Kelly Riddell Sadler is an American journalist and former political advisor. She wrote "Water Cooler", a daily political blog for The Washington Times Web site, and was a regular contributor to the Times on political issues. She served as a special assistant to the president in the White House Office of Communications from May 2017 to June 2018.
Her tenure in the White House was marked by an incident during a May 2018 meeting where she mocked Senator John McCain's failing health by saying, "It doesn't matter, he's dying anyway." On June 5, 2018, the White House announced she was "no longer employed within the executive office of the president," although she was not removed due to her McCain comment, but rather due to her accusing her manager Mercedes Schlapp during an Oval Office meeting with Trump of leaking information to the press, as Schlapp looked on - a meeting that itself was leaked.
Education
Sadler has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Chinese and international relations from Hamilton College and a Master of Arts in broadcast journalism from Northwestern University.
Career
Sadler worked in strategy consulting for Kaiser Associates and later as a Bloomberg News reporter from 2009 to 2011. She subsequently was a reporter and editor for The Washington Times. Her work has appeared on Fox News, U.S. News & World Report, and the Albany Times Union. She has appeared numerous times on political shows including The O'Reilly Factor, Hannity, and Media Buzz.
In January 2015, Sadler reported rumors in The Washington Times that political donor George Soros had given at least $33 million in one year to support activist groups during the Ferguson protests which were debunked by The Daily Beast and Snopes. Sadler also shared the rumors in an interview on The O'Reilly Factor. and they were inteviewed on The Sean Hannity Show. The report received the Sigma Delta Chi Robert D. G. Lewis Watchdog Journalism Award from the Washington, D.C., chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, for the entry that "best exemplifies journalism aimed at protecting the public from abuses by those who would betray the public trust."
In February 2016, the International Business Times reported that Sadler had given Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina the maximum individual campaign contribution of $2,700 in 2015. The Washington Times Executive Editor Christopher Dolan responded that this was a violation of company policy and that the paper would retroactively disclose Sadler's ties to maintain journalistic integrity.
Comments on John McCain
In May 2018, Sadler was criticized for mocking Senator John McCain by saying, "It doesn't matter, he's dying anyway", in a closed-door meeting in front of two dozen other staffers. Matt Schlapp, who is married to Sadler's White House colleague Mercedes Schlapp, defended Sadler: "She's also a little bit of a victim here," Schlapp told CNN New Day co-anchor Chris Cuomo.
Personal life
She is married to Frank Sadler, who was the manager for Fiorina's unsuccessful campaign for the Republican Party nomination for US President in 2016.
Her tenure in the White House was marked by an incident during a May 2018 meeting where she mocked Senator John McCain's failing health by saying, "It doesn't matter, he's dying anyway." On June 5, 2018, the White House announced she was "no longer employed within the executive office of the president," although she was not removed due to her McCain comment, but rather due to her accusing her manager Mercedes Schlapp during an Oval Office meeting with Trump of leaking information to the press, as Schlapp looked on - a meeting that itself was leaked.
Education
Sadler has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Chinese and international relations from Hamilton College and a Master of Arts in broadcast journalism from Northwestern University.
Career
Sadler worked in strategy consulting for Kaiser Associates and later as a Bloomberg News reporter from 2009 to 2011. She subsequently was a reporter and editor for The Washington Times. Her work has appeared on Fox News, U.S. News & World Report, and the Albany Times Union. She has appeared numerous times on political shows including The O'Reilly Factor, Hannity, and Media Buzz.
In January 2015, Sadler reported rumors in The Washington Times that political donor George Soros had given at least $33 million in one year to support activist groups during the Ferguson protests which were debunked by The Daily Beast and Snopes. Sadler also shared the rumors in an interview on The O'Reilly Factor. and they were inteviewed on The Sean Hannity Show. The report received the Sigma Delta Chi Robert D. G. Lewis Watchdog Journalism Award from the Washington, D.C., chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, for the entry that "best exemplifies journalism aimed at protecting the public from abuses by those who would betray the public trust."
In February 2016, the International Business Times reported that Sadler had given Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina the maximum individual campaign contribution of $2,700 in 2015. The Washington Times Executive Editor Christopher Dolan responded that this was a violation of company policy and that the paper would retroactively disclose Sadler's ties to maintain journalistic integrity.
Comments on John McCain
In May 2018, Sadler was criticized for mocking Senator John McCain by saying, "It doesn't matter, he's dying anyway", in a closed-door meeting in front of two dozen other staffers. Matt Schlapp, who is married to Sadler's White House colleague Mercedes Schlapp, defended Sadler: "She's also a little bit of a victim here," Schlapp told CNN New Day co-anchor Chris Cuomo.
Personal life
She is married to Frank Sadler, who was the manager for Fiorina's unsuccessful campaign for the Republican Party nomination for US President in 2016.
Chris Bascombe is a North West football reporter for The Daily Telegraph.
Bascombe worked at the Liverpool Echo for seven years, whilst there he won Sports Writer of the Year in the North West for five successive years. He is also the recipient of the 'Merseyside Journalist of the Year' and the 'Sports Journalist of the Year' award at the Merseyside Media Network Journalism Award. He was presented the award by Bill Kenwright. When some fans made violent threats to Bascombe, Following the closure of the News of the World, Bascombe joined The Daily Telegraph in 2011.
Bascombe was the ghostwriter of Jamie Carragher's autobiography Carra.
