Word: influxes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Questions like this seriously worry many members of the Faculty and Administration. How much will the influx of money threaten the autonomy of the university, or on a smaller scale, alter its operation? How much will federal funds affect the balance between different disciplines? But, though reservations are strong, it is clear that universities, Harvard included, want more federal money and that they will fight to get it: when President Johnson proposed that the NDEA program of student loans be substantially changed, universities yelled like hell, and, along with other affected interests, actually won a major modification in the President...
There would be no massive influx of secret agents, as some Senators fear. By most estimates, no more than ten to fifteen officials would be added to the Russian diplomatic corps here. Even J. Edgar Hoover, director of the F.B.I. and the nation's most enthusiastic bloodhound, admits that the government could handle any threat the new arrivals might pose...
...influx of Red Chinese diplomatic staffs summoned back to Peking from their posts around the world continued, bringing the total to an estimated 200 diplomats from some 30 missions. Some will no doubt be purged; the survivors, Japanese analysts suspect, may have a significant say in Chinese foreign policy after the purge is over. That there is hardly anyone minding the diplomatic store abroad for China in the meantime does not much matter; torn asunder by strife at home, Peking has little it can-or wants to-say to the outside world...
Within the second month of operation, some hospitals were in financial difficulty due to the influx of Medicare patients, he said. Payment of these patients are much slower than those of other patients due to the Medicare bureaucracy. Rouse said that hospitals in Dallas, have to wait for all receipts to be sent to Baltimore, processed, and then sent back...
...lesson is plain. Competition for land around the Library is going to be fierce. Moreover, the annual influx of tourists will undoubtedly stimulate development. New construction could bring a series of unsightly, uncoordinated, and unwanted buildings. Accommodating this large number of visitors is necessary; abandoning the place to them is not. Clearly, the City needs some means of regulating the real estate pressures now being exerted on the Square...