No doubt there are arguments in favour of extending PACE to apply to arrest and detention for breach of the peace. |
|
The PACE rapporteur, Ruth-Gaby Vermot-Mangold, says that she was concerned about the fate of more than 300 babies. |
|
The implementation of both the Biodiesel PACE and the Biofuels PACE is as outlined in the preceding two recitals. |
|
The term was used at least as far back as 1959, in an advertisement for the PACE TR-10 transistorized computer made by Electronic Associates Inc. |
|
Goal oriented, he has earned his associates degree at sea through the PACE program but remains focused on finishing his bachelors' degree and making chief petty officer. |
|
It is for all of us in Europe, including PACE, to work with alacrity to create the pre-conditions for lasting peace. |
|
However, PACE expressed concerns over the presence of Singlish, in particular, in some local children's productions. |
|
The regulations in force for the Swiss delegation to the Assembly stipulate for instance that the mandate of Swiss members who leave the national parliament, expires the latest at the end of the following PACE part-session. |
|
A pre-election delegation, comprising five members of PACE, issued a statement after its visit to Moscow on 7 and 8 February 2008, in which it expressed concern at the limited choice of candidates. |
|
Organizations that operate PACE programs receive capitated payments, usually from both Medicare and Medicaid, and are responsible for all the services a member needs. |
|
She turned and walked down the nearest boardwalk down to the beach, making sure her pace was not too quick to summon Cal's suspicion. |
|
I was out the door and on my way to school in about forty minutes, walking at an unusually slow pace that one could almost consider moseying. |
|
The acting isn't all that way, because we're sometimes treated to underacting as a change of pace. |
|
The hilarious gags come at a slam-bang pace, and they're occasionally edgy. |
|
Pace Lewis, common sense does not take anything that affects the time and manner of an event to be a cause of the event simpliciter. |
|
Poulsen rates as a hard-running utility man, offering plenty of pace and stamina on the right side of midfield. |
|
Reason: Funeral home directors had invested the preneed proceeds in low-yielding certificates of deposit that failed to keep pace with inflation. |
|
Strictly speaking, the comparison is between an unclothed individual moving through calm air at a brisk walking pace and that same individual moving through wind. |
|
Just start out at a leisurely pace-like a warmup-and find a rhythm and pace that you can maintain indefinitely. |
|
Remember: since your baby's feet will grow rapidly, the shoe size will have to keep pace. |
|
|
The movie has a great pace which never slackens and the end is amazing. |
|
On balance, they expect sales to increase at a faster pace over the next year than they did over the past year. |
|
As the operations picked up pace and began to pay dividends, the NSA called in its most skilled cyber warriors. |
|
The wondrous thing is how effortlessly Chin changes pace, from delicacy to grotesquerie, from cutesiness to dementia. |
|
Go back to your normal jogging pace for a few minutes then do another fartlek. |
|
Her pace quickened as she heard the motor of a nearby automobile turn on. |
|
I lapped on hard rear tyre and the pace was consistent and gathered some useful data for tomorrows session. |
|
Impishly skilful, full of pace and with everything to play for, Ore's boys appear well placed to do just that. |
|
The precise start and end of the Industrial Revolution is still debated among historians, as is the pace of economic and social changes. |
|
So accelerating the pace at which liquid mine tailings are transformed into solid, reclaimable surfaces is critical to resolving our overall oil sands reclamation challenge. |
|
And he's batted very indeed, keeping the pace without swishing sillily. |
|
Which is why, foolhardily, I find myself in a dance studio in southern California, attempting to keep pace with Natalia Osipova and Ivan Vasiliev, the most celebrated ballet partnership of our times. |
|
And now, at a time when multipolarity, as we call it, or pluralism, is gathering pace, efforts are being made to try to establish stable, pragmatic and balanced international relations. |
|
The ease and speed of communication and commerce created by the Net have meant that many scam artists can now hit and run almost anywhere, while the law trundles along at snail's pace in their wake. |
|
Together, these chapters reveal that the legal, policy and governance environments have failed to keep pace with the pluralization of policing that currently characterizes the Canadian policing landscape. |
|
The four-part Datemi pace, based on a Petrarch sonnet, favours homophony and looks eagerly forward to the bold chromaticism of Pomponio Nenna and Don Carlo Gesualdo. |
|
When The Economist stopped by last week Ms Roden was engaged in an animated conversation with Charles Pace, another pretender to Davidian prophethood. |
|
Seymour, who remains a passionate waterfowler, sets a lively pace. |
|
In the transiting system HD 209458, the times of the transits of the known giant planet are the 'ticks' of an orbital clock whose pace can be changed by the gravities of other unseen planets in the system. |
