Word: restraint
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Still, all three networks performed with admirable sensitivity and restraint. Some viewers were offended at the oft-repeated shots that had been taped by WNEV-TV in Boston of Schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe's parents viewing the launch at the Kennedy Space Center. But interviews with grieving relatives were refreshingly absent. Though NASA had immediately sequestered the crew's families following the accident, network executives insist they would have avoided such interviews in any case. "We had our chance at the time of the accident," says Jeff Gralnick, vice president and executive producer of special programming for ABC. "The first rule...
With the current talk of appointments to the Court, there will be arguments over questions like abortion, judicial restraint, potential justices' intellectual abilities, and ideology in general. Absent will be the quiet sense, character, and integrity for which Potter Stewart will not be forgotten...
Rehnquist also said that he would not comment on the recent dispute between Attorney General Edwin Meese and Supreme Court Justice William Brennan over the issue of judicial restraint because he had not read their speeches on the subject...
Tribe said the landlords are equating municipal regulation with private anti-competitive behavior. "The economic powers of the state such as rent control are sharply distinguished from state authorization of cartels" and are not "combinations in restraint of trade," he said...
...entrusting the CUE Guide to Harvard's student government, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences would prevent similar episodes from happening in the future. By retaining an influence over the book's content, the faculty would perpetuate the possibility of counterproductive constraints and prior restraint...