September 13, 2017
Update: He lost the primary Tuesday but is humbled because he came so close and will run again.
The following information comes from El-Yateem himself during an interview with The Village Voice.
Khader El-Yateem is the first avowed Socialist and liberation theologist to seek the Democratic nomination for the City Council seat in District 43. He will primary an allegedly less radical Democrat Justin Brannon in what he describes as a “battle for the soul of New York City”.
Brannon is supported by the Working Families Party which strives to get the most Progressive [Communist?] people elected.
The leftist strongly supports single-payer healthcare, a free CUNY and SUNY, and opposes real estate developers. He is anti-police.
COVID-19 antibody treatment available at Fort Hamilton Hospital Fort Hamilton Hospital has the antibody therapeutic, bamlanivimab, for the treatment of non-hospitalized patients (Source: Live 5 News) By FOX19 Digital Staff | February 3, 2021 at 12:25 PM EST - Updated February 3 at 12:25 PM
HAMILTON, Ohio (FOX19) - The new COVID-19 antibody treatment,â¯Bamlanivimab,â¯is now being used for qualified patients at Fort Hamilton Hospital.
Kettering Health Network began using the new antibody treatment for patients at Kettering Medical Center in November.
Patientsâ¯may be eligible for the infusion treatmentâ¯if theyâ¯are suffering from moderate symptomsâ¯of COVID-19â¯including, but not limited to:
Fever
Shortness of breath
10 معلومات عن جانيت يلين أول وزيرة للخزانة الأمريكية: يهودية elwatannews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from elwatannews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Fort Hamilton, N.Y. - Two leaders from Fort Hamilton graduated from Installation Management Command’s Emerging Enterprise Leader program, Jan. 20.
Trevor Loew, Family and Morale, Welfare, and Recreation director, and Rose Perez, Equal Employment Opportunity specialist, were among a small group of graduates who began their two-year long EEL journey in Jan. 2019.
The program is an effort to expand the Army’s enterprise leadership development efforts to emerging and aspiring leaders at the GS-11/12 levels. Competitively selected participants, such as Loew and Perez, developed targeted competencies all while continuing to perform in their current positions.
“This two-year civilian leader development program is designed to develop participants in the targeted competencies of interpersonal skills, communication, innovation, strategic thinking, conflict management, team building and problem solving,” said Kayla Jackson, IMCOM EEL program manager. “The program