3,140 research outputs found

    María Fernanda Castro, piano (Colombia); Jaime Enrique Malma, piano (Colombia)

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    Concierto interpretado por María Fernanda Castro y Jaime Enrique Malva. Ganadora del tercer premio y ganador del tercer puesto, respectivamente, del I Concurso Nacional de Música de Cámara organizado en la Universidad Eafit. En este concierto su repertorio incluyó obras de Wolfgang A. Mozart, Franz Schubert, Mario Gómez-Vignes, Maurice Ravel; Albert Guinovart e Ignacio Cervantes

    Luisa Fernanda Delgado, violín (Colombia)

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    Concierto interpretado por la violinista Luisa Fernanda Delgado, en compañía de la pianista ángela Rodríguez. Delgado inició su formación musical y de violín en 1997 en el Conservatorio de Música del Tolima (hoy institución educativa musical Amina Melendro de Pulecio) y se graduó con honores en 2004; se desempeñó como integrante de la Orquesta de esta institución y concertino de la Orquesta Sinfónica Pre-Juvenil, Juvenil y de Cámara; en ésta última actuó como solista. En la Orquesta de la Universidad del Tolima fue asistente de concertino y solista

    Claudia Fernanda Fuenmayor, piano (Colombia)

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    Concierto interpretado por Claudia Fernanda Fuenmayor. Inició sus estudios a temprana edad en el Conservatorio Antonio María Valencia, participó en diversos talleres y seminarios como el Taller de Música de Cámara dictado por el maestro Marino Capelletti, el I Seminario Nacional de Piano EAFIT -Yamaba (Medellín), el IV Encuentro Iberoamericano de Estudiantes y Profesores de Piano (La Habana, Cuba) y el Seminario Taller J. S. Bach dictado por el maestro Walter Blankenheim. En este concierto interpretó obras de Ludwig Van Beethoven, Frederic Chopin, Claude Debussy, Luis Carlos Figueroa, Viviana Ruiz Acosta, Alberto Ginastera y Moisés Moleiro

    ANÁLISIS DE LA CARTERA VENCIDA DE CLIENTES Y SU IMPACTO EN LOS ÍNDICES FINANCIEROS DE LA EMPRESA ELECTRODOMÉSTICOS ANDINO DUQUE CÍA LTDA EN EL PERÍODO 2015 – 2016

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    La empresa Electrodomésticos Andino Duque Cía. Ltda., más conocida como almacenes LA GRAN VIA y LA GRAN VIA MOTOR`S., cuenta con 14 locales comerciales, ubicados en las principales ciudades del país, se dividen de la siguiente manera: 8 locales de electrodomésticos, y 6 locales de motocicletas que cuentan con talleres de mecánica de motos; sin embargo debido a la crisis social económica y política desde los años 2015 hasta la fecha, que atraviesa el país ha afectado notablemente la situación financiera de la empresa Electrodomésticos Andino Duque Cia Ltda. Por lo que es necesario tomar acciones urgentes y necesarias para minimizar los riesgos económicos y garantizar la continuidad del negocio. Electrodomésticos Andino Duque Cia Ltda, con la falta de empoderamiento de los trabajadores y concientización al momento de otorgar créditos, la falta de verificación y políticas de otorgamiento de crédito claras, ha llevado a la empresa tener problemas de recuperación de cartera; por lo tanto financieramente la empresa se encuentra en una situación crítica de liquidez, solvencia, y sobreendeudamiento. El presente trabajo ha permitido levantar información para realizar los cambios necesarios que la empresa necesita para la continuidad del negocio, en todas las empresas es importante dar un buen tratamiento a las cuentas por cobrar para dar liquidez a la empresa, con un buen nivel de recuperación de cartera la empresa podrá solventar sus obligaciones a corto y largo plazo.Uise

    William Ospina Quiñones, piano (Colombia), David Andrés Guevara García, violín (Colombia) y Claudia Fernanda Fuenmayor, piano (Colombia)

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    Este concierto contó con la participación de tres artistas: William Ospina Quiñones, David Andrés Guevara García y Claudia Fernanda Fuenmayor. Ospina interpretó composiciones de Domenico Scarlatti, Franz Schubert, Adolfo Mejía, Mozart y Claude Debussy. En el intermedio David Guevara y Claudia Fuenmayor interpretaron obras de Arcangelo Corelli, Johann Sebastian Bach y Luis A. Calvo

    'To Save Them from the Dangers to their Faith’: Documenting Student Life at Catholic Women's Colleges

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    This article focuses on student life at Catholic women's colleges in the United States during the 20th century. These colleges helped acculturate many daughters of immigrants to middle-class American society, at the same time creating a specifically female and Catholic culture on college campuses. This evolving culture, which was characterized by the ideals of femininity, religion, and service, can be reconstructed through documentation from the college archives.Peer reviewe

    ‘A Well-Balanced Education’: Catholic Women’s Colleges in New Jersey, 1900-1970

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    By examining Catholic women's colleges in New Jersey during the period 1900-1970, this paper illustrates the complexity of developing a typology of Catholic women's colleges in the United States. The first Catholic women's college in New Jersey, College of Saint Elizabeth was established in 1899 by the Sisters of Charity; followed by Mount St. Mary's, later known as Georgian Court College, in 1908; Caldwell College in 1939; and Felician, originally a junior college, in 1967. Earlier typologies of Catholic women's colleges have divided them into elite liberal arts institutions and local, vocationally-oriented colleges which served the working and lower-middle-class daughters of immigrants. Using college catalogs and yearbooks from the four New Jersey colleges, this study compiles data on curriculum, the education of faculty, college costs, and student origins, and compares it to similar data from two elite colleges, Trinity in Washington, D.C. and Manhattanville in Purchase, New York. In spite of some pressure to offer vocational courses and the challenge of giving women religious faculty members the opportunity to pursue doctoral degrees, during this period New Jersey's Catholic women's colleges provided a Catholic liberal arts education for white middle-class women not unlike that offered at better known and more prestigious colleges. Only after 1970 did social and demographic changes begin to have an impact on the curriculum and student population of this sector of Catholic higher education.Peer reviewe

    Gone and Forgotten? New Jersey's Catholic Junior Colleges

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    In the late 1960s, New Jersey had eleven seemingly-thriving Catholic junior colleges; by the mid-1970s, all but one of these colleges had closed. This article analyzes why these institutions appeared and disappeared so quickly, and explores what contribution they made to Catholic higher education. While private junior colleges declined throughout the U.S. during this period, in some respects the situation of New Jersey was unique. Research suggests that the greatest contribution these short-lived institutions made was to the education of women religious.Peer reviewe

    Vanished Worlds: Searching for the Records of Closed Catholic Women’s Colleges

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    This article presents the results of a survey of the archives of 36 Roman Catholic women's colleges that have closed or merged with other institutions since 1967. The majority of these archives are held by the women's religious communities that originally sponsored the colleges, although about one third are held by universities. These archives are rich resources on the history of women, education, religion, and culture that to some degree have been neglected by scholars who have focused on the history of colleges that are still open. As well as suggesting avenues for future research, this article contributes to the literature on how archives can cope with the voluminous records of twentieth-century institutions, and to emerging scholarship on the relationship of archives and memory. The survey upon which it is based revealed certain limitations on preservation, access, and use of these archives, so the article concludes with recommendations on how to make them more visible.Peer reviewe
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