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Schutz
Schutz (german: shelter, protection) is a German surname, related to Schütz (which needs to be spelled ''Schuetz'' without umlaut ü). Notable people with the surname include: *Alfred Schutz, Phenomenological philosopher and sociologist *Bernard F. Schutz (born 1946), physicist *Dana Schutz, painter in New York * David Schütz, Israeli writer *Guillermo Schutz (born 1980), Mexican sports announcer *Heinrich Schütz, German composer *Herbert Schutz (1937-2018), German-born Canadian philologist *Ignaz Schütz (1867-1927), Czech–German mathematician and a physicist *Johan Christher Schütz, Swedish singer and composer * Katelin Schutz, physicist and cosmologist *Maurice Schutz, French actor * Peter W. Schutz (born 1930), Porsche manager * Philipp Balthasar Sinold von Schütz (1657–1742), German writer * Roger Louis Schutz-Marsauche (Frère Roger, 1915–2005) *Susan Polis Schutz, American poet *William Schutz, psychologist in the 1960s See also *Schutzjude, an old status for ...
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Dana Schutz
Dana Schutz (born 1976 in Livonia, Michigan) is an American artist who lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. Schutz is known for her gestural, figurative paintings that often take on specific subjects or narrative situations as a point of departure.Jarrett Earnest"In Conversation: Dana Schutz with Jarrett Earnest" ''The Brooklyn Rail'', June 2012. Early life and education Schutz was born and grew up in Livonia, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit.Fineman, Mia (January 15, 2006).Portrait of the Artist as a Paint-Splattered Googler" ''The New York Times''. Retrieved April 2, 2017. Her mother was an art teacher in a junior high school and an amateur painter, her father a high school counselor. An only child, Schutz graduated in 1995 from Adlai E. Stevenson High School. In 1999, while pursuing her BFA at the Cleveland Institute of Art, Schutz then went abroad to attend the Norwich School of Art and Design in Norwich, England. That same year, she participated in Maine's Skowhega ...
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Katelin Schutz
Katelin Schutz is an American particle physicist known for using cosmological observations to study dark sectors, that is new particles and forces that interact weakly with the visible world. She is a NASA Einstein Fellow and Pappalardo Fellow in the MIT Department of Physics. The American Physical Society awarded her the Sakurai Dissertation Award in theoretical particle physics in 2020, citing the highly original contributions from her PhD work. Early life Schutz grew up in rural western New York in the Finger Lakes region. In 2010, she graduated from Allendale Columbia School. Career Schutz attended MIT, where she did research with Max Tegmark, David Kaiser, and Tracy Slatyer. She was awarded a Hertz Fellowship and NSF Fellowship in 2014. She did her PhD with Hitoshi Murayama at UC Berkeley. She completed her thesis in 2019, titled "Searching for the invisible: how dark forces shape our Universe." Schutz joined McGill University in Montreal as an assistant professo ...
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Herbert Schutz
Herbert (Herb) Schutz (February 25, 1937 – January 1, 2018) was a German-born Canadian philologist who was Professor Emeritus and Chair of the Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies/Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures at Brock University. Biography Herbert Schutz was born in Germany on February 25, 1937. He emigrated to Canada in 1951. Schutz graduated from the Central Technical School in Toronto in 1956. Schutz obtained his BA from the University of Toronto in 1959, where he studied Ancient, Near Eastern, and Modern History. Obtaining his teaching qualifications at the Ontario College of Education, Schutz taught at Jarvis Collegiate Institute and Central Technical School, where he was head of the French department and as assistant head of Moderns. Obtaining his MA (1965) and PhD (1968) at the University of Toronto, Schutz taught at Brock University, where he became Professor in 1983. He subsequently served as Chairman of the Department of Germanic and Slavic Studies ...
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William Schutz
William Schutz (December 19, 1925 – November 9, 2002) was an American psychologist.Ancestry.com: Social Security Death Index
Accessed June 19, 2009
''Los Angeles Times'' Obituary
Accessed June 19, 2009


