Word: renewably
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...because he was too emotionally disturbed to live alone outside. Outpatients dropped in during the morning for Koch to treat ulcers-most of them located on their hands and feet-that had originally been caused by leprosy and then complicated by other infections. Some came to have the doctor renew their prescriptions for medicine-not, in most cases, because their leprosy was active, but to keep their arrested disease suppressed...
Business School administrators agreed that the salary hike will help renew enthusiasm among those students who became anxious last year after a national survey of business school deans ranked Harvard below the Stanford Business School...
...firm and depends on it to provide fuel and marketing support. Often these operators make most of their money from car repairs or maintenance, and do not want to switch to selling gas exclusively. Yet, if they refuse to go along, the companies can and sometimes do refuse to renew their lease...
When a corporation is financially on the rocks, unable to pay or renew its loans, and the U.S. Government lends that firm its credit-guarantees its loans-the firm has been bailed out as completely and as precisely as though the Government had given it the cash. Mr. Willis Hawkins, president of Lockheed-California, who recently held otherwise in your Letters column [June 27], should know this...
...everything that Nader says it will do. They may be right, but that still leaves room for positive accomplishments. The proposal is worth a try, especially if enacted with a "sunset" clause calling for the abolition of the agency after three years unless Congress takes positive action to renew its charter. This would eliminate the problem created by agencies that have outlived their usefulness, but that cannot be scuttled because they have acquired a few friends and no enemies...