Word: absorber
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Obviously, that kind of growth takes much of the heat off the four-year colleges. California's master plan, for example, calls for its junior colleges to absorb 50,000 students by 1975 who otherwise would have qualified for entrance to the state university. But the statistics do not fully measure the true value of the junior colleges, which lies in their distinctive multiple functions...
There were, of course, some specks on the economic scene. Johnson and his economic advisers are particularly concerned about how to absorb some 500,000 more teen-agers into the work force this year. Says the council report: "The great increase in the number of young, inexperienced workers constitutes the most important change in the labor force during this decade." They are also worried about the possibility of a prolonged steel strike, the continuing drain on U.S. gold, and "disturbing" pressures toward inflation. Johnson pledged that "the full resources of this nation" will be used to keep the gold value...
...building 30 two-year community colleges which are administrated by county school boards and located so that 70% of all students are within commuting distance. Florida Atlantic, built on the site of a former U.S. Air Force base, opened four months ago as a two-year senior college to absorb graduates of the community colleges. Classes will begin at Pensacola in 1967, and at Orlando a year later. Enrollment, currently 40,000, is expected to rise to 135,500 by 1975. A system of closed-circuit TV education, aimed at supplying graduate courses to scientists such as those at Cape...
East & West. The flood of arms has entered the Congo from almost all sides (see map), and in such quantity that some Western intelligence sources say the Simbas cannot possibly absorb any more. Some light equipment was unloaded from Russian and Chinese ships at the Brazzaville Congo port of Pointe Noire, shipped by rail to Gamboma, and smuggled across the Congo River, possibly to secret Simba units in Bolobo -only 180 miles upriver from Leopoldville. Other shipments arrived by sea at Tanzania's capital of Dar es Salaam, were sent in sealed boxcars to the lake port of Kigoma...
...just that. Through the bore of the heavy-gauge needle, he then inserted a thin plastic tube. And through this he injected red cells, Rh-negative like the mother's, to replace the baby's own Rh-positive cells, which were being destroyed. A fetus can absorb blood cells directly from its abdominal cavity...