Academic literature on the topic 'Atta, Mohamed'

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Journal articles on the topic "Atta, Mohamed"

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Lankford, Adam. "A Psychological Autopsy of 9/11 Ringleader Mohamed Atta." Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology 27, no. 2 (December 3, 2011): 150–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11896-011-9096-9.

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Souza, Jefson Jesus de. "O TERROR EM ESTADO BRUTO." Revista Ibero-Americana de Humanidades, Ciências e Educação 8, no. 1 (January 31, 2022): 1390–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.51891/rease.v8i1.3959.

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O estilo de Don DeLillo é conhecido pela maioria de seus leitores, um amplo horizonte entrelaçado de figuras históricas com indivíduos ficcionais. Nesse romance, porém, o único ser nomeado é Mohamed Atta, um dos mentores da tragédia do 11 de Setembro. DeLillo mantém o foco numa família de classe média de Manhattan, oferece várias doses de silêncios e enigmas até a inesperada sequência final. O romance mantém-se, então, no que poderíamos chamar uma certa espiritualidade nouvelle vague. No entanto, ao invés de estabelecer com essa dicção a inércia, o efeito obtido é o de uma bomba devastadora revelando o terror em seu estado bruto.
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Parra-Bañón, José Joaquín. "Algunas relaciones conyugales entre la arquitectura y el arte." Revista de Arquitectura 27, no. 43 (December 27, 2022): 8–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5354/0719-5427.2022.68073.

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Con el propósito de poner en púdica evidencia y analizar algunas de las relaciones más intensas, prolíficas y vigentes entre la arquitectura y ciertas manifestaciones artísticas, se selecciona una serie de ocho casos ejemplares en los que los límites clásicos entre las distintas disciplinas se disipan. En la obra de Donald Judd toda pieza plástica es al mismo tiempo artefacto y edificio, espacio y atmósfera. La Casa de vidrio chilena, grávida de Daniella Tobar, transparenta la habitación y la transforma en escenario: convierte la vida ermitaña en espectáculo. La estudiante de arquitectura guatemalteca Rogelia Cruz incorpora a la acción reivindicativa de los lugares la violencia: inocula la política a la arquitectura por vía intravenosa. El arquitecto destructor Mohamed Atta, con sus procedimientos terroristas, le suministra argumentos a la guerra y materiales e imágenes al arte. Nenrod, el ideólogo de la Torre de Babel, emerge del pasado exigiendo que las palabras del Génesis que la definen trasciendan en figuras, en formas, en apariencias arquitectónicas. Lara Almacegui documenta, como ya hicieran Kafka y Matta-Clark, el proceso de descomposición y desaparición de una casa en Otwock, y Soledad Sevilla le devuelve la memoria de su patio expoliado a una fortaleza en Vélez Blanco.
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Gullestad, Marianne. "‘Mohammed Atta and I&rsquo." European Journal of Cultural Studies 6, no. 4 (November 2003): 529–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/13675494030064005.

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Cluett, Ronald. "From Cicero to Mohammed Atta: People, Politics, and Study Abroad." Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad 8, no. 1 (December 15, 2002): 17–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.36366/frontiers.v8i1.92.

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My own contribution to the literature on experiential learning is intended as a reminder that however novel the term, and however modern (indeed, post-modern) many of the issues surrounding it may be, the phenomenon itself is anything but new. Experiential overseas learning dates back at least as far as when young Romans traveled to Athens to study at the feet of the great philosophers and rhetors; it also enjoys a distinguished history in both Western and non-Western societies. The examples I have chosen—17th century Russia and 19th century China—are but two, particularly fascinating and well-attested, examples of what seems a persistent constellation of human impulses: to travel, to learn from travel, and to learn from travel by doing. Bureaucratic complexity and controversial policy and pedagogical issues are never far from these episodes of experiential learning over the centuries. My discussion concludes, for a number of reasons, with the most notorious foreign student of our time. For one thing, the ‘career’ of Mohammed Atta raises important questions that challenge our easy assumptions about cultural assimilation and the value of overseas vocational training. For another, his life and career both conform to and challenge an important paradigm I identify in experiential learning throughout history. Finally, his example reminds us that our appreciation of the novelty of our own experience is both confirmed and called into question by the search for historical context—learning how to learn from the past may take place more often in the library and the archives than in the field, but is no less experiential if undertaken seriously.
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Hamid Fahmy Zarkasyi. "Knowledge and Knowing in Islam: A Comparative Study between Nursi and al-Attas." global journal al thaqafah 8, no. 1 (July 31, 2018): 31–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.7187/gjat072018-3.

