Word: restraints
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Speaking to a capacity crowd at yesterday's event, which was co-sponsored by the Harvard Institute of Politics and the Harvard Republican Club, Hatch stressed the need for judicial restraint in the nation's highest court...
...worried about restraint of trade, you probably should worry about dividing the calendar and making an agreement,” she said. “That would fall in the dangerous area...
...which both Israelis and Palestinians refrain from violence and respect existing agreements, eventually returning to the negotiating table to seek a comprehensive agreement. The subtext of their proposal appears to be that they'd lean on Arafat to rein in the militants if Washington can get Israel to exercise restraint. And Israel's speedy reaction to Washington's statement on Tuesday is likely to amplify Arab calls for the U.S. to take a more active role in refereeing the conflict...
...place to advertise luxury jewelry. The genre's growing popularity also risks subjecting consumers to ad fatigue. Admits Nigel Conway, a director at MediaVest, a media buying agency: "It would be disappointing if you saw ambient ads every time you turned a corner." Conway thinks the industry has exercised restraint...
Over the next two years they slowly rebuilt a relationship, this one based not on the attractions that originally brought them together but on restraint, careful civility and their love for their son. Jane has primary custody but lives just a mile from David, and John, now 14, visits his father whenever he wants. Every Sunday both parents sit down with John for a big home-cooked meal at Jane's house, and the three often dine together at a restaurant during the week. The focus of conversation: John. "We discuss the problems, mostly about attitude and ability in school...