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Mrs Clinton cannot easily sustain the Wright controversy, although she may be sorely tempted to do so.
ECONOMIST: Hillary Clinton has few weapons to hand
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From time to time governments are sorely tempted to keep these instruments from being invented, which is the wrong response.
FORBES: Fact and Comment
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Governments will be sorely tempted to protect workers, but a flexible, well-educated labour force is likely to fare best in the transition.
ECONOMIST: The middle-class task- force
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Even so, we're sorely tempted to splurge -- it's not often that a gadget scratches so many of our nostalgic itches at once.
ENGADGET
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Future rulers could be sorely tempted, as Assad has been, to try to unite these disparate groups by fanning hatred of a common "enemy, " i.e.
FORBES: Fact and Comment
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If Democrats nevertheless resort to reconciliation, Ornstein said, they would be "sorely tempted" to include the kind of government-funded public health insurance option favored by Kennedy and the rest of the party's liberal base.
CNN: Analyst: Post-Kennedy health care bill may be more sweeping
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The way Mr Chernomyrdin twitched about the Norilsk auction, and some sharp comments he has made lately about privatisation, have been seen as hints that he is sorely tempted to go Mr Berezovsky's way.
ECONOMIST: Russia
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The Economist, to be frank, is sorely tempted.
ECONOMIST: Gordon Brown
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There is no getting around the fact that Mr. Reagan abhorred nuclear weapons and was sorely tempted by an offer made by then-Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at Reykjavik in 1986 to eliminate the two nations' nuclear arsenals.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Stopping START
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He was sorely tempted to turn up.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Magazine | Leslie, Kerry, Kim, Vivian, Tracy write
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But I was sorely tempted.
FORBES: Contrarian Kleinschmidt Not Afraid Of Big Bad Market, Buying Microsoft, Pfizer And More
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The problem is that until banks have all the capital they need, and as I have already mentioned, all the banks will be sorely tempted to boost the ratio of their capital to assets by lending less, to shrink the denominator in the calculation.
BBC: How big is the 'material' hole in banks?