make way for a successor.
However, this constant state of improvement means fan-favorite attractions sometimes have to make way for the new and improved ones.
Two awful years later, the Brewers dumped Segura on the Diamondbacks to make way for their next shortstop of the future.
This summer, the largest women's prison in western Europe, first built in 216, will close, to make way for new homes.
This was entirely plausible: The party cleared the field of other candidates before the primary began to make way for Clinton.
Land is cleared inside Indonesia's Singkil peat swamp — habitat of the Sumatran orangutan — to make way for palm oil production, Nov.
In South-East Asia, peat fires are caused by local environmental change, including drainage and deforestation to make way for crops.
The Kleins have been trying to step away as the sole "faces" of their fund and make way for new talent.
That budget has not been passed, but Congress is currently considering a budget deal that would make way for tax reform.
He is said to have consulted with a board member and other investors before agreeing to make way for new leadership.
Ford killed the Fiesta, Fusion, Taurus, and C-Max to make way for new trucks and SUVs, according to USA Today.
Mr. Price sold his three-year-old home for 40 per cent over the appraised price to make way for Foxconn.
However, as Beijing's city limits have expanded, many smaller artist villages have been torn down to make way for new development.
He reiterated that Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, would not cut supplies unilaterally or make way for rival producers.
Horton told BuzzFeed that she came up with the idea while preparing Summer's bedroom to make way for the new baby.
Other lakes have been covered by tarmac and concrete to make way for more buildings, and some have simply dried up.
One-way protected bike lanes were planned for 12th and 13th Street, to make way for the expected spike in cyclists.
But they moved after two buildings on either side of theirs were torn down to make way for large new ones.
His presence is specifically noteworthy for Senate Republicans' upcoming vote on a budget measure that would make way for tax reform.
After Bloomberg bombed in his first debate, pressure began growing behind the scenes for the billionaire to make way for Biden.
And these women are very aware of how to use their successes to make way for new people in their fields.
Slashing and burning the existing forests to make way for oil-palm cultivation had a perverse effect: It released more carbon.
These include an entire block of wedding dress shops that were destroyed to make way for one of the subway stops.
Many Congolese, two-thirds of whom grow what they eat, also chop down or burn trees to make way for crops.
Much of the community was demolished in the 1940s to make way for the entrance ramps to the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel.
A patch of land in Hidalgo County, Texas, where crews have cleared thick brush to make way for a border wall.
But that does not mean that the St. John's Terminal will soon be demolished to make way for new residential towers.
This canvas had hung in the Coler-Goldwater Memorial Hospital, which was razed to make way for the Cornell Tech campus.
Roads that were once the exclusive domain of cars have been squeezed to make way for bike and bus-only lanes.
The clouds you'll see as you're sipping your morning joe should soon make way for sunshine and a high of 21.
Nearby, workers are clearing trees from a national park to make way for a port deep enough to host naval ships.
In July, demolition is expected to begin to make way for a replacement boat and restaurant, scheduled to open next year.
A senior official said last week China will revise its criminal law to make way for the new anti-graft commission.
Close by, the Triângulo favela community was disrupted to make way for rapid bus lines that were expanded before the Olympics.
UK Prime Minister Theresa May has announced she will resign on 213 June to make way for a new prime minister.
But she feared that if they didn't buy it, someone else might knock it down to make way for a McMansion.
During the early 2000s, the mayor of Guaynabo, in league with developers, started expropriating properties to make way for luxury villas.
Vietnam's boom in real estate in recent years has spurred protests by small landowners evicted to make way for construction projects.
Many of the city's historic sites are neglected and unmarked, or they have been bulldozed to make way for apartment blocks.
Heynckes retired to make way for Guardiola after winning everything — the German league, the German Cup and the Champions League — in 2013.
Much of the city's architectural heritage is crumbling, or has been pulled down to make way for office blocks and luxury apartments.
The excitement soon gave way to demands that the transitional military council make way for a civilian-led interim body and elections.
Further down the line the French company's stake will fall to 20 percent to make way for Italian broadcaster Mediaset, it said.
She is unlikely to make way for a successor until Britain has left the EU. Yet there is no time to lose.
The Indonesian rainforest has fallen on devastating times thanks to farmers burning the forests to make way for fields of palm trees.
Why it matters: Most media companies have to unwind years worth of sales and product infrastructure to make way for the transition.
This was meant to be the kernel of the new railway town: people were resettled here to make way for the tracks.
No child wants or needs to see the world being completely obliterated, even if it is to make way for mankind. 24.
The actress is leaving the show to make way for Olivia Colman, who will play Queen Elizabeth in her slightly older years.
It can be traumatic to be forced off your land to make way for a palm-oil plantation or a high rise.
Home demolitions for both these groups are still widespread in the region to make way in many cases for more illegal settlements.
Data informs investment decisions at VC funds more than ever, as new technologies make way for increasingly quantitative approaches to deal-making.
I am not physically able to continue in my current role and have therefore decided to make way for a new leader.
Fuerabamba, a former herding and farming community, was relocated to a new town to make way for Las Bambas earlier this decade.
Disputed elections occurred in 2010, which nevertheless led to the junta dissolving itself to make way for a military-dominated civilian government.
Supporters and critics alike suggest that he could step down, perhaps in 2018, and make way for John McDonnell, his shadow chancellor.
Down on the ground, things look very different, as the city's architectural heritage is wiped clean to make way for the new.
Ahead of an auction, traders typically sell Treasuries to make way for the new supply of government debt, leading to higher yields.
The owners sold it off to make way for a bar, which is a sad process being repeated all along the strip.
The 150-year-old institution at 12th Street and Seventh Avenue was subsequently demolished to make way for the development of condominiums.
Make way for the crunchy moms, free-range parents, babywearing dads, single moms by choice, positive parents — just to name a few.
This car might have to pull over to make way for the consumer rush back to S.U.V.s, pickups and big crossover vehicles.
Two decades of unparalleled fortune generation are about to make way for the greatest wealth transfer in history, the study also found.
