As soon as I laid eyes on that poster, I knew we were in for trouble.
If the central bankers are even half as blunt in public as they are in private, Mr Kohl is in for trouble.
These bonds may default (the state's finances are looking very shaky), but if they do, the LA property market is in for trouble too.
Firms that supply capital goods could thus be in for trouble.
His company has, in the past, been in trouble for its lack of transparency.
To date no Spur, for example, has gotten in trouble for shooting a gun outside a nightclub, as Golden State Warrior guard Stephen Jackson allegedly did earlier this season.
Stocks tumbled in the third quarter, a recipe for trouble in an IPO market that leans heavily on an appetite for equities as an asset.
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Al-Dunya said it was the work of "armed terrorist gangs", who are blamed by the government in Damascus for all the trouble in the country.
But why wait for your company to get in trouble and for the board of directors to replace the management team?
Captain Nasser Hussain also fell cheaply, hooking Roger Telemachus straight to Willoughby in the deep for just nine, to leave the tourists in some trouble at 14 for two.
If you're down the chain in the review process in one of these organizations, you just know one thing, you are never going to get in trouble for saying no.
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Under questioning by prosecutors, Mr. McNamee described how in 2001, his wife, Eileen, was angry at him, repeatedly saying he would get in trouble for providing illegal drugs to Mr. Clemens.
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Because, Madame President, this country is in trouble for lots of reasons, only one of which is Iraq.
Especially if they got us in trouble for it, because it's an outside of school thing.
Mr Bush is also in trouble for trying to fiddle with the Clean Air Act.
De Tomaso, a maker of sporty cars, has been in financial trouble for years.
Piper is the second Warwickshire player in trouble for failing a drugs test in the space of seven months.
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But maybe they would get in trouble for meeting me without my translator.
On a larger scale, that could mean Google gets in trouble for pointing the way to illegally shared copyrighted content.
In fact, if you promise to keep this between us, because, I mean, I could get in trouble for this.
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Later, quarterback Brett Favre got in trouble for sending her lurid messages while he was a player on the Jets.
The 29-year also found himself in trouble for breaching disciplinary rules for club and country following the break-up of his marriage.
The Tories' Liberal Democrat coalition partners, already in trouble for abandoning a promise not to raise university-tuition fees, will also grumble.
Growing up, I always got in trouble for watching too much TV.
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And these young people who are working at these companies, they know they are not going to get in trouble for saying no.
There have been lots of stories about people who've been defrauded by their online paramours, even a couple of Internet dating sites are in trouble for alleged false advertising.
He recently got in trouble for suggesting in campaign leaflets that he could single-handedly remodel one of Rio's largest shanty towns to resemble a picturesque hillside village in Italy.
Now, investors are crying foul, the SEC is launching investigations and Chinese companies are in trouble for failing to comply with reporting rules of the exchange on which they are listed.
And maybe it's three levels upstairs, but eventually somebody that understands this is going to make a decision and if they say yes then they won't get in trouble for having said no.
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