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Stuck abroad, Indian students rally for medicines, oxygen as relatives fall sick
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Many of them, though, are doing what they can, amplifying requests for oxygen, hospital beds, and key medicines which are in short supply in cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Lucknow, and Bengaluru and even raising funds to help individuals and organisations overcome the crisis.
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A week ago, 25-year-old Chetna Johar who studies in Ireland found out that her mother in Delhi was showing symptoms of Covid-19. She wanted to fly home, but there was no way she could do that. While her mother tested negative for the virus, Johar said the situation is taking a mental toll on her as she keeps wondering what will happen next.
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Robert Schuyler (bottom right) has retired after using a Nazi phrase and salute during the opening plenary of a virtual archaeology conference. LIZ QUINLAN
Archaeologist who used Nazi salute retires
Jan. 26, 2021 , 3:20 PM
Earlier this month, Robert Schuyler, an archaeologist at the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn), sparked a storm of criticism when he used a Nazi salute and phrase during the plenary session of the Society for Historical Archaeology’s (SHA’s) annual meeting. Yesterday afternoon, UPenn updated a statement about the incident, saying Schuyler has retired from the university. Kathleen Morrison, chair of UPenn’s anthropology department, also tweeted the news but declined to comment further. Schuyler did not respond to requests from
The letter was co-authored by University of York Ph.D. candidate Liz Quinlan, the speaker that Prof. Robert Schuyler engaged in a brief altercation with at the Society for Historical Archaeology conference before he used the Nazi phrase and salute.