Art Review Make way for Francis Picabia, one of the grandest, most mordant exemplars of early modernism, and perhaps the least familiar.
It's being closed at the end of the year to make way for an expanded neonatal unit and fifteen additional postpartum beds.
He was ordered to make way for Leclerc, who was clearly faster, before stopping for a second time on the 33rd lap.
A member of Mr. Wickremesinghe's party issued a public letter last week, asking the prime minister to make way for new leadership.
Among other measures, the White House is considering action to help small businesses and make way for paid sick leave for workers.
The Pendry San Diego occupies half a city block that was cleared to make way for a Marriott hotel that never materialized.
Representative Linda Sánchez, 48, a California Democrat, said that it was time for older Democrats to make way for a younger generation.
Their owners say city officials have not begun negotiations to acquire their parcels to make way for later phases of the project.
As old political power structures make way for new ones, cooperation between the corrupt authorities and criminal groups fall apart, analysts said.
President Aliyev has systematically isolated, and then fired, longtime members of the regime in order to make way for his own cronies.
The company moved 210 farms to make way for the lodge, and has replanted over 22,29 indigenous trees to restore the landscape.
The country's former Communist leader, Nicolae Ceausescu, ordered the demolition of historic neighborhoods around the country to make way for modern buildings.
Patrick Nkanga, an adviser to President Joseph Kabila who stepped down last month to make way for Tshisekedi, also criticized the measure.
After the forests were nearly wiped out to make way for sugar plantations and other forms of agriculture, the species nearly vanished.
Pisces season (February 19–March 20) coincides with late winter, when the frozen ground begins to thaw and make way for spring.
Mr. Gallego said on Tuesday morning that he was still considering the race, indicating he would not make way for Mr. Kelly.
" These subtle digs make way for much more outlandish criticism, like when Fallon proclaims that, "Everyone here knows I was born into diamonds.
I make way too much, but R. plays in sports leagues throughout the week and I know he'll eat it after his games.
The Villa Namazee, Gio Ponti's only building in Iran, will be demolished in order to make way for a new five-star hotel.
The interest in this new show doesn't come as surprise with people trying to make way for better habits in the new year.
The disappearance of the Well of the Scribes is a timeless LA story — it was removed to make way for a parking lot.
He added, although it is "very tough" to let go of the device, the change will make way for new and better experiences.
I was hoping that this would make way for a more nuanced conversation about Star's sexuality moving forward, but that moment didn't come.
Many villagers in Tilia, about 350 km from the capital Bhubaneswar, were resettled there years ago to make way for the Hirakud dam.
SpaceX's most vocal holdouts in South Texas are selling their homes to Elon Musk's rocket company to make way for a Mars spaceport
The expectation is that Prime Minister Boris Johnson will be forced to ask for an extension to make way for a general election.
Now, make way for a new one called WeDo, whose developers believe it can do things better for a wider market of people.
Even if it isn't entirely accurate for the time period they were modeling, "it's the least wrong choice you can make," Way said.
Local families in both cities have been kicked out of their houses in order to make way for the inflow of ISIS families.
The industry should make way for new ways to buy medicines, including allowing consumers to make installment and "outcomes-based" payments, he said.
Will Uber repeat as Best Overall Startup in 2015, or will the ridesharing service make way for someone else to steal the crown?
"In conversation with the chief today, she and I agreed that she would step aside to make way for new leadership," Hodges added.
If you want to just chill out on their (private) beach, make way for the shore and dig your toes into the sand.
Even if he manages to sign more cutting-edge acts, they'll eventually move beyond him before they, too, make way for another style.
In more recent years sites surrounding the Kaaba in Mecca have also been removed to make way for luxury hotels and imperial palaces.
It has not applied to run in those elections, in an effort to put pressure on the government to make way for technocrats.
There was, despite appearances, a noble idea behind the EU-Turkey deal: stop the irregular migrant flows to make way for regular ones.
The recently fired vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa—an ouster that triggered last week's military seizure of power—called on Mugabe to make way.
Pearson is expected to step down in the coming weeks to make way for the incoming CEO, Joseph Papa, previously of Perrigo Company.
Noreika is expected to leave the post in coming weeks to make way for Joseph Otting, President Donald Trump's pick for the OCC.
More than 770,000 people were displaced and an untold number of trees felled to make way for plantations of rubber, sugarcane and timber.
Among differences, the FAO says that a forest where trees are deliberately felled to make way for new plantings is still a forest.
This piece explores what the expansion has meant for the city's ancient sites: they have largely had to make way for the pilgrims.
Renzi then resigned to make way for what Fitch described as "a weakened interim government," led by his former foreign minister Paolo Gentiloni.
A rare exception came after Mr. Trump decided to demolish a department store to make way for his Trump Tower in Midtown Manhattan.
Boo-Keun Yoon and Jong-Kyun Shin said they have decided to follow Kwon and make way for new leaders, according to Samsung.
Instead, lawmakers assumed that, soon enough, old plants would either retire and make way for new models or undertake upgrades to stay competitive.
Perhaps now would be a great time to retire and make way for a candidate who better reflects the views of your constituents?
The British government evicted thousands of islanders from their homes on Diego Garcia and the surrounding area to make way for the base.
Ultimately, the outcome of those talks must be some kind of U.S. withdrawal to make way for the Korean rapprochement and eventual unification.
Should Representative Martha McSally, a Republican, lose to Representative Kyrsten Sinema, Mr. Kyl could step aside to make way for Ms. McSally's appointment.
Environmentalists have blasted RWE for targeting the Hambach Forest to make way for expansion of its open-pit lignite, or brown coal, mine.
As recently as 2016, it opened as frequently as 20 times a month, often to make way for barges loaded with sewage sludge.
She said she thinks the landlord is using it as a tactic to push longtime tenants out to make way for higher rents.
The government says the bulldozing was done with good intentions - to make way for new development and improved living conditions for the Rohingya.
