| 41. | If Dole is to pull off the verbal victory he needs, he will have to go for the jugular and skip the polite niceties.
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| 42. | He can, at once, seem soft-spoken and humble, yet fiercely pugnacious, focused and unafraid to go for the jugular.
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| 43. | Next Monday, two of the industry's most successful competitors are set to go for the jugular in federal court in San Francisco.
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| 44. | "If you feel you have a chance to put a fork in somebody, go for the jugular, " said Weis.
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| 45. | "But now that we've won the first one we're going to go for the jugular tomorrow night ."
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| 46. | But he seems to me to be more willing to go for the jugular than most, and to slit a few other veins along the way.
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| 47. | Wednesday night may be another story because Brenly may very well bring back Schilling on abbreviated rest ( if he wants to go for the jugular ).
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| 48. | "It's not quite like 1991, when you could go for the jugular, when you could offer half, " he remarked.
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| 49. | Israeli opinion writers, however, do not need a cause celebre, either an issue or an event or a person, to go for the jugular.
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| 50. | If Gore does what comes naturally _ act smart, talk down, go for the jugular _ he will seem even less presidential than he does now.
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