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WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., Jan. 08, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) Affiliated Managers Group, Inc. (NYSE: AMG), a global asset management company, today announced the appointment of Félix V. Matos Rodríguez to its Board of Directors, effective immediately.
As Chancellor of City University of New York, Dr. Matos Rodríguez leads the nation’s largest urban university, which has 25 campuses across New York City’s five boroughs and a student body of 275,000. Recognized as an innovative leader within academia and the public sector, Dr. Matos Rodríguez has served as a teacher, administrator, and former Cabinet secretary for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Prior to his appointment as Chancellor, Dr. Matos Rodríguez was president of CUNY’s Queens College and of CUNY’s Eugenio María de Hostos Community College in the Bronx. He sits on the governing board of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities and additionally serves on the boards of Phipps H
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(Photo : Higher Education Executive, Ben Corpus, on How Covid Learning Gaps Will Be Revealed)
In March of 2020, schools shut down across the country and moved to distance learning on the fly. Given it was accompanied by a recession, lost jobs, social isolation, and racial strife resulting in protests across America, education took a back seat.
Dr. Ben Corpus is a higher education executive with more than 24 years of proven enrollment management, strategic planning, diversity, and student affairs experience in several unique colleges and universities.
In this article, Dr. Corpus comments on how the residual effects of the Covid-19 pandemic are revealing significant learning gaps in the U.S. education system, thus shedding a much-needed spotlight on academic morass.
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Is Coquito Healthier Than Eggnog? Rachel Meltzer Warren
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If eggnog had a bit of tropical flair, it might be something more like coquito, the spiced coconut-and-rum drink popular in Puerto Rico throughout the holiday season. Coquito (Spanish for “little coconut”) is nothing new to people with ties to the island recipes have been passed down in families for generations. Whether coquito feels nostalgic or is totally new to you, you may be wondering how this boozy beverage compares nutrition-wise with eggnog.
There’s nothing wrong with a celebratory beverage every once in a while. Americans drank around 61 million quarts of eggnog last year, according to the Department of Agriculture. Statistics on coquito are harder to find, though it is nearly ubiquitous in Puerto Rican and other Latin American communities.