Word: signed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...people who have a cultural bond with the students should be working but aren't, because they did not know about the program" Comick said. Atkinson said he had hpoed for more black tutors, and had planned to approach black organizations for volunteers. But, he added, so many people signed up at registration and Phillips Brooks open house, that it would have been difficult to accommodate more tutors. Everyone had the same chance to sign up at registration, he said...
...settlement is reached, what kind of document are you prepared to sign...
...context of achieving a just peace, we agree to sign such a document as the one stipulated in U.N. resolutions, which indicates the transfer from a state of war to a state of peace; namely, a document ending the state of belligerency. This document is a peace document. All efforts for peace, including the Geneva Conference, are taking place within the framework of the U.N. and under the aegis of the two superpowers. Our concern is to achieve peace, and the document to be signed should be a peace document. To make it clearer: we are either in a state...
Keeping the Peace. Before a neophyte Special can sign up a client, he or she spends 98 hours in police training, shooting cardboard crooks on the pistol range, learning self-defense and boning up on details of police legal procedure. Then, after approval by the chief of police and the police commission, the trainee hires on as an apprentice to a full-fledged Special, often the officer who later sells him the beat. The traditional price is ten times the monthly revenue from the beat...
Medipet. San Francisco pet owners who feel distempered by runaway veterinary costs can now sign up for Medipet, a prepaid insurance plan for dogs and cats. For $68 a year, pets are covered for routine treatment such as physical exams, rabies shots, defleaing and worming-all of which can cost up to $100 a year without insurance. They also get prescription drugs and emergency hospital care. Medipet founder Paul E. Murray Jr. says some 13,000 pets are put to death in the U.S. each day because their owners cannot afford vet bills. Murray, who started the San Francisco program...