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= = = Lützow's Wild Hunt = = =
Lützow’s Wild Hunt (German: "Lützows wilde verwegene Jagd") is the title of a patriotic German song and a 1927 German silent war film.
The poem was written by young German poet and soldier Theodor Körner, who served in the Lützow Free Corps during the Wars of Liberation. It was set to music by Carl Maria von Weber and became very popular.
The song praises the deeds of the Free Corps that became an essential part of Germany’s national identity in the 19th century due to its famous members. Besides Körner, “Turnvater” Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, the famous poet Joseph von Eichendorff, the inventor of the kindergarten Friedrich Fröbel, and Eleonore Prochaska, a woman who had dressed as a man in order to join the fight against the French, served in the Corps.
The tune was adopted as the regimental march of the 1st Surrey Rifles, a Volunteer unit of the British Army.
The 1927 German silent war film was directed by Richard Oswald and starring Ernst Rückert, Arthur Wellin and Mary Kid. The film’s art direction was by Ernst Stern. It is part of the cycle of Prussian films and portrays the fight of Prussian troops under the command of Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm von Lützow against the French during the Napoleonic Wars, commemorated in the poetry of Theodor Körner.
= = = Rue de la Liberté = = =
The Rue de la Liberté is the main street in the historic center of the French city Dijon. It connects the Place Darcy to the Place de la Libération. This busy shopping street for pedestrians is lined with buildings mostly dating from the 15th century to the 18th century, which are classified as monuments historiques.
The Rue de la Liberté was named Rue de Condé before the French Revolution. A part of the street, from the Coin du Miroir to the Place d'Armes (now Place de la Libération), was drilled in 1724. Previously, the street included the Rue des Forges and reached the back of the Palais des Ducs. The name "Coin du Miroir" is linked to a hotel in the old Rue Saint-Jean at the corner of the streets Guillaume and Gondrans and which belonged to the Abbaye Notre-Dame du Miroir. This hotel, composed of a square tower which displays on its first floor large ogival openings in the wall, crenellated and surrounded by ditches, was demolished in 1767.
= = = Electoral history of Ed Markey = = =
This is the electoral history of Ed Markey, a Democratic Senator from Massachusetts. He was previously a Democratic Representative from Massachusetts, representing the 7th and 5th districts. Markey was first elected in a 1976 special election to replace the deceased Torbert Macdonald, and was re-elected in every subsequent election. He was also the Democratic candidate, and winner, of the 2013 special election, for the United States Senate.
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= = = Compound NJ2 = = =
Compound NJ2 is a xanthylium yellowish pigment found in wine.
In model solutions, colorless compounds, such as catechin, can give rise to new types of pigments. The first step is the formation of colorless dimeric compounds consisting of two flavanol units linked by carboxy-methine bridge. This is followed by the formation of xanthylium salt yellowish pigments and their ethylesters, resulting from the dehydration of the colorless dimers, followed by an oxidation process. The loss of a water molecule takes place between two A ring hydroxyl groups of the colorless dimers.
= = = NJ2 = = =
NJ2 may refer to:
= = = Kirovsky Urban Settlement = = =
Kirovsky Urban Settlement or Kirovskoye Urban Settlement is the name of several municipal formations in Russia.
= = = Benjamin P. Sachs = = =
Benjamin P. Sachs is a physician with health care management experience at the Harvard Medical School hospitals and the Tulane University Medical Center.
Sachs was born in London, the son of Holocaust survivors. He graduated from St. Mary's Hospital Medical School in London.[2] He received a degree in Public Health from the University of Toronto and completed a residency in obstetrics and gynecology and a fellowship in Maternal-Fetal Medicine at the Brigham & Women's Hospital in Boston.
In 1980, Sachs was a visiting scientist at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. In 1987 he completed the Program for Management Development at the Harvard Business School.
Sach's background is in clinical medicine, public health - health policy and finance - business administration with extensive executive experience in physician and hospital management.
