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13. || DukeMedNews || Dr. Geoffrey Ginsburg Named Director of Genomic Medicine at Duke
- www.dukemednews.org
- Geoffrey Ginsburg Named Director of Genomic Medicine at Duke.
- Ginsburg, M. ...
- As director of the new Center for Genomic Medicine within the IGSP, Ginsburg will direct efforts to develop new approaches by which detailed genetic data can be used to tailor preventive health-care plans for individual patients, a key part of Duke's larger effort to promote a new era of personalized medicine. ...
- , director of the IGSP, called Ginsburg "uniquely qualified" for the position. ...
- Ginsburg comes from Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ... At Millennium, Ginsburg was responsible for crafting strategy on the discovery of "biomarkers" -- genetic characteristics that measure the effects or progress of a disease or condition -- and the use of those indicators for clinical prediction and diagnosis. ...
- Ginsburg received both his M. ... Ginsburg developed and directed the preventive cardiology service at Beth Israel Hospital in the late 1980s, and has served on the faculty of Harvard Medical School since 1990. ...
- In addition to his role in the IGSP, Ginsburg will join the faculty in the department of medicine at Duke University Medical Center. ...
- Ginsburg said he seeks to discover and develop novel therapies and predictive biomarkers for clinical research and practice "to optimize efficiency, effectiveness and success in bringing the right therapy to the right patient at the right time. ...
- "My main goal is to connect leading-edge genome science to leading-edge clinical medicine," Ginsburg said. ...
- Ginsburg, M. ...
14. Allen Ginsburg Broadside
- www.the-forum.com
- Allen Ginsburg Broadside.
15. Invent Now | Hall of Fame | Search | Inventor Profile
- www.invent.org
- Ginsburg .
- Charles Ginsburg led the research team at Ampex Corporation in developing the first practical videotape recorder (VTR). ...
- Ginsburg led the Ampex research team that developed a new machine that could run the tape at a much slower rate because the recording heads rotated at high speed, allowing the necessary high-frequency response. ...
- Born in San Francisco, California, Ginsburg graduated with a B. ...
16. Family.org - CitizenLink - FNIF News - Ginsburg Tied to NOW
- www.family.org
- Ginsburg Tied to NOW.
- Revelations that liberal Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is co-sponsored on the lecture circuit by an arm of the abortion-friendly National Organization for Women (NOW) is raising eyebrows â ” but not to any great extent in the mainstream media. ...
- The light reporting done on the cozy relationship between Ginsburg and NOW is in stark contrast to the heated media criticism of Justice Antonin Scalia over his recent duck-hunting trip with Vice President Dick Cheney.
- Sherry Sylvester, director of Texas Media Watch, said the imbalance in coverage is especially egregious because what Ginsburg's done smacks much more of impropriety: The Ruth Bader Ginsburg Distinguished Lecture Series is actually co-sponsored by NOW's Legal Defense and Education Fund. ...
- "There's no excuse," Sylvester said, "for Ginsburg playing a promotional role for the NOW Legal Defense Fund, which has a point of view that's going to come before the court. ...
- "Justice Ginsburg, in fact, is actually speaking at advocacy organizations. ...
- And yet, the media have excoriated Scalia, not Ginsburg.
17. Ginsburg finds deep evolutionary roots in blood clotting
- www.umich.edu
- Distinguished University Professor lecture Ginsburg finds deep evolutionary roots in blood clotting.
- David Ginsburg, sitting at a table in his corner office on the fifth floor of the Life Sciences Institute (LSI) with a commanding view of the Hill residence halls. ...
- David Ginsburg.
- Ginsburg, the James V. ...
- Ginsburg likens the intricate, finely calibrated clotting system to the immune system: Both have to be highly responsive, and highly adaptable to a variety of conditions in the body. ...
- Having conquered many fundamental questions of how various heritable clotting disorders occur, Ginsburg now is becoming curious about the co-evolution of infectious agents and the clotting response. ...
- At U-M, Ginsburg's career has been distinguished in clinical practice, basic research and teaching. ... As a physician, Ginsburg is board certified in clinical genetics and internal medicine, as well as the subspecialties of hematology and medical oncology, and he still sees patients in the medical genetics clinic. As a teacher, Ginsburg has co-authored a popular text for medical students, "Principles of Medical Genetics," with colleagues Francis Collins and Thomas Gelehrter.
- Ginsburg, 51, has had quite a year. ...
- Ginsburg's professorship is named for the late James V. ...
- Ginsburg finds deep evolutionary roots in blood clotting .
18. Georgetown Law - Faculty (Online Curriculum Guide)
- www.law.georgetown.edu
- Ginsburg .
- Professor Ginsburg specializes in teaching tax at the Law Center. ... Before moving to Washington in 1980 when his wife got a good job here, Professor Ginsburg was the Beekman Professor of Law at Columbia University. ... Professor Ginsburg is co-author, with Jack S. ... The portions of the treatise written by Professor Ginsburg are, he is certain, easily identified and quite superb. ...