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This article compares Bediuzzaman Said Nursi’s conception of knowledge and knowing with Syed Mohammad Naquib al-Attas’ epistemology and philosophy of science. These two prominent Muslim thinkers are worth our attention, given the impact that their thought have had on contemporary Muslim discourse and social movement in the Middle East, Southeast Asia and beyond. It is found that both Nursi and al-Attas share a common conviction that modern science is neither neutral nor value-free; it is dominated by theories and principles derived from secularistic and atheistic-naturalistic worldview. It comes to the conclusion that although Nursi and al-Attas both have the same concern, their thought do exhibit some differences with regard to the nature of knowledge and knowing, the meaning and object of knowledge as well as the process of knowing.
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Abaza, Mona. "Two Intellectuals: The Malaysian S.N. Al-Attas and the Egyptian Mohammed 'Immara, and the Islamization of Knowledge Debate." Asian Journal of Social Science 30, no. 2 (2002): 354–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156853102320405906.

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Janowitz, Naomi. "Framing the Intentions of Suicide Bombers." Religions 13, no. 9 (September 16, 2022): 864. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel13090864.

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Despite the extensive information known about suicide bombings, widely-varying intentions have been used by many scholars to explain the religious motivations for the violence: these events are framed by participants as religious experiences, raising complex questions about the relationship between religious experience and violence. Recent studies use the vocabulary of religious studies—sacrifice, martyr, witness—to locate “cultures of violence” in a specific psychic structure, in a specific religion, or in religion in general; this paper compares three major studies that are representative of contemporary debate about religious experience. Ivan Strenski’s approach offers the broadest view, grounding suicide bombings in specific Islamic shaping of religious experience by a (non-normative) view of self-sacrifice emboldened by notions of jihad. Gideon Aran reconstructs a much narrower frame, a mutual attachment by bombers and their enemies around motivations from the redemptive capacity of blood (spilling and collecting). Ruth Stein psychoanalyzes the mind of a specific suicide bomber, Mohammed Atta, locating a complex web of love and hate as a motivation. These studies, each in a different way, demonstrate just how elusive the intentions of bombers remain and the sheer range of frameworks that might illuminate the aims of individuals who engage in suicide bombings.
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Ibrahim Mohammed, Inst Dr Saman Jalil. "The Appearance and Disappearance of Feminine Voice and the Structure of Masculine Structure A Study in (Shadows of Body … Banks of Desire) By: Sa'ad Mohammed Raheem." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 227, no. 1 (December 1, 2018): 301–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v227i1.697.

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This research aims at studying (Shadows of Body …Banks of Desire) by Sa'ad Mohammed Raheem in its first publication that has been rewarded of (Katara Prize for Arabic Novel ) in 2016 which was classified in the category of unpublished novels. From the cultural criticism point of view, the narrative texts contain much cultural coordination behind the pragmatic meanings as well as the beauty that’s hidden under the skin of the text itself. The study also focuses on the feminine voice and the ways that it appears and disappears in the text especially when it's taken from the symbol of feminism Rawa'a Al- Attar (The Player) who intends to put full constrain on shattering masculine attendance as well as destroying the general idea of traditions. It is more like a breakthrough the old traditions. The novel also contains some male characters that make the tension and argument even bigger along the story
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Alrayes, H., M. Alazmi, K. Alderaan, M. Alghamdi, N. Alghanim, A. Alhazmi, N. Alkhadhrawi, et al. "AB0566 CONSENSUS-BASED RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF PSORIATIC ARTHRITIS IN THE KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA." Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 80, Suppl 1 (May 19, 2021): 1320.1–1320. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2021-eular.298.

