Bob Chaundy, former obituaries editor at BBC News, says there used to be a convention in obits, particularly in print, that you didn't speak ill of the dead, but that went by the wayside by the 1980s.
BBC: Margaret Thatcher and the taboo of speaking ill of the dead
It's important that we don't make any ill-considered decisions -- even with the best intentions -- particularly at a time when our resources are so limited.
But Robinson, now chairman of the Casey Institute at the Center for Security Policy, argues that capital market restrictions wouldn't have the same ill effects as trade sanctions.
That's why I support comprehensive background checks, so criminals and the dangerously mentally ill can't buy guns.
Buffett, to his credit, didn't take positions in those ill-fated stocks.
Family members of both children also had flu-like symptoms, but it's not clear whether they were infected with the same virus since samples weren't taken when they were ill.
That said, most people sitting near someone who is ill probably won't get sick.
In a nation where healthy people don't often exercise, persuading the ill to do so is all the more difficult.
WSJ: Iram Leon: May the Last Marathon Be The Fastest��Gusher Marathon
Fidel Castro hasn't been seen publicly since falling ill in July.
On one flight studied, one passenger spread a particular strain to someone seated seven rows away, while people seated next to the ill passenger didn't contract the disease.
And that wasn't the evening's only ill-considered musical cue.
If I was to get ill again I wouldn't be able to manage that at all.
Isn't it clear that this mission was ill-conceived, poorly planned and embarrassingly executed?
BBC: Hagues blames botched Libya mission on misunderstanding
"We've had a few lads go down ill, which wasn't ideal but the movement and passing was good, " he said.
The Pew report also doesn't address how much is being lost to ill-informed investment choices.
She was seriously ill, and it wasn't clear how long she would live.
If you have to plead, "it was a joke" then obviously it wasn't, or at the very least, ill advised and insensitive.
Armed with a black bag and blackberry, DeJonge visits mostly the elderly who either can't get to a hospital or are so ill that moving them would prove life-threatening.
CNN: Black bag and Blackberry in hand, this doc makes house calls
Debt-protection services, which cover your credit-card bill when you can't, can help out if you become ill or lose your job, protecting your credit score, the Government Accountability Office said in a report last month.
This explains why new mothers feel ill-prepared: They can't get advice from their mothers, aunts, grandmothers and neighbors.
Pistons coach Lawrence Frank returned to the team after missing six games to be with his seriously ill wife, but it didn't save his team from a ninth straight loss.
Here's hoping that the affiliated Tech Policy Summit--with some participants' eyes cast nervously toward Washington--helps ensure policymakers don't devour the technology sector's promise with ill-conceived intervention (your Wayne will be a panelist there).
Smith and forward Kenyon Martin -- didn't even make it to the workout because they were ill.
When a man who tells you he's terminally ill cuts you a check, you don't stop for lunch.
Zubeidat Tsarnaev told CNN in late April that her husband couldn't travel to the United States, saying he was too ill.
The federal agency says the term "energy drink" isn't defined by any FDA regulation, describing it as an ill-defined marketing term with widely varying ingredients.
Some, I think, are merely expressing an odd respect the democratic process - they don't want to look as though they are being hasty or ill-considered.
Daly had coaxed plant managers to develop standard colors, paper weights and printing practices so that U.S. directory publishers wouldn't know the difference between a job done in Dwight, Ill. and one in Greeley, Colo.
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