Reinhold Merten

  • -

Reinhold Merten

Reinhold Merten dirigiert 1926 bei einer Radio-Liveübetragung Bild © hr-Archiv

Reinhold Adolf Merten (June 6, 1894 in Wiesbaden; August 19, 1943 in Munich[1][2]) was a German conductor and physician.

Coming from a family of musicians, Merten initially attended the conservatory in Wiesbaden, but then studied medicine at the Philipps University of Marburg and the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main, and served as a medical officer in World War I. After the war, he received his doctorate from the University of Frankfurt with a dissertation on acid-fast, tubercle-like bacilli in wind instruments (1933).

Merten did not work as a doctor, however, but became a solo répétiteur at the Frankfurt Opera in 1920. Together with Paul Hindemith, he founded the Frankfurter Gemeinschaft für Musik in 1922. After the Südwestdeutsche Rundfunkdienst AG (Radio Frankfurt) began operations in Frankfurt am Main in April 1924, several musicians gathered under Merten’s direction in the station’s studio in the old postal savings bank on Stephanstrasse and played ensemble music. From 1926, he worked in Frankfurt as an organist and pianist. In 1927, he joined the SPD, a party he remained a member of until 1931. On October 1, 1929, the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra was founded, with Hans Rosbaud as first and Reinhold Merten as second conductor.

In addition to his musical activities, he was a “music official” at the radio station. On April 1, 1933, he joined the Nazi Party (membership number 1,795,051). In 1934, he was tasked with establishing a sound engineering school in Berlin. In 1938, he became head of the acoustic-musical border areas department of the Central Technical Directorate within the Reich Broadcasting Company in Dresden. In 1939, he moved to the Great Orchestra of the Reichssender Leipzig as chief conductor. He remained there until the station was shut down in 1940 due to the war. He also taught applied musicology at the University of Freiburg.

In 1941, he went to the Reichssender Munich as first Kapellmeister. After a serious illness, he died in Munich in 1943.

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reinhold_Merten

https://www.hr-sinfonieorchester.de/orchester/historie/90-jahre-special/die-anfaenge-19261929-reinhold-merten,chefdirigent-anfaenge-102.html


  • -

André Lee

He has been playing the violin since he was 6 years old and has studied with Prof. Michael Goldstein (Hamburg University of Music, First Concertmaster of the Hamburg Philharmonic State Orchestra), Prof. Wilfried Laatz (Lübeck University of Music), and Prof. Ingolf Turban (Munich University of Music), among others, and continues to be active in various orchestras and chamber music.
Since November 2020, he has returned to the IMMM as a tenure-track junior professor.

https://dgfmm.org/die-gesellschaft/vorstand-beirat/dr-andre-lee

https://www.akademie-fuer-handrehabilitation.de/handtherapeut/das-team/prof-dr-andre-lee.php#reloaded

https://iabnetz.de/?author=48407

https://www.bundesakademie.de/akademie/dozent-innen/details/dozent/andre-lee

https://www.immm.hmtm-hannover.de/de/institut/personen/andre-lee


  • -

Thomas Löffler

Playing the piano is my passion and I am happy that I can still practice it today, even though I decided to study medicine rather than music.


  • -

  • -

Marion Kiechle

Marion Brigitta Kiechle (formerly Kiechle-Schwarz; born April 4, 1960 in Oberkirch) is a German physician, scientist, author, and former politician (CSU). Since October 2000, she has been Director of the Gynaecology Clinic at the Klinikum rechts der Isar of the Technical University of Munich and holds the Chair of Gynecology and Obstetrics.

On March 21, 2018, Markus Söder appointed her to his cabinet as Bavarian Minister of Science. Kiechle is chair of the Bavarian Bioethics Commission and deputy chair of the Central Ethics Committee for Stem Cell Research. Initially independent, she joined the CSU in April 2018 and, on the 21st of that month, was placed in the hopeless fifth place on the Upper Bavaria district list for the 2018 Bavarian state election. After the end of the legislative period in November 2018, she left the government and returned to TUM.

Engagement

Since 2021, Marion Kiechle has been chairwoman of the board of trustees for the Hospice House of Life project in Munich. Since February 2023, she has been a member of the administrative advisory board of FC Bayern Munich.

Privates

Since April 2010, she has been married to television journalist and sports commentator Marcel Reif, her fourth wife. Before that, she was married to a special education teacher and two doctors.

https://www.professoren.tum.de/kiechle-marion

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marion_Kiechle

https://www.facebook.com/prof.kiechle


  • -

Andreas Sliwka

Andreas Sliwka is a gynecologist, psychotherapist, and yoga instructor in Unterföhring. He also holds consultations for refugees. Sliwka has traveled to crisis areas repeatedly.Foto: Catherina Hess

Multiple deployments as a doctor in various crisis areas in the Third World – in the Congo after the genocide in Rwanda, in the jungle clinic on Mindanao (Philippines), and most recently several deployments as a ship’s doctor in sea rescue operations off the coast of Libya – are expressions of my self-image as a physician.

My own search led me to the Eastern wisdom teachings. Training as a yoga teacher with my own yoga school for 10 years was an important step on this path. I currently practice Zen meditation according to the Soto school.

