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Cornel Ronald West (born June 2, 1953) is an American philosopher, theologian, political activist, politician, social critic, and public intellectual. [12] West was an independent candidate in the 2024 United States presidential election and is an outspoken voice in left-wing politics in the United States.
Originally, 200 BCE was proposed as the date of the site's construction. "Under the Parthians any observable western influence can just as well be a survival from the Hellenistic period, which is why the monument at Kangāvar was once acceptably dated as early Parthian while recent investigations proved it to be late Sasanian."
University of La Verne President Pardis Mahdavi, the second woman in history to hold the school's top job, stepped down this month after less than a year at the private college.
Anahita / ɑː n ə ˈ h iː t ə / is the Old Persian form of the name of an Iranian goddess and appears in complete and earlier form as Aradvi Sura Anahita (Arədvī Sūrā Anāhitā), the Avestan name of an Indo-Iranian cosmological figure venerated as the divinity of "the Waters" and hence associated with fertility, healing and wisdom.
"Mahdavi" is the Persianate form of "Mahdawi", i.e. "Mahdiist", but it is mostly used of the 16th-century movement started in India. See Category:Mahdiism for Mahdi movements in general. Pages in category "Mahdavi"
Anahita Norouzi (Persian: آناهیتا نوروزی; born 1983), is an Iranian multidisciplinary visual artist, based in Montreal, Canada.Her work is articulated across various materials and mediums, including sculpture, installation, photography, performance, and video.
Pardis Mahdavi is an American scholar and former president of University of La Verne. [1] Previously, she was the provost and executive vice president of the University of Montana, the dean of social sciences at Arizona State University, acting dean of Josef Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver, and the dean of women and chair of anthropology at Pomona College.
Nathanael West was born Nathan Weinstein in New York City, the first child of Ashkenazi Jewish parents Max (Morduch) Weinstein (1878–1932) and Anuta (Anna, née Wallenstein, 1878–1935), [2] from Kovno, Russia (present-day Kaunas, Lithuania), who maintained an upper middle class household in a Jewish neighborhood on the Upper West Side.