enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Neil Young: Heart of Gold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_Young:_Heart_of_Gold

    Box office. $2.2 million [1] Neil Young: Heart of Gold is a 2006 American documentary / concert film by Jonathan Demme, featuring the Canadian/American singer and songwriter Neil Young. It documents Young's premiere of his songs from his album Prairie Wind at Ryman Auditorium. The film was produced in the summer of 2005 in Nashville, Tennessee.

  3. Cordial (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordial_(medicine)

    Cordial (medicine) Old apothecary bottles of the kind once used for cordials. A cordial is any invigorating and stimulating preparation that is intended for a medicinal purpose. The term derives from an obsolete usage. Various concoctions were formerly created that were believed to be beneficial to one's health, especially for the heart (cor in ...

  4. Gold-containing drugs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold-containing_drugs

    Gold-containing drugs. Gold-containing drugs are pharmaceuticals that contain gold. Sometimes these species are referred to as "gold salts". "Chrysotherapy" and "aurotherapy" are the applications of gold compounds to medicine. [1] Research on the medicinal effects of gold began in 1935, [2] primarily to reduce inflammation and to slow disease ...

  5. Heart of Gold (Neil Young song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_of_Gold_(Neil_Young...

    file. help. " Heart of Gold " is a song by Canadian singer-songwriter Neil Young. From his fourth album Harvest, it is Young's only U.S. No. 1 single. In Canada, it reached No. 1 on the RPM national singles chart for the first time on April 8, 1972, on which date Young held the top spot on both the singles and albums charts, and No. 1 again on ...

  6. Frank H. Netter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_H._Netter

    Frank H. Netter. Frank Henry Netter (25 April 1906 – 17 September 1991) was an American surgeon and medical illustrator. The first edition of his Atlas of Human Anatomy — his "personal Sistine Chapel " [1] — was published in 1989; he was a fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine where he was first published in 1957. [2]

  7. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Restaurant_at_the_End...

    Life, the Universe and Everything. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe is the second book in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy science fiction comedy "trilogy" by Douglas Adams. It was originally published by Pan Books as a paperback in 1980. Like the preceding novel, it was adapted from Adams' radio series, and became a critically ...

  8. Medical illustration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_illustration

    Medical illustrations have been made possibly since the beginning of medicine [1] in any case for hundreds (or thousands) of years. Many illuminated manuscripts and Arabic scholarly treatises of the medieval period contained illustrations representing various anatomical systems (circulatory, nervous, urogenital), pathologies, or treatment methodologies.

  9. Medieval medicine of Western Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_medicine_of...

    In the Middle Ages, the medicine of Western Europe was composed of a mixture of existing ideas from antiquity. In the Early Middle Ages, following the fall of the Western Roman Empire, standard medical knowledge was based chiefly upon surviving Greek and Roman texts, preserved in monasteries and elsewhere.