|
It was to be anticipated as the destabilisation impact of the globalization process and the accelerated pace of change were creating anxieties among many segments of the public. |
|
|
Championship leader Hamilton could only manage the fifth fastest time and was over half a second off the pace having run wide on his first stint on the quicker, supersoft tyres. |
|
The pace of events continued unabated and by the time the year came to a close, the IPU had organized twentyone meetings attended by over 4,000 members of parliament, an all time record. |
|
The pace of cinematic coprophagia seems to be hotting up. |
|
Dureau and Bosc were again prominent, creating the platform for the France international to scoot over at pace as the Wildcats defence looked increasingly tired. |
|
I believe that your generation will seize upon the complexity and rapid pace of change that mark the modern world as opportunities to break the mould and to try fresh approaches. |
|
When inflation is low, downward nominal rigidity will slow the pace of real wage adjustments, adversely affecting the allocative efficiency in labour markets. |
|
Another benefit is being able to grow at your own pace, unpressured by public markets. Jimmy Dunne, Sandler's boss, sees a link between public ownership and the dangerously high leverage that undid many banks. |
|
He came running around the corner at a breakneck pace and couldn't stop in time to avoid hitting the fruit stand. |
|
Role-players, carebears and casual gamers belong here. They advance at their own pace, oblivious to the race going on around them. |
|
The United States of America is not yet a jungle of metropolitan areas, but we are citifying at a very rapid pace. |
|
They slowed the pace of Richard's mounted charge and bought Tudor some critical time. |
|
The instability inhibited Spain's development, which had started fitfully gathering pace in the previous century. |
|
His greatness came in the war with France, with the adversary setting the pace. |
|
Whittle was unable to interest the government in his invention, and development continued at a slow pace. |
|
This enabled factories to be sited away from rivers, and further accelerated the pace of the Industrial Revolution. |
|
Some dancers were also associated with a tradition of mumming and hold a pace egging play in their area. |
|
In addition to setting pace for the line, the caesura also grouped each line into two couplets. |
|
Kipling kept writing until the early 1930s, but at a slower pace and with much less success than before. |
|
The rhythm of the song served to synchronize the movements of the sailors or to pace the labor as they toiled at repetitive tasks. |
|
The pace and extent to which the cyber is transforming our world increases daily. |
|
|
Still, the dogged obstinacy of his race held him to the pace he had set, and would hold him till he dropped in his tracks. |
|
To make sure that all such effort remains fun and rewarding, the dogless hunter should set a pace that's both relaxed and ready for action. |
|
If the real wage rate is not downflex, the pace of adoption of technical change depends upon the elasticity in the savings supply schedule. |
|
The pace was fast and furious most of the time, with new high records of prices constantly being established. |
|
The horses went at a good pace on this soft grass, and soon the two footgoers called out to us to stop. |
|
Christina Culhane maintained a heart-pounding pace until she broke her stride to glance at her plastic Swatch. |
|
Further complications have arisen through sound changes with which the orthography has not kept pace. |
|
Murray did not want to share the work, feeling that he would accelerate his work pace with experience. |
|
After months in the horse latitudes, retail and auto sales are scudding along at a brisk pace. |
|
The influx of food into the Celtic region, however, was far from keeping pace with the influx of consumers. |
|
The use of digital technology is growing at a very fast pace which led to the emergence of systems based on the cognitive infocommunications. |
|
Henry's pace through Staffordshire was slow, delaying the confrontation with Richard so that he could gather more recruits to his cause. |
|
Netherlands, one of the pre-tournament favourites, combined their undoubted guile, creativity, pace and attacking quality with midfield grit and organisation. |
|
Due to the slow pace of informal negotiations, BAE Systems exercised its put option which saw investment bank Rothschild appointed to give an independent valuation. |
|
A friend of mine having occasion to show this section to a party of 4 bristlers, states that they withdrew a pace and seemed to be computing among themselves. |
|
The steady pace of secularization picked up faster and faster during the 20th century, until only pockets of nonconformist religiosity remained in Britain. |
|
This pace was maintained until World War I forced reductions in staff. |
|
The district is home to a number of large businesses with recognised brands operating on a national and international scale such as Morrisons, Pace Plc and Hallmark Cards. |
|
It was not until 1670 that the pace of rebuilding started accelerating. |
|
After a week of working at a frenetic pace, she was ready for Saturday. |
|
|
Perhaps you would like to help us pick up the pace with a jody call? |
|