Nov 2013 to 2000 Clinical Support Agent/ Customer Service RepresentativeHospice & Palliative Costa Mesa, CA Jan 2011 to Apr 2013 AgentVolt Workforce @ Ricoh Inc Irvine, CA Jun 2009 to Aug 2010 Shipping and Receiving Clerk
Education:
Orange Coast College Costa Mesa, CA 2010 to 2000 Human ResourcesSegerstrom High School Santa Ana, CA 2005 to 2009 Diploma
Caremore Medical Group 14350 Whittier Blvd Suite 215, Whittier, CA 90605 5622362290 (Phone)
Certifications:
Family Practice, 2002
Awards:
Healthgrades Honor Roll
Languages:
English Spanish
Hospitals:
Caremore Medical Group 14350 Whittier Blvd Suite 215, Whittier, CA 90605
Downey Regional Medical Center 11500 Brookshire Avenue, Downey, CA 90241
PIH Health 12401 East Washington Boulevard, Whittier, CA 90602
Education:
Medical School Universidad Autonoma De Guadalajara, Facultad De Medicina Graduated: 1979 Medical School Mil Hospital Graduated: 1980 Medical School Southside Hospital Graduated: 1994
Dr. Lopez graduated from the SUNY Downstate Medical Center College of Medicine in 1992. He works in Fort Lauderdale, FL and specializes in Gastroenterology and Internal Medicine. Dr. Lopez is affiliated with Broward Health Imperial Point and Holy Cross Hospital.
Dr. Lopez graduated from the University of Texas Medical School at San Antonio in 1999. He works in San Antonio, TX and specializes in Pulmonary Disease and Pulmonary Critical Care Medicine. Dr. Lopez is affiliated with Methodist Hospital and Methodist Texsan Hospital.
Dr. Lopez graduated from the Universidad Autu00F3noma de Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico in 1979. He works in Whittier, CA and specializes in Family Medicine. Dr. Lopez is affiliated with PIH Health Hospital Downey and PIH Health Hospital Whittier.
Adelphi Elementary School Adelphi MD 1987-1991, Martin Luther King Middle School Germantown MD 1991-1991, Takoma Park Junior High School Silver Spring MD 1991-1993
Despite the unease, there are no signs that the end of the Castro era brings Cuba any closer to the end of communist rule, said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a Cuba expert at Holy Names University in California.
Date: Apr 16, 2021
Category: Headlines
Source: Google
Castro's successor seen as unlikely to bring sweeping change to Cuba
There are reasons to expect he will be more flexible, more modern, said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a former Cuban government analyst who grew up in Diaz-Canels hometown of Santa Clara and now lectures at the University of Texas.
Date: Apr 18, 2018
Category: World
Source: Google
Fidel Castro's eldest son, a bookish nuclear scientist, commits suicide
He had some physical resemblance to Fidel, but that was it, said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a former Cuban government analyst who is now a professor of political science at University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. He was never associated with the charisma that his father had.
Date: Feb 02, 2018
Category: World
Source: Google
Cuba faces renewed tensions with US, but without Fidel Castro, its field marshal
Then again, Cuban national pride remains a powerful force on the island, and nothing stirs it like a perceived threat from a swaggering American leader, said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a former Cuban intelligence analyst who now teaches at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley.
Date: Nov 27, 2016
Source: Google
Cuba's Communist Party Congress wants change, but also more of the same
Party leaders are trying to set up continuity in the context of reform but it will be the type of reform managed by conservative politicians, said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a lecturer at the University of Texas, Rio Grande Valley, and a former Cuban intelligence analyst.
Date: Apr 18, 2016
Category: World
Source: Google
Church Talks Help Make Cuba 'Perfect Place for Negotiations'
"Cuba has been transformed from a revolutionary actor, isolated from other states in the Western Hemisphere with the exception of Mexico and Canada," said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a Cuban-trained professor at the University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley. "The country has come to be seen as a country in trans
"It's not possible for these groups to continue to survive in their current state, but they will survive," said Arturo Lopez-Levy, a Cuban analyst and adjunct professor at New York University. "The U.S. will continue to promote democratic values and will not make excuses for doing so."
violated the sovereignty of Cuba and other countries committing young people and their relatives to risky missions without their informed consent or proper training for some covert missions." Arturo Lopez-Levy, research associate, Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver.