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Computer science courses: the numbers ( CNR )

Computer science courses: the numbers ( CNR )

In thirty-nine years of activity, the courses in Computer Science organized by the University of Pisa have generated nearly eight thousand graduates. Overall, 5,569 students got their four degree in Computer Science (the top year being 1989 which saw 318 students graduate). 237 have completed their fi ve-year degree in Computer Science and 93 their bachelor’sdegree. With the advent of fi rst and second level degrees, Pisa has produced 1272 fi rst level degree graduates in Computer Science and 84 in Applied Information Sciences, 231 students managed to get a postgraduate degree, and 263 in Information Technology. And fi nally there have been 59 graduates in fi rst degree courses in Computer Science and Economics.

CNR Science 17 Jun 2009
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OLAF PUBLISHES ITS ACTIVITY REPORT

OLAF PUBLISHES ITS ACTIVITY REPORT

A crumbling bridge built with EU money but substandard materials, plagiarism in an EU research project, tomato importers evading customs duties, a retired official trying to increase his pension by illegal means: these are only four examples demonstrating the large variety of cases in which the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) intervened in 2007. OLAF presented today in Brussels its new Annual Activity Report which illustrates its work inside and outside the EU in 15 case studies and numerous statistical tables. At the end of 2007, OLAF was investigating a total of 408 cases.

Redazione World 03 Aug 2008
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Easy breathing

Easy breathing

Anti-mucus molecule may help asthma sufferers. HELEN R. PILCHER

Redazione Health 12 Jan 2004
176.5K 0
THE FANCONI ANAEMIA/BRCA PATHWAY

THE FANCONI ANAEMIA/BRCA PATHWAY

Fanconi anaemia (FA) is a rare genetic cancer-susceptibility syndrome that is characterized by congenital abnormalities, bone-marrow failure and cellular sensitivity to DNA crosslinking agents. Seven FA-associated genes have recently been cloned, and their products were found to interact with well-known DNA-damage-response proteins, including BRCA1, ATM and NBS1. The FA proteins could therefore be involved in the cell-cycle checkpoint and DNA-repair pathways. Recent studies implicate the FA proteins in the process of repairing chromosome defects that occur during homologous recombination, and disruption of the FA genes results in chromosome instability ”€ a common feature of many human cancers.

Redazione Health 22 Jan 2003
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