POPULARITY
Food Facts – der Lebensmittelchemie-Podcast der TU Dresden
Die Weltbevölkerung wächst und damit auch die Herausforderung, alle Menschen mit ausreichend Nahrung zu versorgen. Ein möglicher Ansatz um die weltweite Ernährungssicherheit zu gewährleisten sind Insekten als Nahrungsmittel - proteinreich, nachhaltig, vielseitig verwendbar. Immer mehr Insekten werden auch in der EU als Nahrungsmittel zugelassen. Aber wie sieht es mit der kulturellen Akzeptanz aus? Gibt es neue Allergierisiken? Und manche Verbraucher:innen befürchten verstecktes Insektenmehl in Brot, Kuchen und Co. In Folge 14 unseres Podcasts diskutieren Peer Kittel und Jule Wäntig mit Lebensmittelchemiker Prof. Thomas Henle von der TU Dresden darüber, ob Insekten wirklich DAS Nahrungsmittel der Zukunft sein können, welche Richtlinien und Kennzeichnungspflichten gelten und woran das Team von Prof. Henle zu dem Thema forscht. Besonderes Highlight: Thomas hat Geschmacksproben zur Verkostung in dieser Folge mitgebracht.
Magician, Swiss Watchmaker, Aloof, Elegant, Precise, Soulful, Childlike, Naive, Warm: these are all words that have been used to describe Maurice Ravel, a man of elegant contradictions. But perhaps these contradictions are why his music remains so beloved and universally appealing to so many musicians and audience members. Ravel has long been one of my favorite composers, and I always adore listening to his music and performing it. For the 150th anniversary of his birth, the legendary publishing house of G Henle has decided to focus on Ravel and his circle this year, calling this series Ravel and Friends. A few months ago, the Henle office contacted me to ask if I would be willing to collaborate with them on a series of Sticky Notes episodes about Ravel, each one focusing on the relationship between Ravel and another composer who was in his circle. This sounded like an amazing idea, and so I jumped at the chance to work with them. So, over the course of the next 5-6 months, you will be seeing 5 episodes under the Ravel and Friends theme. Today's episode will be a chance to do an overview on Ravel himself and to take a look at some major works that I haven't gotten around to covering on the show yet. We'll then finish the show with an interview with the great pianist Boris Giltburg, as we discuss the solo piano verison of Ravel's La Valse, one of the most challenging pieces in the entire repertoire. Later episodes will include a look at Ravel's relationships with Debussy, Gershwin, and De Falla, and much more! This is such an exciting chance to take a deeper look at one of the greatest 19th and 20th century composers, as well as take a look at the broader musical and social trends of that era, something I've always been deeply interested in. Join us!
Ein wichtiges Thema unserer Zeit: Dezentrale Energieversorgung & deren Bedeutung für die Energiewende in Deutschland. In dieser ZWEIvorZWÖLF Folge beleuchten wir die Vorteile, Chancen, den aktuellen Status quo, sowie Herausforderungen & Chancen, die sich aus der dezentralen Energieversorgung ergeben. Zusammen mit Florian Henle erörtern wir das Interesse an erneuerbaren Energien & die Rolle von Bürgerenergieprojekten am Beispiel von Mieterstrom. Wir klären Fragen wie: „Welche Immobilien für solche Projekte geeignet sind? Welche Rolle & Vorteile haben Eigentümer:innen & Mieter:innen? Sowie gibt uns Flo Einblicke in erfolgreiche Best Practices. Florian Henle ist Gründer & CEO vom Öko-Energieversorger Polarstern Energie. Er ist Diplom Betriebswirt & hat in Landshut & Cambridge studiert. Im April 2011 hat er Polarstern mit Simon Stadler & Jakob Assmann gegründet. Heute führt er über 80 Mitarbeitende & sie zählen Kund:innen im fünfstelligen Bereich. Sie wurden letztens als „Europe's Long-Term Growth Champions 2025“ ausgezeichnet. Polarstern ist ein B Corp Unternehmen, Teil der Gemeinwohl-Ökonomie & Mitglied im Social Entrepreneurship Netzwerk Deutschland. Wir sprechen heute zum dritten Mal mit Flo. Er war schon zu Gast in Folge #27 Gemeinwohl Ökonomie & #81 Energiemarkt-Krise. Links Website: https://www.polarstern-energie.de/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/polarstern_energie/ Empfehlung ARD Doku: „Herrhausen – Der Herr des Geldes“: Werbung Polarstern Energie Wir wollen euch den Ökoenergieversorger Polarstern ans Herz legen. Gegründet wurde Polarstern schon vor 12 Jahren als Social Business. Heute sind sie eben auch zertifiziert durch die Gemeinwohl-Ökonomie & durch B Corp. Ihr erklärtes Ziel ist es, mit Energie die Welt zu verändern. Und mit jedem Tag, mit jedem Produkt & jedem:r neuen Kund:in wird das Realität. Mach mit. Code: ZweiVorZwölf *Jede:r bekommt bei Wechsel eine 20€ Gutschrift auf die nächste Jahresrechnung. Link: www.polarstern-energie.de ZWEIvorZWÖLF Infos/Kontakt Website: https://www.zweivorzwoelf.info/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zweivorzwoelf/ Produktion & Musik: David Wehle david@zweivorzwoelf.de, https://www.instagram.com/david_wehle/ Redaktion & Interviews: Andrea Gerhard https://www.instagram.com/andreagerhard_tall_area/?hl=de ZWEIvorZWÖLF Infos/KontaktZur WebsiteZu Instagram Produktion & Musik: David Wehle david@ZWEIvorZWOELF.de, https://www.instagram.com/david_wehle/Redaktion & Interviews: Andrea Gerhard @andreagerhardZWEIvorZWÖLF ist offen für Sponsoren & Partner. Wir wissen, dass Nachhaltigkeits-Unternehmen oft nur ein kleines Marketing-Budget haben. Kontaktiert uns einfach und wir finden eine Lösung
Klaas führt ein Interview mit Anne Henle (LoMeRio) über Geburtstraumata. Dieses kurzweilige Interview ist spannend und wichtig für alle (werdenden) Eltern, Osteopath*innen und alle Berufe, die sich mit dem Thema Schwangerschaft, Geburt und Pädiatrie beschäftigen. Anne erzählt von ihrem speziellen Interessengebiet und gibt berufliches Fachwissen weiter, ebenso wie ganz persönliche Erfahrungen. Es geht um körperliche, seelische, emotionale Traumata für Kind, Mutter und (ja, wirklich) Vater. Hört rein!
Welcome to The Art of Memorialising (TOaM), Digital Legacy Edition #20.Whether you're interesting in exploring the cutting edge of digital afterlife and digital immortality, or curious about the art of preserving your life stories, TAoM is here helping you leave a meaningful legacy online and off.In This Issue:* How using music can help us connect with our memories, and create a unique digital legacy for life storytelling.* Exploring how #GriefTech and #GriefBots are reshaping our farewells to loved ones.* Can AI truly help end mourning, or does it risk extending grief indefinitely?* What will happen to our parents' social media posts after they pass?* Legal rights for digital twins: are new regulations enough to protect our #Digitallegacy?Featured Product - Playlist for Life - ‘Moments of happiness and flashes of joy.'* What piece of music can instantly take you back to a particular moment, person, or place in your life? * What song's opening notes are enough for you to recall a memory from your childhood perhaps years ago? (For me, it's Rosemary Clooney singing, ‘Me and My Teddy Bear.')Here's an amazing truth. For those living with dementia, music can reach parts of their world, when spoken words from loved ones cannot. This is the incredible work undertaken by the charity, Playlist for Life who I want to highlight this month. (I'm grateful for one of the readers of TAoM who introduced me to the charity.)Music has unique power.Playlist for Life harness it as a tool to help people, especially those living with dementia, reconnect with their memories. You may know a person or caregiver, who could find their resources of tremendous benefit by creating a personal playlist for someone.Even for those of us not facing life slowly taking our memories away a day at a time, we can use music to recover a memory from our past. It's another creative way of digitally documenting our life for the next generation.Playlist for Life encourages people to create personalised playlists that serve as bridges to their life stories.Imagine curating a soundtrack that reflects the chapters of your life—from the songs of your childhood, to the anthems of your adolescence, and beyond. This personal playlist could serve as a unique #DigitialLegacy keepsake, helping you capture your life story in an accessible, emotional way, to share with your descendants. Not sure which songs were the songs of your youth? Published by Playlist for Life, and based on the work of volunteer Music Detective Peter Grech, The 100 Year Book lists the top 100 tunes in the UK from 1915 to 2015.To explore their resources and see how music can bring stories to life, visit Playlist for Life.On Spotify you can find several Playlists for Life - Here's a link to Sir Alex Ferguson's playlist. Looking through the playlists there, you might find the perfect combination of either sports, movies, even faith based lists. If you would be interested in supporting the work of the charity, you can find details of how to donate to Playlist for Life HERE.Create Your Own Soundtrack To Your Life with Suno Scenes - AI Music CompositionWant to have you own soundtrack to life song created by AI for your memories? Now you can with Suno Scenes. Suno Scenes allows creators around the world to inspire new types of songs through captured memories and visual content. Upload photos or video, choose the genre of the song, and let AI create it for you. When I first looked at this, I was transfixed by the quality, variation and creativity of A.I to make music. Worth a look and creative experiment. But make sure you have plenty of time to play. It's incredible the ways you could use this to create life story memories. Sponsor Spotlight Opportunity!Are you pioneering the future of digital legacies or revolutionising how we preserve memories? Do have a non-profit or charity like playlistforlife.org.uk/? We're seeking innovative companies in the fields of AI, digital immortality, or life story preservation to feature in our next issues.This is your chance to showcase your product or service to an engaged audience passionate about leaving meaningful digital legacies.Interested in becoming our next featured sponsor?Contact me:5 Memorialisation MorselsQuick bites of #Deathtech #DigitalImmortality #LifeStory news:* How Is The Rise of #GriefTech and #GriefBots Changing Bereavement? BBC World Service Business Daily. The podcast looks at a growing trend of using artificial intelligence to ‘connect' people to loved ones who have died. According to TechRound, this business sector is on track to generate £100bn globally. What are the ethical issues when we may never have to say goodbye to those we have loved and lost? (via BBC World Service)* Who Will Win The Race to Optimise Grief and End Mourning As We Know It? In 2023, Sunshine Henle used a ChatGPT-powered “ghostbot” of her late mother to navigate her grief, finding solace in its comforting messages. Henle initially found the AI chatbot more helpful than traditional therapy. Platforms like Replika and HereAfter AI offer us the creation of digital twins and avatars, which could provide future virtual interactions with a deceased loved one. For many people, it's the ethical concerns around #GriefTech that persist. Questions about consent, dependency, and data privacy after death. What questions does this raise for you? (via vox.com)* Kwillt - A Creative Platform For Digital Life Story Preservation Launches. Kwillt is a new all-in-one platform for digital storytelling and memory preservation. It offers users a digital way to chronicle their lives or honour loved ones. You can use photos, videos, audio, and written stories to create a lasting legacy online. With Kwillt's two account types—Legacy Patch and Remembrance Patch, you can document your own life milestones or celebrate the memories of those who have passed. Kwillt wants to help in memory keeping and bring families closer during emotional transitions. (via PRN Newswire)* How Could Deceased Social Media Accounts Shape Your Families Future? Do your parents use Facebook? According to Herd Digital, 21.6% of people over 55 have a Facebook account. By 2060 estimated that it will hold 1.2 billion deceased users. Connecting with children, grandchildren, and friends, the platform has been a lifeline for many aging people. In keeping with the featured theme of this issue (playlistforlife.org.uk), what will happen to those accounts as our parents age? Maybe face the challenges of dementia, and eventually pass away? Without a plan, someone could leave these accounts inactive may even even get hacked. Privacy of our life after death is a growing concern for many. Adding a legacy contact is a critical choice to help secure our parents' wishes. Have your parents added a legacy contact to their Facebook account? Can you help them do it? (via chosun.com) See also: Digital Ghosts: Facebook's Birthday Alerts for Deceased Friends.* In The Rise of Digital Twins: What Will Be Our Legal Rights Under New EU Regulations? How might legislation answer the developing legal questions about privacy, ownership, and the ethics of legacy AI? Partners at William Fry, Barry Scannell and Leo Moore, consider the rise of unique contemporary legal questions about the ethics of digital immortality AI. In this article, ‘Legal Rights of the Undead AI…' a Halloween timed post, they consider EU laws, like GDPR, now only offer limited protections for the deceased, leaving digital twins in a grey area. Maybe developing new EU regulations—the AI Act and Digital Services Act—may soon classify legacy AI as high-risk, aiming to prevent misuse and protect users. A concluding question to ponder: Do we have a right to control our legacy in the afterlife, even in a digital sense? (via William Fry)* UPDATE - Eternal You a film by Hans Block & Moritz Riesewieck we profiled last month - is now streaming for free in the UK on BBCiplayer.The Digital Edition Life Story Writing Prompts.Here are four life story prompts this month that draw out the deep, often surprising, connections we have with music. Grab a coffee and a journal or blank document and remember. What is the Soundtrack of Your Life Story?* Was there ever a song that made you see things differently or feel deeply understood? Write about when you first heard it, what it meant then, and how it still resonates with you today.* Consider a major life event—birthdays, weddings, new jobs, or a farewell. Was there music that accompanied that moment? Revisit the scene through the lyrics, melody, and why it became tied to that event.* Reflect on the music passed down to you by parents, grandparents, or close family. Which songs were part of your upbringing? How have they shaped your identity or linked you to family traditions and cultural heritage?* Think of a time when music may have helped you through something difficult. Write about the song or genre you turned to and what it provided—a sense of hope, release, or peace. How has this song remained a support, and what does it mean to you now?In The Next Issue: The Sundial Series Edition - You Don't Mess With Memorials!In the next Sundial Series Edition of TAoM, I'll share an unforgettable event from my life. It concerns a small Methodist chapel, whose walls are etched with names. Each brick bearing a testament to past lives intertwined with faith, community, and resilience.I set out to preserve this place. I became its unlikely steward—a guardian of the past for the future. As events unfolded, I learned the importance of ‘Stones of Remembrance,' not just as markers of history but as living legacies that urge us to pause and reflect. Because, as Sundial Wisdom' reminds us while ‘Time Flies,' our memories and moments can endure.Heard of a startup in #Deathtech? Please let me know.Until the next edition of The Art of Memorialising, thanks for reading!PetePS: Whether we're discussing digital memorials or pen-and-paper memoirs, remember: your story matters. Let's make sure it's told, preserved, and cherished for your generations to come. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit theartofmemorialising.substack.com
Mit Florian Henle (Polarstern Energie) Staffel #10 Folge #6 | #Marketing_021 Der Podcast über Marketing, Vertrieb, Entrepreneurship und Startups *** https://www.polarstern-energie.de *** Vorschaubild der Episode © Polarstern
In dieser Folge geht es um das wichtige Thema grüne Energie und Nachhaltigkeit. Zu Gast ist Florian Henle, Gründer des Ökostromanbieters Polarstern. Gemeinsam beleuchten Florian und Marco, was der Unterschied zwischen normalem Strom, grünem Strom und echtem Ökostrom ist. Die beiden analysieren die vielfältigen Dynamiken des Strommarkts und filtern die Informationen heraus, die Verbraucher:innen benötigen, um fundierte Entscheidungen bezüglich ihrer Energieversorgung zu treffen. Florian berichtet außerdem, wie es ihm gelungen ist, sein Unternehmen von Anfang an nachhaltig aufzubauen und zu strukturieren. Florian und Marco diskutieren, wie man den anspruchsvollen Dreiklang zwischen Menschen, Umwelt und wirtschaftlichem Erfolg managen und in der Unternehmenspraxis umsetzen kann. Warum dieser Dreiklang ( "People, Planet, Profit") entscheidend ist für eine langfristig erfolgreiche und verantwortungsbewusste Unternehmensführung. Und warum das gerade in einem hart umkämpften Wettbewerbsumfeld, wie dem Strommarkt, eine besondere Herausforderung ist. Weitere Themen sind das Geschäftsmodell von Polarstern, die konsequente Ausrichtung auf erneuerbare Energien und Gemeinwohl, sowie die Mitarbeiterkultur, die auf gemeinsamen Werten basiert. Außerdem diskutieren die beiden ausführlich Florians These, dass sich hinter der Komplexität der Energiewende nicht nur Herausforderungen, sondern auch große Chancen verbergen… Diese Folge findest du auch als Podcast auf: https://murakamy.com/blog/podcast-66-polarstern-Florian-Henle Alle bisherigen Folgen findest Du hier: https://murakamy.com/blog/tag/Podcast Besuche uns auch auf https://murakamy.com Links zu Florian Henle: https://www.linkedin.com/in/flohenle/ https://www.polarstern-energie.de/magazin/ Links zur Folge: Jeremy Rifkin “Der globale Green New Deal”: https://www.amazon.de/globale-Green-New-Deal-Zivilisation/dp/3593511355 Podcast “Kettenreaktion”: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/kettenreaktion-der-geo-podcast-von-dirk-steffens/id1687300080
Locked On Baylor - Daily Podcast On Baylor Bears Football & Basketball
