Word: prohibitions
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...House Masters decided unanimously yesterday to ban kegs from the Houses on the weekend of this year’s Harvard-Yale game—an extension of the decision made after the 2000 Harvard-Yale game to prohibit kegs from the tailgate area...
While Clinton was quick to indirectly blame the first Bush administration for not aiding the Shi’ites in 1991, he conveniently forgot to mention his administration’s litany of failings in Iraq. Those include the following: the decision in 1993 to prohibit the Iraqi National Congress (INC)—an umbrella group of resistance forces—from using American funds to buy weapons, the abandonment of the INC just before its March 1995 offensive against the Iraqi army, the refusal to sponsor a peace-monitoring force to unite hostile Kurdish factions and the withdrawal...
...School announced in August that it would exempt military recruiters from its nondiscrimination requirements in the face of a Pentagon threat to prohibit Harvard from receiving $328 million in federal research funding...
...were virtually guaranteed to rise sharply. Spitzer filed a legal action last week. A prominent target is former WorldCom CEO Bernard Ebbers, who made $11 million in trading profits over four years on IPO shares he bought through Salomon, according to documents obtained by Congress. Spitzer would like to prohibit IPO allocations to executives that can't be justified by the amount of business those executives provide their broker through personal accounts. "You cannot give shares in an effort to persuade the CEO of a big company to bring business to your investment bank," Spitzer told Time. "That's commercial...
...Jersey Supreme Court rightly decided, election law does not prohibit the replacement of a name on the ballot at such a late date. The law is silent on the procedure for filling a vacancy later than 51 days before the election, which gives the court the right to decide the appropriate procedure. As a result, the court—which includes two Republicans—was right to interpret the election laws liberally in order to create a “full and fair ballot choice for the people of New Jersey.” The entire point...