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Hagai Angrest, who got the first proof of life of his 21-year-old son, Matan, last week, told JNS: “We know today he is alive but tomorrow, we don’t know what will happen.”
“Iran’s brazen use of transnational criminal organizations and narcotics traffickers underscores the regime’s attempts to achieve its aims through any means,” the U.S. treasury secretary stated.
Local pro-Israel and Jewish groups didn’t comment on the event, which Rabbi David Wolpe told JNS was “a twisted perversion of the historical record and Israel’s actions.”
The “Washington Free Beacon” obtained emails from three professors who told students that class wouldn’t take place in person.
It wasn’t clear if the university has actually used the tools, the Harvard student paper reported.
“American taxpayers shouldn’t underwrite the tuition of criminal, pro-Hamas protesters who deface their college campuses, disrupt classes and endanger their fellow students,” the senator said.
The chair of the Senate education panel stated that he was told the Education Department will still be able to “carry out its statutory obligations.”
“Anyone who thinks they can lie to us and get away with it, should think twice,” the special agent in charge of the FBI Boston division stated.
“From 2015 to 2020, Alqaysi provided his computer expertise to develop and post logos for a media arm of the ISIS group known as the Kalachnikov team,” stated the U.S. Justice Department.
“Mahmoud Khalil was an individual who was given the privilege of coming to this country,” the White House press secretary said. “He took advantage of that opportunity, of that privilege, by siding with terrorists.”
The owner of the nearly 65-year-old bakery told JNS that he sells some 20% more of the triangular pastries during the Purim season.
“A call from the DOJ concentrates the mind like the prospect of a hanging,” said Kenneth L. Marcus, Brandeis Center chairman and a former U.S. assistant secretary of education. “A call from the Office of Civil Rights is more like a heavy-duty laxative.”