Former Baylor Bears tight end Christoph Henle joined the Drake Toll Show on ESPN Central Texas this week to discuss his theory about how Dave Aranda's practice structure has stunted the program's growth since the 2021 Sugar Bowl season. According to Henle, roughly half the team is not getting regular practice reps until they are starters, a fact confirmed by a former player who said Aranda does not have a scout team for Baylor's practices. This NFL style practice method could be what is spear-heading Baylor's downfall since the end of the 2021 season. Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! LinkedIn LinkedIn Jobs helps you find the qualified candidates you want to talk to, faster. Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com/LOCKEDONCOLLEGE. Terms and conditions apply. eBay Motors With all the parts you need at the prices you want, it's easy to turn your car into the MVP and bring home that win. Keep your ride-or-die alive at EbayMotors.com. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply. eBay Guaranteed Fit only available to US customers. Athletic Brewing Go to AthleticBrewing.com and enter code LOCKEDON to get 15% off your first online order or find a store near you! Athletic Brewing. Milford, CT and San Diego, CA. Near Beer. PrizePicks Go to PrizePicks.com/lockedoncollege and use code lockedoncollege for a first deposit match up to $100! Daily Fantasy Sports Made Easy! Gametime Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONCOLLEGE for $20 off your first purchase. FanDuel Score early this NFL season with FanDuel, America's Number One Sportsbook! Right now, NEW customers get ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS in BONUS BETS with any winning FIVE DOLLAR MONEYLINE BET! That's A HUNDRED AND FIFTY BUCKS – if your team wins! Visit FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON to get started. FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Locked On Baylor - Daily Podcast On Baylor Bears Football & Basketball
Former Baylor Bears tight end Christoph Henle joined the Drake Toll Show on ESPN Central Texas this week to discuss his theory about how Dave Aranda's practice structure has stunted the program's growth since the 2021 Sugar Bowl season. According to Henle, roughly half the team is not getting regular practice reps until they are starters, a fact confirmed by a former player who said Aranda does not have a scout team for Baylor's practices. This NFL style practice method could be what is spear-heading Baylor's downfall since the end of the 2021 season.Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!LinkedInLinkedIn Jobs helps you find the qualified candidates you want to talk to, faster. Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com/LOCKEDONCOLLEGE. Terms and conditions apply.eBay MotorsWith all the parts you need at the prices you want, it's easy to turn your car into the MVP and bring home that win. Keep your ride-or-die alive at EbayMotors.com. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply. eBay Guaranteed Fit only available to US customers.Athletic BrewingGo to AthleticBrewing.com and enter code LOCKEDON to get 15% off your first online order or find a store near you! Athletic Brewing. Milford, CT and San Diego, CA. Near Beer.PrizePicksGo to PrizePicks.com/lockedoncollege and use code lockedoncollege for a first deposit match up to $100! Daily Fantasy Sports Made Easy!GametimeDownload the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONCOLLEGE for $20 off your first purchase.FanDuelScore early this NFL season with FanDuel, America's Number One Sportsbook! Right now, NEW customers get ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS in BONUS BETS with any winning FIVE DOLLAR MONEYLINE BET! That's A HUNDRED AND FIFTY BUCKS – if your team wins! Visit FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON to get started.FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Vor 75 Jahren hat der gebürtige Würzburger Günter Henle in München einen Musikverlag gegründet, der sich über die Jahrzehnte zu einem der weltweit führenden Klassikverlage entwickelt hat. Wo der Verlag heute, an seinem 75. Geburtstag, steht - darüber hat Michael Atzinger mit dem Geschäftsführenden Verlagsleiter, Wolf-Dieter Seiffert, gesprochen.
Der G. Henle Verlag wird in diesen Tagen 75. Grit Schulze sprach mit dem Geschäftsführer Wolf-Dieter Seiffert über Traditionen und Trends. (Das Foto zeigt Günter Henle, den Verlagsgründer.)
Last time we spoke about the origins of the Big Sword Society and the invulnerability technique known as the Armor of the Golden Bell. China was certainly no stranger to sects and martial art groups. The Big Sword Society rose up to counteract the rebels and bandits that plagued parts of China like good old Shandong province. However when Christian missionaries began to get involved in the mix things got ugly quick. Bandits would exploit the conversion to christianity to protect themselves from justice. The Big Sword Society had been largely successful combating bandits, but when it came to matters involving the church they were powerless. Finally enough was enough and now the Big Swords were tussling with the Christians, truly raising hell. Yet for now the Big Swords averted fatalities and limited their attacks to property, but what would happen if they turned up the heat? #58 The Juye Incident & Scramble for China Welcome to the Fall and Rise of China Podcast, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about the history of Asia? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on history of asia and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel where I cover the history of China and Japan from the 19th century until the end of the Pacific War. The story of Pang Sangjie and the minor skirmish between the Big Sword Society and Church was quite minor. French Jesuits reported two main mission residence at Daitaolou and Houjiazhuang were attacked alongside Christian homes in over 16 villages. The church settled the losses with local Qing officials for only 2000 strings of cash on June 26th, before the final battle had occurred. The Germans in Shandong submitted their report which amounted to petty vandalism to chapels in 17 villages and the burning of 119 rooms in Xue-Jonglou. For this they received 12,020 strings of cash. There were no Christian casualties during the entire conflict either Chinese or foreign. The Big Swords got rowdy, targeted the property of the Christians, but made sure not to take lives. If they had wanted to take lives, they easily could have as they demonstrated. The Qing authorities were too busy with another ongoings, there was a large Muslim rebellion raging in Gangsu and Shaanxi seeing General Dong Fuxiang with numerous forces going into the northwest. Thus the trouble of the Big Swords was pretty small in comparison. But what if the Big Swords began killing Chinese christians, or some foreign missionaries? How would the church react, how would foreign nations react? We talked a lot about French Catholic missionaries, some protestant British and Americans, but another large group came from Germany. There were three missionaries working on behalf of the “Societas Verbi Divini” Society of the divine word. This was a catholic society founded in Steyl, Netherlands in 1875, which drew mostly German priests into its ranks. When Otto von Bismarck came into power, there was a conflict known as die Kulturkampf, basically the church wanted clerical control over education and ecclesiastical appointment. Otto von Bismarck and other enlightenment minded leaders sought a separation of church and state and this led to countless priests fleeing places like Germany. In 1882 the Society began sending missionaries to Shandong province. Three German missionaries working on behalf of the society of the divine wind, George Stenz, Richard Henle and Francis Xavier Nies were at a missionary residence in Zhangjiazhuang in Juye county. This was the mission station of Stenz, it was around 25km west of Jining. The two other men had come to visit. Henle was quite discouraged because his work was going very slow, thus Stenz urged him to take a break. The three men did their best to raise their spirits on the evening of November 1st, 1897, the night of all saints day. They sang songs from their childhood as Stenz played his zither. They practiced the requiem for the following day. When they retired for the evening, Stenz gave up his own room to his two guests and moved over to the servants quarters. It was around 11pm, when suddenly shots rang out into the night, the courtyard was full of torches. A band of 20-30 armed men raced towards the missionary quarters. They charged the door to Stenz quarters which were unlocked as the priest had no reason to believe anything like an attack would occur. The mob grabbed Henle and Nies and hacked them to death. Apparently they realized neither were the local missionary, as the mob continued to ransack the building searching for Stenz. They checked the church, the missionary quarters and such, but they never checked the servants quarters. The christian villagers became aroused by the mob and raised their own mob to combat them, driving the assailants out. It was not certain who committed the murders, but people generally assumed it was the work of the Big Swords Society. So why the hell did all of this happen? Nine men were rounded up by Qing officials, these men were vagrants, the usual suspect types. Two of men of the nine were executed for the crime, but no one really believed they were guilty. Stenz certainly did not believe them to be the assailants, everything was done in haste, with little to no actual investigation. The governor Yuxian claimed that it was the work of a band of robbers, but there was no evidence of robbery, except for a few pieces of clothing being stolen from Stenz's room. Regardless, if it was a simple case of robbery, they would certainly have not resorted to murder, especially against foreign missionaries. It was certain, particularly to Stenz that this was a deliberate attack on German missionaries. Why might Stenz believe so, he had good reason to believe the residents of Juye would wish harm upon him and his colleagues. Local villagers told Stenz, that Henle's failed work in the southern town of Yuncheng was the actual target of the attack. Henle had been interfering in lawsuits and made a few enemies. He apparently was a very difficult man to get along with, so much so, even his own christian congregations had revolted against him. However despite Henle's reputation, its more than likely Stenz that was the target of the attack. He was the resident missionary and the mob literally targeted his room. According to Stenz, he heard them screaming his name as they searched for him. Stenz was not very popular. He was a particularly militant member of the society of divine word. In his autobiography the very first line reads "On September 29, 1893, I received at Steyl the mission cross which was to be at once weapon and banner in my fight for the Kingdom of God." He was also a racist, and I do not mean by today's standards. When he first arrived to China, in Shanghai, he wrote a description of the people, it is as follows. “An entirely new world now opened before us. Crowds of slit-eyed Chinese swarmed about the harbor—prominent merchants in their rustling silks and poor coolies in ragged clothes that did not hide their filthy bodies. Confidence was not our first impression on reaching this gate of the Celestial Empire. Cunning, pride, and scorn flashed from the eyes that met our inquiring looks”. He often wrote about how lazy and procrastinating the Qing officials were and that the food was unpalatable in the nation. He was mortified when forced “to use two short pieces of stick” to eat. Its easy to say Stenz had a rough time adapting to life in China. His experience as a missionary in China was that of suffering and homesickness. He was trained prior to coming to China, but this training was designed to steel himself into a martyr. Indeed he alongside countless other missionaries were taught their deaths in the service of god were a sign of grace. Father Xavier while in China had written back home "More than once I have prayed to God for the grace of martyrdom, but most likely it will not be granted to me. My blood is not deemed red enough by God, and is still mingled with the dust of this earth." The oral history of the event, passed down by local villagers had Stenz and other missionaries interfering in lawsuits. In the case of Stenz he was also accused of raping 10 local women, and participating in christian theft. Though these claims could easily be false, it at least tells us what the locals thought of such a man. Stenz also gave his own oral account of the incident. In Stenz account he talks about how a few members of the White Lotus sect enrolled in his church from the village of Caojiazhuang. He refused the admission of the headman from that village, because he was accused of stealing and killing an ox from a neighboring village. This refusal lead to a lot of villagers becoming upset. Stenz recent converts were from some of the wealthiest families in that village and they began refusing to make normal contributions to village festivals such as paying for food for feasts. This led the other villagers to try and force the christians to pay, and they went to local Qing authorities to complain. Stenz became convinced it was all the work of the headman he refused and he believed that man joined the Big Swords to lead the attack on his mission. Given the previous instances of conflict between the church and Big Swords, such a explanation has merit. Perhaps the villagers sought revenge on the missionaries and went to the Big Swords for help or, perhaps they simply pretended to be members of the Big Swords. Regardless it seems clear, bandits were in their ranks. A story often told of this incident includes a former bandit named Liu Derun who apparently was seeking revenge against the Juye magistrate who had arrested and tortured his wife or daughter. To attack a missionary could bring about the end to the magistrates career. Regardless of why it all happened, it seemed certain to the church that they were indanger. The anti-christian conflicts that had occurred in the previous years were well known, and the involvement of the Big Sword Society also. All of this was seen as a godsend to the missionaries and the new German government. In 1897 Germany was an infant nation looking to flex her muscles on the world stage. Her economy was the largest in continental europe, she was emerging as Britain's rival in the world of trade. German's new position in China reflected her competition with Britain and she was becoming a force to be reckoned with. In 1890 the Deutsch-Asiatische Bank became the first non-British foreign bank in China. However, while German trade was thriving, her military capacity to expand her foreign markets were lackluster. This was also coming upon the time Alfred Mahan's “the influence of sea power upon history” had come out in 1890 which proscribed naked force to be employed to protect one's market in the age of imperialism. The German navy was the 5th largest in the world, far below her ranking in economics. Her navy was being developed by the legendary Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz backed by Kaiser Wilhelm II. A late 19th century navy required coaling stations, and for Tirpitz he desired one in China. Germany requested a lease for a naval base in China in October of 1895, and the following year Tirpitz scouted potential ports, and thought Jiaozhou Bay on the Shandong peninsula to be an excellent location. Jiaozhou held a deep water port, and was surrounded by mineral resources. Alongside this, German missionaries of the society of the divine word were operating in the region which was a large bonus. By November of 1896 Germany was determined to acquire Jiozhou and Heyking in Beijing, looking for any means necessary to grab them. When news came to Berlin on november 6th of 1897 of the murdered missionaries, Wilhelm was delighted “that a splendid opportunity had at last arrived”. The next day Wilhelm met with advisors and argued "It is the last chance for Germany to get a possession anywhere in Asia and to firm up our prestige which has dropped.... [N]o matter what it costs, we must not under any circumstances give up Kiaochow. It has a future for economic development as well as industry, a future which will be greater and more meaningful than Shanghai is today." Meanwhile back in China the Qing officials were as incompetent as usual. As was becoming typical of any incidents involving missionaries, the Zongli Yamen received news of the missionaries murders on November 7th from the German ambassador, before any local officials ever reported it. The Qing court immediately understood the dangerous situation, the Emperor realized Germany would use the situation to seize a harbor. The Emperor ordered governor of Shandong, Li Bingheng to be reprimanded for his incompetence, but on November 14th, German warships arrived at Jiaozhou bay. The local Qing garrison withdrew from the area, without firing a shot. Li Bingheng immediately reported the potential invasion to the Qing court urging them to fight the invaders ''Since they started the feud, we have no alternative but to resist.' He proposed they raise 5 additional companies of soldiers in Caozhou to drive the Germans out. However the Qing court rejected his proposal stating such recruits would be worthless in battle. The Qing court responded with this to Li "although the enemy has certainly acted arbitrarily, the court will definitely not mobilize its troops. The foreigners' actions rely entirely on power. If our power cannot assure victory, we will absorb a great loss." They were not wrong in this regard, do remember they literally just lost a war against Japan. The Qing navy was shattered, the imperial treasury was on the verge of bankruptcy already paying indemnities to Japan, how could China resist Germany at this time? One thing the Qing court understood was the balance of power theory. Europe was divided and all competing in China. When Japan claimed the Liaodong peninsula, the triple intervention of Russia, France and Germany had occurred. The Qing court expected Russia to yet again intervene against the Germans now, hell Russia had also shown desires for Jiaozhou bay. However the Qing did not know Wilhelm had been talking to Tsar Nicholas, convincing him to take Port Arthur and Dalien, while Germany