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Hassiba Ben Bouali [1] was born in El-Asnam (Today, Chlef), Algeria, [2] into an aristocratic family. [3] Her parents moved to Algiers in 1947, where she studied at the Lycée Delacroix (high-school). She joined the Scout Movement, and her travels made her aware of the conditions of the Algerian people under the colonial government.
It was established in 2001 by grouping several national institutes of higher education into one center, [1] and named after the Algerian martyr Hassiba Benbouali. The university currently has almost 26,000 students enrolled over nine faculties, with 75 specialties in the first cycle (LMD) and nearly 112 specialties at the masters level.
After Yacef's capture, la Pointe and three companions, Hassiba Ben Bouali, Mahmoud "Hamid" Bouhamidi and 'Petit Omar', held out in hiding until 8 October. Tracked down by paras acting on a tip-off from an informer, Ali La Pointe was given the chance to surrender but refused, whereupon he, his companions and the house in which he was hiding were ...
It is home to the soccer club ASO Chlef, the Hassiba Ben Bouali university, and the ruins of the basilica of Reparatus, who was bishop of Castellum Tingitanum from 465 to 475. A corner of the flooring of the basilica contained a mosaic labyrinth , the oldest known example of Christian use of this motif.
Trying to run an ethical business isn’t the easiest way to become profitable but he looks to companies like Patagonia, Dr. Bronner’s and Ben and Jerry’s as business models he admires.
The Trump administration has ordered the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to stop nearly all its work, effectively shutting down an agency that was created to protect consumers after the 2008 ...
Hassiba Ben Bouali, 19, Algerian militant, was killed in action. [41] [42] Ali La Pointe (born Ali Ammar), 27, Algerian militant, was killed in action.
Ben Hallman is a senior writer and Shane Shifflett is a data reporter at The Huffington Post. Jacob Kushner and Anthony Langat are Kenya-based reporters for the GroundTruth Project, a nonprofit global news service headquartered in the U.S. Ciro Barros and Giulia Afiune are reporters at Agência Pública in Brazil.