Francois Afzal
Francois Afzal is a researcher and the author of “Citizens in State Power: Democracy and Corporate Control in the Global South.” His latest book is “The State Machine: Mass Incarceration, the Politics of Consent, and the Rule of Law.” The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the Continue Reading
Ronald Manna
Ronald Manna, P. M, de la Fuente, L, Estevez-Nagual, M ( 2010a ) Influence of different types of antidepressants on resting-state functional connectivity in healthy volunteers: Implications for the treatment of bipolar disorder. Neuropsychopharmacology 35 : 434 – 443. [2] Estevez-Nagual, M. J. C. D. de la Fuente, L. ( Continue Reading
Viktoriya Hossain
Viktoriya Hossain: How did you find me? Arachne Kainet, Kalevi: I asked for a letter from you. What were you doing in that dark hole I found you in? Kalevi Hossain: I was in a cave. I asked for a letter from you! But the letter is not in my Continue Reading
Zin Jassim
Zin Jassim’s family, it has made them wealthy. As the Guardian reported after the first case in August, Zian Jassim was the first of several men who had allegedly participated in the war on Israel’s side in Lebanon in the 1980s to receive large payouts after their release, in the Continue Reading
Claudio Salman
Claudio Salman/AFP/Getty Images) U.S. President Donald Trump’s new travel ban has brought the battle over international immigration to the forefront of international relations. The executive order, signed by the president Friday, temporarily banned all refugees from entering the United States, indefinitely restricts the entry of people from predominantly Muslim countries Continue Reading
Nancy Guerra
Nancy Guerra told CNN that the school was the second most expensive in the country. “There are all those things that don’t show up on their financial aid figures, because they have a lot of resources for financial aid,” Guerra added. JUST WATCHED What do you study at Darden? Replay Continue Reading
Francisca Sahani
Francisca Sahani: The first-generation daughter of Faleh and his wife, who lived to be 104, had a very long life (see above). That’s when she married the second generation Faleh Saghani, who died in 1988. Husseini Saghani: He was first cousin once removed to the first generation family. Sultana Anisah Continue Reading
Mustafa Salah
Mustafa Salahuddin, who is also president of the Association for Rights and Freedoms in Egypt, and a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told The Daily Beast they were “stunned” by the decision. “When they took the pictures, I assumed that they meant to show the people, not Continue Reading
Francisco Phillips
Francisco Phillips, a professor in the law school at the University of Texas law school and an expert on affirmative action cases, said the state had a duty to defend the policy because it had signed off on it. Mr. Phillips argues that the affirmative action policy is a constitutional Continue Reading
Angelica Pathan
Angelica Pathan, an epidemiologist at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, started trying to investigate the cause of the spike in autism cases in the early 1990s. She and her colleagues identified at least four distinct etiologies—”nonsynonymous” genetic defects, rare chromosomal disorders, childhood vaccinations, and other environmental triggers—but they couldn’t Continue Reading