could seize Jiaozhou. You have probably heard of the great scramble for Africa during the late 19th century. This involved multiple world powers literally scrambling to seize colonies in Africa, well this situation was also occurring in China. You may have seen a famous painting by the Artist H. Meyer, depicting China as a pie being carved up by the leaders of the great powers. There is a description of the painting which helps greatly for a audio podcast haha “En Chine: Le gâteau des Rois et... des Empereurs” Le Petit Journal Supplément Illustré, January 16, 1898 Artist: H. Meyer “In this French rendering, Queen Victoria glares at the German Kaiser, while the Russian, French, and Japanese figures look pensively at China. The Kaiser stabs his knife into the German-leased territory Jiaozhou (Kiao-Tcheou) in Shandong, acquired in 1898, while the Russian Tsar puts his fists on Port Arthur (the Chinese port of Lüshun, leased in 1897). The caption reads: “China: The cake of Kings and Emperors.” The Germans had long been seeking a port on the Chinese coast, and the Juye incident was a perfect pretext to grab Jiaozhou. On November 6th Kaiser Wilhem sent a telegram to the Tsar stating “sending a German squadron to Jiaozhou, as it is the only port available to operate from as a base against marauders. I am under obligation to Catholic party in Germany to show that their missions are really safe under my protection”. For quite a while, the great powers had engaged in a sort of gunboat diplomacy with China, to compel her government to bring persecutors of Christianity to justice. However now Germany was taking things into her own hands to suppress anti christian activity on Chinese soil. This was quite a novel departure from what the great powers had been doing. Germany had been strong arming China for awhile now, back in October of 1895 the German minister threatened China after some disturbances in Yanzhou. The Qing had failed to act effectively to protect some Christians prompting the minister to say "my government will have no alternative but to devise methods to protect them ourselves." This was the type of threat the Germans would continue to make and after the Juye incident the Germans demanded a guarantee. However the Qing as much as they wanted to avoid conflict could not guarantee anything, they replied areas like Caozhou were unruly in nature and impossible to guarantee 100% protection. Thus the minister now sent this message "Since China cannot guarantee that in the future such incidents will not recur, our warships are in Jiaozhou and can help you handle the matter." The Qing responded with this "this concerns the internal affairs of China, you need not interfere in it." On December 16th, Wilhelm made a speech and sent his brother in command of an additional squadron to China “Make it clear to every European there, to the German merchant, and, above all things, to the foreigner in whose country we are or with whom we have to deal, that the German Michael has set his shield, decorated with the imperial eagle, firmly upon the ground. Whoever asks him for protection will always receive it.... But if any one should undertake to insult us in our rights or wish to harm us, then drive in with the mailed fist and, as God wills, bind about your young brow the laurels which no one in the entire German Empire will begrudge you. “ So yeah, the kaiser meant business. The Germans pushed extremely hard upon the Qing forcing them to do some pretty extraordinary things. The Qing agreed to construct new cathedrals in Jining and Caozhou where the missionaries were killed and the funds would be coming from their pockets. They were forced to put inscriptions over the doors of the new cathedrals reading "Catholic church constructed by imperial order." On top of this they were forced to build new residences for missionaries in Yutai, Cao, Chengwu, Shan, Yuncheng, Heze and Juye. Five magistrates from those countries were dismissed, one was impeached, a daotai was transferred, and a army commander was also dismissed. Governor Li Bingheng was supposed to be receiving a promotion, viceroyship over Sichuan, but instead he was stripped of his promotion and demoted two grades down. Li Binghengs punishment was largely a result of his anti christian behaviors. The Germans pointed out that in the wake of the Big Sword Society causing troubles in 1896, Li Bingheng had made statements like "Ever since the Western religion came to China, its converts have all been unemployed rascals [xiu-min, lit.: weed people]. They use the foreign religion as protection to bring suits for others and oppress their villages. They use the Church to avoid prosecution, and gradually the local officials, to avoid trouble, bend the law in their favor. After a while the people's long-suppressed anger becomes unbearable. They feel the officials cannot be relied upon, and that they must vent their spleen in private disputes. Thus they gather crowds and seek quarrels, burning and destroying churches." Li Bingheng proposed prohibiting missionary interference in lawsuits, so that local Qing officials could do their job. This all obviously angered the Germans, who complained to Beijing about him. Now for the common people of Shandong, Li Bingheng was quite loved. Li Bingheng was seen as an honest man and rather good at administrating economic affairs. He managed yellow river works that saved over a million taels in 1895, raised money for the board of revenue about 100,000 per year. While he was seen as anti christian, he also was seen as an uncorrupt official, something quite rare in the late Qing dynasty. The German move was met with exhilaration by other great powers. Sir Claude McDonald, the minister to Beijing from Great Britain said "The effect on the security of our own people will be of the best. It seems hopeless to expect the Chinese to do their duty in protecting missionaries and discouraging anti-foreign movements unless they are forced thereto by some measure as the Germans have taken." An American missionary working in northwestern Shandong named Henry Porter said "the German Government deserve the admiration of all right-minded men, the world over. A great sense of relief was felt by the foreign residents of China. .. . The immediate effect throughout Shantung province is to strengthen every form of mission work.. .. We welcome the German vigor and the German advance." And of course such people were ecstatic about Germany flexing its arms in China, the Big Sword Society had ruffled many feathers. Getting rid of Li Bingheng was seen as a major play to increase conversions in Shandong. Indeed there was a dramatic change with Li Bingheng gone and a German squadron present. A missionary working in Qingzhou reported the proclamations made by the new governor, Zhang Ru-mei to be "much more favorable to the missionary than anything we have been accustomed to in times past." Another missionary working in Wei county reported "The most marked effect we see is the prestige [the Jiaozhou seizure] gives to the foreigners, a prestige that is pitiful to see. The officials seem for the time being to stand in abject fear of any complications with foreigners." The Germans were pushing the envelope, after the Juye incident, German missionaries got into the habit of placing blame on the Big Sword Society for any difficulties that came about. It was clear to all what they were doing, Governor Zhang Ru-mei remarked "They wish to stir up trouble in this way and let the German troops enter the interior." Local Qing officials began bending over backwards to Christians and lawsuits got worse and worse. Zhang Ru-mei gave an example of one bad situation that arose in the village of Wenshang. There was a dispute over the rights to a village temple, and a Christian had been assaulted. A German missionary sent a message to the magistrate stating the Christian had been killed, prompting the magistrate to rush to the scene to find the man had only light injuries. Nonetheless the magistrate prepared a list of 20 people guilty of the crime and they were forced to kneel and beg for forgiveness before converting to christianity. The German missionary praised the 20 chinese who he called good people, then he stated none of them should be prosecuted as he pulled out his own list with 5 other guilty chinese villagers. The 5 were forced to pay a sum of around 170 strings of cash. Then the same missionary demanded the village as a whole be fined 900 strings of cash. The magistrate anxious to be rid of the situation, increased the sum and added a banquet to be made for the missionary. So as you can see the church was really abusing this situation. The protestant missionaries in the region were quite jealous, one of their missionaries went on to say "The influence of the Catholic persuasion is felt in nearly all parts of the field. Multitudes are flocking to them for the sake of 'help' in various forms, chiefly for the 'power' that is supposed to reside in them more than in the Protestant." The Kaiser famously was quoted to say “hundreds of thousands of Chinese would feel the iron first of Germany heavy on their necks”. Indeed Germany humiliated China and received a lease of Jiaozhou bay from 1898 that would last until 1920. 50 kms of the Jiaozhou bay area was proclaimed a neutral zone in which Chinese sovereignty was limited in favor of the Germans. Germany did not stop there, they immediately went to work grabbing mining and railway concessions within Shandong province. The scramble for concessions was on. Germany seized influence over Shandong; Russia seized influence over Northern Manchuria, Mongolia and Xinjiang; France seized Yunnan, most of Guangxi and Guangdong; Japan seized Fujian; Britain seized influence over the whole of the Yangtze river valley and Italy requested Zhejiang province and was rejected by the Qing government haha. I always loved that aspect of this, despite China literally being torn apart, Italy was still seen to be too small to grab a piece, get rekt. The Kaiser's actions had reinforced China's fears about missionaries, or as many of the locals called them “devils”. In common Chinese believed the missionaries were working on behalf of their respective governments as a pretext for seizing territory in China. To the common Chinese things looked like things were getting wildly out of hand. The Christian converts were becoming not only more numerous, but had extravagant demands. In one famous case a Christian agricultural worker forced his non christian employer to serve him a feast. Over in Beijing, Empress Dowager Cixi bitterly resented hearing these reports and would go on to say “These Chinese Christians are the worst people in China. They rob the poor country people of their land and property, and the missionaries, of course, always protect them, in order to get a share themselves.” It was truly a problem, it was breaking the social fabric of village life. Chinese christians were barred from traditional ceremonies and festivals in their own villages and more crucially they no longer had to share the costs of them. They were not allowed to practice ancestor worship which was a fundamental aspect of Chinese society. As one Qing scholar using the pen name Wen Ching put it “As soon as a man becomes a Christian he really ceases to be a Chinaman”. It was commonly believed many only converted because they were too poor to afford food and were disparagingly referred to as “rice Christians”. Empress Dowager Cixi asked a foreign diplomat at one point “Why don't these missionaries stay in their own country and be useful to their own people?” At the time she made this remark there was over 700,00 Catholic converts ministered by more than 850 nuns and priests, mostly from France. Another 85,000 protestant Chinese were under the guidance of 2800 missionaries, mostly from Britain and America. As Ron Burgundy once said “boy that escalated quickly”. China was being carved up, her social fabric was being torn apart, foreign powers were bearing their boots down upon her, who could come to her rescue? I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. China was literally being carved up by the great powers of the globe. The Kaiser had ushered in a scramble, and now China braced itself for further humiliation. Was there anyone who could save China for the foreign menace?
Henle First Year Latin, Mastery Vocabulary Review List, Units 1 & 2.
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Wer Geige spielen lernt und sich auf anspruchsvolle Violinliteratur vorbereiten möchte, kommt an den Etüden des Violinvirtuosen Rodolphe Kreutzer nicht vorbei. Der Henle-Verlag hat nun begleitend zu seiner neuen Urtextausgabe der Etüden eine Reihe Video-Tutorials veröffentlicht. Sie sind kostenpflichtig auf der Verlagsplattform anzusehen. Die 22jährige Mannheimer Studentin und Hobbygeigerin Helena Sophie Morio hat ausprobiert, wie man sie mit den Tutorials üben kann.
In der aktuellen Podcastfolge sprechen wir mit Florian Henle, dem Gründer und Geschäftsführer von Polarstern Energie, über die praktische Umsetzung eines Social Business. Seit vielen Jahren engagiert sich das Unternehmen für eine nachhaltige Energiewende und eine neue Art des Wirtschaftens. Im Fokus des Gesprächs stehen Themen wie Gemeinwohlorientierung, Marketing, Purpose, sinnerfülltes Arbeiten und gute Führung.
Die Eröffnung der "Veganen Fleischerei" in Dresden vor etwas mehr als einer Woche hat eine Diskussion angestoßen: Darf sich das Geschäft so nennen, wenn doch dort gar kein Fleisch, sondern ausschließlich tierfreie Produkte angeboten werden? Im Podcast "Thema in Sachsen" bei Sächsische.de stellt Stefan Meyer-Götz, einer der Inhaber des Geschäfts, klar: "Wir verarbeiten doch Fleisch: Fruchtfleisch." Meyer-Götz und seinen drei Mitgründern sei jedoch auch bewusst gewesen, dass der Name polarisiere. Allerdings sei es nicht ihr Hauptanliegen gewesen, für eine vornehmlich auf Sozialen Medien ausgetragene öffentliche Debatte zu sorgen. "Wir sind aber trotzdem glücklich, wie der Start gelaufen ist", verrät der Unternehmer und berichtet, was in den ersten Tagen alles passiert ist. Außerdem erklärt Meyer-Götz, wie das Geschäft seine veganen Lebensmittel herstellt und was diese maßgeblich von klassischer Supermarktware unterscheide. "Vor allem die Frische", führt er aus und lässt hinter die Kulissen blicken. In einem zweiten Gespräch in diesem Podcast ordnet der Dresdner Lebensmittelchemiker und Ernährungsexperte Thomas Henle das Grundsätzliche zum Oberbegriff "vegane Ernährung" ein. Henle ist Professor am Institut für Lebensmittelchemie an der TU Dresden. Er erklärt, wie gesund oder ungesund vegane Produkte sein können und worauf man bei Einkauf sowie Verzehr wert legen sollte. Und er begründet, bei allem Respekt um das Marketinggeschick bei der Namenswahl, wieso bei der "Veganen Fleischerei" eigentlich von einer "Bäckerei" die Rede sein müsste.
Florian Henle gründete vor elf Jahren mit zwei Freunden einen eigenen Stromanbieter für Ökostrom und -gas. Das Ziel: eine Energiewende mit Sinn und Verstand. Mittlerweile hat sich Polarstern-Energie deutschlandweit etabliert. Mit Florian spreche ich über seine Karriere, die derzeitige Energiekrise in Deutschland, was das für uns Verbraucher bedeutet und warum es so befriedigend ist etwas tun zu können, um nicht der der Spielball von anderen zu sein.
A new study uses machine learning to classify whether a pesticide is toxic to bees or not.
2011 gründete Florian Henle mit seinem Mitgründer die Polarstern GmbH. Polarstern bieten Ökostrom und Ökogas aus jeweils 100 Prozent erneuerbaren Energien an, genauso wie weltweit Lösungen zur dezentralen Energieversorgung. Im Interview merkt man, dass es Florian wirklich darum geht etwas zu verändern und die Energieversorgung nachhaltiger und besser zu machen. Wie es Florian Henle zum erfolgreichen Unternehmer geschafft hat, verrät er uns im Podcast. Hier kannst du mehr über Florian Henle und die Polarstern GmbH erfahren: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PolarsternEnergie/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/polarstern_energie/ LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/polarstern-energie/ Website https://www.polarstern-energie.de/ Bei Fragen könnt ihr mir gerne eine Mail senden an: christopher@sodenkengewinner.de
Unser weltweiter Energiehunger der nach wie vor mehrheitlich mit fossilen Energien gestillt wird, hat einen immensen Einfluss auf die Klimaerwärmung, die auch dem Leben im und am Meer kräftig zusetzt. Erneuerbare Energien UND eine wirkliche Energiewende dafür ist es allerhöchste Zeit, das merken wir gerade jetzt in Kriegszeiten. Ich habe heute Florian zu Gast - er ist einer der 3 Gründer des social Business Polarstern. Wir sprechen darüber, welchen Einfluss fossile Energien auf unsere Erde und die Klimakrise haben, wo die Herausforderungen in der Energiewende liegen und woran Du als Verbraucher & Verbraucherin echten Ökostrom und Ökogas erkennen kannst. Und kleiner Spoiler vorab, wenn du bis zum Ende dran bleibst, gibt es ein kleines, doppeltes Geschenk, Eins für Dich und gleichzeitig eins für Ozeankind e.V. Du erfährst in dieser Folge: Wer ist Polarstern und was unterscheidet Euch von anderen? Darum sollte jedes Wirtschaften Ganzheitlich betrachtet werden Welchen Einfluss hat der weltweite Energiehunger auf die Klimakrise und welche Auswirkungen hat das auf die Ozeane? Wo liegen die Herausforderungen in der Energiewende? Wie erkennt man als Verbraucher*in echten Ökostrom & Gas? Was kann jede*r Einzelne tun um die Energiewende voranzutreiben? Bekomme 20 € geschenkt & sorge gleichzeitig für eine Spende an Ozeankind e.V. - so gehts: Wer den Code "Ozeankind“ bei seinem Wechsel in unserem Online-Wechselformular eingibt, der erhält automatisch eine 20-Euro-Gutschrift auf seine nächste Jahresabrechnung; der Code hat eine Gültigkeit bis 31.12.2022. Polarstern sammelt, wie viele Wechsler mit diesem Code reinkommen und geben 20 Euro für jeden dieser Kund:innen als Spende an Ozeankind e.V. https://www.polarstern-energie.de/tarifrechner/ Du kommst aus München und möchtest am 09.07 bei einem CleanUp mit anpacken? Dann komm doch zum Polarstern CleanUp. Weitere Infos unter: https://www.polarstern-energie.de/events/isar-clean-up/ ---- Wie immer freuen wir uns, wenn Du nach dieser Folge bei uns auf Instagram vorbei schaust und Deine Gedanken mit uns teilst. Wenn Dir diese Folge gefallen hat, freuen wir uns wenn du den Podcast abonnierst und mit Deinen Freunden teilst.
