"Alan Peter Wells" is an English cricketer. He played for Sussex County Cricket Club/Sussex from 1981 to 1996, where he was captain from 1992 to 1996. He then played for Kent County Cricket Club/Kent from 1997 to 2000. In total he played 376 first-class cricket/first-class matches in a career spanning twenty seasons, with a batting average of 38.57 and a top score of 253 not out (against Yorkshire County Cricket Club/Yorkshire at Middlesbrough in 1991).

He only played twice for England cricket team/England, once in a Test cricket/Test match (where he was dismissed for a duck (cricket)/golden duck by the West Indies cricket team/West Indian fast bowler Curtly Ambrose) and once in a One Day International. In 1989-90, Wells joined the South African rebel tours/rebel tour of South Africa.

More Alan Wells on Wikipedia.

Adolf Hitler spoke of Germany as a body with himself as the doctor. He wanted to make Germany 'healthy' by eliminating diseased, unhealthy parts of the body. Early on, this meant killing the disabled. But because the Nazis also believed that Jews possessed 'bad' genes, they, too, came to be portrayed by public health 'experts' and 'scientists' as a threat to racial purity and a healthy nation.

Many of these Skills for Life qualifications are at level 2 and many of them are being gained by 16- to 18-year-olds in college.

We want to understand why healers became killers and use our understanding as a guide for medicine today, ... Even though the horrors of the Holocaust seem to be so long ago, we can never forget this history because it continues to affect medical ethics today. For example, one reason doctors today are so concerned about racial and ethnic health disparities is because .

During the 1930s, the German medical establishment was admired as a world leader in innovative public health and medical research.