1. If its strategy succeeds, Mexico could even steal a march on its northern neighbour. 2. He also warned of bloodshed should the ANC decide to march on Bophuthatswana. 3. Hitler is due to march on Poland this weekend! 4. The need to steal a march on the competition when introducing new contracts is illustrated by the recent history of product innovation on LIFFE. 5. But buyers there may simply have stolen a march on the market. 6. An additional focus of the event was to instruct the children taking part in the march on simple rules for personal safety. 7. And there are tentative plans for a march on Washington, D.C., next month. 8. And with their strikes and marches on Moscow, they enlivened the election campaigns when Boris Yeltsin fought the powerful tide of labor discontent over his economic reforms. 9. A number of Arab-American and Islamic groups have joined in the current protests, sponsoring several events, including a scheduled march on the White House tomorrow. 10. A march on Washington of African-American men is not likely to modify the deep cultural and economic problems in the African-American community. |