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WASHINGTON, Feb. 3, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ Asian & Pacific Islander American Scholars (APIA Scholars) has elected new members to its Board of Directors: Nancy Lee, Senior Vice President and Chief of Staff to the Executive Chairman of The Walt Disney Company; William F. L. Moses, Managing Director, Education, at The Kresge Foundation; Nidhi Munjal, Vice President of International Partnership Services at Walmart; Wally Suphap, Writer, Lawyer and Advocate at Columbia University; and Jason Wong, Vice President – Treasurer and Investor Relations at Tiffany & Co. Nancy, William, Nidhi, Wally and Jason are excellent thought leaders and advocates for the higher education needs of the APIA community, and we are honored to welcome them to our Board, said APIA Scholars President & Executive Director Noël Harmon, Ph.D. As we continue to navigate the many challenges and opportunities of our new normal in 2021, we are excited to have these five join our efforts to support our Sch
DBusiness Magazine
Miller Canfield in Detroit has announced that nine associate attorneys have joined the firm in six of its key practice groups: corporate and transactions, employment and labor, energy and environmental, financial institutions, litigation and dispute resolution, and real estate.
Joanna Dreaver has joined the litigation and dispute resolution group in the firm’s Troy office. She comes to the firm after working as a contract attorney at Perdue Law Group in Grand Rapids. In 2015, Dreaver was a summer intern for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit Judge Helene White. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan Law School and earned her bachelor’s degree in philosophy from the University of Michigan.
Geltzer graduated summa cum laude from the School of Public and International Affairs and was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa, a prestigious nationwide academic honor society.
Lawsuits detail trauma from family separations at the Arizona border as victims begin quest for justice Rafael Carranza, Arizona Republic
Court documents described the moments of anguish that Eliot, a Guatemalan migrant who traveled to the U.S.-Mexico border to seek asylum, and his then-11-year-old son, Héctor, experienced in the minutes before the U.S. government forcibly separated them under its zero-tolerance policy.
The two had crossed the border near Lukeville, in southwestern Arizona, on May 19, 2018, more than a month after then-U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that all adults, including parents traveling with children, would be prosecuted if they crossed the southwestern U.S. border illegally.