scholarly journals In Memoriam. Emilio Marticorena y Carlos Battilana: un recuerdo de valiosos miembros del Comité Editorial de Anales

2016 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 457
Author(s):  
José Pacheco Romero ◽  
Oscar Alejandro Castillo Sayán

Dr. Emilio Pimentel Achilles Marticorena (1928-2007) was born 20 May 1928, in Villa de Arma in the province of Castrovirreyna, located 3700 m.s.n.m. His studies the school held at the Salesian College Huancayo and Alfonso College Ugarte in Lima. I study medicine at the National University San Marcos (San Marcos), obtaining Bachelor's degree in 1955 with the thesis entitled "Probable influence of great heights in determining the ductus arteriosus: Observations in 3000 school high "and subsequently received the title of Surgeon. He made graduate studies in the US. UU., cardiology at the University of Stanford (1961-1963), University Pennsylvania (1963 and 1964) and Center Presbyterian Medical in San Francisco, 1968; and later in the Institute Cardiology of the State of Sao Paulo, Brazil, in 1974.

Author(s):  
Liubov Melnychuk

The author investigates and analyzes the state Chernivtsi National University during the Romanian period in Bukovina’s history. During that period in the field of education was held a radical change in the direction of intensive Romanization. In period of rigid occupation regime in the province, the government of Romania laid its hopes on the University. The Chernivtsi National University had become a hotbed of Romanization ideas, to ongoing training for church and state apparatus, to educate students in the spirit of devotion Romania. Keywords: Chernivtsi National University, Romania, Romanization, higher education, Bukovina


Bioanalysis ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (22) ◽  
pp. 2027-2028
Author(s):  
John Kadavil

Biography Dr Kadavil received his bachelor's degree in biochemistry from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. He then received his PhD in molecular pharmacology and experimental therapeutics from the University of Maryland, Baltimore, School of Medicine. Following his PhD, he joined the US FDA as a pharmacologist. He first worked in the Office of Scientific Investigations – Division of Bioequivalence & Good Laboratory Practice under the Office of Compliance at CDER. During his 8 years at the Office of Scientific Investigations, he conducted foreign and domestic bioanalytical and clinical inspections for bioequivalence, bioavailability, pharmacokinetic and GLP studies. In 2011, he joined the Division of Human Food Safety at CVM as a pharmacologist, where he conducted reviews of residue chemistry studies and directed method trials. In 2014, he returned to CDER to become the team lead for the Collaboration, Risk Evaluation and Surveillance Team under the Office of Study Integrity and Surveillance. In September 2018, he became the Deputy Director for the Division of Generic Drug Bioequivalence Evaluation in Office of Study Integrity and Surveillance. This interview was conducted by Sankeetha Nadarajah, Managing Commissioning Editor of Bioanalysis, at the AAPS ICH-M10 Public Consultation Workshop (MD, USA).


2000 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-148
Author(s):  
Victor Migenes

AbstractIn the past few years the American Physical Society (APS) has conducted a number of surveys among the graduate student population in the US and also among young researchers. The purpose was to get an idea of the career expectations of the students and how these are met later on in their life. Two of the conclusions were: (1) students want to work in a research environment, preferably academic, and (2) graduate and undergraduate programs are not preparing them well for the different challenges and goals found in industry, the private sector and national laboratories. Jobs in academia, especially tenured positions, have been difficult to obtain forcing many students to give up on their goals after one or two postdoctoral positions. Some have found jobs in other sectors but others feel frustrated that their careers have not met their expectations and are poorly ‘prepared’ for other options. In the areas of Physics and Astronomy there is not much of a job market without graduate studies. So most students must continue graduate work, in these or other fields, in order to compete well in the job market. Graduate and undergraduate programs must become more responsible for the present state of affairs and for implementing improvements. This can be done by broadening the scope of the present programs so that a student is better prepared to face the challenges of other job opportunities. We present here a BSc program designed by astronomers and physicists, at the University of Guanajuato, to try to address some of these concerns and better prepare the students for either continuing with graduate studies or finding employment in an ever-changing job market.


1994 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 46-48
Author(s):  
David Starkweather ◽  
Helga U. Winold

David Starkweather is the cellist on the faculty of the University of Georgia. He grew up near San Francisco, then attended the Eastman School of Music. This was followed by four years of graduate work at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, where he studied cello with Bernard Greenhouse. In 1985, Starkweather spent half a year in Switzerland for intensive work with Pierre Fournier, earning the famous French cellist's accolade as “one of the best cellists of his generation.” He was awarded a certificate of merit as a semi-finalist in the 1986 Tchaikovsky Competition. Starkweather has been featured on the National Public Radio show Performance Today and in. a PBS one-hour recital program televised nationwide. A review in the Atlanta Constitution praised his “sensitive phrasing and Starkweather's obvious technical facility.” His previous articles for AST were “Methods of Shifting” (Winter 1988) and “Choice of Fingerings” (Summer 1990).


Author(s):  
Juan Enrique Mezzich

Resulting from the Fourth Latin American Conference of Person-Centered Medicine held in La Paz, Bolivia on September 7 and 8, 2018, organized by the Latin American Network of Person-Centered Medicine and the National Academy of Medicine of Bolivia under the auspices of the Latin American Association of National Academies of Medicine, the Peruvian Association of Person-Centered Medicine, the Representation in Bolivia of the Pan American Health Organization/WHO, the University of San Andrés (Bolivia), the Franz Tamayo University (Bolivia), San Marcos National University (Peru), and the International College of Person Centered Medicine.


