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Saint James School of Medicine (SJSM) is a private for-profit offshore medical school which had two basic science campuses, one in British Overseas Territory of Anguilla, and the other in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, it was considered one school with two campuses. [1] Saint James confers upon its graduates the Doctor of Medicine (M.D ...
Shailesh J. Mehta School of Management (popularly known as SJMSOM or simply SOM) is a public business school and part of Indian Institute of Technology Bombay. SJMSOM was established in 1995. SJMSOM was established in 1995.
SJSM may refer to: Saint James School of Medicine , private for-profit medical school in Anguilla and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Sisters of Saint Joseph of Saint-Marc , Roman Catholic congregation of religious sisters
Tuition payments, usually known as tuition in American English [1] and as tuition fees in Commonwealth English, [citation needed] are fees charged by education ...
St. James School and similar name forms may refer to: . St James School, Exeter, Devon, England; St James School, Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England; St James's School ...
Saint Jude Catholic School (SJCS), (simplified Chinese: 天主 敎 崇德 学校; traditional Chinese: 天主 敎 崇德 學校; pinyin: Tiānzhǔjiào Chóngdé Xuéxiào; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Thian-chí-kàu Chiông-tiak Ha̍k-hāu) is a private Catholic coeducational basic education institution run by the Philippine Central Province of the Society of the Divine Word in the district of San Miguel ...
The University of Glasgow School of Medicine has a history dating back to its seventeenth-century beginnings. Achievements in medical science include contributions from renowned physicians such as Joseph Lister (antisepsis), George Beatson (breast cancer), John Macintyre (X-rays and radiology), William Hunter (anatomy and obstetrics) and Ian Donald (ultrasound).
The origins of the Congregation lie in their foundation in 1845 by the Abbé Pierre Paul Blanck (1809 - ) [1] in the remaining buildings of St. Mark Abbey (Alemannic German: St. Marx) in Gueberschwihr (Geberschweier) in the canton of Rouffach, Alsace, of a women's community under the Benedictine Rule who accepted the Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, the manual labor and the care of orphans.