Word: incurability
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Poussaint also said the economic lure of private practice often discourages minorities from seeking faculty positions. "Minority students usually incur large debts through the course of their education--it is a lot easier to pay these off through a practice...
...last Sunday before two hotly contested primary elections in Massachusetts. At Roman Catholic Masses in the Boston area, priests pulled out a letter written by the local archbishop, Humberto Cardinal Medeiros, warning worshipers that anyone voting for a politician favoring abortion would incur some of the guilt for "this horrendous crime and deadly sin." The unnamed targets: pro-choice Congressional Candidates Barney Frank and James Shannon. The letter caused bitter debate about whether the church had improperly taken a hand in partisan politics, a frequent question throughout the U.S. during this election year. In April, for instance, a South Dakota...
Lorentzian added that the company is now turning the corner financially. "We have made a promise to our creditors not to incur any more debts and we have...
Other possible proposals to fight the recession-a big increase in federal spending on public-works programs, for example-incur an even more serious risk of spurring inflation. The biggest danger, therefore, is that the U.S. has got itself into a truly vicious circle: inflation is cured by recession, which is cured by more inflation, which results in another recession...
...will have to look at it. The ironic thing is that they're going to have to do it eventually anyway." For now, however, administrators are not sold on the idea, and something more than the assembly's $250,000 predicted savings would be needed to convince them to incur the educational costs they see in the proposal...