33,449 research outputs found

    "...aus allen Zipfeln..." Faust um 1775

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    "...AUS ALLEN ZIPFELN..." FAUST UM 1775 "...aus allen Zipfeln..." Faust um 1775 ( - ) Cover ( - ) Titelseite (1) Preface (3) "Faust" für Holzköpfe / Wandlungen des Faust-Stoffes von der Wanderbühne zum Marionettentheater (7) Faust - Teufelsbündner oder Verlorener Sohn (31) Warum schrieb Goethe den 'Urfaust'? / Shakespeare und Nationalliteratur (43) "Eine Witterung, freylich immer nur schwach von fern" - Müllers und Klingers Faustdichtungen (65) Das "Höllenrichter"-Fragment von Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz. Eine Faust-Dichtung? (89) Ein märchenhafter Roman vom Menschen, von Feen und Hexen, oder: Kakerlak, Tausendschön und Schabernack - Poetisches und Philosophisches, Aufklärung und Satire, Natur und Kunst in einer Faust-Dichtung Johann Karl Wezels. (121) Schlußdebatte (149) Inhalt (159) Geisselbrechts Faust nach der Handschrift von Georg Geisselbrecht (161) Doctor Faust (163

    Faust Rossi

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    From the video archives of the Cornell Law School Heritage Project. The interviewer is Peter W. Martin; the videographer, Michael d’Estries. This video covers Faust Rossi’s reflections on his career as a law professor. A 1960 graduate of Cornell Law School, Rossi began his legal career as a trial attorney in the United States Department of Justice Honors Program. He subsequently became a litigation partner in a Rochester law firm, and joined the Cornell Law School Faculty in 1966. He retired in 2013. Professor Rossi is the author of a text on expert witnesses and coauthor of the Handbook of New York Evidence. He was a national winner of the Roscoe Pound Jacobson Award for excellence in teaching Trial Advocacy. Professor Rossi was a recurring visiting professor at Central European University in Budapest and a regular faculty member in the Cornell Summer Institute of International and Comparative Law in Paris. He has also given hundreds of lectures to lawyers and judges in the United States and Europe. Faust Rossi is Samuel S. Leibowitz Professor of Trial Techniques, Emeritus

    Rossi, Faust

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    (Duration 1:12:04)From the video archives of the Cornell Law School Heritage Project. The interviewer is Peter W. Martin; the videographer, Michael d’Estries. This video covers Faust Rossi’s reflections on his career as a law professor. Faust Rossi is the Samuel S. Leibowitz Professor of Trial Techniques, Emeritus at Cornell Law School. A 1960 graduate of Cornell Law School, Rossi began his legal career as a trial attorney in the United States Department of Justice Honors Program. He subsequently became a litigation partner in a Rochester law firm, and joined the Cornell Law School Faculty in 1966.1_kubfg8f

    Verweile doch, Goethes Faust heute : die Faust-Konferenz am Deutschen Theater und Michael Thalheimers Inszenierungen /

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    "Zur Hör-CD: Ausschnitte aus Faust I und Faust II am Deutschen Theater"--Table of contents.Includes bibliographical references

    »(Ist fortzusetzen.)«

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    For the late Goethe; questions of continuation; connection; and closure play a central role. It is not without reason that he repeatedly uses the formula »(To be continued).« to mark the incompleteness of his works and to raise the question of the continuity of literary and scientific texts. In ten essays; this volume addresses the question of Goethe’s poetics of continuation; which has so far been neglected in Goethe studies. In addition to the central connection between continuation and the form of the novel for the Wilhelm Meister complex; the volume examines the problem of continuation in the two parts of Faust; before finally considering the question of continuability of works in relation to serial publication and the material conditions of writing. With contributions by Michael Auer | Michael Bies | Sean Franzel | Eva Geulen | Ines Gries | Oliver Grill | Wolfgang Hottner | Anja Lemke | Helmut Müller-Sievers | Cornelia Ortlieb | Cornelia Zumbusc

    Ihr hertzliches Mitleiden wolten Gegen ... Heinrich Lincken ... Chymicum und Apotheker ... in Leipzig/ über das frühzeitige Absterben Seines ... Stief-Sohns/ Tit. Herrn Rudolphi Augusti Keffersteins/ ... Bey dessen/ den 29. Octobr. 1691. ... Beerdigung

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    Aus obliegender Schuldigkeit Eilfertigst bezeugen Des Selig Verschiedenen Treu-Verbundene Freunde Joh. Michael Faust, Med. Licent. M. Johann. Jacobus Faust, Argentoratense

    Succincta et brevis Artis Chemiae Instructio

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    Treulichen Aus unumstößlichen Fundament und Schrifften der berühmten so wohl alten als neuen Philosophen ... auffs deutlichste erkläret ... und an Tag gegeben von J. B. G.Aus: Francisci Epimethei Pandora / hrsg. von Johann Michael Faust. - 1706 erschienen als Anhang zu: "Joh. Michaelis Faustij ... Compendium Alchymist. Novum sive Pandora Explicata & Figuris Jllustrata

    Michael Rodriguez interviews fiction writer Michael Kimball

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    Author Michael Kimball talks about moving away from Michigan to become a successful writer, his education, the fiction reading series he has started in Baltimore, the life-story-on-postcard project, and his book "Dear everybody." Kimball is interviewed by Michigan State University Librarian Michael Rodriguez for the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series

    [Faust : Erster und zweiter Teil ; Illustrationen] / F. Simm. [Theodor] Knesing X.A. Michael X.A. E. Helm X.A. M. Weber sc. G. Hensenger. G. Heuer Kirmse X.A.

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    [FAUST : ERSTER UND ZWEITER TEIL ; ILLUSTRATIONEN] / F. SIMM. [THEODOR] KNESING X.A. MICHAEL X.A. E. HELM X.A. M. WEBER SC. G. HENSENGER. G. HEUER KIRMSE X.A. [Faust : Erster und zweiter Teil ; Illustrationen] / F. Simm. [Theodor] Knesing X.A. Michael X.A. E. Helm X.A. M. Weber sc. G. Hensenger. G. Heuer Kirmse X.A. (1) Illustrationen zu Faust, Erster Teil (1) Illustrationen zu Faust, Zweiter Teil (17

    Regulate to reduce chemical mixture risk

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    Humans and wildlife are continuously exposed to multiple chemicals from different sources and via different routes, both simultaneously and in sequence. Scientific evidence for heightened toxicity from such mixtures is mounting, yet regulation is lagging behind. Ensuring appropriate regulation of chemical mixture risks will require stronger legal stimuli as well as close integration of different parts of the regulatory systems in order to meet the data and testing requirements for mixture risk assessment. Until about a decade ago, toxicologists, risk assessors, and regulators regarded risks from chemical mixtures as negligible, as long as exposures to all single chemicals in the cocktail were below the levels judged to be safe for each chemical alone (1, 2). However, an increasing body of scientific evidence has challenged this notion, showing that a neglect of mixture effects can cause chemical risks to be underestimated (see the figure). International bodies such as the World Health Organization now acknowledge the need for considering mixtures in chemical risk assessment and regulation (3). This would align toxicological risk assessment with the clinical sciences and their long tradition of investigating drug-drug interactions. Yet, with few exceptions, regulatory systems around the world still focus overwhelmingly on single-chemical assessments, and the translation of scientific evidence about mixture effects into better regulation is extremely slow
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