Works
*Best XI Liverpool - co-author.
* - ghostwriter.
Bascombe worked at the Liverpool Echo for seven years, whilst there he won Sports Writer of the Year in the North West for five successive years. He is also the recipient of the 'Merseyside Journalist of the Year' and the 'Sports Journalist of the Year' award at the Merseyside Media Network Journalism Award. He was presented the award by Bill Kenwright. When some fans made violent threats to Bascombe, Following the closure of the News of the World, Bascombe joined The Daily Telegraph in 2011.
Bascombe was the ghostwriter of Jamie Carragher's autobiography Carra.
Works
*Best XI Liverpool - co-author.
* - ghostwriter.
The Hematology-Oncology Research Center and Stem Cell Transplantation (HORCSCT; formerly HORCBMT) is affiliated to Tehran University of Medical Sciences (TUMS) and based in Shariati Hospital, Tehran, Iran. As a main national hematology-oncology center, it is among the most prominent stem cell transplantation centers in the world, with more than 300 successful transplantations performed per year.
The Center is mainly involved in new therapeutic approaches which are developed or under development for hematologic-oncologic patients, particularly stem cell transplantation. In addition, it is involved in the research activities aimed at improving the diagnosis and management of different hematologic and oncologic diseases.
The Center was founded in 1991 by Professor Ardeshir Ghavamzadeh, who is currently the Center director. It was further expanded in 2000, when it was moved to a new 4800 m building well-equipped for different basic and clinical research and services.
Iran will invest 2.5 billion dollars in the country's stem cell research over the next five years (2008-2013).
The Center is mainly involved in new therapeutic approaches which are developed or under development for hematologic-oncologic patients, particularly stem cell transplantation. In addition, it is involved in the research activities aimed at improving the diagnosis and management of different hematologic and oncologic diseases.
The Center was founded in 1991 by Professor Ardeshir Ghavamzadeh, who is currently the Center director. It was further expanded in 2000, when it was moved to a new 4800 m building well-equipped for different basic and clinical research and services.
Iran will invest 2.5 billion dollars in the country's stem cell research over the next five years (2008-2013).
Idhu Vedhalam Sollum Kathai () is an upcoming Indian Tamil-language fantasy film directed by Rathindran R. Prasad. An adaptation of the folk tale collection Baital Pachisi, the film features Ashwin Kakumanu, Abhay Deol, Aishwarya Rajesh, Guru Somasundaram and Greg Burridge in the lead roles. Featuring music by Ghibran and cinematography by Roberto Zazzara, the film began production in mid 2016.
Cast
*Ashwin Kakumanu
*Aishwarya Rajesh
*Abhay Deol as Vikramadithyan
*Guru Somasundaram as Vedhalam
*Greg Burridge
*Leslie Tripathy
*Ravindra Vijay as Ashok
Production
The project was first announced by director Rathindran Prasad during July 2016, where he revealed that he would make a mythological fiction film starring Ashwin Kakumanu, Guru Somasundaram and British stunt choreographer Greg Burridge in the lead roles. Prasad had earlier written and directed the music video for Sofia Ashraf's "Kodaikanal Won't" song. Prasad's wife, Basak Gaziler Prasad, a Turkish film producer, decided to produce the film. The film was revealed to be a contemporary take on Baital Pachisi (a collection of folk tales featuring Vetala and Vikramaditya), with Ashwin portraying a video game designer who becomes rich overnight. The film began production on Madhya Pradesh during July 2016, with Aishwarya Rajesh soon joining the film as the lead actress.
The profile of the film was raised in June 2017, when Bollywood actor Abhay Deol joined the film as a co-producer and actor. Being a friend of Prasad, Deol joined the project after being impressed with the script and agreed to play the role of a medieval king named Vikramadithyan. For his role in the film, Deol lost ten kilograms and learnt to speak his lines in ancient Tamil, as the makers chose a sync sound technique. In 2018, the team worked on the post-production of the film and began their promotional campaign for its release.
Cast
*Ashwin Kakumanu
*Aishwarya Rajesh
*Abhay Deol as Vikramadithyan
*Guru Somasundaram as Vedhalam
*Greg Burridge
*Leslie Tripathy
*Ravindra Vijay as Ashok
Production
The project was first announced by director Rathindran Prasad during July 2016, where he revealed that he would make a mythological fiction film starring Ashwin Kakumanu, Guru Somasundaram and British stunt choreographer Greg Burridge in the lead roles. Prasad had earlier written and directed the music video for Sofia Ashraf's "Kodaikanal Won't" song. Prasad's wife, Basak Gaziler Prasad, a Turkish film producer, decided to produce the film. The film was revealed to be a contemporary take on Baital Pachisi (a collection of folk tales featuring Vetala and Vikramaditya), with Ashwin portraying a video game designer who becomes rich overnight. The film began production on Madhya Pradesh during July 2016, with Aishwarya Rajesh soon joining the film as the lead actress.
The profile of the film was raised in June 2017, when Bollywood actor Abhay Deol joined the film as a co-producer and actor. Being a friend of Prasad, Deol joined the project after being impressed with the script and agreed to play the role of a medieval king named Vikramadithyan. For his role in the film, Deol lost ten kilograms and learnt to speak his lines in ancient Tamil, as the makers chose a sync sound technique. In 2018, the team worked on the post-production of the film and began their promotional campaign for its release.