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Bland-Altmann-Diagram.
The Bland-Altmann-Diagram suggests a good agreement of the image graders that evaluated the size of the FAZ (ICC of 0.788).</p
Bernhard Altmann family collection 1916-1987 1933-1966
The collection holds personal and official papers, photographs, documents, correspondence, memoirs and notes pertaining to four generations of the Altmann family. Topics of the collection are, among others, the lives of the family members in Austria-Hungary, in pre-war Austria, during the emigration process, and in the United States. Part of the material focuses on the family’s genealogy.Bernhard Altmann was born in 1888 in Przemyśl, Galizia, Austria (today Przemyśl, Poland), the son of Karl Chaskel Altmann and Karoline Keile Altmann. Karl Chaskel Altmann was born in Bachory (close to Oleszyce, Galizia) in 1864, the son of Moses Altmann; he was one of many members of the Altmann family engaged in the textile industry.Bernhard Altmann became a textile manufacturer in Vienna, where he and his family – his first wife Nelly Cornelia Altmann and several siblings –¬ lived, until they had to flee Vienna after the “Anschluss” in March 1938. Bernhard Altmann entered the Viennese textile business in 1915. 1919 he established his first company, which expanded in Vienna as well as in various other places, among others in Moscow and Paris and had grown to more than 1000 employees by the time it was “Aryanized” in 1938. Some of the family members were engaged in textile companies by Bernhard Altmann in Vienna and Liverpool. Bernhard Altmann, who fled to Liverpool via Paris in 1938, supported several family members in escaping Vienna in 1938, among them his wife Nelly and his brothers Max, Julius and Fritz with their families.After having fled Austria, Bernhard Altmann lived in England; in the United States, where he started successful cashmere textile companies; back in Austria; and in Switzerland, where he died in Zurich in 1960.Finding aid available online.See B. Altmann's book "Drei Jahre Aufbauarbeit in Wien"Processeddigitize
Ruth Rogers-Altmann Collection. 1920s-2002
This collection contains materials about fashion designer and artist Ruth Lotte Rogers-Altmann née Karplus (1917- ). Documents found here include photocopies of professional materials and clippings relating to her career as a ski fashion designer, as well as some photographs.Ruth Altmann, November 1999Ruth Lotte Rogers-Altmann née Karplus (1917- ), fashion designer and artist, was born in Vienna (Austria). Her father Arnold Karplus was an architectural engineer, as well as an amateur ski teacher. He taught her skiing as a child, and she won numerous prizes in the Swiss Alps and Austrian Tyrol while studying fashion design at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Vienna between 1934 and 1938. She also worked as a stylist at Herzmansky, Vienna’s largest department store. In May 1938 she immigrated to the United States, and in September 1938 she married Dr. Rogers. She became one of the leading ski and sports clothing designers in America, and also wrote for various fashion magazines. In New York she established her own consulting firm, and she launched Bloomingdale’s first skiwear center. In 1951 she established Ruth Rogers Enterprises (RRE), a management consulting service for apparel manufactures, specializing in design and styling. She later married Hans Altmann.Austrian Heritage CollectionSee also AHC interview with Ruth AltmannRuth Altmann contributed to the project 'Verlorene Nachbarschaft'Processeddigitize
Siegfried Altmann Collection 1872-1963
The bulk of the collection consists of correspondence of Siegfried Altmann with rabbis, politicians, physicians, authors. The correspondence deals with various topics including Altmann's activities with the Blindeninstitut, and later with the Austrian Institute, among which is a benefit for the Vienna Opera in the late 1940s, with Zionism, and with literary and cultural matters.The following individuals are also mentioned in this collection:Altenberg, Peter, writer, 1859-1919; Beer-Hofmann, Richard, writer, 1866-1945; Broch, Hermann, writer, 1886-1951; Chajes, Hirsch Perez, rabbi, 1876-1927; Feuchtwang, David: rabbi, 1864-1936; Freud, Anna; Gurlitt, Ludwig, 1855-1931; Hayek, Max, writer; Kaestner, Erich, writer, born 1899; Karlweis, Oscar, actor; Kastein, Josef, writer, 1890-1946; Kraus, Karl, writer, 1874-1936; Lehmann, Lotte, singer, 1874-1936; Liliencron, Detlev Baron v., writer, 1844-1909; Loewi, Otto, pharmacologist, 1873-1961; Mamroth, S., editor; Schnabel, Arthur, pianist, 1882-1951; Schnitzler, Henry; Serkin, Rudolf, pianist, born 1903; Sonnenfeld, Kurt; Straus, Oscar, Composer, 1870-1954; Torberg, Friedrich, writer, born 1908; Trebitsch, Siegfried, writer 1869-1956; Walter, Bruno, conductor, 1876-1962; Ziegler, Ignaz, rabbi, born 1861.A memoir by Altmann is catalogued separately in the memoir collection, ME 11.There is also a photo album of the Israelitisches Blinden-Institut, (including poems by Ludwig August FranklBorn in Nikolsburg, Austria Hungary (now Mikulow, Czechoslovakia), on July 12, 1887, Siegfried Altmann studied social work and became director of Israelitisches Blindeninstitut, Vienna. He emigrated to the United States in 1939 and served as business director of the Austrian Institute in New York from 1943 until 1958, when he became its director. He died in New York City on September 14, 1963.The Israelitisches Blinden-Institut was founded upon an initiative of Ludwig August Frankl; Jonas Freiherr von Königswarter donated the building, which was inducted on December 1. 1872, with Rabbi Adolf Jellinek and Cantor Salomon Sulzer being present. The institute took care of blind children and young adults, providing them with vocational training.10-page inventory.Photographs removed to Photograph CollectionProcesseddigitize
Purity, taboo and food in antiquity: theoretical and methodological issues
The essays analyize similarities and differences between Lev 11 and Deut 14 in their respective contexts. Utilizing the theoretical perspective provided by Dan Sperber, the essay fleshes out the significance of the diachronic and synchronic difference with regard to the genesis of the prohibitions as well as their reception in Judais
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the antetorsion angle measurement.
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the antetorsion angle measurement.</p
Hans Heinz Altmann Collection 1930-1973
This Collection contains the files of the restitution cases handled by the lawyer Hans-Heinz Altmann. It consists primarily of legal correspondence; medical opinions, attestations, insurance records or income statements are frequently enclosed. Although the focus is clearly on the legal bearings of the individual cases, the material also gives insight into the difficulties displacement and emigration inflicted upon the refugees. This becomes especially obvious in regard to the clients’ trouble procuring documentation and affidavits or finding attesters substantiating their restitution.Hans Heinz Altmann was born in Breslau in 1908. He was a lawyer for the Jewish community in Berlin between 1933 and 1939, when he immigrated to South America. He first lived in Bolivia, but settled in Argentina in 1944, where he worked for the Joint Distribution Commitee as a bookkeeper. He then was a lawyer, helping Jewish immigrants with restitution claims. In 1973, he returned to Germany and was active in the Jewish community of Freiburg. He died on October 2, 1993.See also Hans Heinz Altmann's memoirs "Grenzsituationen meines Lebens" (Freiburg 1991) in the LBI library, DS 135 G5 A5
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the varus/valgus angle of the tibia.
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the varus/valgus angle of the tibia.</p
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the femoral varus/vagus angle.
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the femoral varus/vagus angle.</p
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the tibial torsion angle.
Comparison of the VoXim® method with the 3D Slicer method using a modified Bland-Altmann-Diagram for the tibial torsion angle.</p
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