Word: loath
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...summer of 1990, the Iraqi blitz prompted Washington and Moscow to act in stunning unanimity, each abhorring the raid and demanding, in an unprecedented joint statement, that the invaders retreat. That position was also endorsed by the United Nations Security Council. While all parties were clearly loath to take on the mightiest army in the Arab world -- a force of 1 million fighting men -- the rare convergence of views raised the possibility that Iraq's expansionism can somehow be contained...
...both Budget Director Richard Darman and Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady. Darman is intrigued with the idea because he knows he must raise taxes on wealthier Americans if he is to win Democratic support for Bush's cherished reduction in the capital-gains tax; he also knows that Bush is loath to raise income taxes to achieve this. Brady, on the other hand, has long objected to the quick turnover of securities by stock- and bondholders. Ever since he headed a blue-ribbon panel that investigated the 1987 Wall Street crash, Brady has waged a personal campaign to get people...
Doctors are loath to admit that patients may be dying because they cannot get proper treatment in overcrowded emergency rooms. Indeed, under such harsh conditions, they are rightly proud of the high level of expert care they maintain. But in some hospitals, as volume grows, there are bound to be errors: in 1988, for example, the New York State health department reported that poor patient care was at least partly responsible for twelve deaths that year at Lincoln Hospital in the South Bronx. In one case, a 30-year-old woman with chest pains died after waiting 5 1/2 hours...
Today Russians occupy the grain-growing Volga, Ukrainians the Crimea's sunny coast, and Georgians the stone houses built long ago by Turks. These relative newcomers are loath to make way for returning natives, especially in these tough times. Says Igor Krupnik, a researcher at the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences Institute of Ethnography: "The Crimeans can't let the Tatars come back and have houses when there is a waiting list years long...
Naturally, many Communist nobles are loath to surrender their deserts. Conservative Politburo member Yegor Ligachev once drew hoots of derision when he responded to complaints of inequality by saying, "The party worker has ! only one privilege: to be in front, to struggle for the party's policies." Junior Politburo member Yevgeni Primakov got a bigger sneer when he argued in the Congress of People's Deputies that the rewards of being a party peer were in some ways a burden. During the hot summers, he complained, the chauffeur- driven black cars turned into sweatboxes...