2011 gründete Florian Henle mit seinem Mitgründer die Polarstern GmbH. Polarstern bieten Ökostrom und Ökogas aus jeweils 100 Prozent erneuerbaren Energien an, genauso wie weltweit Lösungen zur dezentralen Energieversorgung. Im Interview merkt man, dass es Florian wirklich darum geht etwas zu verändern und die Energieversorgung nachhaltiger und besser zu machen. Wie es Florian Henle zum erfolgreichen Unternehmer geschafft hat, verrät er uns im Podcast. Hier kannst du mehr über Florian Henle und die Polarstern GmbH erfahren: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PolarsternEnergie/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/polarstern_energie/ LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/polarstern-energie/ Website https://www.polarstern-energie.de/ Bei Fragen könnt ihr mir gerne eine Mail senden an: christopher@sodenkengewinner.de
2011 gründete Florian Henle mit seinem Mitgründer die Polarstern GmbH. Polarstern bieten Ökostrom und Ökogas aus jeweils 100 Prozent erneuerbaren Energien an, genauso wie weltweit Lösungen zur dezentralen Energieversorgung. Im Interview merkt man, dass es Florian wirklich darum geht etwas zu verändern und die Energieversorgung nachhaltiger und besser zu machen. Wie es Florian Henle zum erfolgreichen Unternehmer geschafft hat, verrät er uns im Podcast. Hier kannst du mehr über Florian Henle und die Polarstern GmbH erfahren: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PolarsternEnergie/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/polarstern_energie/ LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/polarstern-energie/ Website https://www.polarstern-energie.de/ Bei Fragen könnt ihr mir gerne eine Mail senden an: christopher@sodenkengewinner.de
Trade – LasixClass – Loop Diuretic MOA – Inhibits the absorption of the sodium and chloride ions and water in the loop of Henle, as well as the convoluted tubule of the nephron. This results in decreased absorption of water and increased urination Indication – Pulmonary edema, CHF, HTN emergencyContraindications – Known Sensitivity to sulfonamides or furosemideSide Effects - Vertigo, dizziness, weakness, orthostatic hypotension, hypokalemia, thrombophlebitisDosage:Congestive Heart Failure and Pulmonary EdemaAdult: 20 – 40mg IV,IO slow push over 1-2 minsPedi: 1mg/kg IV, IO, IMPedi 2nd Dose: 2mg/kg IV, IO, IMHypertensive Emergency Adult: 40mg IV, IOPedi: 1mg/kg IV,IM
In part one of a two-part conversation, Drs. Patrick Loehrer and David Johnson sit down with Dr. Deborah Schrag to discuss her roles as a leader, researcher, oncologist and public health expert. The current Chair of the Department of Medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, Dr. Schrag discusses the joy and passion she has found throughout her career, and more. If you liked this episode, please subscribe. Learn more at https://education.asco.org, or email us at education@asco.org. TRANSCRIPT Dr. Pat Loehrer: I'm Pat Loehrer. I'm the Director of the Center of Global Oncology and Health Equity at Indiana University. Dr. David Johnson: Yes. And hello, I'm David Johnson. I'm at UT Southwestern in Dallas, Texas. Dr. Pat Loehrer: And welcome to another version of Oncology, Etc. Dr. David Johnson: Yeah, great guest today, before we get started with our guests, though, Pat, what are you reading these days? What can you recommend to me? Dr. Pat Loehrer: Well, I'm reading Jamie Raskin's book, which is about his son and about the insurrection. It's really a wonderful read so far, particularly I think about the family nature and how much he deeply respected his son who unfortunately committed suicide. Dr. David Johnson: Right before one of the impeachment trials as I recall, right? Dr. Pat Loehrer: It was right before the January 6 insurrection. Dr. David Johnson: Yeah, terrible situation. I have a book I've been meaning to recommend for a while. It's one that I've given to all the chief residents I've worked with over the last several years. And today's guests made me think about this book. It's entitled, Osler: Inspirations from a Great Physician. It's written by Charles Bryan, who's the former Chair of Medicine at the University of South Carolina in Columbia. Dr. Pat Loehrer: You trained with Osler, didn't you? Dr. David Johnson: I was a couple of years behind him. He was my senior resident. For anyone who's an Oslerphile, it's a great book to have. But even if you're not, it's got some wonderful lessons to be learned about how to interact with one's colleagues, and a lot of information about leadership, which is why it made me think of today's guest, Dr. Deborah Schrag who we're really excited to welcome to Oncology, Etc. Dr. Schrag is the Chairman of the Department of Medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. She's a highly accomplished healthcare leader, clinician-researcher, and expert in public health and population science. Deborah received her medical degree from Columbia University and completed her residency in internal medicine at Brigham and Women's. She obtained her medical oncology training at Dana-Farber in Boston and also received an MPH degree from the Harvard School of Public Health. After a brief stint on the faculty at DFCI and Brigham and Women's, she joined the division of gastrointestinal Oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering, where she was an associate member and Associate Professor of Public Health and Medicine. In 2007, I believe it was, she returned to Dana-Farber and Brigham, where she continued her work focused on improving the delivery, quality, and effectiveness of cancer care. While there, she served as chief of the Division of Population Sciences until this past year when she returned to Memorial to chair the Department of Medicine. I also think she's the first woman to hold this position, but we'll learn about that momentarily. Deb is internationally recognized as a pioneer for her work engaging patients in reporting outcomes as a way to improve care. She has led pragmatic trials using informatics strategies to optimize patient and clinician wellbeing, efficiency and quality, and equity of care. In short, she's a true superstar, leading the department, the major department, in one of the world's foremost Cancer Institutes. Deb, welcome to Oncology, Etc. Thank you so much for accepting our invitation. This is a relatively new oncology podcast, but already, we're known for our incisive, deeply penetrating questions. So, I have a question for you to start off. Do you have any carpentry skills? Dr. Deborah Schrag: Absolutely none whatsoever, Dave. None. Dr. David Johnson: I'm disappointed. It's my understanding that Schrag is German for cross or a slant and people who build cross-legged tables. So, I was hoping, my house was destroyed recently, and I'm looking for replacement furniture, and I was hoping you might be able to help me. Dr. Deborah Schrag: I apologize. But I'm not going to be able to help. The name, you're correct, though, David, is a German name. So, my family does hail from Germany and they made malt, which is the major ingredient in beer. I'm not sure where the name comes from. But they ran malt factories and shipped malt all over to all the beer, before there were craft beer distilleries, that's what they did. Dr. Pat Loehrer: That may come in handy by the end of this podcast, by the way. Dr. Deborah Schrag: Could be. Dr. David Johnson: Well, speaking of your family, tell us a little bit about your background and where you were raised, and your family members. Dr. Deborah Schrag: Sure! I'm glad you asked that because I really have been very influenced by where I grew up. And as I think about it, experiences that go back to first grade got me where I am today. So, I am from New York City. I grew up in Manhattan in the 1970s. And as you may know, that was a pretty rough time in the history of New York, what's often referred to as the 'bad old days', although it didn't feel that way to me. But I started out attending New York City public schools. And at that time in my neighborhood on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, my first-grade class had about 45 students, and one teacher, there were about five or six of us who spoke English, and everyone else was a recent Puerto Rican immigrant. I pretty much sat in the corner and read to myself. Now I didn't stay in the public school system for long, but I saw in first grade, how things weren't fair. And I saw and felt my own privilege, acutely. And even as a little kid, I had that sense. Eventually, my parents transferred me to private school later on. And there were kids in the neighborhood who didn't have the same privileges that I did. But living in New York, you walk around, you're confronted with disparities every day. We still see it today with homelessness on the streets. At that time, there was a lot of alcoholism and the use of drugs. And they were two blocks north that were safe to walk and two blocks east that were not safe to walk. So, this really stuck with me from a very early age. As a student in summer jobs, I worked lots of interesting jobs. I started at 14 scooping ice cream at Baskin Robbins, I worked at a famous Deli in New York called Zabar's, selling coffee. Lots of interesting jobs that I worked during holidays and vacation times. But one of my first jobs was working in an organization called the Floating Hospital, which was a big old ferry boat that circumnavigated Manhattan, and it provided a summer camp. And we would take 1800 people on a boat around Manhattan every day. And my job was to do lead testing. And I learned how to stick kids, test them for lead because there were incredible amounts of lead poisoning in New York City in the early 1980s. And then we would work on tracing the kids and these were toddlers, two-year-old, three years old. There were many families who were living in homeless shelters in New York City in the early 1980s. And that was really the beginning of my interest in public health and inequities. And really the marriage of medicine and public health. That had a deep and long-lasting impression on me and really stayed with me throughout my career. That early experience, I think it propelled me into medicine and to medical school and also to marry medicine and public health. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Tell me a little bit, Deb, about your parents. Dr. Deborah Schrag: Sure! My mother was born in the United States. She was a teacher who many years later after having three children went to law school and she became a litigator. And actually, her boss was Rudolph Giuliani. My father is a child of World War II. He was a child of German Jewish parents who had to flee the Nazis. Probably the most interesting story is that my paternal grandfather was an OB-GYN. So, I am a fifth-generation physician. My paternal grandfather was an OB-GYN at Charité, which is a very famous Hospital in Berlin. He was the head of OB-GYN there in the 1930s. But he had, I think he was half Jewish, and the Gestapo asked him to leave and he had to leave. He was an expert in version, which is essentially flipping babies and the setting of placenta previa. He then left for Lebanon, where he was in the French Resistance and had a thriving OB-GYN practice in Beirut, Lebanon, during World War II. And at night, there was a curfew, and he was part of the resistance and passed secrets around from the Russians to the French, so very dramatic. My father was born in this setting, and arrived as a new immigrant to the United States in the 1940s, where it was very hard to be a child whose parents had a German accent, given the prejudice against Germans at that time, but also went to New York City public schools, had a tremendous opportunity. It's really kind of the classic New York immigrant success story. You know, arrived in the United States with the shirts on their back and managed to work their way to a better life and achieve success and good education through public education for all their offspring. I will also say that my father had a public health stint. He worked in North Carolina as an alternative to going and serving in the Vietnam War, he was in the Public Health Service. And he worked in North Carolina in the textile mills and worked on a disease called byssinosis, which is also known as the brown lung. It's an occupational health disease that affects textile mill workers. As a child, I spent many dinners, hearing about byssinosis and brown lung, and black lung. I think at an early age I really came to understand how the world wasn't fair, and how it was instilled in me early on that it was important to work to try to make things better, particularly for people who didn't have privilege. And I think when you come from an immigrant family, and you realize how much privilege has been bestowed on you, that really leaves an indelible mark. I have to say, as Chair of Medicine at MSK, it is staggering to me the proportion of faculty here at MSK, but also at Dana-Farber, where I worked previously, we have lots and lots of immigrants who've been able to accomplish just amazing things through just motivation and drive and energy and creativity. And so, I'm a big believer in how much immigrants have powered this country. Dr. Pat Loehrer: Deborah, are your parents still alive? Dr. Deborah Schrag: My parents are still alive. They're both in their early 80s. And they both still live on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. So, I'm very privileged and fortunate to have living parents. Dr. Pat Loehrer: I can imagine the pride that they have for you. Dr. David Johnson: I just want to jump in and let our listeners know that Deb mentioned Charité in Berlin. That's the home of multiple Nobel laureates that all of us would know like Ernst Chain, who was one of the individuals involved in the development of penicillin, but Paul Ehrlich, Robert Koch, Hans Krebs, and for cancer doctors, Otto Warburg, among others. So, it truly is a world-renowned institution. Dr. Deborah Schrag: Well, my paternal grandfather was famous for this technique called version, which essentially involves putting your stethoscope next to the uterus, figuring out where the placenta was, and then essentially trying to flip the baby without disrupting the placenta or causing any harm, which required incredible skills with a stethoscope because you had to appreciate, I guess, the placental vessels. I'm not aware that this skill is still in existence, it was an important skill to have in the 1930s. When, if you did a C-section, there was a high probability of endometritis. So, you could save the baby, but you would often lose mom to endometritis. Or you could save mom, but you might not save the baby. So, at that time it was a big deal, but thankfully no longer. Dr. David Johnson: This is why we call it an Oncology, Etc. Our listeners didn't know that we're gonna get OB information in this particular podcast. Dr. Deborah Schrag: Or a digression on the history of medicine. I do find that, you know, I am inspired by the generations that came before me. I think it's also true that there are many physicians who are first-generation physicians in their families and some of us are privileged to have lots of healthcare professionals and sort of feel it as a calling. Dr. David Johnson: I think of you with many, many talents. But one of the things that I think stood out to me is, many years ago, you were in the van, talking about the financial cost of health care. I remember a very influential paper you wrote in the New England Journal, talking about the cost of treating GI cancer, colon cancer in particular. But where did your interest in that particular aspect of health care begin? What was the stimulus there? I mean, obviously you had a lot of stimulus from your family. What else? Dr. Deborah Schrag: That's really interesting. This is a little bit of a history of oncology. At that time, I was an assistant professor and assistant attending in the GI oncology service, seeing lots of patients with colorectal cancer. And we were working on a clinical trial of a drug called ImClone C225. And that was the name of the protocol. And we were putting patients in that clinical trial. And you know what? This drug was working. We were getting excited and the drug was moving ahead. We looked at the Phase 1 data and we launched Phase 2. We had meetings with the research protocol nurse and the research assistants, team meetings, and I would say there were about 50 people who were aware between the GI oncologists and the nurses and all the research assistants. You guys know that it takes a village and even though the villages were smaller then and it wasn't a particularly large trial, there are many, many people involved and everyone had the sense that this drug might be working. Just for context for our younger listeners, this is back in the early aughts, and basically, the drug that we had to treat colorectal cancer was 5-FU in many different formats and Irinotecan. And that was it. Some people thought mitomycin might work a little bit, but it was so horrible that it really barely worked. But that was what we had in our bag of tricks. So, the fact that we had this ImClone drug that eventually came to be known as Cetuximab, was remarkable. So, here's what happened. It turned out that this is the drug made by the company ImClone. And there were some shenanigans, some insider trading. And one of the people caught up in insider trading, in addition to some people involved with the company itself was none other than Martha Stewart, sort of the famous homemaker who still publishes magazines to this day. And you may know that she actually did some time in federal prison as a result of insider trading on this drug. I remember being a junior attending, and all the people involved in the trial and all the cancer professionals, we all knew this was working. But everyone respected the confidentiality of the situation, of the patients, and all the integrity that goes into academic medicine. And I remain inspired by the integrity of all the professionals, the doctors, the residents. These were not affluent people. I can tell you. we were not paying research assistants a whole hunk of money. They investigated every trade made by this company. There were absolutely no shenanigans or improprieties from the hard-working folks