Wegmarken

My interest in philosophy and art arose in my youth. A milestone in this regard was Fritjof Capra’s book “Wendezeit” (The Turning Point) during my medical studies. He successfully established a connection between quantum physics and Eastern wisdom teachings, which has accompanied me throughout my life. About 20 years ago, Ken Wilber’s “Integral Theory” initiated a further development in my thinking. Integral Theory emerged from transpersonal psychology, a psychological development in the USA that integrated the spiritual aspects of human existence into psychotherapy. This form of therapy now also has a firm foothold in Germany (for example, at the Heiligenfeld Psychosomatic Clinic).

https://www.integrale-psychotherapie-muenchen.de

https://www.sueddeutsche.de/muenchen/landkreismuenchen/unterfoehringer-im-hilfseinsatz-die-fluechtlinge-kommen-so-oder-so-1.3619925


  • -

Rudolf Rehbach

In his time as medical student ans assistant doctor Rehbach still had time for his artistic ambitions. Georg Brenninger and Emil Krieger were supporting him at the Munich Art Academy. He got further impulses from the Phantastic Realism of the Vienna School – Ernst Fuchs and Aric Brauer were protagonists here. But also surrealism – especially Salvador Dalí and Max Ernst wer influencing his visions of shape as well as Henry Moore.

Based on this he mainly makes small sculptures of bronce in the magical-mystical world between erotics and sexuality – as a free style of the new era.

Though his main work for the last 1 5years (2007) is obstetrics and cytology in Neufahrn near Munich/Bavaria/Germany. He is member of an art circle in Echingen and participated in several exhibitions and got a great response about his work.

Nachfolgerin der Praxis


  • -

Pharmacist Tennis Championship

Willkommen zur 31. Apotheker Tennismeisterschaft 2025!
Ismaning near Munich/Bavaria

The Pharmacist Tennis Championship is the sporting highlight for all tennis-loving pharmacists, PTAs, and PKAs from across Germany. Whether you’re a passionate team player or an ambitious recreational player, the focus is on the fun of the game, athletic competition, and friendly camaraderie. Competitions are held in various skill levels, complemented by a friendly “Schleiferl” tournament for accompanying adults and anyone who prefers a more relaxed game. Sanacorp is delighted to be organizing this long-established and established tournament for the first time in 2025. You can expect a tournament day with exciting matches, a great atmosphere, refreshments throughout the day, and a communal dinner. The Pharmacist Tennis Championship 2025 – where tennis and pharmacy meet.

https://www.sanacorp.de/tennis


  • -

German Ski and croos-country championships

The German Pharmacists’ Ski and Cross-Country Championships were a complete success! Whether downhill skiing, cross-country skiing, or snowboarding – exciting competitions and a fantastic audience ensured a great atmosphere on and off the slopes. There were also plenty of opportunities to network with colleagues, industry insiders, and manufacturers. To give everyone a taste of the unique atmosphere, we created a video of the last event – ​​full of action, emotions, and unforgettable moments!

https://www.sanacorp.de/ski


  • -

Werner Bartens

Werner Bartens (born 11 July 1966 in Göttingen) is a German physician, historian, science journalist and non-fiction author.

Werner Bartens was born the second child of Werner Bartens and his wife Luise, née Marienhagen, in Göttingen and grew up in Niedernjesa. He attended primary school in Reinhausen and then the Hainberg-Gymnasium in Göttingen, where he graduated from high school in 1985. From 1985 to 1993, Bartens studied medicine, history, and German at the universities of Giessen, Freiburg, Montpellier, and Washington D.C. In the fall of 1988, he completed a clinical internship in the emergency department at the Royal Infirmary in Cardiff, Wales. In 1991, he completed clinical internships at the University Hospital of Freiburg, the Urban Hospital in Berlin, and in cardiology at the Bad Krozingen rehabilitation center. In 1992, he received his medical degree and subsequently worked as a research fellow at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland.

In 1993 he passed the German state examination in medicine at the University of Freiburg and received his doctorate there in the same year under Christoph Wanner with a thesis on lipid metabolism disorders in nephrotic syndrome with special emphasis on lipoprotein(a). In 1995 he also received his master’s degree in history and German studies in Freiburg with a thesis supervised by Gerd Krumeich on racial theories in the 19th and 20th centuries.[1] After working as a doctor at the university hospitals in Freiburg and Würzburg, he held a fellowship at the Max Planck Institute for Immunobiology in the research group of Nobel laureate Georges Köhler. From 1997 onwards, Bartens worked as an author, translator, freelance journalist and editor for the Süddeutsche Zeitung, Die Zeit, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, die tageszeitung and the Badische Zeitung. Since 2005 he has been an editor in the science department of the Süddeutsche Zeitung, and since 2008 he has been editor-in-chief.

In addition to his journalistic work, he has published numerous books with a total circulation of 1 million copies, which have been translated into 14 languages. Some of them, such as “Body Happiness,” “The Doctor Hater Book,” and “The Encyclopedia of Medical Errors,” quickly became bestsellers, some of them remaining on the bestseller lists for months. He has received numerous journalism awards for his publications, including several Science Journalist of the Year awards.

He also became known to a wider public through appearances on talk shows on German and Austrian television.

Bartens lives near Munich.

web

youtube

wikipedia DE

facebook

Portrait SZ Süddeutsche Zeitung

X