Word: decayed
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...nation's cities. In Boston's case, as the middle-class Irish drifted to the suburbs, Curley-style paternalism faded. The hospital was flooded with more and more poor patients, but it lacked the means to provide the increasingly expensive medical care. Faced with spreading urban decay and soaring annual deficits, a strapped city hall felt compelled to place the hospital's money requests far behind other needs, such as schools, slum demolition and downtown renewal. Three years ago, the hospital's accreditation was put on probation. Still, newly installed Mayor Kevin White, who has switched...
...sought to ignore the poor but rather to give them new hope. He has done this through identification with minorities. As the one candidate to be accepted completely by Negroes, he best offers the solution to America's most distressing domestic problems-racial unrest and urban decay...
White's administration, in fact, seems to be an ideal Act II for what has be come known as the New Boston. In Act I-the fine, sometimes brilliant administration of John Collins-the city was dramatically saved from nearly three-quarters of a century of inelegant decay by a variety of bold, even spectacular renewal projects. Business confidence, lost by a succession of amiable but frequently corrupt mayors, was restored, private investment increased, and "the Hub," as its citizens still sometimes like to call it, once more was the center of something...
...maintenance and growth. The message for making the differentiation - specific protein is extra stable. That is, each molecule of cocoonaise - messenger RNA remains active in the cytoplasm for at least two days. By contrast, the rest of the cell's messengers only survive for a few hours. Presumably, their decay introduces flexibility in the non-specialized functions of the cell...
Pollard's plight is common enough from Harlem to Newark. But to find poverty in Greenport, L.I., is something else again. As Poet William Cullen Bryant wrote in the 1870s of the tidy, tree-shaded town with its white clapboard houses: "Nowhere is decay or unwholesome poverty apparent." It is not apparent today, but there all the same are migrant labor camps, like the Cutchogue settlement for potato workers, whose four grey-painted World War I barracks house itinerant teams of Florida, Arkansas, Virginia or New Jersey farm hands. Isaiah, 35, the crew chief, is a diminutive Negro from Florida...