19. Michal Ginsburg | Faculty of French and Italian | Northwestern University
- faculty.frenchanditalian.northwestern.edu
- Michal Ginsburg.
- michal ginsburg.
- MICHAL PELED GINSBURG, Professor of French and Comparative Literature and Co-Director of the French Interdisciplinary Group. ...
- Ginsburg is a past Fellow of the Wissenschaftskolleg in Berlin and a former director of Northwestern’s Program in Comparative Literature and Theory. ...
20. Westchester County Business Journal
- www.westchestercountybusinessjournal.com
- Ginsburg Sing Sings praises of museum plan.
- Martin Ginsburg urged an audience of real estate professionals to join him in supporting a museum within Sing Sing prison in Ossining, saying the plan ’Äî an idea now picking up steam with county and state officials ’Äî could anchor the revitalization of the county's Hudson River shore he has advocated for years. ...
- "A Sing Sing museum would make it (the Hudson Valley) a major tourist destination," said Ginsburg, principal of Ginsburg Development L. ...
- Ginsburg addressed a Feb. ...
- "What becomes a selling point is when the villages and towns along the river have more and more interesting restaurants, shops, boutiques," Ginsburg said. ...
- Ginsburg is one of the area's busiest developers with about a dozen projects under construction, review or design stages in Westchester and Rockland counties. ...
- Ginsburg touched on several of his current projects in his address to the real estate group, including: .
- + White Plains: Ginsburg said he remains in talks to purchase from Louis R. ...
- Ginsburg wants to raze the 6,000-square-foot retail strip now on the parcel and create open space he says would enhance both Pinnacle and City Center. ...
- + Affordable housing ’Äì Ginsburg said he would soon announce ideas he believes would generate more lower-cost housing for Westchester than the county's failed "fair-share" allotments. ...
- Ginsburg originally proposed nine affordable apartments as part of an earlier 148-unit version of Pinnacle. ...
21. Ginsburg & Leshin, LLP, lawyers in Wellesley, MA, Massachusetts
- www.lawyers.com
22. Department Of Computer Science - USC
- www.cs.usc.edu
- Seymour Ginsburg.
- Seymour Ginsburg.
- Seymour Ginsburg, passed away on 5 Dec 2004 at the age of 76 following his long battle with Alzheimer's Disease. ...
- Ginsburg is one of the pioneers of theoretical computer science, especially automata and formal languages. ...
- As the first chair of computer science at USC I knew Seymour Ginsburg well. ...
- I first "met" Seymour Ginsburg through his book "An Introduction to Mathematical Machine Theory" when it was published in 1962 (at which time this brand-new hard cover science book cost $8. ...
23. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg '59
- www.law.columbia.edu
- Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg '59 .
- Coffee and Gilson | Barbara Aronstein Black Lectures on Women and Law | Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg '59 | Antjie Krog, South African Poet, Journalist, and Author .
- On September 12, 2003 Columbia Law School hosted a celebration in honor of the 10th anniversary of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's appointment to the Supreme Court of the United States. ...
- Columbia Law School was honored to host the celebrations for its distinguished alumna Justice Ginsburg -- a 1959 graduate of the Law School. ...
- Justice Ginsburg's Contributions to Supreme Court Jurisprudence .
24. justiceshp.htm
- www.supremecourthistory.org
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
- RUTH BADER GINSBURG was born Joan Ruth Bader on March 15, 1933, in Brooklyn, New York. ...
- At Cornell she met Martin Ginsburg, whom she married following her graduation in 1954. ...
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg entered Harvard Law School a year behind her husband, following two years in Fort Sill, Oklahoma, where he served in the army. ... Despite the chilly atmosphere and the extra demands of her young family, Ginsburg excelled in her classes and won a spot on the law review.
- During her second year at Harvard, Martin Ginsburg was diagnosed with cancer. ...
- Although she had superior academic credentials, Ginsburg received no job offers from New York law firms, nor was she able to obtain a clerkship interview with a Supreme Court justice. ... Palmieri, finally hired Ginsburg as a law clerk. ...
- Following her clerkship, Ginsburg took part in a comparative law project sponsored by Columbia Law School. ... In years immediately prior to her Supreme Court appointment, Ginsburg spent some of her spare time assisting in the translation of the Swedish Code of Judicial Procedure into English.
- While at Rutgers, Ginsburg became pregnant with her second child, James. ...
- In the early 1960s, prompted in part by her reading of Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex, Ginsburg recognized that the second-class treatment she had experienced was a symptom of a larger problem--social conditions that denied women choices and opportunities open to men. ... While continuing to teach at Rutgers, Ginsburg assisted the New Jersey affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union in litigating sex discrimination cases, prime among them, cases on behalf of school teachers who were forced to forfeit their jobs when they became pregnant. Asked by her Rutgers students to teach a course on sex-based discrimination, Ginsburg was surprised to discover how little had been written on that subject.
- Ginsburg believed that such sex stereotyping, although ostensibly benign, demeaned women and unfairly limited their opportunities. ... But in the 1960s and early 1970s, Ginsburg found that promoting this viewpoint was an uphill battle. ...
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