Word: sessioners
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That reversal will cost you $800 for the eight-session course of treatment over four to eight weeks. Light BioScience, the privately held company that makes GentleWaves, is working on the home version, says president and CEO Rick Krupnick...
...turn in the interrogation room came every other day. The questions never varied. "They kept coming back to the phone number--why I didn't have any," he says. "They just wouldn't believe me." Every session would end with threats of more beatings and torture. He was told of other captives who had died grisly deaths and was shown stains on the floor where they had bled. The strong smell of chemicals began to make sense. They had been used to cover up the smell of vomit and dried blood. But, says the U.S. official, the threat of death...
...them." While waiting to use the toilet over the next few days, the captives whispered rumors of how their Sunni kidnappers were taking revenge by killing some of the Shi'ite captives. Waddah says at least two captives he knew to be Shi'ite disappeared abruptly. At his next session in the interrogation room, Waddah's captors told him he was lucky that he was a Sunni. Any Shi'ite whose family was unable to pay ransom within a week was being killed, they said. To reassure them of his Sunni loyalties, Waddah claimed friendship with the fanatical cleric...
...Perhaps the greatest Firefox 2 feature has the boring title of "Session Restore." If you have a bunch of websites open, but unexpectedly have to shut down (maybe your computer crashes, or you're installing software that needs a restart), Firefox remembers the pages you had open and goes right back to them. Firefox also comes with a smart new spellchecker. If you're typing in an e-mail, blog entry or online comment form, it puts a little red line under dubious spellings. Right-click the word to see correctly spelled suggestions. Ironically, it just like using Microsoft Word...
...student-run film journal. But when he returned to Harvard Square’s Brattle Theater two weeks ago, it wasn’t as a visiting director or journalist. He came as an employee of Katzenbach Partners LLP, a New York-based consulting firm. Haddad coordinated a brainstorming session at which Harvard students discussed ways to keep the doors open at the financially troubled theatre. He says his ties to the Brattle are strong. “I wanted to see if the Brattle had anything they wanted help with,” he says. “Then...