Foes of the accord found a fresh target in a provision that would give reduced-fee licenses for a new generation of wireless telephones to three private companies-- American Personal Communications Inc ., Cox Enterprises, and Omnipoint Communications.
12.
By then, he will have set a fresh target for his colleagues, one which the likes of Pat Day ( more than 7, 600 wins ) and Chris McCarron ( 6, 800 ) may one day overhaul in their turn.
13.
New Zealand claims guardianship of the 370, 000 square miles ( 958, 000 sq . km . ) of the Ross Sea Dependency, a fresh target for the estimated 80 pirate boats in the fleet fishing for the prized Antarctic toothfish.
14.
Even with some fears that a presidential entourage might turn New York into a fresh target, the calamity on Tuesday and the heartache since then had in some way been validated by the motorcade of black vehicles slicing through Lower Manhattan.
15.
Now, after leveling discount chains from Kmart to Caldor, Ames to Bradlee's, Wal-Mart executives are setting their sights on a fresh target : more affluent shoppers who pride themselves on snagging bargains and who discovered stores like Target, Costco and Kohl's some time ago.
16.
Throughout the day, as the battle continued, the guns were constantly being moved to fresh targets firing at 100 yards or less, but by 3pm the gun ammunition began running short, so the artillerymen used their rifles to fire at any Germans who showed their heads.
17.
The news that fresh targets for verbal body blows were emerging might be the best news for the rising, fledgling Fox News Channel, the cable network whose bare-knuckles style of political talk has, in the words of one rival network talk host, " altered the competitive landscape in the talk arena ."
18.
According to the International Herald Tribune ( IHT ), the move " opened a new security vacuum between Gori and [ Igoeti ], creating fresh targets " for " looters and armed gangs in uniform-many of them apparently Ossetians, Chechens and Cossacks-[ who ] have operated behind the army's path, ransacking villages largely vacated by fleeing civilians ."