Tracing them is hard work, but Lakeport's researchers believe that this may be the only way to arouse interest in (and attract more money to) their project.
So foreign criticism, which in some countries might arouse defensiveness, is in fact welcomed.
"In the 1930s, two things happened to arouse fascination of people in the West, " he says.
These days the politics of Christianity arouse little general interest in Britain.
These days, the issues likely to arouse workers, particularly in the private sector where employees are ever in fear of their jobs, are harder to come by.
The notion of a stay-at-home dad still seems to arouse a terrible sense of anxiety in many people.
FORBES: Why Are We So Worried About The Idea Of Stay-At-Home Dads?
Sho could not have survived these millennia if they did not, in some way, arouse an emotional response and interest among the viewers.
At the very least, it is fair to say Michael Skakel has, for whatever reason, often acted out in ways certain to arouse suspicion.
"You need to accept that you will arouse some, so reassure yourself in the middle of the night that nothing catastrophic will happen if you are awake for a while, " says Esther.
Yet radical welfare reform will inevitably arouse far more opposition than a trifling cut in benefits.
And a two-minute peal of church bells continues to arouse sleepy Germans from their beds every weekday at 7am in the towns and 6am in the villages of the countryside.
"These celebrations or commemorations can have the capacity, if not managed in a sensible and responsible way, to arouse passions, to cause anger, to provoke tension and indeed exacerbate community division, " she said.
The changes in working practices that the airline hopes to introduce with the move are sure to arouse union ire.
The plight of an economy in its fourth year of recession, with unemployment at near 25%, a banking system in collapse and many people's savings both devalued and inaccessible, is bound to arouse sympathy.
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