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Word: intendancy (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...kind of identification card altogether. Some opponents fear that any sort of ID would be not only a nightmare to administer but, more important, too totalitarian for most Americans to tolerate. Simpson, for one, remains undaunted. Says he: "If there is nothing else I get done I intend to send a signal to the world that you have to have some kind of identification before you work here. Right now we are the patsies of the earth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Closing the Golden Door | 5/18/1981 | See Source »

...former Levi Strauss Foundation officer who is the A's executive vice president, plan to install baseball's first computerized ticket-selling operation, with satellite terminals in San Francisco, Sacramento, San Jose, Fresno and Stockton to cope with the lengthening lines of excited fans. The executives also intend to get athletes involved in community projects, and, as the elder Haas dreams, "win the World Series." October is a long way off, but if the new owners keep their cattle rollin' and their hats on the rack, their phenomenal success with the A's just could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Deliverance in Denim | 5/11/1981 | See Source »

Bookstein is simply an extremely dedicated musician. "I intend to become a concert pianist," he says, and he will allow nothing to stand in his way. "I've been known to practice until five in the morning," he continues. "I really find it quite pleasant concentrating for such long periods of time--sort of like running the marathon." He adds with a grin, "Of course the chair helps...

Author: By Sarah Paul, | Title: Practice Made Perfect? | 5/1/1981 | See Source »

...management will not publicly admit that its missile guidance systems are used to steer missiles. For this reason, and because the Lab has been unwilling to negotiate on the request to examine conversion, the group Monday sponsored a sit-in on the Lab's property. We intend to continue these sit-ins, as well as pursue talks with the Lab's management...

Author: By John Chute, John Lindsay, and Jay Mccleod, S | Title: Demonstration at Draper Lab | 4/30/1981 | See Source »

President Reagan does not intend to launch a major new public works spending program. In fact, as part of his budget-cut plans, he hopes to carve $31 billion out of federal spending on transportation over the next five years. The highway program would lose $11.2 billion, and mass-transit aid would be trimmed by $12 billion. Though Congress is expected to approve a large portion of the Reagan cuts, some lawmakers argue that the reductions are shortsighted. Says Democratic Congressman Henry Reuss of Wisconsin, the chairman of the Joint Economic Committee: "The whole thrust of the Reagan program...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time to Repair and Restore | 4/27/1981 | See Source »

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