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Neue Faustliteratur / Julius Goebel
NEUE FAUSTLITERATUR / JULIUS GOEBEL
Neue Faustliteratur / Julius Goebel (1)
Cover (1)
Neue Faustliteratur (3
Goethes Faust : Erster Teil / Edited With Introduction And Commentary By Julius Goebel Havard University
GOETHES FAUST : ERSTER TEIL / EDITED WITH INTRODUCTION AND COMMENTARY BY JULIUS GOEBEL HAVARD UNIVERSITY
Goethes Faust : Erster Teil / Edited With Introduction And Commentary By Julius Goebel Havard University (1)
Cover (1)
Title page (3)
Titelseite (6)
Widmung (8)
Preface (10)
Introduction (18)
Zueignung (70)
Vorspiel auf dem Theater (72)
Prolog im Himmel (80)
Nacht (88)
Vor dem Thor (106)
Studierzimmer (122)
Auerbachs Keller in Leipzig (161)
Hexenküche (179)
Straße (194)
Abend (199)
Spaziergang (205)
Der Nachbarin Haus (209)
Straße (219)
Garten (222)
Ein Gartenhäuschen (231)
Wald und Höhle (233)
Gretchens Stube (240)
Marthens Garten (242)
Am Brunnen (250)
Zwinger (253)
Nacht (255)
Dom (264)
Walpurgisnacht (267)
Walpurgisnachtstraum oder Oberon und Titanias ... (286)
Trüber Tag (295)
Nacht, offen Feld (299)
Kerker (300)
Notes (312
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Julius Goebel, Jr.: In Fond Recollection
Memorable teachers, like great delicacies, are not to everybody\u27s taste. Most of us endured nineteen years of formal education, encountering perhaps 100 teachers along the way. Many were journeymen, imparting whatever information their particular slice of the curriculum warranted. A few, a very few, truly moved our minds. And, not uncommonly, the genius who made me see left others in the dark, while my friend\u27s cicerone left me hopelessly lost. The teacher who dares to inspire will not inspire many, but if in every class a few are enabled to think in a way they could not think before, that teacher is a master of his craft. Julius Goebel was such a teacher
Julius Goebel, Jr.: In Fond Recollection
Memorable teachers, like great delicacies, are not to everybody\u27s taste. Most of us endured nineteen years of formal education, encountering perhaps 100 teachers along the way. Many were journeymen, imparting whatever information their particular slice of the curriculum warranted. A few, a very few, truly moved our minds. And, not uncommonly, the genius who made me see left others in the dark, while my friend\u27s cicerone left me hopelessly lost. The teacher who dares to inspire will not inspire many, but if in every class a few are enabled to think in a way they could not think before, that teacher is a master of his craft. Julius Goebel was such a teacher
Gift inscription in Minions of the Moon: a little book of song and story
This edition includes a gift inscription possibly penned by the author, Madison Julius Cawein, "Frank on Valentines Day, 1914. M.J." Madison Julius Cawein (1865-1914).Cawein, Madison Julius, 1865-1914
Oral history interview with Julius Franks, August 10, 1989
Oral history interview with Julius Franks, conducted by Lewis Carlson on August 10, 1989. Franks discusses his introduction to football at Hamtramck High School, how he was recruiting into football, his experiences as a football player and his bout with tuberculosis. During his recovery, he returned to school graduating from U of M in 1947 and later from dental school in 1951 as the only African American of that class. Through his connections with Governor Romney and Mayor Paul Goebel, Franks was appointed on WMU’s first board in 1964. Franks discussed the politics and board member relationships with representatives in Lansing, former WMU President Jim Miller, and John Bernhard as well as cost concerns, racial tensions on campus in the 1960s, and faculty strikes addressed by the board through his three-year term. Passing away on November 26, 2008, Franks was the last surviving member of WMU’s first Board of Trustees
Julius Bab Autographs Collection 1919-1955
The collection contains handwritten and signed letters from Julius Bab to several individuals, including ten letters
from Bab to Margarete (Grete) Collin, widow of his close friend Ernst Collin, and one letter to Lutz Weltmann. All of the letters are
of a personal nature.Also included is a handwritten poem by Bab entitled "Deutschland!"; a typescript by Bab with memories
of Ernst Collin; and a page of an essay about Alexander Moissi, which includes Bab's signature.Born in Berlin on December 11, 1880, Julius Bab was a theater critic, author, and co-founder of the Jüdischer
Kulturbund in 1933. He immigrated to France in 1938 and to the United States in 1940. He died in New York City on February 12,
1955.The original German-language inventory is available in the folde
The Other Face of Julius Fučík
The author of the thesis is primarily going to examine the publishing activity of Julius Fučík in the magazines Tvorba and Kmen in the second half of the 1920s. In her work the author will also focus on Fučík?s life and the historical context of that time. Part of the thesis will deal with his later works. The aim of the work is to show Julius Fučík in a different light in comparison to the previous unilateral views
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