Word: attach
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...magazine--which is published six times a year and sent to alumni the world over--many advertisers tend to include their year of graduation. In a given issue, don't be surprised to find companionship sought by Radcliffe '45, Harvard '68 and Harvard-Radcliffe '59. Those who don't attach any special meaning to the word "veritas" are described as Yale Ph.D, MIT grad, Vassar '54, or Wellesley woman. The emphasis is clearly on degree, not sex appeal...
Lest any credit whatsoever attach to your power to influence events related to reserves, I want Crimson readers to know that the reserve system has received serious scrutiny from staff work groups in the last year and will continue to do so, that some preliminary steps have been taken to control input into an automated reserves file, and that the administration of the Harvard College Library and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences are aware of the pressing need to rationalize and rehabilitate the reserves system. Heather E. Cole Librarian of Lamont and Hilles Libraries
There are several competing systems. Digital Product's On Guard is an electronic handcuff. The offender wears a wristwatch-like device that must be inserted into a verifier box in response to random telephone calls from a corrections computer. Control Data's Home Escort system and Controlled Activities' Supervisor attach at the ankle. The Supervisor system used in Florida keeps constant vigil by sending a radio signal every 35 seconds to a central computer. If the signal stops, it tells officials that the prisoner has strayed more than 150 ft. or so from his house. The computer can be programmed...
...written, to add impact. Don't say, "Responsible for ..." This doesn't communicate what you did or what you achieved. Don't list the name and phone number of a reference. If you have letters of reference from the supervisors of your most responsible positions you may want to attach them...
...sided outer shell that vaguely resembles a soccer ball. The sides consist of three identical triangles each containing three proteins on its irregular surface, and one below it. On the surface proteins, the researchers discovered, features that resemble mountaintops are actually antigens, structures that antibodies seek out and attach themselves to when attacking the virus. A "canyon" snakes between these mountaintops and is believed by scientists to be shaped specifically to fit over projections, or receptors, on the surface of human cells. The virus may use this canyon to attach itself to a receptor, like a keyhole receiving...