The video concludes with a sequence of demolitions of newly built apartment blocks, which were cleared to make way for further upscale development.
That is because dealers want to move cars off their lots, he said, to make way for the delivery of new model years.
She was abruptly kicked out of her space when the building was bought by Restoration Hardware to make way for a boutique hotel.
Make way for a group of self-involved Broadway performers, swooping in to save the day — and get publicity — through song and dance.
Karen Karapetyan, who had just left the post of prime minister to make way for Mr. Sargsyan, stepped in as acting prime minister.
The equestrian monument was moved to make way for a North Korean-built independence museum that is a paean to Swapo's liberation movement.
Trees release the gas when they rot or are burnt to make way for farms, such as for cattle or palm oil plantations.
Ahead of an auction, traders would typically sell Treasuries to make way for the new supply of government debt, leading to higher yields.
In the months ahead, however, many of these same women would be summarily dismissed from their jobs to make way for returning veterans.
Mugabe removed Mnangagwa from the office of vice president, almost certainly to make way for his wife Grace to succeed him as president.
But Hatch and his team have pushed back on reports that he plans to retire to make way for Romney as his replacement.
I adore planning and preparing such feasts but find that I keep running into the same problem — I make way too much food.
Drugmakers Lupin Ltd and Cipla Ltd will make way for the two banks, according to a statement from Asia Index Pvt Ltd. bit.
Remember the 2011 405 Freeway "Carmageddon," when the state paid almost $2 billion to widen the highway to make way for more cars?
Some £4bn ($5bn) of work has been completed, including exhuming 45,3623 bodies from a graveyard at Euston to make way for new platforms.
In this case, it's even people who want to help you save the world—not eradicate it to make way for another one.
The vacant LA homes are part of a large-scale art piece, and they're being demolished to make way for a new housing complex.
Overstock plans to sell its decades-old retail business in the next few months to make way for a full-blown bet on blockchain.
"Between 1950 and 1985, around a hundred 'bostons' in the walled city were destroyed to make way for boulevards, hospitals, and housing," he says.
The wooden walkway that was seemingly cursed from the day it opened in 2013 was demolished recently to make way for a steel replacement.
Growers there (or at least the cartels that control them) have taken to cutting down forests illegally to make way for more extensive farming.
Where would their loyalties lie when the Nazis view them as subhuman, people who should be ethnically cleansed to make way for Aryan superiority?
To make way for the tongue, the rest of the creature's tiny head is extremely reduced in size, with some skull bones missing entirely.
In recent years, a real estate market boom in Vietnam has stirred up protests by small landowners evicted to make way for construction projects.
But the practice is more than a little outdated — in order to support diversity, it's compulsory that the industry make way for diverse nomenclature.
Within the apparel category, it's been dealing with too much inventory that needs to be discounted in order to make way for new styles.
The 27-year-old has been kept on while Russian Daniil Kvyat is dropped to make way for the returning French rookie Pierre Gasly.
President Trump's budget proposal, unveiled in March, outlined $54 billion in cuts across government programs to make way for an increase in defense spending.
It is blamed for fouling the environment and causing great suffering among the 213m people who were relocated to make way for its reservoir.
In Thailand, protests have erupted, as evictions from forests and farm land have risen to make way for mines, power plants and national parks.
Pearson is expected to step down in the next few weeks to make way for the incoming CEO, Joseph Papa, previously of Perrigo Company.
In 2011, PS122 moved out of its longtime home on First Avenue to make way for renovations designed to update and enlarge the building.
The main flaw of the Snohetta building may be that the San Francisco Modern's 1995 structure was not demolished to make way for it.
Several years after the neighborhood was cleared to make way for GM, the company did what it too often does: build the wrong car.
Deforestation has been a problem in Boreno for decades, as its rainforests have been burned and slashed to make way for oil palm plantations.
Deforestation and fires to make way for development, logging, and agriculture have been two of the biggest threats to the rainforest over the years.
Although, its September release date is a little late for places with distinct seasons, where the summer will soon make way for the fall.
Raleigh hopes to renovate some buildings and tear others down to make way for an outdoor theater, athletic courts, sports fields, and botanical garden.
Here's the last picture of my Halloween Garden Club tree since it's about to come down to make way for a new killer tree.
But its usage has become unsurprisingly controversial, as huge areas of rainforest have been cut down or burned to make way for palm plantations.
The buildings were destroyed to make way for a 25,2220-foot office tower, One Vanderbilt, that will rival the Empire State Building in height.
For his part, Netanyahu has been hazy about whether he would remove Jewish settlements in the West Bank to make way for the Palestinians.
Moses had the former home of Hart Crane and Washington Roebling demolished to make way for an on-ramp to the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway.
Acres upon acres of forest have been razed to make way for small cities of huts, made from cheap black tarps covered in mud.
Although it was extremely popular, it closed for good in 1964 to make way for the construction of the housing development Co-Op City.
That would save forests on the urban fringe from being cut to make way for more housing, and cut emissions and congestion on highways.
In the 1950s, bequests to Goodwill Industries thrift stores tripled, and flea markets flourished as Americans dumped the old to make way for new.
They had plied their trade in the popular tourist district for years before being kicked out to make way for food stalls decades ago.
Every actress who has assayed the role, including Jacqueline Bisset and Jaclyn Smith (even the names chime), must now make way for Natalie Portman.
"In conversation with the chief today, she and I agreed that she would step aside to make way for new leadership," Ms. Hodges said.
Dudley, who turns 65 next September, will step down in February to make way for successor Bernard Looney, BP's current head of upstream operations.
Russia's government resigned Wednesday to make way for major new constitutional changes, according to the Tass state news agency, citing Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.
Make way for the queso fundido, served not in a bubbling bowl but inside a banana leaf that's spent some time on a grill.
Thousands of shanties were bulldozed last week in Kibera, Nairobi's largest slum and home to some 400,000 people, to make way for a road.
Sahrawis, as the people of Western Sahara are known, say Minurso must either carry out the referendum or withdraw and make way for war.
