| 11. | If the accounts were concocted, he said, " you'd expect a better effort to have stories come into line with each other.
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| 12. | He added that changing EU policy to come into line would take some time, and might not be possible before next January.
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| 13. | "Confidence is sort of coming into line " with flat sales early this year, said Bruce Steinberg, a senior economist at Merrill Lynch.
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| 14. | Unless the organizing committee comes into line, it could face fines, warned Van Miert, the top EU official handling the tussle over tickets.
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| 15. | Earnings forecasts, which two months ago were for 8 percent growth in the third quarter, have come into line with reality, he said.
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| 16. | I think you're really on the right track, you just need to adjust your goal slightly to come into line with Wikipedia's practice.
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| 17. | While times quite obviously have changed throughout the sport _ on the ice and off _ the judging seems to be coming into line.
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| 18. | That means stars such as Brazil's Ronaldo, George Weah of Liberia and Colombia's Faustino Asprilla come into line with players born in EU countries.
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| 19. | Since the new Microsoft O / S is virtually a Mac clone, shouldn't the cost of supporting it also come into line with Apples?
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| 20. | This meant that their dates did not correspond, and the Austrians were brought into conflict with the French before the Russians could come into line.
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