Word: soliman
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...into one. The routines are pretty different; while it’s mainly hip-hop choreography, one is much slower, set to a piano and with more fluid motion. We have this more distinct movement in there because we want to vary it up,” says Erfan Soliman ’12, a member of the Breakers, who are participating in Cultural Rhythms for their second year...
...joined forces with the U.N. Foundation to host a panel in New York City for the Global Coalition on Women and AIDS, an initiative of UNAIDS. Four extraordinary women--Frika Chia Iskandar of Indonesia, Princess Kasune Zulu of Zambia, Gracia Violeta Ross Quiroga of Bolivia and Michaelle Soliman of Haiti--spoke eloquently of their efforts to combat AIDS in their countries. This November TIME and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation plan to hold a Global Health Summit in New York City, bringing together medical experts, politicians and business leaders to discuss new ways to combat diseases like AIDS, malaria...
...beginning of the end. Over the next few years, all four of the Barbary States signed treaties with America renouncing piracy, kidnapping and blackmail. Algiers had to be bombarded a few more times, and there was an awkward moment during negotiations in Washington when the Tunisian representative, Sidi Soliman Melli Melli, made it clear that he expected to be amused at public expense by some ladies of the night. (Jefferson and Secretary of State Madison were able to arrange an off-the-record State Department budget for that purpose, thus demonstrating that they understood the facts of life...
...ruling was handed down in the case of Dr. Nader Soliman, a self-employed anesthesiologist who spent 10 to 15 hours a week working out of the spare bedroom of his home in McLean, Virginia. Soliman also worked a total of 30 to 35 hours each week in three hospitals. But the irs denied him a $2,500 tax deduction because it determined that his home office was not his "principal place of business." The ruling was roundly criticized by small businesses, some members of Congress and, appropriately, the National Association for the Cottage Industry...
...have carefully catered to regional tastes as they have grown. W.R. Grace's El Torito goes so far as to grind its beef in Southwestern cities like Houston and Dallas and to shred it in San Francisco and Los Angeles, where diners prefer it that way. Says Anwar Soliman, executive vice president for Grace's restaurant group: "You have to look at all these subtleties. It's critical in some places, particularly the Midwest." Soliman predicts that Mexican restaurants will double their business by 1985. Many others are bullish as well. "I don't think...