who helped bring this drug to market. So, as this was going on, we had many patients who were not eligible for the trial who were interested in getting the trial. So, of course, we followed as this drug got FDA approved and came to market. You could check me but I believe it was February 2004, it was FDA approved. It came out with a huge price tag. It was approximately $10,000 per month. I was mad because I was taking care of regular New Yorkers at that point. I had public school teachers, I had patients on Medicare and they couldn't afford the 20% copay. Because $10,000 a month for Cetuximab, if you have a 20% copay and you're New York City, public school cafeteria worker, is not yet eligible for Medicare with a typical plan that a New York City public school system employee would have, that was $2,000 a month. And that did not work for one of my patients who is essentially what we used to call a lunch lady. I was so mad that I decided to channel that anger into writing what I think is a perspective for the New England Journal called, “The Price Tag on Progress”. I wrote that piece. I know that many, many people and many of my esteemed colleagues have continued to work in that area and do research on the economics of drug pricing and there are many, many experts. I didn't stick with that. Not that it's not interesting, and not that it's not important. It's incredibly interesting and important, but I felt that the solution needed to happen in the legislature, state legislature, federal legislature. I think that this is about social policies, and we need to advocate for appropriate health insurance programs to make it possible for people to get coverage when they have catastrophic illnesses, and we need to think about the entire approach to drug pricing in this country. I still think that's important. I'm not convinced that what we need is more research on the topic. I think we need more policymaking and laws on the topic. I think we're still dealing with this. I'm sad to say that it's been nearly 20 years since I wrote that perspective. But I think it was motivated by frustration, not being able to get my patient what she needed, and many patients thereafter. And just the incongruity between some people benefiting from insider trading and all the good people who were doing the right thing. Dr. Pat Loehrer: I just want to throw in one thing if I can. Len Saltz, who's one of your partners, it was a piece of that trial that he presented at ASCO talking about ImClone C225. And ironically, it had a 22.5% response rate. And Len said, it's a bummer that ImClone didn't call it C995. Dr. Deborah Schrag: You have no idea how often we used to talk about that, joke about that in the clinic. I have another good story about that drug, which I think really illustrates something I believe and I think it's actually something that Osler said but it's also something I have to say I learned from both of you. And it has to do with listening to your patient. So, I had a patient named Matthew, who was a young man, 34 years old. He walked into my clinic with a diagnosis of diffuse metastatic colorectal cancer with multiple bilateral pulmonary metastases, which came to light when his tennis game was off. He was, at that time, an early employee of a newly started company called Google. And he was working on advertising algorithms, and Matt got the drug Cetuximab. And unfortunately, he was on it for quite some time. He was on it for about five or six months. But eventually, it was pretty clear that we were coming to the end of the road. And he and his wife planned a vacation. This was part of his end-of-life process planning. It was their fifth wedding anniversary in the Berkshires. We worked so hard to get Matt to the Berkshires to a beautiful inn, and on Saturday night, my pager goes off, and Matt cannot sit up. He's weak. And he'd been complaining of terrible fatigue for weeks, to me, and I really hadn't quite figured out why Matt was so fatigued. I mean, I just didn't understand it. And we get into this inn and I get a call from the Berkshire Medical Center, a small community hospital, 'Dr. Schrag, your patient is here. He's so weak and he can't sit up.' 'What's going on?' The ER doctor says, 'Well, he has a Chvostek sign', which is a sign of severe hypocalcemia. 'So, call me back with the calcium.' The calcium is low. Well, I think those of your listeners who are closer to medical school know that when the calcium is low, you have to check the mag. And Matt's magnesium was 0.2. And he got some magnesium in the Berkshire Medical Center. And all of a sudden, he felt great. He was able to go on and enjoy the second half of his fifth anniversary weekend at the Berkshire Inn and he came back. And I felt terrible because he'd been complaining to me of fatigue for six weeks and I hadn't checked his magnesium. I was like, 50 bilateral pulmonary metastases on chemotherapy. That's a fatigue explanation. Suffice it to say that we went on to start checking magnesium on everyone getting Cetuximab. Now mind you, the drug is FDA approved and FDA labeled at this point. So, we started checking magnesium, and we find that it was low. I start getting on the phone and calling my mentors. I called Dr. Bob Mayer, who was the head of my fellowship director and was like a revered mentor to me. 'Hey, Bob, does anyone up there in Boston have low magnesium from Cetuximab?' 'We don't check magnesium.' I said, 'But can you check?' I started calling around and that's a great example of the community of oncology. We are a community. I just started working the phones and calling friends and saying 'You guys checking magnesium for any of these folks on Cetuximab?' Suffice it to say, we figured out that their EGFR receptors in the ascending loop of Henle - so, again, back to biology and pathophysiology - the drug Cetuximab was blocking reabsorption of magnesium in the kidney, and it was Cetuximab that caused a terrible magnesium wasting. Oral magnesium did not work. You had to give it intravenously, repeatedly. And we helped eliminate fatigue for a bunch of patients. About six months later, I showed up at ASCO with these little cardboard slides and a little poster back in the corner and put up our little case series, very little. But I'm proud to say that we changed the label of Cetuximab and it's now on the label that it causes hypomagnesemia. It might be one of my more cited papers, paradoxically. But I think it's a principle that really has stuck with me, and I've tried to impart it to all the students and residents and fellows, 'Listen to your patients because - I think it comes from Osler- they're telling you something. We have to pay attention.' Again, I have never forgotten that. But really listening and trying to figure out how we can use our understanding of pathophysiology and what our patients tell us to ask questions and not just accept dogma and try to figure out what we can do. And you know, I couldn't have figured that out on my own. I happened to find a really smart nephrologist who happened to be able to sort of go to animal models and knew the right studies and the right people to talk to. Dr. David Johnson: It's one of the reasons why we are a multidisciplinary specialty. And we use the expertise of our colleagues. I think that's such a wonderful example of listening to one's patient and it really profoundly impacted our understanding of how that drug works and renal physiology, actually. That wraps up part one of our interview with Dr. Deborah Schrag, Chair of Medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. We hope you've enjoyed learning about her background and her early career. In part two of our conversation, Dr. Schrag will discuss her programmatic goals at Memorial Sloan Kettering, the importance of mentorship and leadership, and what it means to have joy in the profession of medicine, and, frankly, much more. So, please be sure to join us. As always, we want to thank you for tuning in to Oncology, Etc. an ASCO educational podcast, where we will talk about just about anything and everything. So, if you have an idea for our topic or a guest, please email us at education@asco.org. Unknown Speaker: Thank you for listening to the ASCO Education Podcast. To stay up to date with the latest episodes, please click subscribe. Let us know what you think by leaving a review. For more information, visit the comprehensive education center at education.asco.org. The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement.
Story: Her Father's Smile Author: Henle Girl Rating: Teen and Up Site link: http://fluky.gossamer.org/display.php?HerFathersSmile.Girl Read by: kristinsauter Summary: How does Maggie Scully find out about her daughter's pregancy? Used by the author's permission. The characters in these works are not the property of the Audio Fanfic Podcast or the author and are not being posted for profit. ***Every effort was made to reach out to this author for permission but we weren't able to make contact. In the event they were to reach out to us and request it, this will be taken down and as such this track will NOT be available for download. Should contact be made and permission given, the option to download will be offered.***
Heute haben wir uns einen Energieexperten eingeladen, um über Ökostrom und Ökogas zu sprechen. Das Thema erneuerbare Energie könnte nicht aktueller sein und Florian Henle, Gründer und CEO von Polarstern Energie bringt spannende Insights aus der Sicht eines nachhaltigen Energieversorgers mit. Nebenbei erfahren wir noch einiges über das Unternehmen als Social Business. Eine tolle Sichtweise auf soziales Unternehmertum, inklusive.
Teure Energie: Seit Monaten sind die gestiegenen Energiepreise ein Preistreiber der Inflation. Freuen darf sich, wer jetzt bereits mit Solarenergie Strom und Wärme erzeugt. Zumindest an sonnigen Tagen. „Die Sonne schickt keine Rechnung“, weiß Florian Henle, unser heutiger Gast und Gründer vom privaten Energieversorger Polarstern aus München. Mit ihm ziehen wir eine kleine Bilanz über die ersten zehn Jahre bei Polarstern – sein ambitioniertes Öko-Energie-Unternehmen aus München. Weshalb sie bei ihrer Mission „Mit Energie die Welt verändern“ erst mal auf Zuckerrüben aus Ungarn setzten und ob der sogenannte Energiesee auch dort liegt, haben wir unter anderem von ihm erfahren. Außerdem fragen wir uns, was die Stadt München beim Umstieg auf eine nachhaltige, eigenständige und günstige Versorgung besser machen kann oder vielmehr muss. Viel Spaß mit der Folge!
Following publication of his new book The Bach Cello Suites: A Companion, cellist Steven Isserlis spoke to online editor Davina Shum about consulting various musical sources, from different editions to manuscripts. Steven also speaks about making bowing and fingering suggestions for the new Henle edition of the Dvořák cello concerto, and how musicians need to make an informed choice for their preferred interpretation. Check out thestrad.com for the latest news and articles on all things to do with string playing. Register and subscribe to access exclusive archival content from 2010 onwards. Student discount! Get 50% off an online subscription! Check it out here: https://bit.ly/3eQ75AB Find us on social media: Facebook.com/thestrad Twitter: @TheStradMag Instagram: @the_strad_ Sarabande from Cello Suite no.5 in C minor BWV1011 Steven Isserlis, cello Johann Sebastian Bach: The Cello Suites Hyperion CDA67541/2 Photo credit: Jean Baptiste Millot
... sondern weil wir sie nicht wirklich wagen, ist sie schwierig. „Was ein Ernst, was ein Fokus!“ dachte ich noch lange nach meinem Gespräch mit Florian Henle, damals als ich ihm vor Jahren gegenüber saß in einer der wenig guten Kantinen-Restaurants auf der E-world in Essen. Er war dort, wo sich gefühlt seit Jahrzehnten vor allem die Klassik der deutschen Energiewirtschaft trifft, um zu schauen, ob sie wirklich bereit sind für ein Ökoenergie-Start-up wie Polarstern. Großartig abgelenkt oder ins Zweifeln wird es ihn nicht gebracht haben, was er von den Etablierten gehört und gesehen hat, sonst wäre Polarstern heute nicht einer der führenden und vielfach ausgezeichneten Anbieter von Ökoenergie. Disclaimend muss ich hier vorausschicken, dass auch ich seit Jahren Polarstern-Kunde bin. Ein paar Fanboy-Vibes sind also am Start. Was mich damals und heute so fasziniert ist die Ernsthaftigkeit, mit der das Team aus inzwischen fast 50 Polarstern:Innen zeigt, dass es wirklich geht, die Welt mit Energie ein bisschen besser zu machen. Dazu kommt, dass der ganze Auftritt von Polarstern nicht so nischig-ökig daherkommt, sondern ganz modern-urban, zeitgemäß einfach. Ich slide mit Flo ein bisschen durch alle Gründungs- und Wachstums-Themen, wir sprechen natürlich über das Ergebnis der Bundestagswahl („Mei, ist halt 'ne Wahl.“) und seine Einschätzung, ob wir die Netto-Null an CO2-Emissionen schaffen werden. Wissen wollte ich auch, wie es in Kambodscha oder Madagaskar aufgenommen wird, wenn dort mitfinanziert durch die Polarstern-Kunden Mikro-Biogas-Anlagen oder PV-Systeme entstehen. Spoiler: auch dort tun sich die Menschen schwer mit Veränderung, auch wenn sie ihr Leben ein gutes Stück besser machen können. Viel Spaß jetzt mit Flo und auf geht's …
A brief description of the concentration gradient of the loop of Henle. This concept is difficult to master but once mastered can easily explain and allow the student to grants key concepts in the field of nephrology. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/andrew-kowalski/support
This week the throw-down continues as Dave, Jeff, and Dr. Patrick M. Owens dig into a pile of Latin textbooks and see which ones are worthy of a podium finish. Need to brush up on your ecclesiastical Latin? You'd better know your Collins from your Henle. Do the names “Cambridge” and “Oxford” conjure images of Britishy erudition? Maybe not so fast. Dashed off caricatures of oddly proportioned “melon heads” not your thing? Learn which books NOT to open. So, tune in (if you can take a break from gilding your cute little Duolingo owl and trying to advance to the Amethyst League). Also, Rosetta Stone, Ossa Latinitatis, and Hans Ørberg.
Furosemide is an antihypertensive loop diuretic drug. The main indications are for edema and hypertension with an off-label use for hypercalcemia. The general dosing range is between 40-120 mg per day with a max of 600 mg per day. The mechanism of action is it interferes with the chloride-binding co-transport system causing a natriuretic effect. It inhibits sodium and chloride resorption in the ascending Loop of Henle and the proximal and distal renal tubules. The onset of action for diuresis is around 30-60 minutes with symptomatic improvement of acute pulmonary edema occurs within 15-20 minutes. Caution should be observed in patients with electrolyte imbalances, the elderly, premature neonates, patients with gout, lupus, and diabetes. There is a black box warning for fluid and electrolyte loss if excessive amounts are used. When considering the drug interactions one should consider that furosemide is an OAT1 and OAT3 substrate, it may cause hypocalcemia, hypokalemia, hyponatremia, ototoxicity, and others. Go to DrugCardsDaily.com for episode show notes which consist of the drug summary, quiz, and link to the drug card for FREE! Please SUBSCRIBE, FOLLOW, and RATE on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever your favorite place to listen to podcasts are. The main goal is to go over the Top 200 Drugs with the occasional drug of interest. Also, if you'd like to say hello, suggest a drug, or leave some feedback I'd really appreciate hearing from you! Leave a voice message at anchor.fm/drugcardsdaily or find me on twitter @drugcardsdaily --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/drugcardsdaily/message
Show notes with a full set of references are available here: http://www.rosebook.club/episodes/2021/6/22/chapter-fourAlso, please fill out our listener survey: https://forms.gle/DVdcJikKZkzY56mXA
#36 Ökostrom trägt maßgeblich zum Klimaschutz bei und ist einer der einfachen Schritte, die du gehen kannst, um einen wirklich wertvollen Beitrag zum Schutz unseres Planeten beizutragen. Ich freue mich, heute einen besonderen Interviewgast im Podcast begrüßen zu dürfen, mit dem ich über das Thema Ökostrom rede. Was vor 10 Jahren als Idee geboren wurde, ist seit einem Jahrzehnt zu einer großen Vision geworden: Polarstern hat es sich zum Ziel gesetzt, den Energiemarkt so nachhaltig zu verändern, um uns allen und den nachfolgenden Generationen ein gutes und lebenswertes Leben zu ermöglichen. Mit Florian Henle, einem der 3 Gründer von Polarstern Energie, spreche ich über: Strom aus erneuerbaren Energien warum Ökostrom nicht gleich Ökostrom ist und was der Unterschied zu herkömmlichem Strom ist was du unter Energiewende verstehen kannst warum es so wichtig ist, die Energiewende mit anzukurbeln wie einfach der Wechsel zu Ökostrom ist was das für dich bedeutet und was du tun kannst, um selbst einen Beitrag zu leisten Ich wünsche dir viel Spaß mit unserem Gespräch und hoffe, dass du ganz viel daraus für dich mitnehmen kannst! Deine Christina Mehr zu Polarstern: Webseite: Polarstern-energie.de Instagram 99 Energiespartipps Newsletter YouTube Hat dir diese Folge gefallen? Dann teile sie gern mit anderen und lasse mir ein Feedback da! Ich freue mich, wenn du mir eine 5-Sterne-Bewertung auf iTunes hinterlässt. Auf diese Weise kannst du meine Arbeit unterstützen. Ich danke dir von Herzen! Melde dich bei mir für ein Erstgespräch: 1:1-Coaching "weniger ist mehr" dein digitaler Guide: Natürliche Pflege leicht gemacht Abonniere meinen Newsletter "Fairschickt" Christina auf Instagram christina-wendlandt.com hallo@christina-wendlandt@.com >>> Unterstütze mich mit einem Beitrag auf Steady.com
Christopher Henle spoke with the media following the Green & Gold game. #SicEm
Have you ever wondered how music gets from the manuscript to the printed page? Today we’re talking about Haydn, and a project by Henle Publishers to reissue all 55 of Haydn’s piano sonatas with fingerings from 55 different pianists! I talked with the editor in chief at Henle, Norbert Mulleman, and also the brilliant pianist Stephen Hough, one of the 55 pianists chosen for this project. We talked about editing, putting fingerings in, and how interpretation is affected by these decisions. This is a fun one!