2019 ◽  
pp. 20-34
Author(s):  
Joel Luis Jiménez-Galán ◽  
Giuseppe Francisco Falcone-Treviño ◽  
Zaida Leticia Tinajero-Mallozzi ◽  
José Antonio Serna-Hinojosa

First, that it can be identified if academic performance and psychosocial skills, under the Latin American identity in the university concept in Argentines, Peruvians, Costa Ricans and Mexicans, increase for their students, considering the improvement in the development of the academic study; second, to analyze that academic achievement when considering biological neurocomputing allows to identify the degree of anxiety in students; third, measure the different indicators between social skills and academic averages among students. Through its multicenter observational design focused on biological neurocomputing, a measuring instrument was used on the MEDMAR scale, with a finite sample of the student universe of 1500, with different school environments in the universities of the National University of Rosario (Argentina), National University Mayor of San Marcos de Lima (Peru), University of Costa Rica (Costa Rica), University of Guadalajara (Mexico), University of Aguascalientes (Mexico) and Autonomous University of Tamaulipas (Mexico) in 2018. With indicators on the affective / emotional. The academic performance and behavior of the students, it was detected that 20% of students with lack of motivation for their learning. Situations of computational neurobiological character were defined with interaction towards educational programs, when managing the optimal academic performance and the constant lack of interest in the new knowledge to acquire with data of internal consistency, test-retest reliability and concurrent validity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 142
Author(s):  
Language Value

This is the fourteenth issue of Language Value, the journal created by the Department of English Studies at Universitat Jaume I (UJI) over 12 years ago. Since its beginning, the journal has grown and progressed, and, at this moment, it is already indexed and recognised internationally. In this evolution, many persons have left their imprint, some of them from the department that devised this journal. One of these persons was Raquel Segovia Martín, who unfortunately left us one year ago. Raquel arrived at Universitat Jaume I from the University of Pittsburgh (USA), where she had obtained her PhD degree in Languages and Film Studies and taught Spanish language and culture courses. Since very young, she had been interested in the Spanish language: she had finished her bachelor’s degree in Hispanic Philology at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. However, she saw an opportunity to adapt her profile and to participate in the new project of Universitat Jaume I in 1994, once she had decided to come back to Spain. At this university, she could combine her knowledge of Spanish and English in translation courses and add to it her expertise in film and communication studies. She was a good teacher and a good colleague who left us much too soon. This volume is in memoriam of Raquel Segovia Martín, and the articles included in it are all related to her profile: translation, cinema and communication.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-58
Author(s):  
Zhengren Zhu

Abstract In the US, transferring from a two-year program to a four-year program has become an increasingly important route towards a bachelor's degree. However, the pathway has an extremely high attrition rate. Utilizing two recent institutional reforms in the University System of Georgia, I show that allowing community colleges to offer bachelor's degrees and consolidating institutions increase two-year students’ bachelor's degree attainment by around 3 percentage points, which represents a 20% improvement. Both reforms increased two-to-four transfer rate, and institutional consolidations also increased bachelor's degree attainment, conditional on transferring. Moreover, I find evidence that reduced loss of credits during transfer is the driving force of the improvements. In particular, the reforms reduced credits lost during transfer by around 36%.


PMLA ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 131 (5) ◽  
pp. 1523-1526
Author(s):  
Anaya-Ferreira Nair María

I Have Been Teaching Literatures in English for Over Twenty-Five Years at the Universidad Nacional AutóNoma de México (Unam), Mexico's national university, where I received my undergraduate degree. My formative years were marked, undoubtedly, by the universalist ideal that defines the motto of the university, “Por mi raza hablará el espíritu” (“The spirit will speak on behalf of my race”). I cannot recall whether I was aware of the motto's real meaning, or of its cultural and social implications, but I suppose I took for granted that what I was taught as a student was as much part of a Mexican culture as it was of a “universal” one. Reading English literature at the department of modern languages and literatures in the late 1970s meant that I was exposed to a canonical view of literature shaped as much by The Oxford Anthology of English Literature and by our lecturers' (primarily) aesthetic approach to it as by the idea of “universal” literature conveyed in the textbooks for elementary and secondary education in Mexico. This conviction that as a Mexican I belonged to “Western” civilization greatly diminished when in the early 1980s I traveled to London for graduate studies and was almost shattered by the attitudes I encountered while conducting my doctoral research on the image of Latin America in British fiction. I was often asked whether I had ever seen a car (let alone ridden in one), or if there was electricity in my country, and the ambivalent, mostly negative, view of Latin Americans and Mexicans in what I read (authors like Joseph Conrad, D. H. Lawrence, Graham Greene, and Aldous Huxley, as well as more than three hundred adventure novels set in the continent) forced me to question the idea that one ought to read literature merely for the enjoyment (and admiration) of it or to analyze it with assumptions that fall roughly in the category of “expressive,” or “mimetic,” criticism, which was common in those days and often took the form of monographic studies, which relied heavily on paraphrase.


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