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Background:Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is a chronic inflammatory condition associated with psoriasis. The common clinical features of PsA include peripheral arthritis, dactylitis, enthesitis, spondylitis, skin and nail disease1. Considering the heterogeneous course of disease and the different patient characteristics, there is a need to standardize management of PsA patients. At present, no established guidelines are available on PsA care pathway in Saudi Arabia.Objectives:To provide consensus-based guidance to all Saudi health care providers (HCPs) on the management of PsA patients including referral pathway, definition of remission and treat-to-target approach.Methods:A Delphi technique was used to understand PsA patient care pathway. In first step, a targeted literature review was conducted and a survey questionnaire including 16 questions was developed to explore PsA patient journey. In second step, this questionnaire was submitted to 127 HCPs and 33 of them provided their response. In third step, a panel of 12 experts including 10 rheumatologists, 1 dermatologist and 1 general physician reviewed the available evidence along with survey results to align on final recommendations.Results:The most common management guidelines recommended for PsA were European League against Rheumatism (EULAR, 100% agreed) and American College of Rheumatology (ACR, 100% agreed). Psoriasis Epidemiology Screening Tool (PEST) was recommended by 67% of experts as validated screening tool for PsA in dermatology clinic. The laboratory investigations included were C-reactive protein (CRP, 100%), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR, 100%), complete blood count (92%), urea and creatinine (92%), liver function (92%), rheumatoid factor (56%) and X-ray of affected joints (75%). For patients with additional symptoms of back pain, X-ray of sacroiliac joints and human leukocyte antigen B27 (HLA-B27) test to be included. Only rheumatologists should recommend a magnetic resonance imaging based on the individual clinical picture. The agreement criteria for HCPs for referring patient to a rheumatologist were presence of psoriasis (100%) and one of the following features: dactylitis [100%], joint pain [100%], arthritis [100%], nail dystrophy [91%]. Patient with active arthritis should be referred to rheumatologist within 4 weeks. The referral pathway agreed by the experts for PsA patients is presented in Figure 1. Majority of experts (57%) defined clinical remission as absence of disease activity in all facets of disease assessed using the disease activity in psoriatic arthritis (DAPSA) or minimal disease activity (MDA) index. For treat-to-target, 71% of experts agreed on EULAR recommendations2. For remission and treat-to-target, experts identified a need for more clear definition.Conclusion:This expert consensus aimed to provide guidance to Saudi HCPs on standardizing diagnosis and care of PsA patients. Most experts recommended PEST as validated screening tool for PsA along with laboratory investigations such as CRP, ESR, X-ray, etc. Referral to a rheumatologist should be considered for patient with presence of psoriasis and one of the other defining features for PsA. There is a need for more clear definition of remission and treat-to-target.References:[1]Ogdie A, et al. Rheum Dis Clin North Am. 2015;41(4):545–568.[2]Gossec L, et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2020;79:700–712.Figure 1.Referral pathway for psoriatic arthritis patients CRP: C-reactive protein; ESR: Erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CBC: Complete blood count; HLA-B27: Human leukocyte antigen B27; PEST: Psoriasis Epidemiology Screening ToolAcknowledgements:This project was supported by Novartis Saudi Ltd., Saudi Arabia and the Saudi Society for Rheumatology. We would also like to thank Dr. Xenofon Baraliakos for his support.Disclosure of Interests:Hanan Alrayes: None declared., Mansour Alazmi Speakers bureau: Pfizer, Abbvie, Khaled Alderaan: None declared., Mushabab Alghamdi: None declared., Nayef Alghanim: None declared., Ahmed Alhazmi: None declared., Nadeer Alkhadhrawi: None declared., Mohammad Almohideb Speakers bureau: Novartis, Abbvie, Celgene, Lilly, Jansen and Sanofi, Grant/research support from: Sanofi and Abbvie, Suzan Attar Speakers bureau: Lectures in symposium about different diseases in rheumatology and management, Grant/research support from: Research in recruiting patient, Zyad ahmed Alzahrani Speakers bureau: Pfizer, Novartis, MSD, Janssen, Abbvie, Lilly, Consultant of: Pfizer, Novartis, MSD, Janssen, Abbvie, Lilly, Mohamed Bedaiwi: None declared., Nancy Zakaria Employee of: Novartis, Hussein Halabi: None declared.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Atta, Mohamed"

