Word: incurability
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...cabinet government," and urged Britons to give him "generous and effective support." And in Essex he answered the Labor charge in his own way: "I gave up my office and responsibility because I thought it was my duty. I did not feel that at my age I should incur new and indefinite responsibilities...
...Although not a "direct danger," smoking causes harmful increases in the blood pressure and heart rate of heart-disease patients, reported three U.S. Public Health Service researchers in the A.M.A. Journal. Warned the Journal: "No patient with coronary disease should incur the added risk to his heart imposed by smoking without [consulting] his physician...
Production of the show would have been completely impossible without financial support. The Club is already doing "The Seagull" this spring, Smith noted, and it could not have undertaken another major product without a guarantee to cover any losses the musical might incur...
...conform than to take an individual stand, and now it is easy to blame conformity on the so-called "climate of fear." University administrators, men of the academic world themselves, say that they would not fire this or that professor were it not for the dangerous publicity they would incur by retaining him. Condemning the public and public opinion, yet capitulating to it, these men find a ready excuse for the conformity which they deplore in the abstract...
SALESMEN who do their selling outside the employer's place of business may deduct from taxable income the expenses they incur in making or seeking sales-and they can do so even if they take the standard deduction on their tax returns...