Both agencies moved out of the Old Post Office building on Pennsylvania Avenue to make way for a new tenant: the Trump International Hotel.
Similar to holdout buildings, like the nail houses of China whose owners refused to make way for development, spite houses are acts of protest.
Two scientific collections at the University of Louisiana at Monroe (ULM) are being divested to make way for renovations of the campus track stadium.
In April this year it made headlines worldwide after a paying passenger was dragged semi-conscious from a flight to make way for airline staff.
Sinosphere BEIJING — More than 2000,233 Chinese villagers are leaving their homes to make way for aliens — or for the possible echoes of them, at least.
Here are 14 of the most revealing changes: Humans have been clearing forests to make way for farms and pastures for at least 19873,000 years.
CNN viewers may have wished for more of a change when the network ended one of Anderson Cooper's two hours to make way for Cuomo.
Earlier this year, in constructing the telescope, the government forcibly uprooted over 9,000 residents within a 5km radius, to make way for the massive structure.
The Tesla comparison isn't entirely apt, however, as June will effectively be sunsetting the previous version to make way for the new, lower-cost model.
The commodity is under scrutiny because the producers in Indonesia and Malaysia have in the past cleared forests to make way for oil palm cultivation.
Having lost an election, Yahya Jammeh missed a deadline to step down as president of the Gambia to make way for his successor, Adama Barrow.
To launder their money, they invest in ranching and agriculture, two businesses notorious for bulldozing and burning forests to make way for livestock and crops.
Lebanon has only recently passed a law to protect historic buildings and many have been demolished to make way for modern apartment buildings and offices.
He'd be "brokenhearted" if, as the judge has ordered, the city did away with East Side to make way for the middle schools, he said.
Interestingly, Gartner notes that some of China's growth may be due to manufacturers looking to move old flagship stock to make way for 5G models.
The pews were removed to make way for dozens of blond, bowl-cutted kids to run freely across what is now the school's gym floor.
As Valley Public Radio reports, farmers have been tearing out other crops to make way for almond trees, which resulted in the glut of nuts.
Investors often sell existing bonds to make way for new supply but on this occasion, the trade-war jitters held sway and pinned yields down.
The one-time Dow stock surged 7 percent after Chairman and CEO John Flannery was ousted to make way for former Danaher chief Larry Culp.
Most of the family is decked out in camouflage attire, ditching any semblance of red-and-green duds to make way for New Year's celebrations.
They also said Tesla was rejiggering its Fremont, California, factory to make way for the refresh and for production of its upcoming Model Y crossover.
Officials had a free hand to requisition land for the airport: 20173 villages were demolished and about 20,000 people relocated to make way for it.
As forests and wetlands have been cleared in the past century to make way for cities and farmland, land has been degraded and soil eroded.
More than 52,000 families have been relocated to sites on the outskirts of Chennai as slums were flattened to make way for roads and flyovers.
Tiangong-2 will make way for Tiangong-3, the country's last step before it embarks on establishing a crewed station like the International Space Station.
The Sports Arena, which was once home to the Los Angeles Lakers and Clippers, will be torn down to make way for the new complex.
Stefani had left the show to make way for the returning Christina Aguilera, but this move will see her and Shelton working together once again.
As the outgoing British Prime Minister hums his way towards the exit door to make way for Theresa May, we've graded Cameron's time in office.
Italian 30-year government bond yields jumped to three-week highs at 3.678 percent as investors sold bonds to make way for the new issue .
Another photo showing her and her friend crossing a busy road had to be taken in mere seconds so they could make way for traffic.
Adam Jones — who moved to right field to make way for Mullins in center — put Baltimore in front 4-3 with a two-run single.
In Cairo, some communities are being displaced to make way for business or tourism projects that authorities say will boost the economy and attract investment.
Read more: Boris Johnson could soon be forced to stand down as prime minister to make way for Jeremy CorbynAs things stand, that looks unlikely.
The timber buildings of Orwell's era either burned down or were demolished to make way for crude concrete buildings that now dominate the downtown area.
As you might imagine, some people are none too pleased at the prospect of the US government killing wild horses to make way for livestock.
Maybe Mount Vernon Baptist and/or Friendship Baptist Church can play host, since their buildings were razed to make way for the Falcons new stadium?
Elsewhere in the country, indigenous people are increasingly being forced off their land to make way for dams, mines and wildlife parks, rights groups say.
In 1977, Orville Wright's downtown Dayton laboratory, where he loved to experiment, was demolished to make way for a gas station that was never built.
Flipping food halfway through cooking is much easier when you don't have to dig around with tongs, and multiple trays make way for bigger batches.
The building was demolished in 1996 to make way for Madame Tussauds Wax Museum, part of the city's effort to revitalize the Times Square area.
Shortly after we shared her story, her family revealed that she had died after being discharged from the hospital to make way for new patients.
Beginning in 1966, a decade-long Cultural Revolution sought to eradicate old ideas and customs in order to make way for a new, revolutionary China.
To make way for the Tin Building, its predecessor was temporarily relocated nearby in the late 1800s, and scheduled for demolition upon its successor's completion.
But mangrove forests and marshes around the world are increasingly vanishing to make way for cash crops like palm oil, according to the new study.
Many Democrat and Republican lawmakers say that the U.S. pullout could make way for rivals like Iran and Russia, who back Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Putin, who has fired a raft of officials this year to make way for a new generation, praised Oreshkin as a young and efficient expert.
In Thailand, evictions of villagers and indigenous people from forests and farm land have risen to make way for mines, power plants and national parks.
Later known as the Omni International Hotel, it was demolished in 183 to make way for the 294-room InterContinental Cleveland, which the clinic owns.
The revelations of plot make way for the bigger revelation that the complacent, well-heeled Will and Lily Dale are defenseless against life's universal solitude.
Left-hander Gary Ballance must make way for Buttler after a disastrous tour of Bangladesh where he could only manage 24 runs in four innings.
Every now and then someone remarks to me that I should retire to make way for younger women who want to get started in teaching.
