1,139 research outputs found
AHC interview with Siegfried Mayer.
June 5, 2015Siegfried Mayer was born 8/24/1927 in Vienna, Austria. His parents, Henry and Goldie Mayer, née Sigall, hailed from Galicia and never obtained Austrian citizenship. They also had a daughter, Sedonia. Henry Mayer was an actor and owned the “Theater Reclame” on Praterstrasse in Vienna’s 2nd district, while the family lived in the 20th district, Brigittenau. In 1930, his father toured New York City, where he had friends and relatives.In April 1938, Jews were not allowed in public high schools anymore, and Siegfried got beaten up several times. His father registered the family at the American Consulate in Vienna in order to obtain visas for the United States, which they acquired in early 1939; affidavits were provided by relatives of Henry Mayer, who lived in the Bronx. The Mayer family left Austria by train for Rotterdam, where they boarded the “New Amsterdam” and disembarked a week later in New York City. After living temporarily in the Bronx in an uncle’s apartment, the Mayer family moved to Rockaway Beach, Queens. Siegfried’s mother Goldie worked as a sewer while his father, unable to pursue his carrier as an actor, had to make a living working in a shipyard. After finishing primary school, Siegfried Mayer attended a high school in the Bronx, where he graduated in 1944. Drafted in 1945, Siegfried Mayer stayed with the army for a year, before enrolling at City College and obtaining a Bachelor’s degree in chemistry. The following years, Siegfried Mayer decided to continue his studies in Europe since he was not accepted to American medical schools. He enrolled at the University of Freiburg in Switzerland and later also studied in Geneva and Lausanne. After graduation, Siegfried moved back to the US to work in a City Hospital in the Bronx and eventually opening his own office. He retired to Englewood, New Jersey.Austrian Heritage Collectio
Siegfried and Gertrude Bloch Collection 1933-1980 Bulk dates: 1930s-1950s
The collection includes mainly photographs of Siegfried and Gertrude Bloch as well as several other unidentified people. The collection holds a few official documents referring to Siegfried and Gertrude Bloch.digitizedDigital ImageSiegfried (Fred) Bloch was born on September 7, 1890 in Sachsenhausen. Siegfried Bloch lived in Düsseldorf before World War II and worked as a retailer. He travelled to Spain, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Switzerland between 1933 and 1936. Gertrude (Gertie) S. Bloch was born on April 3, 1896 in Germany. They had no children. Siegfried Bloch had a half-brother, Louis Bloch.Finding aid available onlinePhotograps of Louis and Carrie Bloch,Processe
Deformation Behavior and Damage Modeling of Polypropylene and Polycarbonate
Author Philipp Siegfried StelzerKurzfassungen in deutscher und englischer SpracheMasterarbeit Universität Linz 201
Henri Temianka Correspondence; (siegfried)
This collection contains material pertaining to the life, career, and activities of Henri Temianka, violin virtuoso, conductor, music teacher, and author. Materials include correspondence, concert programs and flyers, music scores, photographs, and books.https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/temianka_correspondence/4165/thumbnail.jp
Siegfried Jacoby Family Collection 1880-1960
This collection contains the papers of members of the Siegfried Jacoby family, depicting the family's private lives as well as their literary work. Most prominent among the papers here are many unpublished manuscripts, family correspondence, and Siegfried Jacoby's herbarium. There is also personal correspondence with others, some professional correspondence, official and personal papers, newspaper clippings, and a few notebooks and family photographs.Siegfried Jacoby was born on February 2, 1877 in Marggrabowa, East Prussia (now Olecko, Poland). He lived in Berlin, where he worked as an advertiser and businessman under the nomme de travail "Fritz Blum." In addition, Siegfried was a prolific author, writing numerous plays, short stories, essays, and poems, as well as writing for several newspapers. Siegfried's chief hobby was botany, in the course of which he assembled many journals of plant pressings and descriptions. On April 10, 1906, Siegfried married Selma (spelled Sellma on the birth certificate) Cohn from Schwerin an der Warthe (now Skwierzyna, Poland). Siegfried and Selma had two children. Their son, Friedrich Walther (Fritz), was born on June 1, 1909. Fritz died in Wernigerode in 1929. The Jacobys' daughter, Ursula Ellen (usually known as Ursel, also called Ulle), was born on October 25, 1907. Ursel was quite well-educated, being fluent in English and French. She followed in her father's literary footsteps as an author and translator. As a child, Ursula won or placed in several youth writing contests. As a young women in the 1920s, she worked as a translator for several regional papers. Between March and May 1927, Ursel went to Paris.In October 1932, Ursel married Max Bunzl, son of the Viennese Kommerzialrat Martin and Margrete (Grete) Bunzl. Max worked for his father's company. Ursel and Max lived in Frankfurt am Main and thereafter in Vienna. In December 1934, Ursula and Max had a son, Tom (Tommy). On October 3, 1937, the Bunzls had another son, Claudi (also known as Clausi or Klausi). The next year, the family left Austria for England. From there, Max went to Palestine (where he had relatives) and Ursula and Claudi went to Argentina (where Claudi became Claudio).In 1939, Selma and Siegfried Jacoby left Germany, travelling like their daughter to London. Later that year, the Jacobys joined their daughter and grandson in Argentina. The Jacoby-Bunzls lived in Buenos Aires, Conesa, and Rio Caballos while in Argentina. Siegfried, or Sigfrido, continued to write in German and Spanish, sometimes using the nomme du plume "Siegfried Jacoby-Wilde" (Sigfried may have been fond of Oscar Wilde). Eventually, Max (or Maximo) joined his family in Argentina.Little information is available about the Jacobys or Bunzls after the war. In 1947, Ursula returned to Europe, although it is unclear where. By the 1960s she had moved to London. The fate of her parents, husband, and child is unclear.digitize
Die Open Science Strategie in Österreich
Am 15. September wurde am IHS die ZBW Wanderausstellung "Open UP! Wie die Digitalisierung die Wissenschaft verändert" mit einer Diskussionsveranstaltung zum Thema Open Science in Österreich eröffnet. Nach Grußbotschaften von Doreen Siegfried, Pressesprecherin ZBW und Bundesminister Heinz Faßmann diskutierte folgendes Expert*innen-Panel die Auswirkungen von Open-Science auf die Sozialwissenschaften:
Katrin Auspurg (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, LMU)
Erich Griessler (Institut für Höhere Studien, IHS)
Katja Mayer (Uni Wien; Zentrum Soziale Innovation ZSI)
Harald Oberhofer (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien)
Falk Reckling (FWF - Der Wissenschaftsfonds
Der Verlust der Identität:Zu den Romanen von Siegfried Lenz
The article focuses on the topic of identity crises in the novels of German author Siegfried Lenz. He presents no solution of the identity problem, which is reflected both in a private and in a historical dimension, but has a distinct preference for nostalgic ways of life
Differential strain analysis : application to shock induced microfractures
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Earth and Planetary Science, 1977Vita.Bibliography : leaves 135-137.By Robert Wayne Siegfried, II.Ph. D.Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Earth and Planetary Scienc
Sportverein - Organisationsstruktur, Ambivalenz, Gesundheitssport, Wettkampfsport, Perspektiven
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