Word: adjuncts
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About 10 years ago, the first inhibitor was discovered. Clinical trials began in 1992 to establish the use of the inhibitor--TNP-470--as a cancer drug, largely as an adjunct after chemotherapy...
...spend performing such loathsome tasks as teaching undergraduates, serving as advisers and managing administrative operations. Courses proliferated: the course catalog for my senior year was 271 pages; today it's 375 pages. Yet the number of full-time arts-and-sciences faculty members remained stable. Graduate students and adjunct faculty increasingly shouldered the load, while professional counselors and administrators and their retinues of support staff took over tasks once within a professor's job description. In 1970 the number of full-time university employees was 12,155; by 1993 it had risen to 15,706. Yet the number of undergrads...
Gewanter will move to Washington, D.C., this summer with his wife, who has secured an adjunct position at Georgetown and will teach English...
...Denver, Heath and other businessmen will next month open the Rocky Mountain Manufacturing Academy, a trade-school adjunct of the state's community-college system. Housed in the former Lowry Air Force Base (which once employed hundreds of civilians) near Denver, the $5.5 million facility will make use of cast-off gear like lathes from the old Rocky Flats nuclear-weapons plant. Typical subjects: welding, robotics and laser technology...
Maxine Isaacs, the adjunct lecturer at the Kennedy School and former press secretary for Walter Mondale, moderated the event, which was hosted by IOP Fellow Mark Merritt, former chief spokesperson for the 1996 Republican National Convention. Gerald Seib of the Wall Street Journal was also a panelist