Tobias Glöckler is the associate principal double bass player at the Dresdner Philharmonie and a prizewinner of the International ISB Double Bass Competition (USA). He studied with Konrad Siebach at the Music Conservatory in Leipzig, perfecting his skills with Jeff Bradetich (Chicago) and Ulrich Lau (Stuttgart). While studying, he was the principal double bass player with the International Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra under Claudio Abbado. He has performed as a soloist with different orchestras, including the Dresdner Philharmonie with Ton Koopman. In addition he has made recordings for radio and has made guest appearances at diverse music festivals. He is a founding member of and solo bass player with the “ensemble frauenkirche” and has explored a great many chamber music works with the Dresdner String Quintet. Glöckler teaches at the music conservatory in Dresden. His efforts concerning the revival of the “Viennese Tuning” have been rewarded with a Distinguished Achievement Award for historical performance practice. We talk about all sort of topics, including: me meeting Tobias back in the 1990s at Jeff Bradetich's masterclasses seeing his session in 2016 at Bass Europe in Prague how Tobias got into creating urtext editions and what he has learned in the process Enjoy, and be sure to check out Tobias’ writing and projects on the Henle blog! Subscribe to the podcast to get these interviews delivered to you automatically! Check out our Online Sheet Music Store with 80+ wide-ranging titles for bassists. Listen to Contrabass Conversations with our free app for iOS, Android, and Kindle. Check out my Beginner's Classical Bass course, available exclusively from Discover Double Bass. Thank you to our sponsors! Dorico - Dorico helps you to write music notation, automatically producing printed results of exceptional quality — and plays it back with breathtaking realism. It is easy enough for anyone to learn, yet has hundreds of advanced notations, features, options and sounds to satisfy even the most demanding professionals. With its streamlined, natural user interface, students and those with less experience in scoring can compose and arrange straight into Dorico, making learning the language of music notation much faster and more intuitive. Editing and making changes — such as instrument, time signature or key — are straightforward, with the notation instantly and correctly adapting to include them, reinforcing the learning outcome. Ear Trumpet Labs - They make hand-built mics out of Portland, OR and they have an excellent mic for upright bass called Nadine. The Nadine is a condenser mic with a clear natural sound and incredible feedback rejection. This mic is a completely new design -- the head mounts in between the strings above the tailpiece with a rubber grommet, and the body securely straps to the tailpiece with velcro elastic. A 14-inch Mogami cable connects the two parts making it easy to place on any bass. It’s durable and holds up to the demanding needs of the instrument while offering excellent sound quality. Ear Trumpet Labs is offering a free t-shirt just for Contrabass listeners with the purchase of a mic, just visit EarTrumpetLabs.com/contrabass to claim yours and check out the Nadine! Modacity - Are you a practice-savvy musician? Get Modacity – the music practice app that organizes, focuses, and tracks your progress. Recorder… metronome… tone generator… timer… note taking… Do away with the random assortment of music practice apps in your arsenal. Modacity™ combines all the tools you need into one easy to use, music practice tool. Organize, focus, and reflect on your practice – motivating you to increase retention in less time. Modacity has a special offer for Contrabass Conversations listeners that includes lifetime access to the app. Contrabass Conversations production team: Jason Heath, host Michael Cooper and Steve Hinchey, audio editing Mitch Moehring, audio engineer Trevor Jones, publication and promotion Krista Kopper, archival and cataloging theme music by Eric Hochberg
Fighting in the war on college campuses.
Florian Henle ist Mitgründer und Geschäftsführer des Ökoenergieversorgers Polarstern. Polarstern möchte gemeinsam mit Energie die Welt verändern. Erwähnungen und Ressourcen: www.polarstern-energie.de/ (https://www.polarstern-energie.de/) Sea Shepherd (https://sea-shepherd.de/about) charity: water (https://www.charitywater.org/) Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) (https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objectives_and_Key_Results) Asana (https://asana.com/de) Small is beautiful: Die Rückkehr zum menschlichen Maß von Ernst Friedrich Schumacher (Buch) E-Book: 21 Fragen für mehr Klarheit im Business (https://simonmcschubert.de/klarheit/) Über folgende Themen sprechen wir: 02:28 Inwiefern das Thema Energie ein riesiger Hebel beim Klimawandel ist 04:46 Wie kommt es, dass so wenig Menschen und Organisationen bei offensichtlich enorm wichtigen Themen und Herausforderungen aktiv werden? 09:55 Was sind die wirklichen Aufgaben von Unternehmen? 17:38 Wie groß sind unsere Handlungsspielräume? 21:41 Wie können wir gute Entscheidungen treffen? Wie kann Polarstern in der umkämpften Energiebranche konkurrenzfähig sein? 44:07 Die Arbeit mit OKRs Gast dieser Folge: Florian Henle Florian Henle ist Mitgründer und Geschäftsführer des Ökoenergieversorgers Polarstern. Das Unternehmen wurde bereits mehrfach als „Innovativstes Unternehmen in Deutschland“ ausgezeichnet. So beschreibt Polarstern sich selbst: „ Polarstern ist ein Fixstern im Energiemarkt. Unsere Vision: mit Energie die Welt verändern.“ Florian Henle war außerdem früher bereits u.a. Finalist der Swiss Economic Award, der wichtigsten Auszeichnung für Jungunternehmer in der Schweiz sowie EXIST-Stipendiat des BMWi für die Forschung auf dem Gebiet des Handels von erneuerbaren Energien. Studiert hat er Europäische Betriebswirtschaftslehre mit Doppel-Diplom in Cambridge und Landshut.
Part 2 - Neville James announces the temporary closure of the Anguilla landfill site on St. Croix and resumes his discussion with the Department of Education Commissioner Raquel Berry-Benjamin, Superintendent Carlos McGregor for the St. Croix district and Superintendent Dr. Stephan Jurgen from the St. Thomas-St. John district. Commissioner Berry-Benjamin finishes this segment by detailing her vision of transformation for the VIDE, adding that COVID-19 has helped set the foundation for transitioning into the technological realm. St. Croix-based Photographer, Tina Henle, then joins Neville to discuss the history and sentiments surrounding the newly announced closure of the iconic Henle Gallery in Christiansted. Tina speaks to the potential for rebirth during these uncertain times, advising the public that though another artist will be taking over the space, the pervasive work of the Henle family, from her father, Fritz Henle, sister, Maria Henle and herself, will live on in this new space, on the Henle Gallery’s website and beyond.
Ken Wolf, Artistic Director of Manhattan Repertory Theatre in New York City, presents the 172nd episode of THE PLAYWRITING PODCAST. Episode Topic: “Interview with Playwright/Actor Richard Thomas Henle on The State of the Art, Memories, and What's Next in this Brave New World!" https://www.manhattanrep.com/directing-for-playwrights https://www.manhattanrep.com/how-to-write-a-fantastic-play-in-28-days https://manhattanrep.com/playwriting-coaching/ https://www.manhattanrep.com/script-consultation Website: https://manhattanrep.com Email: manhattanrep@yahoo.com
Wir sprechen in der heutigen Folge mit Florian Henle, Founder & CEO bei Polarstern Energie (www.polarstern-energie.de). Polarstern ist ein grüner Energieversorger mit Gemeinwohlbilanz, der Ökostrom aus Wasserkraft und Ökogas aus organischen Reststoffen zu fairen Konditionen produziert. Florian hat Polarstern im Jahr 2011 mit seinen Mitgründern Jakob und Simon gegründet. Das Unternehmen möchte die Energiewende konsequent und weltweit voranbringen. Die Vision: Mit Energie die Welt verändern. Wirklich. Der Ökoenergieversorger aus München ist für seine Kunden in Deutschland aktiv und zusätzlich wird für jeden Kunden von Polarstern eine Familie in Kambodscha mit Biogas unterstützt. Viel Spaß beim Zuhören! Walter Zornek & Vicki Kormesch
13ª parte da entrevista do pianista e compositor Amaral Vieira ao IPB. Amaral conversou com Alexandre Dias sobre editoras de música como a Henle, e a carência que ainda temos no Brasil por traduções de livros sobre piano, incluindo biografias. Depois fez pequenas correções e adendos sobre o episódio narrado no podcast anterior sobre o piano de Horowitz no Brasil. Em seguida, falou sobre mudanças que ocorreram ao longo do tempo na fabricação de pianos, e como alguns compositores trabalharam para a esta evolução. Depois falou sobre seu filho, Theo Vieira, que é vocalista de bandas de rock, e relembrou a única vez em que se apresentaram juntos, no programa do Jô Soares, interpretando uma música de Theo. Falou sobre sua rotina de preparo em dia de concertos, e sobre a gratidão que tem aos compositores que irá interpretar, lembrando sempre que cada obra era antes um papel em branco. Por fim, falou sobre sua predileção por repertórios mais raros e compositores menos tocados, como Alkan, e sua opinião sobre transcrições, mencionando algumas realizadas por ele próprio. Trilha sonora: CD Caminhos Barrocos, com obras de Handel, Rameau e J. S. Bach, interpretadas por Amaral Vieira. Apoie o IPB e receba partituras raras brasileiras mensalmente: https://www.catarse.me/InstitutoPianoBrasileiro
Episode 19: Bartter and Gitelman The sun rises over the San Joaquin Valley, California, today is July 10, 2020. In case you did not notice, we did not have an episode last week. We were very busy in our residency. We started a new rotation and a new academic year. We welcomed a new group of PGY1s, along with 3rd-year medical students, and Sub-Is. We also said good bye to our dear graduates: Greg Fernandez, Ronald Gavilan, Yunior Martinez, and Steven Saito. “Spread your wings, it’s time to fly. Make the leap. Own the sky.”(1) Good luck in your careers! Those activities kept us busy, and, as if that wasn’t enough, we saw an increase in incidence of COVID-19 across the nation. In Clinica Sierra Vista, we went from 270 positive cases in May to 700 positive cases in June, we also increased the total tests performed from 1200 in May to 2800 in June. Our positivity rate increased from 21% to 25%. In the county of Kern we have had 5,500 cases and 82 deaths. In California, the total of cases is 260,000 with total deaths of 6,500(2), which may have changed by the time you listen to this episode (numbers were rounded up for easy listening).Also, on a positive note, last weekend we celebrated Independence Day. We hope you had a Happy 4th of July! Especially during these tumultuous times, may America continue to be “the land of the free and the home of the brave.”Welcome to Rio Bravo qWeek, the podcast of the Rio Bravo Family Medicine Residency Program, recorded weekly from Bakersfield, California, the land where growing is happening everywhere.The Rio Bravo Family Medicine Residency Program trains residents and students to prevent illnesses and bring health and hope to our community. Our mission: To Seek, Teach and Serve. Sponsored by Clinica Sierra Vista, Providing compassionate and affordable care to patients throughout Kern and Fresno counties since 1971.“All our dreams can come true, if we have the courage to pursue them.” Walt DisneyWhen you want to reach a goal, dreaming is not enough. At some point, you have to start working to make that dream come true. You may need a little dose of faith, and a big dose of action. What dreams do you have? What kind of doctor do you want to become? Your training in residency is the time to prepare to live that dream. Today we have a resident who is working to reach his goals. Dr Sin is a diligent, trustworthy resident and will participate today for the first time in this podcast. QUESTION NUMBER 1: Who are you?My name is Hasaney and I am a second-year resident at Rio Bravo Family Medicine residency program. I was born and raised in Long Beach, California, to parents who emigrated from Cambodia. I went to Long Beach Polytechnic High School, and continued my studies at UC Irvine majoring in Biological Sciences. I worked in Quality Assurance for a healthcare manufacturing company for a few years, before deciding to pursue a career in Medicine. I enrolled at Ross University School of Medicine in Dominica where I received my medical degree.I’m a pretty simple guy. I love spending time with my girlfriend, my family, and my friends. I love to go camping, especially in Mammoth, California. I love watching and rooting for the Dodgers. QUESTION NUMBER 2: What did you learn this week? I had Nephrology clinic for the first time this past Wednesday and Dr. Moreno gave some little teaching points about different syndromes we may see as family physicians, a couple of them being Bartter Syndrome and Gitelman Syndrome.Bartter SyndromeBartter syndrome is an autosomal recessive disorder associated with metabolic abnormalities: hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, hyperreninemia and hyperplasia of the juxtaglomerular apparatus, and hyperaldosteronism; There may also be associated hypomagnesemia. It is a fairly rare disease occurring 1 in 1,000,000, however the similar but milder Gitelman syndrome is more common with a prevalence rate of 1 to 10 in 40,000.In short, Hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, and hyperaldosteronism. PathophysiologyThe primary defect in both syndromes is an impairment of the sodium chloride reabsorption in the loop of Henle or distal tubule. The impaired sodium chloride reabsorption leads to volume depletion and activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. This increased distal flow of sodium enhances potassium and hydrogen secretion at the secretory sites in the connecting tubules and collecting tubules which leads to hypokalemiaand metabolic alkalosis. Patients generally have a lower blood pressure than the general population in Bartter syndrome but normal blood pressure in Gitelman syndrome. Bartter syndrome mimics chronic ingestion of a loop diuretic, while Gitelman syndrome mimics chronic ingestion of a thiazide diuretic.Presentation and TypesClinical manifestations of Bartter syndrome, besides the metabolic abnormalities we have mentioned, are growth and mental retardation, polyuria and polydipsia. There are four types of Bartter syndrome. Types 1 and 2 are usually severe disorders that cause polyhydramnios during pregnancy and prematurity. They develop hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis, polyuria and hypocalciuria. Nephrocalcinosis is common and probably contributes to development of kidney dysfunction, sometimes end stage renal disease. Nephrocalcinosis is the deposition of calcium salts in the renal parenchyma. Nephrocalcinosis is related to, but not the same as, kidney stones (nephrolithiasis).Bartter syndrome Type 3 is the classic form, less severe, and presents later in life with the metabolic abnormalities. Late manifestations of Bartter syndrome include proteinuria and a decline in GFR. Bartter syndrome Type 4 causes severe disease, with antenatal presentation and congenital hearing loss. Gitelman syndromeClinical manifestations of Gitelman are similar to Bartter, except for having normal blood pressure. Patients may develop cramps of arms and legs due to the metabolic abnormalities, as well as fatigue. Hypertension may develop later in life.Both syndromes are usually a diagnosis of exclusion. Patients will present with unexplained hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis and normal to low blood pressure. Surreptitious vomiting and diuretic use must be ruled out as these could present in a similar way. DiagnosisSurreptitious vomiting is ruled out by measuring urine chloride excretion, with Bartter and Gitelman syndrome showing a urine chloride concentration greater than 25mEq/L, whereas vomiting would show a urine chloride concentration that is less than 25 mEq/L.Suspicion of diuretic use would be ruled out with a urine diuretic screening. Plasma renin and aldosterone levels will be elevated; however, these are not required for diagnosis.TreatmentTreatment requires ad lib NaCl intake with supplements of KCl and if needed magnesium salts. Most patients will require a drug that blocks distal tubule Na-K exchange such as spironolactone. QUESTION NUMBER 3: Why is this knowledge important?As family physicians, we see the full spectrum of Medicine. If we see low blood pressure in a pediatric patient, with the metabolic abnormalities akin to these two syndromes an urgent nephrology referral should be placed. QUESTION NUMBER 4: How did you get that knowledge?Initially, some of it was taught to me by Dr. Moreno. He did not have time to go through most of the details of each syndrome in clinic, so I decided to read a little more about it on Up to Date. Some of the details on Up to Date are very thorough, so I liked to cross reference it with Pocket Pediatrics. QUESTION NUMBER 5: Where did you get that knowledge?The majority of the information were points that I thought were most important from the Up to Date article “Bartter and Gitelman syndromes”. Speaking Medical: Nephronia by Manpreet Kaur, MS3Nephronia. It may sound like the sister planet of Neptune, but what exactly is it and when would you diagnose a patient with it? Well, on the spectrum of upper UTIs, nephronia would fall at the midpoint between acute pyelonephritis and an intrarenal abscess. It forms when a patient has an acute bacterial infection that results in a renal mass without liquefaction. We usually see this disorder in the pediatric population but there are case reports of this presentation in adults as well. While it sounds rare, it may just be an underdiagnosed disorder. However, with advancements in noninvasive imaging, this diagnosis is being made at an increasing frequency. Acute lobar nephronia (ALN) is similar to acute pyelonephritis (APN). ALN is similar to APN. A few differences are that acute lobar nephronia (ALN) is associated with a longer clinical course, longer fever duration even with treatment, and higher inflammatory markers like CRP and WBC count. A CT is the most sensitive and accurate modality of making the diagnosis but risks of exposure to radiation and possible sedation have to be weighed in small children. Some studies indicate that about 25% of children with ALN can go on to develop renal abscesses and have a higher incidence of renal scarring. Once nephronia has been diagnosed, these patients will require a minimum of 2 weeks of IV antibiotics, followed with 1 week of oral antibiotics. They will show slow improvement with fevers sometimes persisting until the end of the 1st week of treatment.Now you now the medical word of the week: Nephronia. Espanish Por Favor: OrinaOrinaisthat yellowish-colored liquid that comes out of the urethra with a characteristic smell, which in normal circumstances is sterile. Yes, you guessed it, orina is urine in Spanish. Orina can be easily turned into a verb:Orinar. Just like in English, there are several terms to refer to urine (pee, piss, pee-pee), orina can also be called meados(vulgar), orín, pis, pichi, and my favorite: pipí (pronounce pee-pee), normally used with pediatric patients. Now you know the Spanish word of this week: Orina. For your Sanity: A wet noseby Steven SaitoWhat do a puppy and a near-sighted OB doctor have in common? A wet nose. ConclusionNow we conclude our episode number 19, “Bartter and Gitelman”. Dr Sin briefly shared the highlights of these rare syndromes. Hypokalemia and hypotension may have a long list of differential diagnoses, but keep Bartter and Gitelman on your list. Ms Kaur explained that nephronia is not a planet, but an intermediate state between pyelonephritis and a renal abscess; and we could not leave the word urine out of this renal episode, so we learned the Spanish word orina.This is the end of Rio Bravo qWeek. We say good bye from Bakersfield, a special place in the beautiful Central Valley of California, United States, a land where growing is happening everywhere.If you have any feedback about this podcast, contact us by email RBresidency@clinicasierravista.org, or visit our website riobravofmrp.org/qweek. This podcast was created with educational purposes only. Visit your primary care physician for additional medical advice. Our podcast team for this episode is Hector Arreaza, Hasaney Sin, Manpreet Kaur, and Steven Saito, Audio edition: Suraj Amrutia. See you soon! _____________________References:Ms Moem, http://msmoem.com/2014/poetry-2/spread-your-wings/California Coronovirus Update, https://update.covid19.ca.gov/Emmett M, Ellison DH. Barrter and Gitelman syndromes. In: UpToDate, Post TW (Ed), UpToDate, Waltham, MA. (Accessed on July 5, 2020)
In part 2 we now turn our attention to the Loop of Henle
durée : 00:01:47 - Musique connectée du jeudi 27 février 2020 - par : Suzanne Gervais - Henle c’est un éditeur, bien connu des musiciens, un éditeur allemand, mais qui ne fait pas que des partitions…
Hey guys, Welcome to the Unshakable Man Podcast: A show and community for men who want to be their best emotional, mental, physical and spiritual versions of themselves. Today's show is in the category of relationships. Mike, checking in for my first episode of The Unshakable Man and I'm honored that our guest today is my first! Her name is Jonalyn Henle, she is a yoga teacher and studio owner, and wife of one of my deepest brothers, fellow EVRYMAN facilitator, Tom Henle. You may have heard him on Episode 5 of The Unshakable Man Podcast. In this episode, we explore her life after Tom attended his first few men's retreats and started a men's group. And the impact that his transformation had on their 30-year marriage and their family. Subscribe to our podcast on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.
