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Page "Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates" ¶ 1
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ECFMG and registration
Graduates from international medical schools must apply through ECFMG and the registration fee is $ 780.

ECFMG and for
Students and graduates of medical schools outside the United States or Canada register for Step 1 and Step 2 with the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates ( ECFMG ).
Through its program of certification, the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates ( ECFMG ) assesses the readiness of international medical graduates to enter residency or fellowship programs in the United States that are accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education ( ACGME ).

ECFMG and USMLE
USMLE Step 2 CS replaced the former ECFMG Clinical Skills Assessment ( CSA ) effective June 14, 2004.

ECFMG and medical
After completion of this pilot project, ECFMG will invite additional medical schools to participate.
International medical schools can send Medical Student Performance Evaluations ( MSPEs ), medical school transcripts, and letters of recommendation ( LoRs ) on behalf of their students and graduates to ECFMG by means of mail, or through digital documents by the ECFMG Medical School Web Portal ( EMSWP ).

ECFMG and Medical
are not assessed by ECFMG, because the Liaison Committee on Medical Education historically accredited M. D .- granting institutions in both the U. S. and Canada ( today, Canada has its own accrediting body that generally follows U. S. standards ).

ECFMG and ).
To participate in the NRMP, an IMG is required to have an ECFMG certification by the " rank order list certification deadline " time ( usually in February of the year of the match ).

acts and registration
At the time, weddings were largely a matter of civic registration rather than religious ceremony, but one of the first acts of their shared life was a short pilgrimage from Ōtsu to the remains of the Buddhist temple complex on Mount Hiei ( Which, coincidentally, would later become the Kyoto headquarters of Kenshin's future nemesis Shishio Makoto ).
Further major trade mark acts were passed in 1888 and 1905 ( which both further refined definitions of a trade mark ), 1919 ( which separated the trademark register into Parts A and B, each of which had different registration criteria ) and 1938, the last of which remained in force until it was superseded in 1994.
Normative legal acts of the Cabinet, ministries, and other central bodies of executive power are subject to registration.
* Mutant registration acts ( comics )
The constitution also allows for acquisition of citizenship by: descent, registration, naturalization, and acts of parliament.

acts and agency
Business organizations originated with agency law, which permits an agent to act on behalf of a principal, in exchange for the principal assuming equal liability for the wrongful acts committed by the agent.
The Conference elects a council of 49 member states ( serve three-year rotating terms ) that acts as an interim governing body, and the Director-General, that heads the agency.
The co-ordinating work is generally allocated to the Cabinet Secretariat which in turn acts as a nodal agency for the functioning of the various Ministries.
The lead character, Bigger Thomas, represented the limitations that society placed on African Americans as he could only gain his own agency and self-knowledge by committing heinous acts.
A similar approach can be found in British police laws, where entitlements of police constables are vested in the constable in person and not in the police as an administrative agency, this leading to the single constable being fully responsible for his or her own acts in office, in particular their legality.
* Software agent, piece of software that acts for a user or other program in a relationship of agency
In those states with an administrative county court, the body acts as the executive agency for the local government.
Other executives within MCA were Lawrence R. Barnett, who ran the agency's live acts division during its glory agency years in the 1950s and 1960s, and Ned Tanen, head of Universal Pictures.
Often, acts that violate ethical codes may also violate a law or regulation and can be punishable at law or by government agency remedies.
Furthermore, reputation acts on different levels of agency, individual and supra-individual.
At the cargo terminal, AAI functions as ground handling agency for airlines for handling or processing their cargo on ground and acts as custodian on behalf of customs import / export cargo under the customs act of 1962.
NJT also acts as a purchasing agency for many private operators in New Jersey, with numerous private operators receiving equipment from NJT ( primarily buses ) for route service within the state not controlled by NJT.
The agency arranges engagements and tours in venues around the world for a wide range of acts.
Most states have a statewide agency that acts as a clearinghouse for all statewide arrest information.
In computer science, a software agent is a software program that acts for a user or other program in a relationship of agency, which derives from the Latin agere ( to do ): an agreement to act on one's behalf.
The World Health Organization ( WHO ) is the international agency that coordinates and acts on global public health issues.
* Capture ( politics ), situations in which a government agency created to act in the public interest instead acts in favor of other interests
If the agent has actual or apparent authority, the agent will not be liable for acts performed within the scope of such authority, so long as the relationship of the agency and the identity of the principal have been disclosed.
The CEQ reports annually to the President on the state of the environment ; oversees federal agency implementation of the environmental impact assessment process ; and acts as a referee when agencies disagree over the adequacy of such assessments.
A dating agency is a business which acts as a service for matchmaking between potential couples, with a view toward romance and / or marriage between them.
In addition to conducting its own research projects, DLR also acts as the German space agency.
Having done that, individual players, led by Freeman McNeil of the New York Jets, brought a new antitrust action, challenging the NFL's so-called " Plan B free agency, which gave teams a right of first refusal to sign a player, as an unlawful practice under the antitrust acts.
The capacity of a human to act as an agent is personal to that human, though considerations of the outcomes flowing from particular acts of human agency for us and others can then be thought to invest a moral component into a given situation wherein an agent has acted, and thus to involve moral agency.
" The character Carol Beer in the British comedy series Little Britain usually acts like a jobsworth: she works, for instance, in a bank and travel agency, listlessly inputting customers ' requests into her computer only to flatly reply with her catchphrase, " Computer says no ..."

