There’s an old saying that the happiest days of a boat owner’s life are the day they buy the boat, and the day they sell it. For me, the happiest days of an Android tablet owner’s life are the day ...
Cup of Joe: Starkey on sports in 400 words or less The game was pretty much over — Game 5 of the 2000 Eastern Conference quarterfinals — when Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Luke Richardson ...
Op-ed: UCLA’s Initiative to Combat Antisemitism risks doing more harm than good On April 20, I attended a meeting with Stuart Gabriel, distinguished professor of the UCLA Anderson School of Management ...
This column frequently tracks insider buys by companies’ chief executives. Lately, they are scarce. Executives normally sell more shares than they buy because their cup is periodically refilled via ...
Newspapers—by virtue of the fact that their primary purpose is to report the news—tend to focus on the now, the narrow space of time that occupies the recent past up until the present. Newspapers like ...
David Ignatius writes a foreign affairs column for The Washington Post. Ignatius has written 12 spy novels: “Phantom Orbit” (2024), “The Paladin” (2020 ...
UB classifies data into three risk-based categories to regulate access to, use of, and necessary precautions required to the protect university data. This policy provides a classification framework ...
Every week, The President’s Inbox podcast, hosted by Distinguished Fellow James M. Lindsay, goes beyond the subject line with leading foreign policy experts to explore how the United States should ...
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