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    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

    Margarete Stern

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    MARGARETE STERN Margarete Stern ( - ) Cover ( - ) Abbildung: Porträt von Margarete Stern ( - ) Titelseite ( - ) Vorwort. ( - ) 1855 - 1875. ( - ) 1876 - 1881. (31) 1881 - 1890. (77) 1890 - 1896. (159) Abbildung: Porträt von Margarete Stern ( - ) 1896 - 1899. (213) Anhang. (247) Inhalt. ( - ) Druckvermerk ( -

    James Stern papers

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    James Stern (1904-1993) was an Irish-born author of more than fifty short stories, non-fiction, and translations. His works include The Heartless Land (1932); The Hidden Damage (1947); and The Stories of James Stern (1969). Stern's papers consist primarily of correspondence he received relating to Djuna Barnes, both from her and from others. The papers also include newspaper and magazine articles about Miss Barnes. Major topics include Nightwood, The Antiphon, mutual acquaintances, social events, personal affairs, and requests for information about Djuna Barnes

    Testamentum novum <dt.>

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    Die Vorlage enthält insgesamt 2 WerkeAutopsie nach Ex. der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltDas New Testmanent ...Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Lüneburg, Gedruckt und verlegt durch Johann Stern. Im Jahr Christi 1702.Frontisp. (Kupferst.), Kupfert

    Alfred Stern : Wissenschaftliche Selbstbiographie.

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    University life in Goettingen and Heidelberg in second half of 19th century; travels; contains bibliography of author's publications.The historian Alfred Stern was born in Goettingen in 1846 to the mathematician Moriz Abraham Stern. He was a student of Waitz and Ranke and taught history in Berne and at the Technische Hochschule in Zurich. He was the author of a 10-volume work on European history. He died in Zurich in 1936.Brief summary in Max Kreutzberger: "Leo Baeck Institute New York, Bibliothek und Archiv; Katalog": C 39

    Evangelischer Hertzens-Spiegel Oder: Geist-reiche Erklärung und Betrachtung der Sonn- und Fest-täglichen Evangelien, Wie auch beygefügten Passions-Predigten

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    Titelbl. in Rot- und Schwarzdr.Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Lüneburg, Gedruckt und verlegt durch Cornelius Johann Stern, Anno 1744

    Cost-Benefit Analysis of Climate Change: Stern Revisited

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    This paper explores the challenges facing orthodox economic approaches to assessing climate control as if it were appraisal of an investment project. Serious flaws are noted in the work of economists with especial attention to the UK Government report by Stern and colleagues. The opinions expressed in this paper are those of the authors and may not be taken to reflect the views CSIRO or the Australian Government.enhanced greenhouse effect, global CBA, Stern Report

    Anna Stern

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    Portrait of Anna Stern, Clerical Assistant of the Development Offic
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