acts and for
The decision maker who acts for the community as a whole must decide whether the objectives pursued and the methods used are appropriate to public policy regarding cultural groups.
That fall he submitted to Professor Baker the first acts and outlines of the following acts of several plays, six of them, according to some of his associates, and he also worked on a play that he first called Niggertown, the material for which he had collected during the summer at home.
The Department of Defense appropriation acts for the past several years have contained a rider which limits competitive bidding by firms in other countries on certain military supply items.
At the present time we do not know by what biochemical mechanism TSH acts on the thyroid, but for bio-assay of the hormone there are a number of properties by which its activity may be estimated, including release of iodine from the thyroid, increase in thyroid weight, increase in mean height of the follicular cells and increase in the thyroidal uptake of Af.
The feeling of individual inferiority, defeat, or humilation growing out of various social situations or individual deficiencies or failures is compensated for by communion in worship or prayer with a friendly, but all-victorious Father-God, as well as by sympathetic fellowship with others who share this faith, and by opportunities in religious acts for giving vent to emotions and energies.
As such it acts as an anchor for the people.
Confused and divided though this tradition may be, it is an important part of the social and cultural heritage of the group, and acts as a means of socialization, particularly for members of the rural community.
One of his initial acts in office was to appoint Philip Coombs of the Ford Foundation as the first Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs.
She had been sentenced to 180 years in prison, but former Gov. Stratton commuted her term to 75 years, making her eligible for parole, as one of his last acts in office.
His bill, allegedly aimed at Hoffa, would amend the Sherman, Clayton and Norris-LaGuardia acts to authorize the issuance of federal injunctions in any transportation strike and would make it illegal for any union to act in concert with any other union -- even a sister local in the same international.
Only in its final scene, where Beatie Bryant ( Mary Doyle ) shakes off the disappointment of being jilted by her intellectual lover and proclaims her emancipation do we get much which makes worthwhile the series of boorish rustic happenings we have had to watch for most of the first two and one-half acts.
This need not imply that on average 50 % or more of altruistic acts were beneficial for the altruist in the ancestral environment ; if the benefits from helping the right person were very high it would be beneficial to err on the side of caution and usually be altruistic even if in most cases there were no benefits.
Although they " were expecting to see activity in the brain's reward centers ", based on the idea that " people perform altruistic acts because they feel good about it ", what they found was that " another part of the brain was also involved, and it was quite sensitive to the difference between doing something for personal gain and doing it for someone else's gain ".
Additionally, while generous acts make people feel good about themselves, it is also important for people to appreciate the kindness they receive from others.
The iodine acts as a carrier, ensuring that there is sufficient material for laboratory techniques ( such as filtration and precipitation ) to work.
One of his first acts as Emperor was to persuade the Senate to grant divine honours to Hadrian, which they had at first refused ; his efforts to persuade the Senate to grant these honours is the most likely reason given for his title of Pius ( dutiful in affection ; compare pietas ).
Parsons had already acted as assistant engineer on The Beatles ' Abbey Road and Let It Be, had recently engineered Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon, and had produced several acts for EMI Records.
The category of acts constituting hubris for the ancient Greeks apparently broadened from the original specific reference to mutilation of a corpse, or a humiliation of a defeated foe, or irreverent, " outrageous treatment ", in general.
Over Grant's objection, Johnson removed generals Sheridan and Sickles for failing to follow his earlier orders to circumvent the Reconstruction acts.
Now, suppose there is a program in the language L < sub > 1 </ sub > which acts as an interpreter for L < sub > 2 </ sub >:
She was best known for ordering her male servants to be crippled " as the lame best perform the acts of love ".
However, the people did not interpret the acts this way, and the discipline turned into judgment for the people's disobedience.

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