Yarel ramos biography of michael
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CLINICAL REPORT - Volume 101, Issue 8 2021
Trends in Kaposiâs Sarcoma Morbidity: A Retrospective Cohort Study of Heart and Lung Transplant Recipients
Tal Serlin, Tuvia Ben Gal, Mordechai R. Kramer, Diana Sorin, Emmilia Hodak, Batya Davidovici
CLINICAL REPORT - Volume 101, Issue 8 2021
Prognostic Relevance of Pretreatment Peripheral Neutrophil Count and Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte Ratio in Primary Cutaneous Angiosarcoma
Kentaro Awaji, Takuya Miyagawa, Jun Omatsu, Hiroko Numajiri, Toru Kawai, Kaoru Funamizu, Ryosuke Saigusa, Daisuke Yamada, Yoshihide Asano, Shinichi Sato
INVESTIGATIVE REPORT - Volume 101, Issue 8 2021
Effects of COVID-19 Lockdown on Tumour Burden of Melanoma and Cutaneous Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Antonio Tejera-Vaquerizo, Sabela Paradela, Agusti Toll, Jorge Santos-Juanes, Ane Jaka, Alba López, Javier Cañueto, Àlvaro Bernal, Isabel Villegas-Romero, Carla Ferrándiz-Pulido, Héctor Perandones, David Moreno-Ramírez, Carolina Domínguez-Mahamud, Rafael Salido-Vallejo,
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Life in Spanglish for California's young Latinos
"I talk Spanish at home, except with my brothers, with them I speak English," says Adriana, a teenager at Bell High School in East Los Angeles, California.
"I listen to rock, but my dad is into the more traditional Mexican rancheras."
Like Adriana, many second generation Hispanics constantly navigate between two worlds and two languages: the English in which they learn at school and socialise, and the Spanish they speak at home with their parents.
Four out of five second-generation immigrant children speak English fluently, but the same proportion are also fluent in Spanish. Seven out of 10 confess to using Spanglish.
"Por ejemplo, I'm talking with my friends and sometimes Spanish gets mixed in with the English and you're like, hey, como estas, I saw you the other day…" says Ilyn, a 15-year-old, explaining how it works.
If you hear someone talking about "going out to hanguear (ha
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Gerardo Ortiz, Mun2 To Honor Slain Manager Ramiro Caro On Sunday
Regional Mexican artist Gerardo Ortiz, along with the bilingual cable network mun2, will pay tribute to slain business manager Ramiro Caro on the schema “Reventon with Yarel,” scheduled to air Sunday at 12 p.m., ET/PT.
The one-hour show regularly features Regional Mexican acts. Ortiz, who has been on the schema several times, is known for writing and singing narcocorridos, music that explores Mexico’s drug wars.
“Ramiro was part of our mun2 family,” said Yarel Ramos, the program’s host, who also attended Caro’s memorial services on Thursday. “The special will celebrate Ramiro’s life through Gerardo’s music and all the people who worked behind the scenes.”
Ortiz and Caro, also cousins, were on business in Colima, Mexico, on March 20 when their vehicle was ambushed. Caro, 31, and a driver, Abel Valle Rosales, 59, were killed, but Ortiz, his f