61. Republicans said it was needed because Medicare officials had been biased against HMOs and had imposed too much regulation on health-care providers. 62. Serbs have been wary of participating because they accuse the U.N.-led administration of being biased against them. 63. She says she suspects the accusations are coming from people who are biased against her because her children are half Hispanic. 64. Since then, Vargas says he has been victimized around the world by judges biased against the United States. 65. Some district officials and others say the new state standards are biased against urban systems in which the vast majority of students enter school testing at the lowest levels. 66. Some anti-independence leaders have said they would not accept the vote, asserting that the United Nations was biased against them. 67. Some are biased against voting for a pitcher as MVP, though Martinez was dismissive of that argument. 68. Some have gone so far as to broach the idea of doing away with standardized tests entirely, on the grounds that they are culturally biased against minorities. 69. Some on the panel initially said they were biased against Graham based on extensive publicity about the case, but all agreed that they would be impartial jurors. 70. Thatcher believed its political reporting was biased against her, and she wondered why the BBC should be excluded from her policy of privatizing government-owned public utilities. |
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