A declassified memo after the first
Gulf War shows Colin Powell's three - page response to criticism of defense policy — reduced to letterhead, a paragraph of polite evasion, blocks of magic marker, and an official signature.
But people dislike playing Russian roulette — even with those odds — each time they board a plane, as the dip in travellers through fear of terrorist action around
the Gulf War shows.
Not exact matches
«These new studies, together with previous studies,
show that no matter how you choose subjects or how you define
Gulf War illness, you still see structural changes in the brain,» says Roberta White, a neuropsychologist from Boston University's School of Public Health.
He cites the UN's investigation of Iraq's nuclear weapons programme after the
Gulf War, which
showed that the programme used a variety of technologies which were supposedly imported for civilian purposes.
«Veterans with
Gulf War Illness
show brain changes linked to memory deficits.»
The first image
shows Kuwait on 6 January 1991, two weeks before the
Gulf War began.
Gulf War veterans with low - level exposure to chemical weapons
show lasting adverse effects on brain structure and memory function, reports a study in the October Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
New preliminary research
shows, for the first time, direct evidence of greater mitochondrial damage in
Gulf War veterans.
Studies also continue to
show that
Gulf War illness is not associated with psychological stressors during the war, the panel sa
War illness is not associated with psychological stressors during the
war, the panel sa
war, the panel said.
3/10/2008 Health Problems in Persian
Gulf War Veterans Higher Due to Chemical Exposure UCSD researchers warn of potential risk to civilians exposed to pesticides A study by researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine
shows there is increasing evidence that high rates of illness in Persian
Gulf War Veteran... More...
After a study last year on
Gulf War veterans
showed a certain allele may prevent brain atrophy, University researchers wanted to extend the research to the general population.
Matthew Fox is the ostensible star as Jack, the doctor who steps up as group leader in the first episode, but it quickly settles in as a dense ensemble
show with characters who have vivid backstories: tough, raven - haired beauty Kate, whose fair looks hide a rough outlaw past (Evangeline Lilly), con man Sawyer (Josh Holloway) who hides his bitterness under a country - boy voice and a suspicious smile, Iraqi communications specialist and
Gulf war veteran (he fought on the other side) Sayid (Naveen Andrews), steely survivalist John Locke (Terry O'Quinn), who has a mystic, one might say miraculous, connection to the island, pregnant single mother - to - be Claire (Emilie de Ravin) running from a fortune - teller's prophecy, washed - up rock star and heroine addict Charlie (Dominic Monaghan), Korean couple Jin and Sun Kwon (Daniel Dae Kim and Yoon - jin Kim) with mob connections and no English skills (or do they?)
Ruby's
show seems to be the antithesis of the much discussed videogamafication of military operations in the media since the first
gulf war.
A discouraging news article in The Times
shows just how big a
gulf remains between Malala's hopes and realities on the ground in rural Pakistan, noting that «the Taliban
war on girl's education continues unabated.»