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Abd, Elrahman Mohamed Attia Mohamed [Verfasser], Bernd [Akademischer Betreuer] Hillemeier, Dietmar [Akademischer Betreuer] Stephan, Frank U. [Akademischer Betreuer] Vogdt, and Alexander [Akademischer Betreuer] Taffe. "Hot water concrete tank to store solar generated energy / Mohamed Attia Mohamed Abd Elrahman. Gutachter: Frank U. Vogdt ; Bernd Hillemeier ; Dietmar Stephan ; Alexander Taffe. Betreuer: Bernd Hillemeier ; Dietmar Stephan." Berlin : Technische Universität Berlin, 2014. http://d-nb.info/106566981X/34.

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Mahmoud, Mohamed [Verfasser], and Matthias [Akademischer Betreuer] Pietschmann. "Biomechanical evaluation of Glenoid Component Stability after ATSA under phasic cyclic loading / Mohamed Mahmoud ; Betreuer: Matthias Pietschmann." München : Universitätsbibliothek der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, 2018. http://d-nb.info/1175381691/34.

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Abdel, Wahab Mohamed Abdel Wahab Attwa [Verfasser]. "Geophysical imaging of Cuxhaven coastal sediments : environmental and hydrogeophysical studies using DC, FDEM and SIP methods / Mohamed Abdel Wahab Attwa Abdel Wahab." Hannover : Technische Informationsbibliothek und Universitätsbibliothek Hannover (TIB), 2011. http://d-nb.info/1014253977/34.

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Olson, Danel. "9/11 Gothic : trauma, mourning, and spectrality in novels from Don DeLillo, Jonathan Safran Foer, Lynne Sharon Schwartz, and Jess Walter." Thesis, University of Stirling, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1893/25276.

