First, I produce media campaigns designed to highlight specific actions people can take to prepare for trouble.
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The group is said by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz to include some senior commanders and to have already stirred up trouble by attempting to take over the camp.
Frugality: Once you establish yourself as a dividend payer, you will generally take the trouble to maintain the dividend.
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Parents who take the trouble to seek out a good school are more likely to provide a supportive home environment for their children.
Non-Hindus who take the trouble to go Madonna and Pierce Brosnan (James Bond) are expected will be awed less by the spectacle than by the fervour that animates it.
Next time you hear a CEO dismiss a negative research report, take the trouble to investigate whether the analyst really did either display bias or make a rookie error.
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As one of the organisers of the protest outside the Miss World contest, I was disappointed that Mary Beard did not take the trouble to inform herself of the nature of the protest before giving her opinions on its supposed redundancy.
Because it may be too much trouble to actually take out your smart phone, or heaven forbid open it up and activate the required app, by wearing your wallet on your sleeve, so to speak, you are wrist ready at all times.
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The bill is called the FHA Housing Stabilization and Home Owner Retention Act, and what it does is to take people who are in trouble, and then it will buy those mortgages from the lenders at below market value, at what they call - I think it's called the short payment.
Chinese companies tend not to take litigation seriously and often find themselves in trouble with U.S. courts for having failed to comply with U.S. discovery rules.
And it doesn't take much thinking to consider the trouble that could cause.
Initially he had trouble getting firms to take loyalty seriously or to do anything about measuring or tracking it.
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Why, then, did Mr Blair take trouble this week to stir things up?
When we start laughing at any individual who exercises their right to take their case to trial, then our justice system is in trouble.
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An earlier drive to seize the city, also scheduled to take several days, ran into trouble over New Year when troops encountered stiff resistance from entrenched rebels.
The real challenge: find a way to capture the value of these relationships and of these conversations, interactions which more often than not seem to penalize the physicians who take the trouble and invest their ever-more-limited time.
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At work there were also differences in the trouble people would take to find out information about colleagues.
When Jamie Talbot's in-laws were in town recently and the family had trouble getting a taxi to take them to dinner, the software engineer pulled out his phone and summoned a town car.
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Just as a general rule I really would prefer it if those who insisted that we should all be more like Sweden would take the time and trouble to find out what Sweden is actually like.
But if the seizing of the Chinese vessels is the work of North Korean criminals and not North Korean authorities guarding its fishing waters, outsiders are likely to take it as the new regime is having trouble maintaining order.
At Deauville, though, Mrs Merkel and Mr Sarkozy wanted default to become a possibility: current debt would be safe, they said, but leaders later agreed that from 2013 countries should issue new types of bonds that could be more easily forced to take a hit if a country ran into trouble.
Given the progress you have cited in recent days on your foreign policy agenda, to what extent do you feel like you have gained political capital with which to take further to the international stage for the rest of this year, to perhaps rejuvenate some initiatives in trouble spots such as the Middle East and elsewhere?
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Nonetheless, the industry is setting up an organisation, called Protector, to take over the obligations of life firms that get into trouble.
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"Everybody who is carrying around a cell phone has the ability to take a picture of you behaving badly, getting in trouble, " Thompson said.
When her sinuses gave her trouble, she didn't want to take oral decongestants or nasal sprays because she feared they could be harmful to her baby.
And I think that's important to get people to take politics seriously , to see that the political process can change their lives, can respond in times of trouble.
BBC: News | BREAKFAST WITH FROST | The Home Secretary, David Blunkett MP
There was no let up in intensity at the start of the second period but the hosts now had the Sandy Park wind behind them and it did not take long for Rob Baxter's men to trouble the scoreboard again.
The trouble is that employers and charities that agreed to take on New Deal workers are getting impatient to receive them.
Your plan might cover the ER visit from a car accident, but if you become permanently disabled, and need to take several prescriptions and regularly see doctors, you are in trouble.
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