And I take a line on drugs that says that we should be tougher on them.
She is part of a growing group applying pressure to the big box store to take a line of cards off the shelves before February 14.
Again it was Barclay at the heart of things, rising to take a line-out and then romping through unmolested to send prop Low over for another seven points.
Wal-Mart used to take a hard line on what its executives viewed as nuisance lawsuits.
The statement said the bank would take a hard line if any evidence of corruption arose.
He believes ministers would do better to take a firmer line with industry.
And would he like the Chinese to take a tougher line with Pyongyang?
In Italy, by contrast, the centre-left has been forced to take a tougher line over Islam by the xenophobic right.
Regulators say that they have been urging banks to take a hard line with nine struggling chaebol, including Kumho Asiana.
The memory of Mr Suharto's brutal suppression of Muslim activism also makes today's politicians more reluctant to take a hard line.
Hours earlier the government declared that it would take a railway line run by National Express, a train franchise, into state ownership.
Before the UN vote of February 18th, Barack Obama reportedly encouraged Mr Cameron and others to take a tough line on Israel.
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With an indignant Indian media at its back, and two grieving families pressing for justice, the government is under pressure to take a tough line.
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Chastened, he promised to take a tougher line on this year's budget.
Salmon Chase, soon to be Treasury Secretary and a Seward antagonist, had been urging Lincoln to take a hard line with the South.
Mr Bush had insisted since September that the UN had to take a hard line with Iraq, or it would lose its credibility.
This adds to the pressure on General Musharraf, criticised at home for winning no important concessions from India, to take a hard line.
You have to wonder--after the tenth claim, maybe, or the twentieth claim or the third big boat loss--why didn't insurers take a harder line?
Although Mr Geithner did not commit himself to any specific action, the use of the m-word suggests Team Obama will take a tougher line.
For the South Korean leader, the main consideration is negotiations with North Korea, towards which he would like Mr Bush to take a softer line.
" Take a different line from the Club for Growth on pre-existing conditions (or any of its poorly vetted Senate candidates), and you are "the establishment.
President Obama appears unlikely to push the Justice Department to take a hard line against state-sanctioned dispensaries, but a Republican successor could easily view things differently.
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The National Amateur Body Builders Association (NABBA) said it had not heard of anyone buying banned substances over the internet, but would take a hard line with any members who did.
Ms Kelly seems unlikely to take a different line.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Education | What's in Ruth Kelly's in-tray?
On Tuesday evening, the chair of the Northern Ireland Assembly's Health Committee, Sue Ramsey, called on Mr Poots to take a firmer line with trusts on the issue of residential care homes.
Peter Robinson, who took over the party leadership from Ian Paisley, would probably like to reach a compromise on policing and justice, but he is reluctant to confront colleagues who take a harder line.
ECONOMIST: Stalemate in Northern Ireland: A tongue-twister of a dispute | The
Nonetheless, in sectors like manufacturing there has been ongoing restructuring because of the yen and because manufacturers, which have not been mollycoddled by years of fiscal packages, have had to take a proper line on costs.
Analysts have suggested both sides are engaging in showmanship, with Kroes and the Commission trying to demonstrate that they will take a hard line on antitrust matters while Microsoft dragging its feet but eventually planning to accede to the regulators' wishes.
As well as improving security at channel ports, and trying to persuade European governments to take a harder line, Britain is planning to introduce identity cards for asylum applicants, and house them in special centres, rather than paying them benefits to live in the wider community.
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