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Al Qaeda killings, posttraumatic stress, and the Gothic together triangulate a sizable space in recent American fiction that is still largely uncharted by critics. This thesis maps that shared territory in four novels written between 2005 and 2007 by writers who were born in America, and whose protagonists are the survivors in New York City after the World Trade Center falls. Published in the city of their tragedy and reviewed in its media, the novels surveyed here include Don DeLillo’s _Falling Man_ (2007), Jonathan Safran Foer’s _Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close_ (2005), Lynne Sharon Schwartz’s _The Writing on the Wall_ (2005), and Jess Walter’s _The Zero_ (2006). The thesis issues a challenge to the large number of negative and dismissive reviews of the novels under consideration, making a case that under different criteria, shaped by trauma theory and psychoanalysis, the novels succeed after all in making readers feel what it was to be alive in September 2001, enduring the posttraumatic stress for months and years later. The thesis asserts that 9/11 fiction is too commonly presented in popular journals and scholarly studies as an undifferentiated mass. In the same critical piece a journalist or an academic may evaluate narratives in which unfold a terrorist's point of view, a surviving or a dying New York City victim's perspective, and an outsider's reaction set thousands of miles away from Ground Zero. What this thesis argues for is a separation in study of the fictive strands that meditate on the burning towers, treating the New York City survivor story as a discrete body. Despite their being set in one of the most known cities of the Western world, and the terrorist attack that they depict being the most- watched catastrophe ever experienced in real-time before, these fictions have not yet been critically ordered. Charting the salient reappearing conflicts, unsettling descriptions, protagonist decay, and potent techniques for registering horror that resurface in this New York City 9/11 fiction, this thesis proposes and demonstrates how the peculiar and affecting Gothic tensions in the works can be further understood by trauma theory, a term coined by Cathy Caruth in Unclaimed Experience (1996: 72). Though the thesis concentrates on developments in trauma theory from the mid 1990s to 2015, it also addresses its theoretical antecedents: from the earliest voices in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that linked mental illness to a trauma (Charcot, Janet, Breuer, Freud), to researchers from mid-twentieth century (Adler, Lindemann) who studied how catastrophe affects civilian minds not previously trained to either fight war or withstand cataclysm. Always keeping at the fore the ancient Greek double-meaning of trauma as both unhealing “wound” and “defeat,” the thesis surveys tenets of the trauma theorists from the very first of those who studied the effects on civilian survivors of disaster (of what is still the largest nightclub fire in U.S. history, which replaced front page coverage of World War II for a few days: the Cocoanut Grove blaze in Boston, 1942) up to those theorists writing in 2015. The concepts evolving behind trauma theory, this thesis demonstrates, provide a useful mechanism to discuss the surprising yearnings hiding behind the appearance of doppelgängers, possession ghosts, terrorists as monsters, empty coffins, and visitants that appear to feed on characters’ sorrow, guilt, and loneliness within the novels under discussion. This thesis reappraises the dominant idea in trauma studies of the mid-1990s, namely that trauma victims often cannot fully remember and articulate their physical and psychic wounds. The argument here is that, true to the theories of the Caruthian school, the victims in these novels may not remember and express their trauma completely and in a linear fashion. However, the victims figured in these novels do relate the horrors of their memory to a degree by letting their narration erupt with the unexpectedly Gothic images, tropes, visions, language, and typical contradictions, aporias, lacunae, and paradoxes. The Gothic, one might say, becomes the language in which trauma speaks and articulates itself, albeit not always in the most cogent of signs. One might easily dismiss these fleeting Gothic presences that characters conjure in the fictions under consideration as anomalous apparitions signalling nothing. However, this thesis interrogates these ghostly traces of Gothicism to find what secrets they hold. Working from the insights of psychoanalysis and its post-Freudian re-inventers and challengers, it aims to puzzle out the dimensions of characters’ mourning in its “traumagothic” reading of the texts. Characters’ use of the Gothic becomes their way of remembering, a coded language to the curious. This thesis holds that unexpressed grief and guilt are the large constant in this grouping of novels. Characters’ grief articulation and guilt release, or the desire for symbolic amnesia, take paths that the figures often were suspicious of before 9/11: a return to organized religion, a belief in spirits, a call for vengeance, psychotherapy, substance abuse, splitting with a partner, rampant sex with nearby strangers, torture of suspects, and killing. All the earnest attempts through the above means by the characters to express grief, vent rage, and alleviate survivor guilt do so without noticeable success. True closure towards their trauma is largely a myth. No reliable evidence surfaces from the close reading of the texts that those affected by trauma ever fully recover. However, as this thesis demonstrates, other forms of recompense come from these searches for elusive peace and the nostalgic longing for the America that has been lost to them.
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Temraz, Mostafa Gouda Mohamed Attia [Verfasser]. "Mineralogical and geochemical studies of carbonaceous shale deposits from Egypt / vorgelegt von Mostafa Gouda Mohamed Attia Temraz." 2005. http://d-nb.info/976129434/34.

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Attia, Mohamad Ibrahim [Verfasser]. "Design, synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of certain GABAB agonists / vorgelegt von Mohamad Ibrahim Attia." 2004. http://d-nb.info/971601941/34.

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Mahmoud, Mohamed Attia Shaaban [Verfasser]. "Bioactive secondary metabolites from marine and terrestrial bacteria: isoquinolinequinones, bacterial compounds with a novel pharmacophor / vorgelegt von Mohamed Attia Shaaban Mahmoud." 2005. http://d-nb.info/974034835/34.

