Word: cures
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...defending the Council's report. Regnery disagreed with Mizell's belief that money will cure the school system's many ills...
...Club is, at best, idealistic, in that it is based on the assumption that to eliminate the Pi means to eliminate the sexism from our community. What such actions will do is only eliminate the more obvious manifestations of sexism from our consciousness. In other words, curing the symptom will not cure the disease...
...Democracy devotes to revitalizing the economy, not one parenthetical expression acknowledges that certain demographic groups fare worse than others, even during prosperity, and no special provisions are outlined. Hart seems to be saying that social concerns are secondary to economic ones, and that solving economic dilemmas will cure the social ills. That is why he irritates "paleo-liberals"--not because of the policies he supports, but because of the problems he ignores. It is not enough to simply vote the right way on a bill when it comes up; a President sets the agenda by taking the lead and demonstrating...
...President was buffeted by the winds of opinion and tugged by the advice of those who doubted the wisdom of a decisive policy based on the strategic considerations I have outlined. One camp favored a low-key treatment of El Salvador as a local problem and sought to cure it through limited military and economic aid, along with certain covert measures. In that camp were Vice President Bush, Defense Secretary Weinberger, Director of Central Intelligence Casey (with reservations), National Security Adviser Allen and most of the others. Together with Baker and Deaver, Meese was the leading voice for caution...
...only hope for a cure was a transplant of bone marrow, which could provide the body with a rapidly multiplying source of defender cells to ward off disease. Such transplants were once possible only if a genetically matched donor, generally a sibling, could be found. Sadly, David's older sister's cell type did not match his. In the past few years, however, new technology has made it possible to transplant imperfectly matched marrow, making obsolete the isolation approach to David's illness. "There will be no more bubbles," said Dr. William Shearer...