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A. hunger-striker (also played by Fassbender), was imperilled by the coolness of its own gaze.
NEWYORKER: Hot and Bothered
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How ironic, then, that the experiment's future could be imperilled by its present success.
ECONOMIST: The crunch comes for welfare reform
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Larger amounts are imperilled, as donors grow tired of seeing so much of their money wasted.
ECONOMIST: Corruption in Kenya: Feet of Clay | The
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The latest imperilled work is the landmark Five Pointz, in Queens, New York.
BBC: Urban art attracts tourists
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Nevada's unemployment rate, the highest in the country, has imperilled Harry Reid, the Democrats' majority leader in the Senate.
ECONOMIST: Unemployment and elections
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At present nearly two-thirds of Novell's sales come from its imperilled Netware franchise.
ECONOMIST: Novell
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America after 1945 realised that its own growth would be imperilled if it did not redistribute massively to Europe.
ECONOMIST: Letters
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To charges that Ataturk was a dictator, he suggests that introducing democracy early on might have imperilled the republic's survival.
ECONOMIST: Turkish history (1)
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Her mother would have been horrified to find her there, imperilled on the roof, as she had been in the old days.
NEWYORKER: Soldier��s Joy
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Where your metropolitan interloper is right is that north Staffordshire needs to gain from the high-speed project, rather than have its Manchester-London service imperilled.
ECONOMIST: Letters
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"We are very worried that, in a general sense, the wrongdoing that has been identified has imperilled its licence to operate" said the investor.
BBC: Barclays�� chairman in firing line
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Fortescue had many times denied having had similar conversations with Chinese companies, even as it became increasingly clear that without a deal, it was imperilled.
ECONOMIST: What China wants and can offer for its money
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Other countries with no involvement in Iraq could be imperilled.
ECONOMIST: The hydra bites | The