Heute teile ich mit dir das Interview mit Florian Henle, Mitgründer von Polarstern Energie. Der Name Polarstern steht symbolisch für den Fixstern am Himmel, der zur Orientierung genutzt wird. Genau das soll auch Polarstern im Energiemarkt werden. In dieser Folge sprechen wir vor allem darüber, warum Florian eine Berufung mit Sinn gesucht hat und selbst handeln will, um unsere Zukunft positiv zu gestalten. Du erfährst in diesem Interview… … wie jeder einen Beitrag leisten kann … warum man nicht auf alles verzichten muss … warum es bei einer Gründung so wichtig ist, den Markt zu kennen und seine Hausaufgaben zu machen … wie man Konflikte im Team löst Weitere Infos zu Polarstern Energie findest du unter: https://www.polarstern-energie.de Florian's Buchempfehlungen: Jeremy Rifkin - Die Null-Grenzkosten-Gesellschaft (hier bestellen: https://amzn.to/2SiqRIN) Jeremy Rifkin - Green New Deal (hier bestellen: https://amzn.to/395E6mU) Timothy Ferris - 4 Stunden Woche (hier bestellen: https://amzn.to/2Otu9aX) ℹMehr Infos zu mir unter: Instagram: @jasminchiarabauer https://www.instagram.com/jasminchiarabauer/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jasminchiarab/ Jasmin-Chiara Bauer Jeden Mittwoch eine neue Folge www.jasminchiarabauer.de Ich würde mir wirklich sehr über deine Bewertung auf iTunes freuen!
Los invito al Festival de Astronomía en Villa de Leyva, Boyacá, Colombia. Este evento será el 31, 1 y 2 de febrero del 2020. Dudas y recomendaciones de nuevos temas para el futuro >> Instagram.com/danhellequin o Instagram.com/humanlab_official. En este episodio abordamos con mayor profundidad la fisiología del riñón, de acuerdo a cada una de las porciones de la nefrona, como lo son el glomerulo, los túbulos contorneados y el Asa de Henle, analizamos diversas hormonas, como la Antidiurética (ADH), la Renina, Angiostensina y Aldosterona. Si este episodio les gustó y fue de ayuda, los invito a que lo compartan a quien le pueda servir y a continuar escuchando el resto de episodios en Spotify, Apple Podcast u otras plataformas similares. Gracias por escucharnos de parte de todo el equipo de HumanLab y nos vemos en una próxima oportunidad. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/humanlab/message
Today on the show we have Tom Henle from the Oakland EVRYMAN men's group. This conversation was recorded about three months ago and in it, he reflects on everything from joy to purpose to anger and his experience of his life after finding men's work. We get into his path to finding EVRYMAN, his relationship with his boys and his life now. We are so thankful for this conversation, this platform and the gift of hearing and sharing these stories. Meeting all different types of men through this work is something that we can all benefit from, even if we do not know that we want or need it!
In this podcast, Dr. Carl Dean, a Nephrologist with Kidney Specialists of Minnesota, presented at Ridgeview Medical Center's Live Friday CME Series on September 27th, 2019. At this event, Dr. Dean provided information on acute kidney injury (AKI)- its frequency, management, and treatment modalities available for AKI. Enjoy the podcast! Objectives: Upon completion of this podcast, participants should be able to: Evaluate for the cause of acute kidney injury. Describe when a referral to a nephrologist is warranted. Identify treatment options available for acute kidney injury. CME credit is only offered to Ridgeview Providers for this podcast activity. Complete and submit the online evaluation form, after viewing the activity. Upon successful completion of the evaluation, you will be e-mailed a certificate of completion within 2 weeks. You may contact the accredited provider with questions regarding this program at rmccredentialing@ridgeviewmedical.org. Click on the following link for your CME credit: CME Evaluation: "Approach to Acute Kidney Injury" (**If you are listening to the podcasts through iTunes on your laptop or desktop, it is not possible to link directly with the CME Evaluation for unclear reasons. We are trying to remedy this. You can, however, link to the survey through the Podcasts app on your Apple and other smart devices, as well as through Spotify, Stitcher and other podcast directory apps and on your computer browser at these websites. We apologize for the inconvenience.) The information provided through this and all Ridgeview podcasts as well as any and all accompanying files, images, videos and documents is/are for CME/CE and other institutional learning and communication purposes only and is/are not meant to substitute for the independent medical judgment of a physician, healthcare provider or other healthcare personnel relative to diagnostic and treatment options of a specific patient's medical condition.” FACULTY DISCLOSURE ANNOUNCEMENT It is our intent that any potential conflict should be identified openly so that the listeners may form their own judgments about the presentation with the full disclosure of the facts. It is not assumed any potential conflicts will have an adverse impact on these presentations. It remains for the audience to determine whether the speaker’s outside interest may reflect a possible bias, either the exposition or the conclusions presented. Planning committee members and presenter(s) have disclosed they have no significant financial relationship with a pharmaceutical company and have disclosed that no conflict of interest exists with the presentation/educational event. SHOW NOTES: Nephrons are the functional unit of the kidneys. The nephrons have specialized capillary beds that have low partial pressures of oxygen which make kidneys susceptible to AKI. The afferent/efferent capillary bed have a unique ability to constrict and dilate to maintain GFR during times of physiologic stress, this is called autoregulation. The thickness of the renal cortex (or essentially where all the glomeruli are located) is important for detecting or estimating the chronicity of kidney disease. A thick cortex tells us that you have decreased renal function. The proximal tubule is the workhorse of the nephron where the electrolytes, proteins and glucose are reabsorbed. Podocytes are specialized epithelial cells that surround the capillary within the glomeruli assisting with the filtration system of the kidney. A strong electronegative charge. A classic disruption of this system leads to nephritic syndrome. The kidney gets about 20% of blood flow from the heart. Prostaglandins and Angiotensin 2 maintain GFR by driving constriction and dilation of the afferent and efferent capillary beds. NSAIDS (diminish the ability to generate prostaglandins through arachidonic acid pathway), ARBs and ACE inhibitors inhibit -- Angiotensin 2 which generates constriction on the afferent and efferent cap beds (preferential on efferent). Patients susceptible to AKI generally have preexisting chronic kidney disease. We detect AKI through creatinine and urine output. Factors that affect creatinine function include: age, gender, lean muscle mass, drugs (bacterium, cimetidine, tyrosine kinase inhibitors), ethnicity, diet. NGAL, KIM-1 and IL-18 are true markers of structural injury to the kidney. They can be found in the serum as well as urine. NGAL and KIM-1 tend to go up rather fast with AKI in comparison to say creatinine. NGAL (neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin) is one of the earliest and most robustly induced proteins in the kidney after ischemic or nephrotoxic AKI in animal models and KIM-1 (kidney injury molecule-1) is a type 1 transmembrane protein, with immunoglobulin and mucin domain, whose expression is markedly up-regulated in the proximal tubule in the post-ischemic rat kidney. Pre-renal causes of CHF, hypovolemia, V/D, MI, PE, antihypertensives, anaphylaxis, cirrhosis, sepsis, hemorrhage, etc. Essentially: "The kidneys are not getting enough blood flow". Post-renal causes include: obstruction can occur anywhere from renal tubule to the urethra. Generally, bilateral etiology to cause AKI. 1st step in evaluation for AKI is comparing present creatinine with previous and how rapidly the creatinine is rising. Next, how is the patient feeling? Med review, screen of oral intake, loss, infection, etc. Recent procedures. Labs to consider: UA, CBC, US, protein/CR ratio, CBC for TTP and micro-angiopathy. Additional testing include: Renal U/S, PTH, and anemia may give clues to the duration of decreased renal function/ Active Urine Sediment - concerning for acute glomerulonephritis, hematuria and proteinuria, hematuria, only 80% is bladder, prostate or urethra disease. Quantify the proteinuria, screening for glomerular disease and its severity. 3g: glomerular disease is present. Hyaline casts (Tamm Horsfall) made in Loop of Henle tell us that there is low flow through the tubules. (Generally a pre-renal issue). Granular cast or muddy brown cast which is pathognomonic for ATN which is generally the diagnosis. RBC cast is generally concerning for acute glomerulonephritis may want to consider a nephron consult. Renal U/S is generally recommended for every new AKI. This evaluate for size, hydronephrosis, 2 kidneys, cortical thickness. Management of AKI is managing electrolytes and acidosis. Volume expansion. Trial of vasopressors, dialysis. No benefit to diuretics. Adjusting appropriate drug dosages for patient with AKI. Furosemide stress test can be implemented as diagnostic test to determine the severity of the AKI in volume resus oliguria patient. AKI in the hospital are likely something we did iatrogenic meds, CT contrast, hemodynamics, obstruction, sepsis, volume depletion. Acute Interstitial Nephritis: Triad of rash, AKI and peripheral eosinophilia very rare (
Solve hypernatremia with tips and tactics from Dr. Joel Topf, MD (@kidney_boy), our Kashlak Chief of Nephrology. We review the diagnostic workup for hypernatremia, polydipsia and polyuria, review the pathophysiology of diabetes insipidus, and how to differentiate between nephrogenic and central DI. Plus, we walk through how to treat hypernatremia in the acute setting and Dr. Topf shares clinical pearls on why hypernatremia is the opposite of hyponatremia… It’s easy! Full show notes at https://thecurbsiders.com/episode-list. Join our mailing list and receive a PDF copy of our show notes every Monday. Rate us on iTunes, recommend a guest or topic and give feedback at thecurbsiders@gmail.com. Credits Written by Hannah R. Abrams and Joel Topf MD Producer: Hannah R. Abrams Cover Art and infographic by: Hannah R. Abrams Hosts: Hannah R. Abrams; Stuart Brigham MD; Matthew Watto MD, FACP Editors: Matthew Watto MD, FACP; Emi Okamoto MD Guest: Joel Topf MD Check out Dr. Topf’s podcast! The NephJC podcast, Freely Filtered, discusses the latest NephJC topic every two weeks. Subscribe here or on iTunes. Time Stamps 00:00 Intro, disclaimer, guest bio 03:25 Joel’s one liner and plug for his new podcast 05:34 Hannah shares a really weird analogy 07:10 Picks of the week*: In Shock (book) by Rana Awdish; HBO’s From the Earth to the Moon; Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (film); Glass(film) directed by M. Night Shyamalan (Stuart’s anti-pick)POCUS! Sign up for a course today from the ACP, AIUM or TRUST. 13:18 Why hypernatremia is easy 14:49 The case of Paula Uric - new onset hypernatremia with hypercalcemia 16:12 Hypernatremia risk factors; ADH, osmolality and the kidney 21:20 Loop of Henle and the sodium, potassium and 2 chloride channel 22:05 How hypercalcemia mimics nephrogenic diabetes insipidus 29:30 Hypercalcemia workup 33:10 Differentiating central from nephrogenic diabetes insipidus 37:35 DDAVP, desmopressin and treatment of nocturia 38:50 The case of Manny Uric - altered mental status and hypernatremia Na = 162; Why do patients in the ICU develop hypernatremia? 42:29 Calculate the fluid deficit; total body water 48:05 Estimate insensible losses (electrolyte free water clearance) 54:48 What if your hypernatremic patient is also hypovolemic? 57:30 Does fluid restriction work in heart failure? 58:35 Hypernatremia - Is there such a thing as too fast in adults? 63:44 Thiazides versus acetazolamide for nephrogenic DI 68:34 Take home points 71:20 Outro Links* In Shock (book) by Rana Awdish HBO’s From the Earth to the Moon Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (film) Glass (film) directed by M. Night Shyamalan (though consider avoiding, per Stuart) POCUS! Sign up for a course today from the ACP, AIUM or TRUST *The Curbsiders participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising commissions by linking to Amazon. Simply put, if you click on my Amazon.com links and buy something we earn a (very) small commission, yet you don’t pay any extra. Disclosures Dr Topf lists the following disclosures on his website: “I have an ownership stake in a few Davita run dialysis clinics and a vascular access center. Takeda Oncology made a donation to MM4MM the program that is taking me to Mount Everest in 2018”. The Curbsiders report no relevant financial disclosures. Citation Topf J, Abrams HR, Brigham SK, Okamoto E, Watto MF. “170 Hypernatremia is Easy with Joel Topf MD”. The Curbsiders Internal Medicine Podcast. https://thecurbsiders.com/episode-list. September 2, 2019.
