2,090,689 research outputs found

    Beiträge von Klaus Graf in anderen Hypotheses-Blogs

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    36 Beiträge in Ordensgeschichte https://ordensgeschichte.hypotheses.org/author/klaus/page/2 21 im Redaktionsblog: https://redaktionsblog.hypotheses.org/author/klaus/page/2 4 in Heraldica Nova https://heraldica.hypotheses.org/author/klaus 4 in Geschichte Bayerns https://histbav.hypotheses.org/author/klaus 1 in Digitale Geschichtswissenschaft https://digigw.hypotheses.org/1063 Macht 66. Nicht mitgezählt die von mir administrierten Blogs https://frueheneuzeit.hypotheses.org/ https://kulturgut.hy..

    Klaus Lebek Collection 1943

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    This collection contains material regarding the 1943 imprisonment and death of half-Jewish Breslau resident Klaus Lebek. There are seven letters in German, plus English translations, that Klaus Lebek wrote to his parents and his sister Rosemarie from several prisons including Auschwitz; three letters from Wolfgang Brodnitz, who was arrested together with Klaus Lebek, to Rosemarie Lebek; death certificate for Klaus Lebek; photocopy of May 1943 Auschwitz mugshot pictures of Klaus Lebek, a February 1943 picture of Klaus Lebek in civilian clothes; letters from Rosemarie Lebek containing background information about her brother's ordeal (in German and English).Klaus Lebek was born on 7/12/1921 and died in Auschwitz on 7/8/1943. His mother was Jewish, his father not.Processed for digitizationSent for digitizationReturned from digitizationLinked to online manifestationdigitize

    On the mathematical work of Klaus Floret

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    In section 1 of this article, a sketch of the life and the career of Klaus Floret is given. Then,in sections 2 to 5, the author reports on the part of the mathematical work of Klaus Floret which was devoted to four important topics in functional analysis in which Klaus worked and in which considerable progress was achieved during his lifetime. These topics are: locally convex inductive limits; bases and approximation properties; L1L1- LftyL_∈fty-spaces and the "probleme des topologies"; tensor norms, operator ideals, spaces of polynomials. Some of the history of these topics is included, sometimes together with an account of some of the leading figures in the field. A prelude, an interlude and a coda present related remarks which do not fit in the main body of the article

    «Die Schweiz kann über Merkels und Macrons Händchenhalten froh sein» (Interview von Guido Felder mit Klaus Armingeon)

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    Deutschland und Frankreich haben einen neuen Freundschaftsvertrag abgeschlossen, der auf Kritik stösst. Politologe Klaus Armingeon von der Uni Bern sagt, was das Abkommen will und warum es auch für die Schweiz wichtig ist

    Stern (Klaus) interview

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    Breslau, GermanyKlaus Stern describes his family history, his employment, and his experience during Crystal Night. Stern, along with other German Jews, was forced into manual labor by the government and was sent to Neuendorf. He was subsequently sent to the Monowitz camp of Auschwitz and was made to do manual labor for the I.G. Farben plant where he worked for two years. The Nazis transferred him amongst others several times, first to Gliewitz, then Sachsenhausen, then Flossenburg, then Leonberg, and finally to Muhldorf where he was liberated by the Allied forces. Stern was able to find his wife Paula and they lived in the Russian Zone for a brief time. He worked for the Jewish congregation in Furth. He immigrated to the United States with his wife in 1946 while she was pregnant. In Seattle, Rabbi Cohen got him job at Langendorf bakeries, worked he worked for 35 years. Klaus and Paula Stern were the first holocaust survivor family to come to Seattle. Klaus Stern was active in the Jewish Club of Washington and served as their president at one time. He subsequently testified against a Commander Rackers to a secretary of the German Consulate of San Francisco in 1952 at a Seattle hotel, and was asked in 1959 to come to Germany to testify against Rackers in Lubeck. Stern describes the social and political climate towards Jews following the war, including Neo-Nazi trials in the 1980s. He advocated strongly for Holocaust education in Seattle schools in the 1970s and 1980s. Stern also describes attending a Holocaust survivors reunion in Israel in 1981. This accession is part of the Washington State Jewish Archives.To request a high resolution or uncompressed reproduction, or to obtain permission to use any portion of this item, contact the University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections. Email: [email protected]. Please reference the Digital ID Number

    Specificity and definiteness in sentence and discourse structure

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    In this paper, I argue that this informally given list of characteristics covers only a certain subclass of specific indefinites. […] In particular, I dispute the definition of specific indefinites as "the speaker has the referent in mind" as rather confusing if one is working with a semantic theory. Furthermore, I discuss "relative specificity", it. cases in which the specific indefinite does not exhibit wide, but intermediate or narrow scope behavior. Based on such data, I argue that specificity expresses a referential dependency between introduced discourse items. Informally speaking, the specificity of the indefinite expression something [...] expresses that the reference of the expression depends on the reference of another expression, here, on the expression a monk, not the speaker

    Klaus Graf-Tag

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    http://library-mistress.blogspot.com/2008/01/klaus-graf-tag.htm

    Arbeiten von Klaus Jürgen Herrmann online

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    Waltraut Herrmann, die Witwe des früheren Schwäbisch Gmünder Stadtarchivars Klaus Jürgen Herrmann (1947-2016), hat die Online-Stellung seiner Schriften genehmigt. Begonnen habe ich mit seinen Beiträgen in den Gmünder Geschichtsblättern: https://archive.org/details/klaus-juergen-herrmann-beitraege-gmuender-geschichtsblaetter/ Nachtrag: https://archive.org/search.php?query=creator%3A%22Herrmann%2C+Klaus+J%C3%BCrgen%2

    Klaus Roy interview, 2005

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    Klaus Roy spoke at the dedication of the Hungarian Cultural Garden at One World Day 1975. Mr. Roy recollects on the day, from who was there to the music that was played. There is also a discussion regarding the struggles of Hungary as a nation and its inhabitants. Other topics include garden restoration, Hungarians in Cleveland, and other Hungarian cultural outlets

    Groth, Klaus an Lotte Hegewisch (1 Brief)

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    GROTH, KLAUS AN LOTTE HEGEWISCH (1 BRIEF) Groth, Klaus an Lotte Hegewisch (1 Brief) (Br2768) Brief 2768 (Br2768
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