Word: extras
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...most important and present need is for Harvard to work together with Allston as much as is practically feasible. This would involve using the Harvard Construction Mitigation website and the Allston-Harvard Task Force to communicate to the days it has deemed necessary to work after hours. A few extra hours is the kind of small inconvenience often essential to the construction process. Important steps such that are now taking place need to be done in continuous blocks. For example, pouring concrete is a process that should not be interrupted and may require extra hours after...
Australia last week sent an extra 200 troops to join its existing contingent of 780 men, who, along with 170 New Zealanders, make up the ISF. The men they are pursuing spent the past two years under the leadership of rebel leader Major Alfredo Reinado, who was killed during what the government labeled an assassination attempt on Ramos-Horta. Under Reinado's leadership, the rebels were regularly hunted by the ISF's highly trained special forces but always managed to stay one step ahead of them...
...preceptor added that extra pay for grading freshman placement exams and choosing essays for ‘Exposé’, the collection of student work published by the program each year, may be cut. Weekly e-mails on how to limit spending are sent to all preceptors, and preceptors even have to request permission to use manila envelopes, the individual said...
...believe in these characters as flesh-and-blood humans because their roles are stereotypical—or, if you prefer, archetypical. You have the buxom blonde, the serious heroine, and the hard-drinking, philosophy-spouting professor. (And yes, he has an accent, so we know to take him extra seriously.) This is the first of Romero’s zombie films in which the protagonists are upstaged by their flesh-eating co-stars. Only one character, a dynamite-hurling, deaf Amish man, truly pops off the screen. His scene, although too brief, is one of the most memorable...
...prominent journalist for the English-language Daily Star newspaper and for CNN and a part-time consultant to Human Rights Watch, paints a depressing picture of abuse at the hands of Bangladesh's military intelligence agency. Khalil, who had been writing about the security forces' alleged role in extra-judicial killings, torture and arbitrary arrests, was picked up by the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI) in May, 2007. According to the Human Rights Watch report, he was kept in a detention center, beaten, threatened with execution and "forced to confess to - and implicate friends and colleagues in - anti-state...