137,517 research outputs found
Concilium : hje in dem Buoch wirt disputiert, das Puren lang Zyt hat verfürt, Heylgen Fürbitt, ouch des Bapsts Gwallt, vom Fägfhür, ouch was dMäss innhalt. Dessglychen von dem Sacrament, von Zinss, Zähenden, Güllt und Rennt. Von Bycht, was die vor Gott nützt, darumb hie Pur gegen Doctor sitzt. ...
[Utz Eckstein]Impressum gemäss VischerBogensignaturen: A-K
Klag des Glaubens, der Hoffnung, und auch der Liebe, uber alle Stend der Christenheit, der Geystlichen und Weltlichen
Alles vor 65. Jaren von ... Utz Eckstein beschriben, und jetz ... widerumb an tag gebrachtErscheinungsjahr aus dem Kolophon: "anno M D XCII.
Experimental study of longitudinal and transverse spin polarization in LEED from platinum (111)
Bauer P, Eckstein W, Müller N. Experimental study of longitudinal and transverse spin polarization in LEED from platinum (111). Zeitschrift für Physik, B: Condensed Matter. 1983;52(3):185-192
Eckstein, Jane (Bailey), d. 1833 (SC 3153)
Finding aid and full-text typescript of letter (Click on Additional Files below) for Manuscripts Small Collection 3153. Letter, 25 April 1832, of Jane Eckstein, Frankfort, Kentucky, to her daughter Mary Kinmont in Cincinnati, Ohio. She details an approaching move to Millersburg, Kentucky, where Mary’s father, the artist Frederick Eckstein, will open a school. She relates news of Mary’s siblings, asks her about family matters in Cincinnati, and offers advice on nursing her young child
Concilium : Hje in de[m] buoch wirt disputier Das puren lang zyt hat verfürt, Heilge[n] fürbit/ ouch des Basts Gwalt, vom Fägfhür/ ouch was d'Mäss in[n]halt ...
[Utz Eckstein]Impressum gemäss VischerBogensignaturen: A-J
Correspondence to George Eckstein
Envelope: Tan envelope addressed to Georg Eckstein, New York City. Includes censor tape on back.Letter: Typewritten letter in German on onionskin paper.
Information Provided by Michael D. Bulmash: One of two letters to George Eckstein (2012.1.517 & 2012.1.519). Eckstein was a Jew who escaped from Nazi Europe and who attempted to aid others in their attempts to flee. The airmail envelope was postmarked from Brunn, old capital of the Austrian crownland of Moravia and (at the time the letter was mailed) part of the Nazi Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (formerly Czechoslovakia). Although the envelope was passed by Nazi censors, it lacks the typical identifying numbers of individual censors. The letter passed through the Protectorate\u27s mail system, the day Hitler planned to begin invasions of Holland, Belgium and Luxembourg. These invasions began on May 9, when this letter passed through Frankfurt. This signaled the beginning of the war on the Western Front.In this letter a European Jew asked Eckstein to help arrange for the writer\u27s relatives in the United States to pay for tickets to the US, as his family was destitute. He did not want American immigration authorities to believe that his family would add to the welfare roll if the local Jewish congregation bought the tickets.https://digital.kenyon.edu/bulmash/2232/thumbnail.jp
Correspondence to George Eckstein
Envelope: Grey envelope with typewritten address to Georg Eckstein in New York City. Includes handwritten return address and censor tape on back.Letters: Typewritten letters on thin paper. Includes handwritten additions.
Information Provided by Michael D. Bulmash: One of two letters to George Eckstein (2012.1.517 & 2012.1.519). Eckstein was a Jew who escaped from Nazi Europe and who attempted to aid others in their attempts to flee. This envelope was postmarked from Breslau on June 27, 1940, the day after the enclosed letters were dated. The return address has the Jewish designation Gertrude Sara Cohen, and the envelope was taken to the post office and presented to a clerk for mailing, as provided by regulations requiring Jews to present outgoing foreign mail in person rather than use a letter box. The purple rubber stamp on the face of the envelope confirms that the rule was followed, Delivered at the counter. Although the envelope lacks the typical pair of rubber stamped numerals within small rectangles, the pencil notations on the front may be the censor numbers. The same notations are found on each sheet of the enclosed correspondence. The language of the correspondence has Austrian phrases, suggesting that the writer was from the southern part of Germany, and the quality of the German language is poor, as is the punctuation.https://digital.kenyon.edu/bulmash/2231/thumbnail.jp
Correspondence to George Eckstein
Envelope: Blue envelope addressed in ink to Georg Eckstein. Includes handwritten return address to Bruno Lipschitz and censor tape on back.Letter: Two-page typewritten message on thin paper.
Information Provided by Michael D. Bulmash: This letter to Georg Eckstein was sent by Bruno Lipschitz, and postmarked from Olmütz, Austria. The purple rectangular marking contains the postal routing instructions: by airmail to North America and from New York and includes censor markings. The letter states that Bruno was taking it to the post office, in all probability referring to the law that Jews were enjoined from using mail boxes for outgoing foreign mail, and that they were required to hand deliver such mail to the post office personally, at which point the mail would be censored. Both letter and envelope have pencil censor notations at the top. The letter appears to be written by two persons, one of whom is probably the Bruno Lipschitz whose name appears on the envelope. Given Georg Eckstein\u27s reputation as someone who could possibly help Jews, the senders were in all probability discussing possible passage to the United States.https://digital.kenyon.edu/bulmash/2235/thumbnail.jp
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