Looking ahead, she believes 5G technology has the power to advance social media even further, and make way for more interactive content and immersive games.
"And that's closing," he added, eyeing Au Rendez-Vous des Amis, a neighborhood cafe that had just shuttered to make way for a hamburger joint.
After a Berlin meeting, Russia, Turkey and other countries pledged to end their interference in the North African nation to make way for peace efforts.
TEXT CARD - Part 1 Over the past century, nearly all of Ethiopia's native forests have been cleared to make way for farming and cattle grazing.
Mr. Gindi said he had bought out several tenants to make way for American Eagle and T-Mobile stores, as well as Designer Shoe Warehouse.
Cycling is already embedded in the fabric of Mexico City, which shuts off miles of streets at weekends to make way for thousands of cyclists.
He quit in 2016 in protest at the sacking of defense minister Moshe Yaalon to make way for Avigdor Lieberman from a rightist coalition partner.
I've moved up people's shit on the belt to make way for my crap, especially my food is in a basket and weighing me down.
It would remain in place for the two years that the shelter is expected to operate, before being demolished to make way for a university.
A mom wonders when the Alcoholics Anonymous meeting will clear out from the picnic shanty and make way for her 2-year-old's birthday party.
Now, as her own family faces possible eviction to make way for a larger road, shifting borders take on a whole new and darker meaning.
The largely deserted Olympic Park is especially galling to the people who were kicked out of their nearby homes to make way for the Games.
Campaigners hailed the ruling as a vindication for poorer residents, whose prime land in Nigeria's biggest city is being cleared to make way for luxury developments.
While that initial structure is no longer standing (as it was demolished in 2005 to make way for a commercial building), the hotel reopened in 2009.
The Sun is an underdog too, a loss-making has-been hived off by its parent company to make way for the all-conquering Daily Mirror.
Initial celebrations gave way to demands that the TMC, which took over after Bashir's ousting, make way for a civilian-led interim body and hold elections.
Growing tourism has led to the clearing of mangroves to make way for small inns and piers that pop up along the coast, the researchers said.
On August 10 at Klowden Mann, artist Nancy Popp will screen films about Vila Autódromo, which was demolished to make way for the Rio 2016 Olympics.
Activists warned that without limits, San Francisco's quaint Victorian homes and Gold Rush bordellos would be ripped out to make way for bank and insurance headquarters.
It was once cloaked in lush forests but huge expanses have been cleared by loggers and to make way for roads, fields and vast rubber plantations.
About a dozen homeowners in South Texas' Boca Chica Village neighborhood have not sold their properties to SpaceX to make way for a planned Starship spaceport.
Most recently, Cheap Charlies, a 35-year-old street bar and fixture of Soi 11, closed on March 31 to make way for real estate development.
Below is a brief, edited transcript of Nilay's conversation with Sruthi on how Mount Pleasant moved people out of their homes to make way for Foxconn.
O threaded together drill pipes one recent morning in the Permian Basin, a bulldozer cleared sagebrush to make way for the company's fifth well since January.
Although many in the African National Congress would like him to resign to make way for Cyril Ramaphosa, the party's new leader, the report was false.
In the last two years, however, plans have changed many times and locals have been forced to move to make way for the 3,000-acre project.
In January the Holy See was reported to have warned underground bishops in two dioceses that they would have to make way for officially approved clergy.
When Brea and I heard about their new projects, we revised our schedule to make way for two of the most important voices in our community.
Maduro is under pressure to step down and make way for opposition leader Juan Guaido, who is backed by the United States and most Western nations.
Some Bedouin sheikhs look to Prince Hamzah, the king's half-brother, who was removed as heir apparent in 2004 to make way for the king's son.
Fans line up to hug him, often reaching back for a lingering last touch as they're led off to make way for the next waiting fan.
The dilapidated low-rise buildings in the 16.5-acre (7 hectares) site will make way for high-rise towers, wide streets, parking lots and green spaces.
Campaigners hailed the ruling as a vindication for poorer residents, whose prime land in Nigeria's biggest city, Lagos, is cleared to make way for luxury flats.
Deputy national security adviser K.T. McFarland has reportedly been offered the post of ambassador to Singapore to make way for Dina Powell, an ally of Kushner.
Floral hair adornments were toppled by dad hats, chokers were covered up by bandanas, and gladiator sandals were pushed aside to make way for branded sneakers.
Its director should've gone on to make way more movies (her only other credit is a Bessie Coleman short she made for Showtime the year after).
When they announced yesterday afternoon that they'd be closing down the game to make way for brand new title, Club Penguin Island, I shed a tear.
As old political power structures make way for new ones, cooperation between corrupt officials and criminal groups falls apart, spurring violent struggles for new cooperative arrangements.
It's seems as bad an exercise of eminent domain as throwing a widow out of her house in Atlantic City to make way for more asphalt.
The salt pans, which are protected by coastal zone rules, will be re-classified to make way for much-needed housing, said Chief Minister Dev Fadnavis.
This year it was announced that the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, in Exposition Park, would be bulldozed to make way for a more modern stadium.
The hotel was demolished in 1929 to make way for the Empire State Building, and the Waldorf Astoria reopened at its current location on Park Avenue.
The primary, in which the victor was 28 years old, also amplified an existing debate over whether the current leadership should make way for younger leaders.
Creative channels are generally less visually overwhelming than the frantic, flashing gaming streams, taking away one distracting element to make way for more personal community-building.
When it's not due to rising rents, panics over "the drugs menace" or noise complaints, it's to make way for another gleaming set of pricey flats.
From 1967 to 1973, the British evicted the entire population of the Chagos islands — known as the Ilois — to make way for the US air base.
Intimations of mortality do nothing to persuade him to resign as prime minister and make way for Anthony Eden, as Churchill's colleagues and family fervently wish.
In a year or two, even higher capacity memory cards will make way for price reductions on this little card and then it'll be worth buying.