Biography

Schutz was born in , . He practiced at the



Susan Polis Schutz
Susan Polis Schutz (née Polis; born May 23, 1944) is an American poet, film-maker, and businesswoman who co-founded the greeting card and book publisher Blue Mountain Arts. She is the mother of Colorado Governor Jared Polis. Early life and education Schutz was born in Peekskill, New York, and is the daughter of June (née Keller) and David Polis. Her grandparents were Jewish immigrants from Russia. Schutz earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Rider University in 1966, where she studied English and biology. Career After earning her undergraduate degree, Schutz worked as a teacher and social worker in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan. She also took graduate courses in psychology and worked as a freelance writer for local publications. Schutz and Blue Mountain Arts came to wider attention with the founding, in 1996, of the bluemountain.com website. One of the earliest experiments with the electronic greeting card medium, the site was widely adopted by web users. In 1999, the ...
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Maurice Schutz
Maurice Schutz (4 August 1866 – 22 March 1955) was a French film actor. He starred in some 91 films between 1918 and 1952. Selected filmography * ''Quatre-vingt-treize'' (1920) * '' Au-delà des lois humaines'' (1920) * ''The Three Masks'' (1921) * '' Tillers of the Soil'' (1923) * '' Little Jacques'' (1923) * ''The Phantom of the Moulin Rouge'' (1925) * ''Montmartre'' (1925) * ''Jean Chouan'' (1926) * ''The Imaginary Voyage'' (1926) * ''Napoléon'' (1927) * ''The Passion of Joan of Arc'' (1928) * '' Verdun: Visions of History'' (1928) * ''Venus'' (1929) * ''A Foolish Maiden'' (1929) * ''The Devil's Holiday'' (1931) * ''Vampyr'' (1932) * ''Fantômas'' (1932) * ''Pasteur'' (1935) * ''The Call of Silence'' (1936) * ''The Assault'' (1936) * ''Three Waltzes'' (1938) * ''Gargousse'' (1938) * ''The Novel of Werther'' (1938) * ''La Symphonie fantastique'' (1942) * '' Jeannou'' (1943) * '' The Captain'' (1946) * '' The Murderer is Not Guilty'' (1946) * ''The Village of Wrath'' (1947) ...
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Schutzjude
''Schutzjude'' (, "protected Jew") was a status for German Jews granted by the imperial, princely or royal courts. Within the Holy Roman Empire, except some eastern territories gained by the Empire in the 11th and 12th centuries (e.g. Brandenburg), Jews usually had the status of Servi camerae regis. This status included imperial protection and the levying of special taxes on the Jews for the Empire's treasury (Latin: camera regis). But the emperors, always short of money, alienated – by sale or pledge – their privilege to levy extra taxes on Jews, not all at once, but territory by territory to different creditors and purchasers. Thus Jews lost their – not always reliable – imperial protection. Many territories that gained supremacy over the Jews living within their boundaries subsequently expelled them. After the general expulsions of the Jews from a given territory often only single Jews – if any at all – would be granted the personal privilege to reside within th ...
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Heinrich Schütz
Heinrich Schütz (; 6 November 1672) was a German early Baroque composer and organist, generally regarded as the most important German composer before Johann Sebastian Bach, as well as one of the most important composers of the 17th century. He is credited with bringing the Italian style to Germany and continuing its evolution from the Renaissance into the Early Baroque. Most of his surviving music was written for the Lutheran church, primarily for the Electoral Chapel in Dresden. He wrote what is traditionally considered the first German opera, ''Dafne'', performed at Torgau in 1627, the music of which has since been lost, along with nearly all of his ceremonial and theatrical scores. Schütz was a prolific composer, with more than 500 surviving works. He is commemorated as a musician in the Calendar of Saints of some North American Lutheran churches on 28 July with Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frideric Handel. Early life Schütz was born in Köstritz, the eldest son of C ...
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Schütze
''Schütze'' in German means "rifleman" or "shooter", or in older terms originally connoted "archer" before the advent of the rifle. It also occasionally occurs as a surname, or as Schütz, as in the opera ''Der Freischütz''. The word itself is derived from the German word ''schützen'', meaning to protect, or to guard. It was originally used for archers as they protected castle walls, and is the German equivalent to Sagittarius, the mythical form which held bow and arrow. Overview As a rank of the Armed Forces of Germany in First World War until 1918, ''Schütze'' was used for the lowest enlisted ranks in machine gun units and some elite troops like Saxon ''Schützen''-Regiment 108 exclusively. Usually translated as "private", from 1920 on it names the lowest enlisted rank of the ''Reichswehr'' infantry. The equivalent of ''Schütze'' in the other branches of the German military was ''Jäger'', ''Kanonier'', ''Pionier'', ''Kraftfahrer'' or ''Grenadier'' in the army; ''Flieger'' ...
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David Schütz
David Schütz ( he, דוד שיץ, August 5, 1941 – July 16, 2017) was an Israeli fiction writer. Biography David Schütz (birth name Dietmar Engbert Müllner) was born in Berlin and immigrated to Israel at the age of seven. He had a master's degree in History from The Hebrew University and also studied cinema at the BFI. Schütz published 9 books. His first book "The Grass and the Sand" ( he, העשב והחול) was published in 1978. The book was translated into French (L'herbe et le sable : roman) and German (Gras und Sand : roman). He received a number of literary prizes, including the Bernstein Prize (original Hebrew novel category) in 1988.David Schütz Awards ''(in Hebrew)''
'' Ben-Gurion University website''
His experiences as a child and adolescent were central ...
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Schütz
Schütz (also spelled ''Schuetz'' without Umlaut ü) is a German surname, deriving from ''Schütze'' (shooter/marksman). Notable people with the surname include: People * Alfred Schütz (1899–1959), sociologist and philosopher * Antal Schütz (1880-1953), Hungarian piarist monk and prominent theologian * Caspar Schütz (1540–1594), German historian * Christian Gottfried Schütz (1747–1832), German humanist scholar * Christoph Schütz (1689–1750), German pietist writer and songbook publisher * David Schütz (born 1941), Israeli writer * Felix Schütz (born 1987), German ice hockey player * Franz Schütz (1900–1955), German footballer * Friedrich Schütz (1844–1908), Austrian journalist * Günther Schütz (1912–1991), German military intelligence (''Abwehr'') agent during World War II * Heinrich Schütz (1585–1672), German composer and organist * Ignaz Schütz (1867–1927), Czech–German mathematician and physicist * Johan Christher Schütz, Swedish songwr ...
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Frère Roger
Roger Schütz (12 May 1915 – 16 August 2005), popularly known as Brother Roger (french: Frère Roger), was a Swiss Christian leader and monastic brother. In 1940 Schütz founded the Taizé Community, an ecumenical monastic community in Burgundy, France, serving as its first prior until his murder in 2005. Towards the end of his life, the Taizé Community was attracting international attention, welcoming thousands of young pilgrims every week, which it has continued to do after his death. Biography Background and early life Born on 12 May 1915, in Provence, Vaud, Schütz was the ninth and youngest child of Karl Ulrich Schütz, a Protestant pastor from Bachs in the Zürcher Unterland in Switzerland, and his wife, Amélie Henriette Marsauche, a Huguenot from Burgundy, France. From 1937 to 1940, Schütz-Marsauche studied Reformed theology in Strasbourg and Lausanne, where he was a leader in the Swiss Student Christian Movement, part of the World Student Christian Federation. F ...
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