5,163 research outputs found

    I'd Start a Battle to Get Back to Seattle

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    1925The music and lyrics for "I'd Start A Battle To Get Back To Seattle (And the Great Northwest) were written by Jack Stern, a "singing comedian" and composer. Jacob Abraham "Jack" Stern (1896-1985) grew up in New York and traveled extensively for his career. With his wife, actress Grace Hamilton (Leete) Alcine Stern (1883-1953), he spent some time in Seattle, where together they had two children: Josephine Alice Stern (1926-) and Arthur Hamilton Stern (1927-). Arthur later shortened his name to Arthur Hamilton, and also became a well-known songwriter. Printed on the back cover of the score is the chorus of another song by Jack Stern, "Cryin' for the Moon."Caption information source: The Seattle Daily Times, June 18, 1925, p. 14.1 score (5 p.) + 1 part ; 9.25 x 12.25 in

    Theocritus' Ephitalamium for Helen

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    Stern Jacob. Theocritus' Ephitalamium for Helen. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 56, fasc. 1, 1978. Antiquité — Oudheid. pp. 29-37

    The Structure of Bacchylides' Ode 17

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    Stern Jacob. The Structure of Bacchylides' Ode 17. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 45, fasc. 1, 1967. Antiquité - Oudheid. pp. 40-47

    Jacob of Sarug's Homily on Tamar (Gen 38)

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    This small volume contains an edition (from Vatican ms. 117) of Jacob of Sarug’s homily on Tamar (420 lines long). The full title is “On Tamar and on the Mystery of the Church.” The biblical narrative on which the poem is based (Gen 38) gives Jacob the opportunity to discuss various women in the early part of biblical history and in Jesus’ lineage, as well as the fact that a woman who is called a prostitute is in that lineage. Jacob explains how Scripture’s language is used in this regard

    Stern, Jacob. v. Garber, Harry et al.

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    Volume 1076, case 9 contains all case materials. Volume 1078, case 5 contains some duplicate pages that appear in Volume 1076, case 9

    Horace Stern Family Collection 2000-2003

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    This collection contains genealogical information for the Stern, Bamberger, Osserman and Goldsmith families. There is a family tree entitled "Descendants of Falck Jacob," tracing the descendants of Falck Jacob (born 1697 in Oberlistingen, Germany) to the early 20th century. Another family tree, entitled "Descendants of Naphtali Hirsch Hoffman," traces his descendants from the 18th century to the late 20th century. Accompanying these family trees are letters from related individuals, giving background information about their genealogical research.Processed for digitizatio

    Portrait of Mrs. Jacob Stern, [s.d.]

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    Photographic portrait of Mrs. Jacob Stern, [s.d.]. Mrs. Stern can be seen from her upper torso to her head looking straight ahead. She is visible wearing a lightly-colored dress and a long metal necklace. Her curly white hair is cut short. She has large arched eyebrows above her sunken eyes and an intense expression on her face. There are long thin leaves of a plant in the right background

    Jacob Wassermann.

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    One of several renderings of the German author Jacob Wassermann by the painter and illustrator Suzanne Carvallo-Schülein.Digital ImageArtwork

    Jacob of Serugh's Homilies on the Spectacles of the Theatre

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    This fascinating volume contains excerpts from four otherwise unedited (and untranslated) homilies from Jacob of Sarug on the theatre. These homilies, extant only in a single manuscript (BM Add. 17158), which is unfortunately poorly preserved, are unique for the light they cast on the Greek theatre in the Byzantine period. In this article, originally published in Le Muséon 48 (1935), Moss gives a substantive introduction to the selections presented from these homilies, and then presents the texts in Syriac and in English translation. Scholars and readers interested in Syriac literature, and in Jacob of Sarug in particular, as well as students of the history of the theatre, will find this work of great interest.Translated into English from the Syriac text

    Luis Stern Collection 1940-1973 Bulk dates: 1940-1943

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    This collection consists almost entirely of correspondence sent to Luis (alternatively Ludwig) Stern from Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi powers. Many of the correspondents were inmates of internment camps in France and Spain, including Gurs, Rivesaltes, Figueras, Miranda de Ebro. Other materials in the collection include notes related to refugees, a few pieces of Stern’s correspondence with officials, correspondence from the 1970s describing Stern's refugee assistance efforts, and a few clippings.There are letters und postcards from these individuals:Bachner, Rudi & Senta; Baer, Arthur; Berliner, Jacob & Fanny; Bialistok, Isaak; Blum, Sigm.; Bunjes, Caroline; Cohn, Hans; Drelinger, Walter; Falk, Recha; Feibelmann, Hans; Feibelmann, Hedwig; Franke, Erna; Goldhammer, Karl; Goldhammer, Franziska Isak; Guenzburger, Herbert; Guenzburger, Lina; Haendler, Karl; Hecht, Hermann; Hecht, G.; Heilbruner, Lina; Hellman, Maxim; Herz-Stern, Otto & Valerie; Idstein, Flora; Jellinek, Erna; Kanner, Isidor; Kans, Vittoria; Keller, Jakob; Lemberger, S.; Levy-Lenz, Kurt; Loeb, Minna & Walter; Loewe, Ernst; Loewe, Gerhard & Edith; Loewe, Margot-André; Loewe, Selma; Marck, Charles; Mayer, Gustav; Neumann, Oscar; Nubel, Annelise; Ornstein, Georg; Persitz, Ch.; Petrowicz, Mary; Rieger, Emilie; Rubin, Elisabeth & Elias; Salomon, Friedrich & Betty (includes letters from Martha Rath on same pages as those from the Salomons); Scheuer, Ernst; Scheuer, Rosi; Schoenberg, Else; Sekelj (Tséklj), Paul; Silbermann, Gustav; Sobernheim, Hans; Sulzberger, Max; Thalheimer, Gustav; Waelder, Flora (signed by Max Silberstein and G. Hecht); Wilder, J.; Wolff, Moritz; Zinner, Alfonso.Born Ludwig Stern in Mannheim around 1890, Luis Stern emigrated to Spain in the early 1930s and was living in Barcelona in 1975.8 catalogue cards.Photographs removed to Photograph CollectionProcesseddigitizedAlthausen, Oskar. Rubin, Elias
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