Word: attach
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...terms of the legislation and found that they couldn't even agree on what was meant by "computer" says Lisa Herwitt, legislative analyst to House Majority Leader W. Paul White (D-Derchester). "There were also questions about the penalties; the type of activities that they were trying to attach penalties to were much different if they were done manually," she added. According to Hewitt, the bill is unlikely to receive a hearing this year but a new version will be presented for debate before the House sometime...
...receiving about $125 an hour, while the C's commanded $400 an hour to $1,000 for the night. For $2,000, a customer could sign up for a ten-hour session that included dinner out, a show, dancing and recreation. The call girls carried attaché cases equipped with a credit-card machine for their clients' convenience. Barrows' establishment, based in a brownstone, took 60% of each woman's earnings. The women had to shave their legs daily, and Barrows kept careful menstrual and weight charts on them. Those who got a bit flabby were...
...turned out, that Mondale would try to bait or rattle Reagan in the hope of making him seem shaky or befuddled, and they wanted to cushion the challenger's shots as much as possible. Baker insisted that the President, who is slightly hard of hearing, be allowed to attach an audio-amplification device to his lectern to enable him to hear questions better...
...Soviet Foreign Ministry, however, has sent a note to foreign embassies complaining that the run "interfered with the normal life of the city." The Soviets asked the joggers to confine their activity to parks and to official sporting facilities. Clint Halloran, 43, a trim Australian attaché who serves as Hash Master, the elected head of the in formal club, chose not to regard the Soviet demand as a worsening of East-West relations. In compliance with the Soviets' request, the runs have been rescheduled for nonrush hours and moved to various parks and suburbs, like the area around...
Another conspiracy theory was raised in an unusually speculative article in Defence Attaché, a generally respected London journal. An editor's note disclaimed agreement with the views of the author, who wrote under a pen name. The author's basic claim was that the KAL intrusion on Sept. 1 deliberately coincided with the Far East passes of both a U.S. spy satellite and the space shuttle Challenger. In his version, the airliner was sent over Soviet territory instead of a U.S. electronic-surveillance aircraft because U.S. officials believed that the Soviets would never shoot down a civilian...