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Rasheed, Mohammed Ata Ur [Verfasser]. "Gene signatures and functional analysis of follicular B helper T cells / by Mohammed Ata Ur Rasheed." 2006. http://d-nb.info/981935397/34.

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Attalla, Mohamed Attia Mahmoud [Verfasser]. "Experimental Investigation of Heat Transfer Characteristics from Arrays of Free Impinging Circular Jets and Hole Channels / vorgelegt von Mohamed Attia Mahmoud Attalla." 2006. http://d-nb.info/978788273/34.

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Tantawi, Attia Mahmoud Mohamed el [Verfasser]. "Climate change in Libya and desertification of Jifara Plain : using geographical information system and remote sensing techniques / vorgelegt von Attia Mahmoud Mohamed el-Tantawi." 2005. http://d-nb.info/97597503X/34.

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Books on the topic "Atta, Mohamed"

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Welcome to terrorLand: Mohamed Atta & the 9-11 cover-up in Florida. Eugene, Or: MadCow Press, 2004.

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United States. Dept. of Justice. Office of the Inspector General. The Immigration and Naturalization Service's contacts with two September 11 terrorists: A review of the INS's admissions of Mohamed Atta and Marwan Alshehhi, its processing of their change of status applications, and its efforts to track foreign students in the United States. Buffalo, N.Y: W.S. Hein & Co., 2003.

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De Samson à Mohammed Atta: Foi, savoir et sacrifice humain. [Montréal, Québec]: Fides, 2007.

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United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Subcommittee on Immigration and Claims. INS's March 2002 notification of approval of change of status for pilot training for terrorist hijackers Mohammed Atta and Marwan Al-Shehhi: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Immigration and Claims of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventh Congress, second session, March 19, 2002. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2002.

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Valemont, Pamela Lillian. Mohamed Atta 9/11 Hijackers. Lulu Press, Inc., 2016.

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Welcome to Terrorland: Mohamed Atta & the 9-11 Cover-up in Florida. Trine Day, 2005.

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Immigration and Naturalization Serviceªs Contact With Two September 11 Terrorists: A Review of the Insªs Admissions of Mohamed Atta and Marwan Alshehhi, ... Applications, and Its Efforts to Track. Diane Pub Co, 2003.

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U. S. Department of Justice. The Immigration and Naturalization Service's Contacts With Two September 11 Terrorists: A Review of the Ins's Admissions of Mohamed Atta and Marwan Alshehhi, ... Documents Reprint Series, Title 7). William S. Hein & Company, 2003.

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The Immigration and Naturalization Service's Contacts With Two September 11 Terrorists: A Review of the Ins's Admissions of Mohamed Atta and Marwan Alshehhi, ... Applications, and Its Efforts to Track. Bernan Assoc, 2002.

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Committee on the Judiciary, United States Congress, and United States House of Representatives. INS's March 2002 notification of approval of change of status for pilot training for terrorist hijackers Mohammed Atta and Marwan Al-Shehhi. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018.

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Book chapters on the topic "Atta, Mohamed"

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Rustomji, Nerina. "The Letter." In The Beauty of the Houri, 13–42. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190249342.003.0002.

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This chapter studies the most consequential recent mention of the houri, the purported letter of September 11th hijacker Mohamed Atta, and shows that media fascination with the houri is related to American reactions to the events of September 11th. Americans used the letter’s promise of the heavenly virgins of paradise to comment on Islam and Muslim societies. The chapter also accounts for how houris became prominent in news media by focusing on the white grape theory, which argues that Muslims do not have the scriptural freedom to interpret religious texts freely. Finally, the chapter surveys references to the houri on the Internet and in contemporary literature.
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"The Janus Face of Architectural Terrorism: Minoru Yamasaki, Mohammed Atta, and Our World Trade Center." In After the World Trade Center, 99–108. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203724408-12.

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