Word: properly
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...employees would be expected to take “ServSafe,” a class on proper food handling that HUDS employees also take. They would also be required to abide by a dress code and wear aprons...
...Gilmore. “He’s picked up right where he left off. He’s actually a big key in stopping that rushing game Harvard has with Dawson. He’s a guy that has to do a good job of getting to the proper gap and making a good tackle when he gets there.”Dawson seems to be the main threat in a weakened Harvard offense.Entering the season with a career total of 3,628 rushing yards, the tailback stands just 1,087 short of the all-time Ivy rushing record...
...West experience derogatory treatment. It is doubly insulting when those victimized are from Muslim countries in the Middle East and elsewhere. In addition to discrimination at home, the arrogant foreign policies of most Western countries produce a sense of injustice among many Muslims who believe they have no proper recourse-politically, socially or economically. The resulting sense of powerlessness breeds anger that finds its way into extremism, violence and terrorism. Instead of blaming Islam, look at the root causes of the boiling anger and remove them. Only then will we feel safe. Bashy Quraishy Chief Editor, MediaWatch Copenhagen...
Gilo was built on barren land almost immediately following the 1967 Six Day War after Jordan retreated from Jerusalem and the West Bank. Several West Bank settlements including Gilo, Ma’aleh Adumim, and Givat Ze’ev, were built as a belt to insulate Jerusalem proper from further attack. When Israel gained control over the land that had been “no man’s land” since the Jordanian conquest, Israelis wasted no time in developing it. Beginning as a modest village, Gilo grew into the city it is today...
...Pakistanis, but they treat us like foreigners." And so, in his opinion, did the central government. "None of the work on the port has gone to people from Gwadar," he added. "They are spending billions of rupees on it, but they have not even built us a proper hospital." Like the children playing cricket, he seemed to consider himself very much a Pakistani. But he resented Islamabad's heavy-handed approach and the troops it deployed to enforce its policies. I left Gwadar with new sympathy for the Baluch and their desire for more say in their affairs...