Alan Naroditsky
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Alan graduated from UCLA in June 2013 with a double major in Economics and English, and is working as a Treasury Management Analyst at Wells Fargo in San Francisco. Alan was Ha'Am's Managing Editor during the 2012-2013 academic year, and was a Senior Staff Writer and Content Editor the preceding year. In other news, Alan enjoys competitive chess, classical piano, and watching and playing basketball and football (okay, just watching for the most part). He is a steadfast supporter of penguins’ rights and believes them to be mystical birds sent from a faraway world to protect the ignorant human race from self-destruction.

Upcoming address to Congress: the next move in Netanyahu’s chess game vs. Obama

If one considers a single word that best encapsulates President Barack Obama’s relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanhayu throughout the past six years, the colloquial portmanteau “frenemies” immediately comes to mind. Dictated by circumstance, Obama and Netanyahu’s arranged matrimony…

Legal battle over passport highlights United States’ refusal to recognize Jerusalem as a part of Israel

A United States passport is one of the most powerful documents in the world. It entitles the holder to travel unimpeded throughout most of the world’s countries, and affords the full protection of the United States government. Like all passports,…

Israel refuses to take sides on Ukrainian crisis

While the maelstrom that has enveloped Russia-Ukraine relations continues to whirl, Israel has done its best to steer clear of the fray. The Jerusalem Post reported Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s statement on the matter: “[Israel’s] basic position is that…

Mein Kampf makes surprise appearance on e-book bestseller list

A glance at the iTunes digital bookstore’s Politics and Social Sciences category may prompt a double take. Among political journalism dynamos such as Charles Krauthammer, Mark Leibovich and Lou Dobbs, another familiar name seems incongruous — Adolf Hitler. Mein Kampf,…

Eden Atias murdered, American media forgets

Controversy is quickly brewing over purportedly skewed media coverage of the fatal stabbing of 19-year-old Israeli soldier Eden Atias on a bus en route to Tel Aviv. The suspect is a Palestinian teenager, residing in Israel illegally. The main catalyst…

Nobel Prize in Chemistry delivers painful reminder of Israel’s recent brain drain

On October 9, 2013, three men were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, two of whom were Israeli. In fact, Arieh Warshel and Michael Levitt are the fifth and sixth Israelis to attain this honor within the past decade, an achievement of impossible statistical…