Primarosa Rinaldi de Chieri is an Argentine-Italian geneticist and physician. In 1965, she obtained her medical degree, from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Buenos Aires. In 1978, she received a doctorate from the same university. [1] She is a consultant and lecturer in genetics and serves as First Chair at the pediatrics department of UBA. She is also a director of the laboratory of genetic analysis at Primagen. [2]
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Roberto García Morillo was an Argentine composer, musicologist, music professor and music critic.
Commitment to Change was a centre-right political party in Argentina, principally active in the City of Buenos Aires.
Juan Ramón Lacadena Calero is a Spanish agronomical engineer.
Mosè Giacomo Bertoni, known in Spanish as Moisés Santiago Bertoni, was an Italian-speaking Swiss-Paraguayan naturalist, botanist and anarchist writer. He emigrated to South America in 1884 and lived in Paraguay from 1887 until he died in 1929.
Susana Calandrelli was an Argentine writer and teacher.
Antonio Krapovickas was an Argentine agronomist.
The Southern Cone is a geographic region composed of the southernmost areas of South America, mostly south of the Tropic of Capricorn. Although geographically this includes part of Southern and Southeastern Brazil, in terms of political geography the Southern cone has traditionally comprised Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay. In the narrowest sense, it only covers Argentina, Chile and Uruguay.
Julio Moizeszowicz is an Argentine psychiatrist. He was born May 25, 1943 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He is the son of Polish immigrants who moved to Argentina before World War II.
The Hipódromo Argentino de Palermo is a horse racing course located in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and one of the most important in the country, hosting 120 days of racing and 1,400 races every year. Races are hosted three days a week, with about nine races per racing day. The property is open to the public free of charge twenty-four hours a day.
Rogelio Polesello was an Argentine painter, muralist and sculptor. He was best known for making Op art known in Latin America. He won two Konex Awards; one in 1982 and another in 2012. He was born in Buenos Aires.
María Teresa Ferrari was an Argentine educator, physician, and women's rights activist. She was the first female university professor in Latin America and one of the first women allowed to teach medicine. She was a pioneering researcher in women's health, studying the use of radiation therapy rather than surgery for uterine tumors and developing a vaginoscope that revolutionized women's health care in Brazil. She established the first maternity ward and gynecological services at the Hospital Militar Central of Buenos Aires in 1925, which provided the first incubation services in the country.
Ernestina A. López de Nelson (1879–1965) was an Argentine educator and women's rights activist who served as Argentina's representative to the Inter-American Commission of Women from its founding in 1928 into the 1940s. She was the first woman in Argentina to earn a doctorate of letters and was a founder of the Argentine Association of University Women.
Francisco Antonio de Basavilbaso was a Spanish jurist and politician, who held various government posts during the Viceroyalty of Peru, including as alcalde, escribano, regidor, and emissary of Buenos Aires in Spain.
Emma de Cartosio (1928–2013) was an Argentine writer, poet, storyteller, essayist and teacher. The Emma de Cartosio poetry contest was established in Entre Ríos Province in 2015.
Roberto Ventura is a Uruguayan neuropsychologist, psychiatrist, activist, musician, author and professor.
Roberto Enrique Martín Wernicke was an Argentine physician, embryologist, bacteriologist, educator and researcher. After training at the University of Jena in Germany, he returned to Buenos Aires, where he taught and practiced medicine for many years.
Alicia Beatriz Casullo was an Argentine psychoanalyst. She served as president of International Psychoanalytical Studies Organization (IPSO), and was a founding member and head of the Sociedad Argentina de Psicoanálisis (SAP). She was also a member of the Federación Psicoanalítica de América Latina, and the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA).
The Embassy of the Philippines in Buenos Aires is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of the Philippines to the Argentine Republic. First opened in 1949 as the first Philippine diplomatic mission in Latin America, it is currently located in the barrio of Palermo in northern Buenos Aires, near its Chinatown.
The Faculty of Medical Sciences, formerly and commonly known as the Faculty of Medicine, is the medical school of the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), the largest university in Argentina. Established in 1822 as one of the UBA's earliest divisions, FMED is presently the largest medical school in Argentina, with over 24,000 enrolled students as of 2011.
Sara Justo was an Argentine women's rights activist, educator and dentist. She was a leader in the women's rights movement of Argentina early in the 20th century, supporting women's suffrage and co-founding both the Women's Pro-Suffrage Committee and the Feminist Center of Argentina. She was one of the first four women dentists in Argentina, graduating from the University of Buenos Aires in 1901.