Antonis kanakis biography of abraham lincoln
Education
Bachelor's Degree: Xavier University Cincinnati, OH, 1978
Medical Degree: University of Cincinnati Cincinnati, OH, 1982 (Neurology)
Internship: Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN, 1983
Residency: Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN, 1985 (Neurology )
Fellowship: Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN, 1987 (Cerebrovascular Disease)
Certifications
American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (Neurology) (Certification Date: 06-30-1988 )
American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (Vascular Neurology) (Certification Date: 04-29-2005 ) - (Recertification Date: to 05-04-2015 )
Clinical Interests
Neurology
Stroke
Acute Stroke
Cerebrovascular Disease
Cerebrovascular Disorders
Comprehensive Stroke
Hemorrhagic Stroke
Intracranial Stenosis
Ischemic Stroke
Stroke, including Hemorrhagic Stroke and Ischemic Stroke
Subdural Hematoma
Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA)
Research and Practice Interests
Treatment and Epidemiology of Acute Cerebrovascular Disease
Positions and Work Experience
- 7/1986–9/1987:Mayo Clinic-Instructor ,
- 9/1987 - 9/1993: University of Cincinnati - Assistant Professor of Neurology,
- 11/1987 - 9/1993: Veterans Administration Medical Center - Staff Attending Physician ,
- 5/1988 - 7/1994: University of Cincinnati - Director of Neurology Residency Training Program ,
- 9/1993 - 8/1996: University of Cincinnati - Associate Professor of Neurology,
- 7/1997 - 7/2007: University of Cincinnati - Director, Vascular Neurology Fellowship,
- 5/1987 - present: University of Cincinnati -Staff Attending Physician ,
- 2/1989 - present: 15 Community Hospitals - Courtesy Staff ,
- 9/1996 - present: University of Cincinnati - Professor of Neurology,
- 4/2000 - present:: University of Cincinnati - Chairman, Department of Neurology ,
- 2/2006 - present: University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute - Academic/Research Director,
- 9/1996 - 8/2010: University of Cincinnati - Tertiary Neurosurgery Appointment
Henry Kissinger Is Dead at 100; Shaped the Nation’s Cold War History
The most powerful secretary of state of the postwar era, he was both celebrated and reviled. His complicated legacy still resonates in relations with China, Russia and the Middle East.
By David E. Sanger
David E. Sanger covers the White House and national security. He interviewed Henry Kissinger many times and traveled to Europe, Asia and the Middle East to examine his upbringing and legacy.
Published Nov. 29, 2023Updated Nov. 30, 2023
Henry A. Kissinger, the scholar-turned-diplomat who engineered the United States’ opening to China, negotiated its exit from Vietnam, and used cunning, ambition and intellect to remake American power relationships with the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War, sometimes trampling on democratic values to do so, died on Wednesday at his home in Kent, Conn. He was 100.
His death was announced in a statement by his consulting firm.
Few diplomats have been both celebrated and reviled with such passion as Mr. Kissinger. Considered the most powerful secretary of state in the post-World War II era, he was by turns hailed as an ultrarealist who reshaped diplomacy to reflect American interests and denounced as having abandoned American values, particularly in the arena of human rights, if he thought it served the nation’s purposes.
He advised 12 presidents — more than a quarter of those who have held the office — from John F. Kennedy to Joseph R. Biden Jr. With a scholar’s understanding of diplomatic history, a German-Jewish refugee’s drive to succeed in his adopted land, a deep well of insecurity and a lifelong Bavarian accent that sometimes added an indecipherable element to his pronouncements, he transformed almost every global relationship he touched.
At a critical moment in American history and diplomacy, he was second in power only to President Richard M. Nixon. He joined the Nixon White House in January 1969 as national securit .Former Participants
Title Name University and title Country Prof. Abul K. Abbas M.D. Department of Pathology UCSF USA Dr. Adrian Kissenpfennig PhD Infection and Immunity, CCRCB Queen’s University Belfast IRELAND Prof. Ake Jakobson Dept. of Paediatrics Akademiska Sjukhuset SWEDEN Prof. Alberto Mantovani Istituto Clinico Humanitas ITALY Dr. Alexandra Filipovich Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center USA Dr. Alexandra Tsakri Gennimatas Hospital GREECE Dr. Alexandra-Chloe Villani Research Fellow in Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Broad Institute of MIT & Harvard UK Dr. Alexandre Belot Dendritic Cells & Immune Plasticity FRANCE Dr. Alison Portnoy MD VP Clinical, Virtual PoC DPU USA Dr. Allan Mowat Institute of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation, University of Glasgow UK Dr. Allan S. Y. Lau Division of Infectious Diseases The Hospital for Sick Children CANADA Dr. Amer A. Beg Associate Professor Columbia University, Dept. of Biosciences USA Dr. Anahita Rafiei University Hospital Zurich/Hematology SWITZERLAND Dr. Andrea Keane-Myers Laboratory of Allergic Diseases NIAID/NIH Twinbrook USA Dr. Andrea Ventura MD, PhD Dept. of Cancer Biology & Genetics Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center USA Dr. Andrew L. ‘Feldman MD Laboratory of Pathology National Cancer Institute USA Dr. Andrew L. Mellor PhD Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Immunogenetics, Director, Immunotherapy Center Medical College of Georgia USA Dr. Andrian Thrasher Molecular Immunology Unit Institute of Child Health UK Prof. Andy Clark Institute of Inflammation & Ageing, College of Medical & Dental Sciences University of Birmingham UK Prof. Angela Vincent MBBS, FRCP Neuroimmunology Group West Wing and Weatherall Institute John Radcliffe Hospital UK Dr. Anjali Bechan Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center Johns Hopkins, Bu