Word: risked
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...will share their facility in order to contribute to knowledge. And let's not forget that the larger community is footing the bill for this research and not only has the right to know what is going on, it has the right to say no if it deems the risk to public health too great...
...face it: the inactivity exists because people don't know enough, don't care to know more, and, if they did, they wouldn't care to do anything about it. How many of us are willing to risk disciplinary action when the job market is tight? How many of us are willing to take a stand on a moral issue we consider important and protest? Or just take a stand and be quiet? Or, simply, how many of us consider any moral issue to be important? Jonathan Ratner is right in that students feel impotent in face of Harvard...
...danger. Citing evidence that "fetal alcohol syndrome" may be more widespread than had been supposed, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism warned pregnant women that consuming more than three ounces of pure alcohol-or perhaps as little as one ounce (two drinks)-a day could increase the risk of their giving birth to a deformed or retarded child. Added University of Washington's Dr. Sterling Clarren: "You wouldn't give a newborn baby a glass of Scotch-and you shouldn't give one to a fetus, either...
...vice president of Manufacturers Hanover Trust: "Each lending bank regularly reviews conditions in a particular borrowing country and makes a decision about what the country's lending limit should be." Moreover, bankers point out, most of their loans are concentrated among richer and more productive LDCS where the risk of default presumably is lowest -such countries as Brazil, Mexico and South Korea. By contrast, countries like Pakistan, Peru and Ghana get little commercial-bank credit. Finally, bankers argue, a substantial cut in foreign loans now could lead to social and political disruption in some LDCs and bring...
...dominant personality trait is the willingness to gamble. Ballerina Assoluta Natalia Makarova, who now makes about $300,000 a year from her dancing, took a great risk in defecting from the Kirov Ballet to perform in the alien world of Western ballet. But then Natasha, 36, has always been supremely confident of her talent. Recalling an old Russian proverb, she observes: "It is bad soldier who does not expect to be general...