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MFA, (formerly Managed Funds Association), is a Washington, DC–based industry group representing the alternative asset management industry. It was founded in 1991 and is considered a leading financial services trade association .
Andrew Nelson Lytle, Professor of Literature; helped start the Masters of Fine Arts program at UF; M. Neill W. Macaulay Jr., writer and professor; Murdo J. MacLeod, Scottish historian of Latin America; G. S. Maddala, Indian-American economist and mathematician; John K. Mahon, historian
The George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates (MFA) is a non-profit 501(c)3 physician group practice affiliated with the George Washington University. The MFA group practice is made up of academic clinical faculty of the GW Medical School. [1]
Shura Baryshnikov – head of Movement at the Brown University/Trinity Repertory Company MFA program; Wendy Edwards – painter; Professor of Art (retired) Shigeko Kubota – Artist in Residence (1974–83), avant-garde Japanese artist associated with Fluxus [32] Ron Nelson – composer; Professor of Music (retired)
Graduate School of Business [12]; Name Years Notes 1 Willard E. Hotchkiss [13]: 1926–1930 2 J. Hugh Jackson [14]: 1931–1956 Carlton A. Pederson 1956–1958 acting dean
Professor of History, dean of the College of Humanities and Fine Arts: Jim Kurose: Computer Science 1956– Professor of Computer Science Joseph Levine: Philosophy 1952– Shona Macdonald: Art 1969– Chair of the Department of Art [1] Lynn Margulis: Biological Science 1938–2011 Distinguished Professor of Botany, Biology, Geosciences Valerie ...
Those who complete the four-year program receive either a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) degree, a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degree (starting Fall 2012), or a diploma. [13] [14] Each year's class is identified by a group number: Group 1 started in 1968 and graduated in 1972; [15] Group 54 includes students completing their fourth year in 2025. [16]
Carl Mydans (QST '30) – pioneering photojournalist, joined Life as one of its earliest staff photographers, from 1936 into the 1950s Fred Allen – The Fred Allen Show (1932–1949) made him one of the most popular and forward-looking humorists in the Golden Age of American radio