Palace chairman Simon Jordan waded into the controversy, angrily accusing City players of cheating.
So I waded into the market last year and bought a bushel of AMR stock.
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Well, it took a while, but Capitol Hill has finally waded into the scrum.
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The last time the Treasury waded into the banking system in this way was in the 1930s.
The President went to Michigan and he waded into the local controversy there involving right to work.
He has played consigliere in some of the most public, and uproarious, calamities his clients have waded into.
We climbed a half mile up a dirt track, past stray dogs and chickens, and waded into a cornfield.
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Long known for its BlackBerry smartphones, the Waterloo, Ontario-based company waded into the tablet market early last year.
After Mass, Francis put his security detail to the test as he waded into the street just outside St.
Unilever first waded into anti-aging hair territory with a now-defunct line, Dove Pro-Age.
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Only the intervention of the security police, who waded into the crowds with batons and shields, saved the foreigners from injury.
Earlier this week I waded into the muddy waters of the multiple sexual harassment allegations plaguing Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain.
The US deputy chief of mission also waded into the heated discussion at the IAEA headquarters in Vienna, accusing Syria of being obstructive.
Elsewhere, faces flushed and still in their uniforms, men and women soldiers waded into muddy paddies and bent down with fistfuls of spinach to plant.
He then hopped up on the wall in front of the grandstand, grabbed the checkered flag and waded into the crowd, trading high-fives with fans.
When Mr Obama waded into the political debate over the proposed Islamic community centre and mosque in lower Manhattan on Friday, many Republican strategists rejoiced.
Together that day and in the days that followed, we waded into the water with our fishing poles and a spear Achor Achor had carved himself.
Over the past several weeks, Republicans have watched squeamishly as presidential contender Rick Santorum has waded into multiple controversies that risk alienating half the 2012 electorate: women.
There was trouble in the 1970s, when Algerian police waded into Egyptian players and fans during a rowdy All Africa Games match between Libya and Egypt in Algeria.
Some of America's big pension funds also waded into the fray last year, expressing concern over the use of compensation consultants to determine the pay of chief executives.
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After the decision, Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton cautiously waded into the debate, vowing to support the U.S. aerospace industry without specifically mentioning either Boeing or Los Angeles-based Northrop Grumman.
While at Akin Gump, in the early 1980s, Rogers waded into the fight between natural gas suppliers and pipeline operators, who were refusing to buy gas under onerous "take-or-pay" contracts.
She said she waded into the water to try to help Mr Cox and, after locals managed to drag him out, emergency services personnel began resuscitation attempts on the riverbank.
After senior black politicians waded into the debate, Mrs Clinton and Barack Obama accused each other of stirring up trouble ahead of the party's primary in South Carolina on January 26th.
Weighing 140kg, with hands like buckets and a face as flat as a plate, he waded into the marquee as if against a strong current of water and assumed a position in the corner.
As the sick man of the Group of Seven (G7) rich nations, Japan could count on the forbearance of other members as it waded into the foreign-exchange markets to manipulate its currency.
The policemen stood at the edges of the field as I waded into the poppies with a translator, a local young man named Saibullah, who had learned English as a refugee in Pakistan.
In a meeting with industry leaders in Berlin on Tuesday, Merkel effectively waded into what is already an escalating battle with the European Union over its plans to enforce huge cuts in carbon dioxide emissions from cars.
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