philippe lazzarini, welcome to hardtalk. thank you for having me. well, it is a pleasure to have you in the studio, but i am very mindful thatjust a few days ago you were in gaza looking at your unrwa relief operations on the ground. you ve come out, you ve had a chance to reflect on what you saw. what were your overriding impressions? it was the second time i went to gaza since the war started, and my impression was that the humanitarian situation has significantly deteriorated. as you said in the introduction, we have 1.7 million people who have been displaced. among them, one million are sheltering in united nations schools or warehouses and premises across the gaza strip. i visited one of these places in khan younis. it s a vocational training centre. we have 35,000 people there. it looked, in a certain extent, like a prison because people shut the door of the compound to prevent new people to come in this shelter. hang on. just let me get my mind around this. 35,000 disp
after 5a years at the nih and almost a0 years as the director of an institute, you know, all the things that i ve done research and developing vaccines what do i want to do for the last five or more years? and i think that the pretty clear answer was to maybe serve as an inspiration for young people who are either interested in a career in public service or already are in a career of public service. your undergraduate, you didn t study medicine, though. you studied classics. i studied classics. greek, latin and the romance language and philosophy in undergraduate, and then i went to medical school. i tookjust enough sciences to get me into medical school. do you remember any of your classics? i could give you the first five lines of the iliad and the odyssey. go on. i would be very. he recites in ancient greek. you still remember it. good for you. and being back at georgetown, where your children were born, you were married. and my wife went to undergraduate here and she
heart has stopped? that process i still going after the heart has stopped? process i still going after the heart has stopped? that is correct, es. what heart has stopped? that is correct, yes. what happens heart has stopped? that is correct, yes. what happens when heart has stopped? that is correct, yes. what happens when alpha i heart has stopped? that is correct, yes. what happens when alpha and gamma rays course in that way and interacting that way? we can only tell from the day that we know from healthy humid beings what happens when you cannot, alpha, beta waves, when you cannot, alpha, beta waves, when they interact in that way and what happens is in our rain when the focus, concentrate, when the dream, when we meditate, and the recall memories, these wave patterns appear and it seems like in the rain of a humid thatjust is about to go into death similar patterns are occurring which that us think that perhaps this is a flashback or recall of life just before we day. ghee thi
try to recall the word pairs. in the control group the subjects aren t exposed to any acoustic stimulation. a comparison shows that after sleeping through the night control group subjects are able to memorize on average thirteen more pairs of words but the subjects who received acoustic stimulation during the night did much better they could memorize twenty two more pairs of words then before sleeping. during deep sleep phases slow brain waves arise in the cerebral cortex and propagate to the hippocampus an interim storage space for information absorbed during the day. in deep sleep the positive wave patterns reactivate the information during this process it s transferred to the long term memory where it s stored in