23,186 research outputs found
[Stammbuch C. F. Schultz]
[STAMMBUCH C. F. SCHULTZ]
[Stammbuch C. F. Schultz] (1)
Cover (1)
Titelblatt (8)
Titelblatt (9)
Einträge S. 1 - 39 (10)
Einträge S. 40 - 79 (24)
Einträge S. 80 - 118 (40)
Einträge S. 119 - 159 (59)
Einträge S. 160 - 210 (73)
Register (88
[Stammbuch Christoph Heinrich Andreas Schultz] / C H A Schultz
[STAMMBUCH CHRISTOPH HEINRICH ANDREAS SCHULTZ] / C H A SCHULTZ
[Stammbuch Christoph Heinrich Andreas Schultz] / C H A Schultz (1)
Cover (1)
Einträge S. 17 - 49 (9)
Einträge S. 50 - 99 (21)
Einträge S. 100 - 149 (43)
Einträge S. 150 - 158 (62)
Einträge Bl. 60 - 86 (66
C. Bertrand Schultz & an unidentified man at the Cather homestead site
C. Bertrand Schultz & an unidentified man at the Cather homestead sit
Hessie Schultz.
Hessie grew up on a sugar cane farm near Ayr, North Queensland and was educated in Charters Towers. After the death of her mother in 1924, she kept house for her widower father until his death in 1937. On 12th April 1942 she married Charles Noel Schultz in Townsville. Charlie was a pastoralist, horseman, stockman, drover and owner of Humbert River Station in the Northern Territory. Hessie began to civilise the station and living conditions improved, they eventually built a new and larger homestead. Hessie brought up her two girls Donna and Betty and fostered many other children including Les Humbert who was the Northern Territory's most successful jockey in over 100 years, Larry Johns, Rosie Gordon and Roy Harrington. In 1952 she took Roger Steele under her wing for a few years. Hessie and Charlie empathised with the predicament of the Aboriginal Territorians and came to an arrangement with the Department of Native Affairs to look after and educate a number of half-caste children, many from other districts. Hessie defied the instructions to leave the station when told to evacuate during the war. She and Charlie often went to visit the soldiers camped at Victoria River Downs property or have them over to Humbert for a home cooked meal. They sold Humbert River Station in 1971 and moved to Yankalilla, South Australia where they continued their interest in race horses for many years.Pastoralis
C. G. Schultz
C. G. SCHULTZ29th August 1905- 17th July 1958 The bells of Asmild church tolled out across Viborg Lake, in the hour that C. G. Schultz was laid to rest in the capital - far from that Jutland to which he had devoted so much of his life. The ancient monuments of Jutland occupied him more and more in his later years, and the list of his discoveries there is impressive: Asmild's remarkable plan with its east and west chancels, the fortress construction around Malling church, the crypt under Our Lady's in Aarhus, the ring-forts at Aggersborg and Fyrkat, the model ship at Hvilsager, the rune stone at Asmild, the baluster pillar at Vitskøl and much more. With untiring zeal he investigated discoveries great and small, and incorporated them in our knowledge of Jutland's early history.From the architect school of the Academy C. G. Schultz came as pupil to C. M. Smidt, the restoration architect of the National Museum, and on the latter's retirement C. G. Schultz was an obvious choice as his successor. But long before this Schultz had made his reputation as a masterly archeologist and a telling and clearsighted writer. He ranged widely, but the culture of his native land around the year AD 1000 became the central point of his research. Our knowledge today of our oldest cathedrals is primarily due to him, and in recreating the pimpstone crypt under Our Lady's he gave us literally an insight into a building tradition which none knew better than he. He loved to work in the old material, he admired the ancient craftsmanship, and he could himself, if it was called for, shape a pimpstone block.We who now must look in vain for the publications which we might have expected from his pen may comfort ourselves with the fact that he left this work in stone completed. The Jutland Archeological Society has decided to set a tablet to his memory in this crypt. No better place could have been chosen.Harald Langberg
\u3ci\u3eParabos dodsoni\u3c/i\u3e Barbour and Schultz: A Correction
A Bos-like animal, Parabos dodsoni, was recently described by Barbour and Schultz (1941, A New Fossil Bovid from Nebraska , Bull. Univ. Nebr. State Museum, Vol. II, No. 7, pp. 63-66, Figs. 24-27, December) as a new genus and species from the Pleistocene of Nebraska. Attention has been called to the writers by Dr. E. H. Colbert of the American Museum of Natural History that the name Parabos is preoccupied. Parabos was introduced as a generic name by C. Arambourg and J. Piveteau (1929, Note preliminaire sur un Ruminant du Pliocene inferieur du Roussillon, C. R. Bull. Soc. Geol. de France, 4th Ser., XXIX, pp. 144-146). Unfortunately the reference was missed by the present writers as well as by the editors of the Zoological Record (1929-1939).
The writers propose the name Platycerabos to replace Parabos for the new American bovid. The corrected designation would thus be Platycerabos dodsoni (Barbour and Schultz).
The occurrence of a Bos-like form from the Pleistocene of North America is unique. It has long been thought that the migration of true bovines from Asia to North America during the Pleistocene was limited to Bison, but the discovery of Platycerabos dodsoni has altered this belief
Alice Schultz
Alice M. Schultz is a Florida-registered architect with 29 years of professional experience, with a focus on southern climate Industrial Facilities and Commercial Construction, including Unique Structures. She received her BArch degree (1994) from the Boston Architectural College (BAC), and Certificate in Sustainable Design (2011). For the last fourteen years she has worked on a multi-discipline A&E team in support of aerospace infrastructure, primarily for the design of launch facilities and equipment for NASA at Kennedy Space Center.
She is adept in addressing ease of access and functional space design along with infrastructure security, and ensuring building envelope performance for the design of high-performance facilities which integrate complex building systems.https://commons.erau.edu/space-congress-bios-2018/1019/thumbnail.jp
Marriage record of Schultz, Gustave C. and Roberts, Emily Virginia
Marriage license for Gustave C. Schultz and Emily Virginia Roberts. Grant J. Akin was the Notary Public
Carl A. Hanson to Robert Schultz, April 10, 1965
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April 10, 1965
General Kobert Schultz
300 Carlisle Street
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
Dear General Schulta:
It might be helpful for you and for us if you had the dates when
the Board of Trustees of Gettysburg College will be meeting during
the remainder of this year and during the next academic year in
order that we might compete for the General's time in the calendar
struggle. The schedule of meetings for the Board of Trustees is
as follows:
June 5, 1965 - Saturday, 9-11:00 A.M.
September 24-25, 1965 - Friday and Saturday
December 14, 1965
March 5, 1966
June 4, 1966
In connection with the September 24th and 25th meeting of the
Board, the College will be celebrating the dedication of the Musselman
Stadium and we would want very much to have General Eisenhower
present for the luncheon on September 25 and for the exercises which
follow in the new stadium. Since Bucknell University and Gettysburg
will meet in an obviously spirited football game immediately follow¬
ing the dedication, we have outlined the Commonwealth interest
involved and have thus invited Governor and Mrs. Scranton to be
present. I would be interested whether you feel that it would be wise
for us to send the General a special letter of invitation for the activities
on September 25. I will be glad, of course, to do this if you feel it wise.
Sincerely,
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/ C. A. Hanso
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