Warren will inevitably face pressure from progressives to drop out and expand Sanders's lane, while moderates may increasingly call for Bloomberg to make way for Biden.
To villagers who have been shoved off their land to make way for the new airport, the project has become a monument to their worst fears.
Because he was unsure how long he would need to recover during the COVID-19 pandemic, he decided to quit to make way for a replacement.
But it's telling that AT&T has underperformed the Dow by 23 percentage points since it was removed to make way for Apple two years ago.
She had to move, she was later told, to make way for the renovation of her high-rise and the higher-paying tenants it would bring.
The Labour leader will challenge Prime Minister Theresa May's cabinet to "pull yourself together or make way" for Labour to deliver Brexit in the national interest.
The city, once farmland where ostriches were raised, was the first in the country to rewrite its zoning code to make way for self-driving cars.
Everything in the old world would be eradicated to make way for the new; no price was too high and there would be no way back.
The property in question, above, is emblematic of that: A rent-regulated building was torn down to make way for the 79-story luxury condominium tower.
"With endorsements, I make way more money sitting at home posting pictures on Instagram than I do fighting," says VanZant, who has 2.3 million Instagram followers.
The Army Corps of Engineers tried to control the water flow through the Everglades to help the sugar industry flourish and to make way for growth.
"Do people even know what eminent domain is?" asked Trump, who has attempted to invoke it to evict homeowners and make way for his private developments.
The trouble is that this exclusion drama is a retread of the original "Toy Story," in which Woody had to make way for the splendiferous Buzz.
Its rooms replace those lost when the clinic's Guesthouse, a dated brown-brick structure, was demolished to make way for Case Western Reserve University educational buildings.
In a normal world, every so often a lightning-sparked fire will roll through a landscape, clearing away old foliage to make way for the new.
This, then, is the player's explicit task in Shadowkeep: Through great difficulty, you're struggling to kill the past to make way for a more dynamic future.
Bemba said last week that he believes he is the strongest candidate to represent the opposition but would be willing to make way for another candidate.
The leader of Britain's opposition Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, said Britain no longer had a functioning government and called on May to "make way" for Labour.
When Trump retreats back to his table with Latvia's leader, to make way for Merkel, Johnson slaps a sign that says "IMPEACH ME!!!" on his back.
That year, Pathmark, the only affordable grocery store for miles and a beloved fixture in the neighborhood, was demolished to make way for One Manhattan Square.
Over the past few years, Mr. Taylor's company has broadened its scope to make way for new works by outside choreographers and appearances by guest artists.
It was demolished in 1991 to make way for an office building, but right before the wrecking ball came, the sculptures were plucked from the facade.
The city's famed Tsukiji fish market was relocated to the new space, in the Toyosu neighborhood, late last year to make way for the 403 Olympics.
You'll see cloudy skies as you roll out of bed, and there's a slight chance of rain — but the gray will make way for sweet sunshine.
Whatever the cause, some records are bound to get swept under the rug to make way for the glory of a few select darlings each year.
Eight pallbearers lifted the gleaming silver coffin, which reflected the bright late-winter sun and the faces of mourners on the steps, who parted to make way.
It also dredged up the president's longstanding feud with local farmer Michael Forbes, who refused to sell his farm to make way for another Trump golf course.
For years, overcapacity, undue regulations and the inability of creative destruction to make way for new entrants have acted as natural governors on high-paying job creation.
To many, the overhaul is the clearest sign yet that President dos Santos really is preparing for retirement but not necessarily to make way for his daughter.
Trees were cut down to make way for the refugees, who also dug up the roots for firewood, making the slopes even weaker and prone to collapse.
Our favorites this week Get going with some of our most popular good news stories of the week The spud squad Make way for the farm equipment!
Two former presidents, civic leaders, opposition politicians and even some of Mr. Buhari's former allies have said he should make way for a younger generation of leaders.
Last month, he told Reuters he planned to step down from the world's largest contract manufacturer to make way for younger talent to move up its ranks.
The fudge was that Mr Duisenberg would step down halfway through his term to make way for Jean-Claude Trichet, a Frenchman who was Mr Draghi's predecessor.
The clearances of the 18th and 703th centuries, when rich landowners forcibly evicted poor tenants to make way for sheep farming, loom large in the cultural imagination.
By then the controller had gauged the seriousness of the situation and told the other plane to abandon its approach to make way for the charter jet.
Despite a campaign to have it placed on Historic England's heritage list, the site is now being demolished to make way for more than 1,500 new homes.
It has all the moving parts of the real bridge; both the lower and upper decks can be lifted to make way for boats on the river.
Small businesses, stores and restaurants that have been serving the Chinatown community for decades are closing to make way for high-end establishments, businesses, and art galleries.
Once meant to protect the city from attack by sea and by land, today in some sections they've been removed to make way for Istanbul's growing population.
The family moves out of the house twice a year to make way for a film crew and groups of men and women participating in the show.
The rabbit incident came after United was under scrutiny for dragging a passenger off a flight April 9 at O'Hare to make way for a crew member.
Hichilema, along with five others, is accused of trying to overthrow the government after a column of opposition vehicles failed to make way for the president's motorcade.
To make way for cars, literally and figuratively, wealthy drivers and the U.S. auto industry set out to stigmatize lower-class pedestrians who crossed streets at will.
In fact, Stalin's city planners once proposed demolishing Saint Basil's Cathedral—the building in the background of this photo—to make way for more elaborate military parades.
However, to make way for these innovations, we need to clarify the regulatory environment and move away from current spectrum licensing policies that favor big network providers.
An artist put cages and foil blankets around Boston's iconic "Make Way for Ducklings" statue to protest the Trump administration's migrant detention policies on the southern border.
To make way for all of this, Palestinian homes are demolished, olive trees cleared, and access denied to touristic sites, quarries, mines, and other revenue-generating resources.
Will Republicans finally make way for the court-shifting nominee of a Democratic president, or will Democrats resort to ending the filibuster to fill a court opening?