In 1978, Sachs started work at the Harvard Medical School. He would eventually serve as chairman of the OB/GYN Department at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and the Harvard Medical School. Sachs was also appointed as the Harold H. Rosenfield Professor at Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health (1997-2007)
Sachs and Major Peter Nielsen, MD, led a team to transfer the concept of crew resource management to obstetrical care. Funded by the U.S. Department of Defense and the Harvard Risk Management Foundation, this was the first major research effort to evaluate team training in healthcare. This crew resource management program formed the basis for TeamSTEPPS, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's national program. TeamSTEPPS is used in hospital Ob/Gyn, surgical, emergency medicine and ICU care departments.
Sachs helped create a research team led by Dr. Ananth Karumanchi that discovered the probable cause of preeclampsia. The team's research was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Nature Medicine, and was described in The New Yorker.
Sachs was also served as president of the Beth Israel-Deaconess Physician Organization.
Sachs joined Tulane Medical School in November 2007. The university had suffered $900 million in damage from Hurricane Katrina and lost a third of the medical school faculty. [7] Sachs' objectives were to help Tulane recover and to fundamentally redesign the medical school and the New Orleans healthcare system. Sachs created a network of 68 clinics in the New Orleans area that by 2010 was treating approximately 200,000 people per year.
During Sachs' tenure, Tulane Medical School hired more leaders and increased the entrance exam scores of its students. It received the 2010 Association of American Medical Colleges Spencer Foreman Award for outstanding community service.
Sachs served at Tulane for six years as Senior Vice President, dean of the Medical School and the James R. Doty Distinguished Professor and Chair. Sachs retired from Tulane in 2014.
Currently Sachs is a senior lecturer at Harvard Medical School - Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and a senior director of Strategy Implemented, a healthcare consulting company
In June 2014, Sachs was appointed the interim dean of the new School of Medicine being developed by the University of the Virgin Islands in St. Croix. Sachs is helping UVISOM become the first English-speaking medical school Caribbean region that is Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME) accredited.
Sachs has two sons.
Sachs has helped raise money for women's and children's health centers in the Philippines, Armenia, and Ukraine. The health center in Dnipropetrovsk in Ukraine provides free care to 20,000 women and children each year.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/myncbi/benjamin.sachs.2/bibliography/48271523/public/?sort=date&direction=ascending
= = = Der Philosophische Arzt = = =
Der Philosophische Arzt is a medical publication published in the late 18th century by Melchior Adam Weikard, a prominent German physician and philosopher to the Russian Empress, Catherine II.
The first edition of "Der Philosophische Arzt" was first published in 1775, but perhaps as early as 1770. It was initially published anonymously as was the second edition, though it was widely believed that Weikard was the author. The reason for doing so is unclear but was probably due to anticipated critical reactions to its publication from several sources. A principal one was the Prince-Bishop of Fulda, to whom Weikard served as physician and in a Catholic region where Weikard worked as a spa doctor being supported by the state. According to Otto Schmitt's biography of Weikard published in 1970, the reaction of organized religion to the publication of his textbook was widespread condemnation. This was likely due to his attacks in the textbook on various religious practices for curing medical illnesses. According to Schmidt, the attacks against Weikard continued throughout his career but his patron, Prince Heinrich von Bibra, maintained an amicable relationship with him and supported him financially late in his career despite many people who criticized the Prince for doing so.
= = = 2013–14 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team = = =
The 2013–14 Cincinnati Bearcats men's basketball team represented the University of Cincinnati during the 2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, The Bearcats competed in the American Athletic Conference, one of two offshoots of the original Big East Conference, and were coached by Mick Cronin in his eighth season. The team played its home games on Ed Jucker Court at the Fifth Third Arena. They finished the season 27–7, 15–3 in AAC play to share the regular season conference title with Louisville. They advanced to the semifinals of the AAC Tournament where they lost to UConn. They received an at-large bid NCAA Tournament where they lost in the second round to Harvard.
!colspan=12 style=|Exhibition
!colspan=9 style="background:#E00122; color:#000000;"| Regular season
!colspan=12 style=| AAC regular season
!colspan=9 style="background:#E00122; color:#000000;"| American Athletic Conference Tournament
!colspan=9 style="background:#E00122; color:#000000;"| NCAA Tournament
= = = 1992 Northeast Louisiana Indians football team = = =
The 1992 Northeast Louisiana Indians football team represented Northeast Louisiana University in the 1992 NCAA Division I-AA college football season. The Indians offense scored 466 points while the defense allowed 278 points.
= = = Thomas D. Ourada = = =