Doncaster boss Sean O'Driscoll claimed he saw Rangel taking aim for Wellens during the same incident.
MyMoneyPro is just one of many new firms taking aim at the mutual funds.
Behind the scenes, they have been taking aim at someone else: the accounting standard-setters.
And now Google faces the most lethal threat of all: Microsoft , aroused, is taking aim at the popular site.
Undaunted, Schwab is taking aim at the highbrow rivals that had long viewed it as cute but no threat.
But critics should be careful about taking aim at Bush, warns David P.
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But Lucent is really taking aim at Cisco and the Internet hardware companies.
In the nineties, the focus turned to specialization, with swimmers taking aim at dominating their piece of the larger puzzle.
This time, though, Stelios (as he is universally known) was taking aim at one of his own creations: Stelmar Shipping.
Gould, a Harvard paleontologist and a popular-science writer, who died in 2002, was taking aim mainly at the rising ambitions of sociobiology.
As the market for conventional seeds stagnates, however, rivals are taking aim.
Besides taking aim at the Facebook IPO, McNamee offered some great advice.
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Critics already are taking aim, noting that she has never won an election and has not lived in North Carolina for years.
McKinsey is taking aim at Diamond's Web-strategy market, and Bergstein is steering his firm into implementing projects rather than just advising on strategy.
The company is taking aim at the perch Apple has established for itself as a key online distributor of newspapers and newspapers via its iPad.
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Companies see dozens of start-ups each year taking aim at them.
For one thing, Adams had just moved into an entirely new area of medicine: Whereas before his drugs fought viruses, Proscript was taking aim at cancer.
"I guess we can look forward to Skype 2011 in a few years, " said another commenter, taking aim at Microsoft's image as a slow-moving old-Web company.
Samsung executives began taking aim in 2009 after Apple began selling the iPhone in South Korea, where it briefly became the top-seller of phones in the country.
Taking aim at arthritis, AIDS, cancer and hepatitis, Boger now has seven new drugs in second- or third-stage human trials (three stages are required to win approval).
And now Google faces the most lethal threat of all: Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ), aroused, is taking aim at the popular site.
But success has brought more scrutiny, and one fiscally conservative interest group is taking aim at Huckabee for his record on taxes using the candidate's own words against him.
Warnock lashed out in several directions, taking aim at familiar targets such as referees, as well as managerial counterparts Sir Alex Ferguson and Rafael Benitez for fielding weakened teams in recent weeks.
It is in a race with several companies that are taking aim at a novel target, a protein-chewing enzyme called DPP-4 (dipeptidylpeptidase 4) which plays a role in disrupting the production of insulin.
They're even taking aim at poor children with a bill to lower the income requirement for North Carolina's prekindergarten program, making it off limits to nearly 30, 000 children who would have previously qualified.
Jebali said the weapons that killed Belaid were also taking aim at the Jasmine Revolution, which led to the ouster of President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali two years ago and spawned the Arab Spring.
The same report criticized both parties for their fundraising efforts, taking aim at Republicans for going outside the host committee to drum up cash and the Democrats for having a high-profile lobbyist in charge of convention fundraising.
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