Police started to clear away debris including umbrellas, bricks and furniture items down one of the city's busiest tourist and commercial districts, to make way for traffic.
Chinese authorities ordered residents to vacate their apartments and banned flying kites, lanterns, and homing pigeons to make way for the parade, The New York Times reported.
We cannot forget the thousands of families evicted to make way for Olympic venues, including the Olympic Village, which will be eventually converted to high-end condominiums.
As new entrants come in and existing residents expand, several time-worn buildings have been demolished to make way for the high-tech spaces now in vogue.
The publication of stories around the world about the forced evictions of around 77,000 local residents to make way for Olympic building projects didn't help the image.
The person who has had an opportunity to live at least has been given that gift by God and should make way for new life on earth.
Memories burst like fireworks, linger and eventually fade into dark skies over an ever-transitioning city that has to make way for the new and the next.
His motorcade took rain-slicked streets through the city's West Side, where block after block was shut down at rush hour to make way for the president.
David Santiago and his family had been forced out of their home on Delancey Street in Manhattan in 1967 to make way for an urban renewal project.
So, too, is Bolsonaro's plan to privatize a string of Brazil's state-owned companies and loosen environmental restrictions to make way for more mining, ranching and farming.
When it rains, or the hot summer sun beats down, massive awnings will unfold; heated paths will melt the snow to make way for cyclists in winter.
The museum is relocating the fish to make way for the long-planned addition, to be known as the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education and Innovation.
To make way for the fleet of L buses, private vehicles will be required to have three or more passengers to use the bridge between 5 a.m.
To make way for the incoming team, Ben Sherwood, the current head of television at ABC and Disney, will leave the company once the deal is closed.
The "Cultural Revolution" resulted in the destruction of old customs, culture, habits, and ideas in order to make way for the spread of Zedong's brand of communism.
On a nearby hill, track hoes hack away at trees to make way for a new lecture hall and a shrine to the goddess of mercy, Guanyin.
Across the pond, British lawmakers continue to work on a long-debated Brexit deal that would make way for the United Kingdom to leave the European Union.
According to the constitution, he must then make way for someone else due to rules that prevent presidents from serving more than two consecutive stints in office.
For 15 years they have been Davids to the Goliath of a plan to level it to make way for an expansion of the Port of Antwerp.
" She speaks of an "internalized model-minority narrative" in which people of color "need to be at the top to make way for other minorities or POC.
She removed built-in shelving in the living room to make way for French doors that can be left open to the sun porch all summer long.
But like the Manhattan real estate developer he is, they said, he believes he must in some cases demolish the old to make way for the new.
In the middle of this, Mr. Renzi promoted an ambitious constitutional reform program, largely aimed at streamlining the Italian government to make way for an economic overhaul.
After decades of building, the city of Los Angeles seized many of the homes in the city's southern portion to make way for an expansion of LAX.
She loved children and said she would forgo a cure if the harsh chemotherapy that would destroy her marrow to make way for Ryan's left her infertile.
Even places most closely associated with cars, like Detroit and Los Angeles, are remaking transit networks once ripped out to make way for Fords, Chevys and Chryslers.
The world lost tree cover the size of Italy in 2017 as forests were cleared using fire to make way for farms, according to Global Forest Watch.
Deforestation in Borneo, designed to make way for timber and palm oil plantations, led to the loss of 100,000 orangutans between 1999 and 2015, the report estimated.
But, if an agency finds itself unable to cut a sufficient number of regulations to make way for necessary new regulations, we are all made worse off.
Or that in Israel, as in the West Bank, Palestinian citizens face demolitions and forced evictions to make way for Jewish communities, military zones and national parks.
He was about six years old when his family was first moved to another part of the district in the 1950s to make way for the Rihand Dam.
When authorities shut down On Nut's thriving night market to make way for a luxury condominium in October 2015, vendors were given two weeks to vacate the premises.
Initial celebrations gave way to demands that the Transitional Military Council, which took over after Bashir's ousting, make way for a civilian-led interim body and hold elections.
I was doing stunts for the movie and I bet this other guy on set that I could make way better food than the crappy overtime catering food.
Over the next year, Than Shin watched as the fields that for decades had provided her family with a living were cleared to make way for fish farms.
Sri Lanka's Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa said on Saturday that he is resigning to "make way for the president to form a new government," the Associated Press reports.
It must be torn down to make way for a better one — and if tearing it down requires a little mass destruction and death, well, so be it.
Fanning, an Obama appointee, will leave the Pentagon to make way for Vincent Viola, the billionaire owner of a Florida hockey team Trump has nominated to replace him.
There is still so much change that needs to happen, but I want to make way for whoever has that mindset that I had when I was younger.
The Brazilian Grand Prix has been held in Sao Paulo continuously since 1990 and Rio's Jacarepagua circuit was demolished to make way for facilities for the 2016 Olympics.
Their quiet community among the trees, once home to 600 families, has been bulldozed to make way for a parking lot and access roads to the Olympic park.
Palm oil, a type of vegetable oil used in confectionery and other goods, is controversial because of the environmental impact of clearing forests to make way for plantations.
The streaming service announced a slew of Disney movies are leaving in June to make way for a new lineup of films for the summer and fall season.
"I never thought the first time I would move would be to make way for a telescope," former villager Yang Chaolan, 62 told Xinhua, China's official news agency.
But to remedy this clusterfuck, audiences are given an irregular death to make way for the maniacal twin brother that would take his place... also named the Joker.
One of the recent victims is in the eastern district of Friedrichshain - a club called Pogo Tussy, which is being torn down to make way for new apartments.
Notionally functional, they were commissioned by city authorities to serve as a record of the overcrowded, unhygienic tenement blocks before they were razed to make way for redevelopment.
As chawls make way for skyscrapers, their part in maintaining the city's diversity is lost, as informal rules and biases increasingly erode the multi-cultural character of cities.
Asked during a news conference at the SPD headquarters in Berlin to explain his decision to make way for Schulz, Gabriel said: "Because he has a better chance".
