Word: equipped
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...American businessmen may now sell to China a wide variety of goods. If the Chinese have the cash-and inclination-they will be able to plow their fields with American farm tractors, use U.S.-made fertilizers, pesticides and insecticides and even import American livestock for breeding purposes. They can equip their offices with U.S.-made desks, typewriters, check writers, telephones and simple calculators, outfit their factories with American forklift vehicles and a wide assortment of U.S. machinery...
...point of a good college education is not to equip the individual to make a financial killing or even get a job in his field immediately upon graduation, but to give him experience through knowledge of the arts, sciences, literature, history and philosophy; this develops a well-rounded...
...step toward a solution, industry experts testified, is to equip the plants' stacks with electrostatic precipitators and wet scrubbers that would cut air pollution by 99%. But environmentalists retorted that even 1% of the huge plants' gases and soot will constitute much more pollution than New York or Los Angeles power plants now produce. Each day, according to environmentalists, the complex will emit 1,970 tons of poisonous sulfur dioxide, 1,280 tons of nitrogen oxides and 240 tons of fly ash. Obscuring the nation's clearest skies, the soot would cripple the region's astronomical...
Developed by Castagna Electronics of Brooklyn, N.Y., the squawk box will sell for about $100. A. Frederick Greenberg, president of Castagna, is counting on fervid competition among the tobacco companies to equip as many cigarette machines as possible with ACMRUs that will broadcast messages. After all, vending machines dispense an average of 22 competing brands. Greenberg says that ACMRU is aimed at the 250,000 vending machines in "prime high-traffic areas"-mostly offices, factories and bars. The messages could be audible at up to 20 ft. but Greenberg does not think that they will be annoying. "Well," he says...
Under their proposal, which they stress is open to negotiation, the town would advance a medical student $2,000 a year at 3% interest for four years, provide and equip an office and guarantee a reasonable income once a practice is established. In turn, the student would repay the loan within three years of completing internship and military service, and would pledge to serve in the town as a general practitioner for at least a year. If the arrangement worked well, the students believe, the young doctors would stay for much longer...