Kelly and Kurt get a chance to get to chat with former UFC TUF season 11 competitor and Professional MMA fighter Joseph "Leonidas" Henle. We talk about what it is like coming up in MMA and his experiences fighting on many different promotions to his shot in The Ultimate fighter TV series season 11 with Tito Ortiz and Chuck Liddell. Joe has just won a Tiger Muay Thai sponsorship and will be heading back to Thailand to capitalize on this chance to go all-in on his MMA career! Fight Chase Muay Thai & MMA Podcast Fight Chase on IG Fight Chase Website Fight Chase YouTube Fight Chase GEAR Carson Kickboxing Club Carson Kickboxing Club on IG --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/fightchase/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/fightchase/support
BASE Life Podcast Episode #45 - Tristan Henle is a Skydiving Instructor and BASE jumper hailing from California. Listen as the boys chat about some of Tristan's influences and how he came into the sky sports scene at the ripe old age of 13! At the time of this recording, he's only 22, but Tristan has seen and done more than a lot of folks twice his age. I hope you enjoy hearing Tristan's story as much as I did! YIEW! Tristan On Instagram: @tristan_flies Favorite Podcasts: Kill Tony, Your Mom's House, Cum Town Book: Harry Potter Series History of Injury: Broken wrist from swooping One More Jump with a Friend from the BFL: Jhonathan Florez Question for the Next Guest: Do your parents know you BASE jump, and if so, how do they feel about it? Give us some feedback below! If you have topics you want us to cover or recommendations to improve the show, hit us up! BASE Life on Instagram BASE Life on Facebook BASE Life on Vimeo Email Us! Valley BASE Gear Horner Pub
In today's episode, Joseph and I discuss the lifestyle in Thailand, traveling around and fighting in different countries, how he got into MMA, fighter pay, his upcoming Tiger Muay Thai Team Tryouts, the sport of MMA evolving, matchmaking and much more!
Host Kevin Patton previews the content of the upcoming full episode, which features a discussion of eponyms in scientific terminology. There's more... some word dissections, and a recommendation from The A&P Professor Book Club. If you cannot see or activate the audio player click here. Questions & Feedback: 1-833-LION-DEN (1-833-546-6336) Follow The A&P Professor on Twitter, Facebook, Blogger, Nuzzel, Tumblr, or Instagram! Topic .5 minute All about eponyms: the good, the bad, and the ugly What are eponyms? Why are they going out of style? Word Dissections 3.5 minutes Eponym Loop of Henle haversian canal Clopton Havers Toponym Lyme disease Book Club 3 minutes The Secret Language of Anatomy 1st Edition by Cecilia Brassett, Emily Evans, Isla Fay, forward by Alice Roberts amzn.to/2YhNe34 Check out The A&P Professor Book Club If the hyperlinks here are not active, go to TAPPradio.org to find the episode page. More details at the episode page. Transcript available at the script page. Listen to any episode on your Alexa device. Sponsors Transcript and captions for this episode are supported by the American Association of Anatomists. anatomy.org The Human Anatomy & Physiology Society also provides marketing support for this podcast. theAPprofessor.org/haps Distribution of this episode is supported by NYCC's online graduate program in Human Anatomy & Physiology Instruction (HAPI) nycc.edu/hapi Amazon and TextExpander referrals help defray podcasting expenses. (Clicking on sponsor links helps let them know you appreciate their support of this podcast!) Follow The A&P Professor on Twitter, Facebook, Blogger, Nuzzel, Tumblr, or Instagram!
Watch video or download podcast belowhttps://bp242.isrefer.com/go/sd4p/yoganow/mh5dc () Jonalyn HenleOverview of Episode Tom and Jonalyn began practicing Bikram Yoga in July 2008. Both have been certified to teach Bikram Yoga by Bikram Choudhry at his nine week Teacher Training in Southern California. They have raised both their sons in Tracy, and own a construction company here as well. Tom and Jonalyn love living in Tracy and bringing this practice to their community is a dream come true for them. Jonalyn knew after her first class that she wanted to teach this yoga, never had she experienced such mental peace and clarity. She embraced this practice wholeheartedly and continues to be amazed at the positive changes it has made in her life. Tom was reluctant to try yoga at first. After years of work in the construction field and his weekend hobbies of extreme sports, Tom's body was feeling the effects. It didn't take long for him to experience the benefits of Bikram Yoga, mainly the healing of injuries old and new. He was determined to "get good at it" and decided he couldn't quit because it was hard. Come in soon and begin your own journey. Jonalyn's show notes....Jonalyn was a professional dancer starting at 14 years old. How dancing & high heels created imbalances in hips and SI joint issues. Jonalyn's first yoga class. How yoga helped Jonalyn get sober. Why Jonalyn bought her and her husband Tom yearly unlimited packages. How Jonalyn stopped the voices in her head. Going to Bikram's Yoga Teacher Training. Three tips for new yoga students. Jonalyn and Tom opening their yoga studio in Tracy, California. Jonalyn was an advocate for a women's center in Tracy. When Jonalyn knew she was going to become a yoga teacher. Why Jonalyn wanted to lose 25 pounds. [gallery link="none" size="large" ids="1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894"] Jonalyn's Links & ResourcesWebsite - https://www.bikramsyogatracy.com/ (Bikram's Yoga Tracy) Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hotyogatracy/ (https://www.facebook.com/hotyogatracy/) https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-falling-up-radio-48876103/ ( ) https://bp242.isrefer.com/go/sd4p/yoganow/mh5dc ()
Susan Anderson shows you the layers of the kidney, and how the function of the kidney depends on its microscopic anatomy. SHe takes you on a tour of the glomerulus, Bowman's capsule, the juxtaglomerular apparatus, loop of Henle and the collecting ducts, telling you all you need to know about the structure and cell types involved. Susan Anderson is Professor of Pathology at the University of Nottingham
Tristan Henle has been skydiving since he was 15 years old. He's logged over 2,000 jumps since then and is now a skydiving instructor. He also happens to B.A.S.E. jump and is a Wingsuit Pilot. Total bad ass at the age of 21. Enjoy! Follow him on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/tristan_flies/
The loops of the nephron between the proximal and distal convoluted tubules are often called “The Loops of Henle” after the discoverer of this important part of the kidney.
durée : 00:04:01 - Le développement des partitions numériques dans l'orchestre - par : Suzanne Gervais - L’Orchestre Philharmonique de Bruxelles est le premier à avoir équipé ses musiciens de tablettes tactiles. C’était en 2012 et le coup d’essai s’est avéré concluant. Depuis, ce sont les orchestres français qui sont les plus branchés ! Il y a tout juste un an, l’Orchestre de l’Opéra de Rouen délaissait le bon vieux papier le temps d’un concert pour se familiariser avec le lecteur de partitions numériques mis au point par la _startup_ _**Newzik**_. En mai dernier, c’est l’Orchestre national d’Ile-de-France qui a tenté l’expérience : 30 iPads pour 80 musiciens. En octobre, ce sera au tour de l’Orchestre Colonne. Il s’agit tout simplement de lire sa partition, non plus sur support papier, mais sur écran. Depuis le boom des tablettes tactile, dans les années 2010, les musiciens sont de plus en plus nombreux à insérer les fichiers informatiques de leurs partitions dans leur tablette et ne tarissent pas d’éloges sur ce nouveau support : fini les kilos de partitions à trimbaler pendant les tournée, la nécessité de poser l’archet pour tourner les pages, l’angoisse des salles mal éclairées ou bien les pinces à linge pour tenir les feuilles lors d’un concert en plein air… ## Qu’est ce que la technologie apporte à la partition ? On peut se demander si c’est un effet de mode un peu _geek_ ou un réel avantage. Quelques exemples : les musiciens peuvent tourner les pages sans les mains, grâce à une pédale bluetooth ou à un petit bouton à fixer derrière le manche du violon… Mais ce n’est pas tout : l’imposant pupitre du chef d’orchestre est remplacé par un large écran et le gain de temps est important pour les bibliothécaires d’orchestres, ces petites mains indispensables chargées de louer et de préparer le matériel, de reporter les indications des chefs de pupitre sur toutes les partitions et… de gommer le tout avant de rendre les ouvrages à l’éditeur. Avec une partition numérique, le premier violon note les indications avec un stylet, et, magie, elles sont automatiquement reportées sur les partitions des violons du rang. Les pratiques de lecture évoluent. Avec le succès des livres numérique, les _e-book_, certains clament que d’ici quelques décennies, le livre disparaîtra et avec lui les belles reliures et le bruit familier des pages qui se tournent. On peut donc se demander si la partition subira le même sort. Les _startup_ sont de plus en plus nombreuses à proposer des lecteurs de partitions numériques, comme _Newzik_ ou _Neoscore_, mais il y a encore du travail du côté des maisons d’édition. Elles sont encore frileuses à l’idée de dématérialiser leurs partitions. Cependant, certaines sont à la pointe comme _Lemoine_ en France ou _Henle_ en Allemagne… Citons aussi le _Mozarteum_ de Salzbourg, qui est en train de numériser l’intégralité de son énorme fonds Mozart. ## Certains répertoires plus propices à la partition numérique {% embed youtube 1SlEh5ElAR4 %} La musique contemporaine sait particulièrement tirer parti des partitions numériques, c'est d'ailleurs ce qu'[expliquait le _quatuor Tana_ dans la matinale](https://www.francemusique.fr/emissions/l-invite-du-jour/l-invite-du-jour-du-mercredi-6-septembre-2017-36359?xtmc=quatuor%20tana&xtnp=1&xtcr=3). Le compositeur, présent dans la salle pendant les répétitions, peut modifier et corriger la partition en temps réel. Fini les musiciens cachés derrière des murs de partitions géantes aux collages bancales... Avec la tablette, pas de feuilles qui tombent ni de gestes parasite, l’épure est reine. Car l’esthétique, au concert, c’est important aussi. ## Une lente transition Abandonner ses chères partitions ne se fait pas du jour au lendemain. Le lien qui nous unit au papier est affectif, presque sensuel : le papier rassure, on en aime le grain, l’odeur… Et la dépendance à la technologie en fait trembler plus d’un : que faire en cas de panne ? Bref, le monde musical est encore bien ancré dans ses traditions, mais les initiatives de quelques orchestres, de quatuors ou de solistes annoncent l’avenir.
Florian, 37 Jahre alt, hat BWL studiert, und ist Jung-Unternehmer. Auch wenn die FDP in vielerlei Hinsicht seine Interessen am besten vertritt, wählt er die Grünen. Weil ihm die Klimaziele noch wichtiger sind.
Basketball, Spaghetti Sauce, and Latin is an article written by Marc Hays. We hope you enjoy the audio. You can also read the article here.
In this podcast Andrew shares insight on the linguistic foundation of many languages: Latin. Learn how Latin can aid you in excelling in grammar and provide you with a deeper understanding of the English language. Go To Part 1 Referenced Materials: The War Against Grammar by David Mulroy The Lost Tools of Learning essay by Dorothy Sayers Prima Latina by Leigh Lowe Song School Latin Classical Academic Press Christopher Perrin's Videos First Form Latin by Cheryl Lowe Second Form Latin by Cheryl Lowe Third Form Latin by Cheryl Lowe Fourth Form Latin by Cheryl Lowe Henle Latin 1 Text by Robert J. Henle, S.J. The Natural Method is Not Natural Article by Cheryl Lowe Memoria Press Remember to send your questions to Podcast@IEW.com, and perhaps yours will be answered the next time we Ask Andrew Anything (AAA). If you have any questions about IEW or our products, do not hesitate to contact our Customer Service Team at 800.856.5815 or Info@IEW.com
Das Musizieren revolutionieren, das möchte der Henle Verlag mit einer neuen App, mit der sich Profi- wie Laienmusiker Urtext-Noten auf ihr iPad laden können. Das Goldmund Quartett aus München hat es einem Praxistest unterzogen.
Slice of MIT: Stories from MIT Presented by the MIT Alumni Association
Both mathematics and cooking are pleasures, writes Jim Henle PhD '76 in his new book, The Proof and the Pudding (Princeton, 2015). "Real cooks and real mathematicians play. They play with structures, they play with ingredients, they play with the ideas and the flavors that attract them strongly." Henle shares his love of play in the kitchen and classroom in this edition of the MIT Alumni Books Podcast. Read more: http://bit.ly/1IyHxBe Transcript: https://bit.ly/2H7DqAK
What do the kidneys do? Where are they? Do we need both? From the Loop of Henle to the realities of renal failure: this is The Fundamentals of the Kidneys. --- Originally published December 2014. Remastered December 2019.
By: Müller, Johannes, 1801-1858 - Henle, Jacob, 1809-1885 , joint author.Publication Details: Berlin,Veit und comp.,1841.Contributed By: Harvard University, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Ernst Mayr Library
Hypertension is a heritable and major contributor to the global burden of disease. The sum of rare and common genetic variants robustly identified so far explain only 1%-2% of the population variation in BP and hypertension. This suggests the existence of more undiscovered common variants. We conducted a genome-wide association study in 1,621 hypertensive cases and 1,699 controls and follow-up validation analyses in 19,845 cases and 16,541 controls using an extreme case-control design. We identified a locus on chromosome 16 in the 59 region of Uromodulin (UMOD; rs13333226, combined P value of 3.6x10(-11)). The minor G allele is associated with a lower risk of hypertension (OR 95% CI]: 0.87 0.84-0.91]), reduced urinary uromodulin excretion, better renal function; and each copy of the G allele is associated with a 7.7% reduction in risk of CVD events after adjusting for age, sex, BMI, and smoking status (H.R. = 0.923, 95% CI 0.860-0.991; p = 0.027). In a subset of 13,446 individuals with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) measurements, we show that rs13333226 is independently associated with hypertension (unadjusted for eGFR: 0.89 0.83-0.96], p = 0.004; after eGFR adjustment: 0.89 0.83-0.96], p = 0.003). In clinical functional studies, we also consistently show the minor G allele is associated with lower urinary uromodulin excretion. The exclusive expression of uromodulin in the thick portion of the ascending limb of Henle suggests a putative role of this variant in hypertension through an effect on sodium homeostasis. The newly discovered UMOD locus for hypertension has the potential to give new insights into the role of uromodulin in BP regulation and to identify novel drugable targets for reducing cardiovascular risk.
Episode 29: More tips about memorization and preparing for chamber music rehearsals - Upcoming events: April 7 – master class at Crown Point High School in Northwest Indiana- Inquiries From My Inbox: CuciucGriga asks, "Where did you study?" - Random Musical Thought: Why does Henle clutter up its “urtext? editions with too many editorial suggestions?- More tips about memorization: re-memorizing a piece you’ve played before (especially if you change fingerings or bowings), memorizing dynamics and articulations and tempo markings (not just notes and fingering and bowings).- More tips about preparing for chamber music rehearsals: figuring out harmonies (major, minor, deceptive cadences), xeroxing page turns and making 4 or 5 pages into 3 tall pages.total playing time: 21:52SUBSCRIBE TO THIS PODCAST ON I-TUNES!Would you like to be featured on Violin Adventures? Just send your question via text or as an MP3 attachment to rachelbartonpine@aol.com and listen for you answer on Inquiries From My Inbox!Thanks for listening!www.rachelbartonpine.com www.myspace.com/rachelbartonpine www.youtube.com/RachelBartonPine Violin Adventures with Rachel Barton Pine is produced by Windy Apple Studios www.windyapple.com
Tue, 1 Jan 1811 12:00:00 +0100 http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2797/ http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/2797/1/8Polit.2064(3_6.pdf Henle, Elkan Henle, Elkan: Ueber die Verfassung der Juden im Königreiche Baiern und die Verbesserung derselben zum Nutzen des Staats. München: Hübsc