With this year's ceremony as a jumping off point, she called on everyone in the industry to take steps to make way for more inclusive filmmaking going forward.
John Keyser, co-author of the book, Make Way for Women, argues, for example, that men need to treat hiring, developing and promoting women as an urgent issue.
But it's telling that telecoms group AT&T has underperformed the Dow by 23 percentage points since it was removed to make way for Apple two years ago.
The combined company will be based in London, but the LSE's chief executive, Xavier Rolet, will step down to make way for Carsten Kengeter, the German bourse's CEO.
But once I started dealing I realized very quickly that I'd make way more money on a Friday night staying home and selling than I would parking cars.
But the company agreed to move to make way for private company Blue Origin, which plans to launch orbital rockets from the facility over the next few years.
Nonetheless, the experts said many parts of the world were suffering rapid change, such as from the felling of tropical forests to make way for farms and cities.
In a situation reminiscent of Kiruna's, Hibbing moved to make way for a mining company that was hoping to unearth the iron ore believed to be underneath it.
In Cape Town, the city's long-established racially diverse neighborhoods were demolished, and its residents of color expelled to the townships to make way for all-white communities.
Johnson claimed parliament needed to be shutdown to make way for a new domestic agenda, but opponents believe he acted to stifle parliamentary debate and action on Brexit.
Tiring of his political overreach, members of his own party turned against him after he dismissed Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa to make way for his ambitious wife Grace.
As Trump denies the science behind climate change to promote the industry, coal-fired power plants continue to shut down to make way for more economical production methods.
Some of the world's biodiesel is made from palm oil from Malaysia and Indonesia, where large areas of tropical forest are cleared to make way for palm plantations.
The new all-veggie menu menu comes weeks after Taco Bell dropped nine items from its menu to make way for new dishes, including the Toasted Cheddar Chalupa.
Sandy Hook Elementary School in rural Connecticut where 20 children and six staff were killed, was razed to make way for a new school that opened in 27.
It replaced a relatively new Romanesque cathedral, demolished in 1160 to make way for the much larger structure that the archbishop thought the city's rapidly growing population required.
Alongside, evictions are rising: at least six homes are pulled down and 30 people forcibly removed each hour in India to make way for metro stations and highways.
He went on to describe how such attitudes that belong "in the 19th century" needed to change in order to make way for creativity in gaming to thrive.
That deal, which includes much of Fox's entertainment division, is expected to close in the coming weeks and will make way for the "New Fox" under Lachlan Murdoch.
More worrying are the politicians licking their chops from the sidelines to swoop in and dismantle existing social supports to make way for a basic income that isn't.
I have no patience for science-fiction worlds where art has seemingly bowed out of existence to make way for the most sterile and stereotypical images of science.
"With endorsements, I make way more money sitting at home posting pictures on Instagram than I do fighting," VanZant said in an appearance on Ariel Helwani's MMA Show.
Slater grew up in a region long known for its muck, the rich moist soil left after parts of the Everglades were drained to make way for sugarcane.
Most of the bunkers would need to get removed to make way for new development, but a few could be converted into neighborhood hangouts, like bars or cafés.
The Edith Macefield House has been compared to the floating house from Disney's "Up" after the owner refused to vacate her property to make way for a developer.
Protests do occur in China when communities are razed to make way for megaprojects — especially in years past, when some people killed themselves rather than lose their homes.
A 140-acre swamp covered part of Kew Gardens Hills until 1918, when it was drained to rid the area of mosquitoes and make way for suburban developments.
Over the last decade, ambitious modernist complexes built in New Delhi in the 20193s are being demolished and redeveloped to make way for new exclusive real-estate projects.
And even as he exhibited this sunset-lit arrival in 1826, many of the old buildings and walls it depicted were being demolished to make way for development.
Eventually, those voters will have to make a choice; in order for this progressive agenda to win, one candidate will eventually have to make way for the other.
However, if Blue and White wins or forms a national unity government with Likud, that could make way for possible cooperation with the Trump administration on a plan.
She and her family have refused to abandon their 61-acre high-altitude homestead to make way for the mine, despite the company even fencing off her farm.
When the plot of a dystopian novel and the daily churn of the news cycle start overlapping, admiration for a given author's prescience may make way for alarm.
Its great city walls and many of its temples and distinctive alleys, or hutong, were destroyed to make way for the new ideals of an atheistic, industrial society.
The obstructed-view bleacher seats in left and right fields have been removed to make way for concrete terraces that sell mixed drinks for a minimum $15 charge.
Until 21, he lived in the Williams on the Upper West Side, a Salvation Army-owned independent living residence that was closed to make way for luxury housing.
Investors often push bond prices lower to make way for new supply and January tends to be one of the busiest months of the year for bond sales.
The settlement, now reduced to 44 buildings and about 300 residents, has resisted for years a government order to move out and make way for a public park.
"He'd say, 'Get out of the business and retire and make way for me — I feel sorry for you, old man,'" Mr. De Luca said with a laugh.
It was a classic Trumpian move, akin to the days when he would knock down New York buildings to make way for visions of grander, more glorious edifices.
Not to mention that it is beneficial to "younger" people for us "older" people, at the top of the pay scale, to retire and make way for them.
LG 103-Inch Class 9 Series for $1,096 ($903 off): Walmart is blowing out this high-end LG TV from last year to make way for newer models.
Rio last hosted a round of the motorcycle world championship in 2004 at the old Jacarepagua circuit that was demolished to make way for the 2016 Summer Olympics.
MRP Realty is renovating three buildings and it plans to tear down smaller, out-of-the way office properties to make way for townhouses, apartments and retail space.
Thunderstorms across portions of the southern Plains will make way for sustained winds of 35 to 45 mph, akin to the strength of a low-end tropical storm.
That's also 45,000 square feet smaller than the total area of the four current buildings which are fated to be torn down to make way for the new structure.
Demonstrators have demanded that the Transitional Military Council, which took over after Bashir was ousted in a coup, make way for a civilian-led interim body and hold elections.

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