1,166 research outputs found

    Union City - Fritz Reuter Altenheim

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    The Fritz Reuter Altenheim, a retirement community named for the German author, Fritz Reuter. It was established in 1897 and has always been a retirement home with a skilled nursing wing. This facility provides 3 levels of care: Total Independent Apartments, Residential care and Skilled Nursing Care.Original file name IMG_1937 (2).jp

    Fritz Bley Collection 1911-1913

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    Twelve letters from the author and journalist Fritz Bley to his publisher, Georg Mueller in Munich; 1911-1913.digitizedFritz Bley (1853-1931) published the journal ‘Zeitfragen’

    Jean Fritz, 15th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Jean Fritz has written over twenty historical biographies for young readers, including Stonewall, Where Do You Think You\u27re Going, Christopher Columbus?, The Double Life of Pocahontas, China Homecoming, And Then What Happened, Paul Revere?, and Why Don\u27t You Get a Horse, Sam Adams?, all of which were named ALA Notable Children\u27s Books. She is also the author of a memoir, Homesick: My Own Story, which won the 1983 American Book Award for Children\u27s Fiction. Jean Fritz has also been presented with the Laura Ingalls Wilder Award by the American Library Association for her substantial and lasting contribution to children\u27s literature

    Fritz von Unruh Collection. 1951-1954

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    This collection contains a eulogy for Alwin Kronacher (German-born American dramaturgical consultant, actor and director) (1951); two theatrical programs for Fritz von Unruh plays (1952-1953); and a biographical sheet (1954).Author, 1885-1970The original German language inventory is available in the folderProcessed for digitizationdigitize

    Fritz Mauthner and the critique of Historicism

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    The article tries to summarise and reinterpret the dimension of language criticism within a tradition of criticising History as science in general and Historicism in particular, which stretches from the 18th century well into the present. In this Fritz Mauthner\u27s works on language criticism are given a central role by the author. Around the turn of the century the philosopher Fritz Mauthner, today largely forgotten if not completely neglected by current historians, formulated a fundamental critique of history as science.The article tries to summarise and reinterpret the dimension of language criticism within a tradition of criticising History as science in general and Historicism in particular, which stretches from the 18th century well into the present. In this Fritz Mauthner\u27s works on language criticism are given a central role by the author. Around the turn of the century the philosopher Fritz Mauthner, today largely forgotten if not completely neglected by current historians, formulated a fundamental critique of history as science

    [Memorandum to Captain J. W. Fritz]

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    Memorandum by an unknown author to Captain J. W. Fritz, regarding a telephone call from Ann Moore concerning Jack Ruby

    Rediscovering Fritz Redl

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    If there was a Hall of Fame for Child and Youth Care practitioners, the first person I would nominate is Fritz Redl. I had been in the field for two years when I first read Children Who Hate, and I was amazed at the description of youth that so accurately mirrored my own experience. Fritz and fellow author David Wineman explained CYC ideas better than anyone I had ever met. The complexity of our work and the use of life spaces to create healing came alive in the descriptions of his work at Pioneer House, a group home for boys

    Rediscovering Fritz Redl

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    If there was a Hall of Fame for Child and Youth Care practitioners, the first person I would nominate is Fritz Redl. I had been in the field for two years when I first read Children Who Hate, and I was amazed at the description of youth that so accurately mirrored my own experience. Fritz and fellow author David Wineman explained CYC ideas better than anyone I had ever met. The complexity of our work and the use of life spaces to create healing came alive in the descriptions of his work at Pioneer House, a group home for boys

    Christian Furchtegott Gellerts Fabeln und Erzählungen

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    This thin book of 106 pages contains, as the T of C at the end shows, forty-two fables, with appendices offering Gellert's statements about himself, Gellert and bibliophiles, and excerpts from literary exercises of Gellert's. The fables are portioned out in their original books. The pictures, which come out quite dark here, include an enlarged medallion of Gellert (frontispiece); Die Nachtigall und die Lerche (9); Der Tanzbär (13, perhaps the best of the lot); Damötas und Phyllis (35); Der arme Greis (67); Die Bauern und der Amtmann (77); Die Frau und der Geist (81); Hanns Nord (83); and Der Held und der Reitknecht (89). I checked out several fables here that are new to me: Die zärtliche Frau (41); Der zärtliche Mann (43); and Der junge Drescher (59).This is a hardbound book (hard cover)Language note: GermanAusgewählt und mit einem Nachwort versehen von Professor Dr. Fritz Behren

    Fritz Mauthner Addenda Collection 1871-1928, 1968-2002

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    The Fritz Mauthner Addenda Collection largely consists of correspondence to and from Fritz Mauthner and its translation. Also included are family and personal papers, transcriptions of a diary, notebooks and articles.digitizedManuscript "Aufstieg und Fall einer Familie: Die Mauthners: ein Stueck des altern Oesterreichs" by Remus Fighter. - Correspondence between Edmond de Goncourt and Fritz Mauthner concerning Mauthner's translation of Henriette Marechal. Letters by Roy Jay Nelson. - Letters by Helene von Mauthner to her family, translated by Eleanor Alexander under the title: "Family letters from Austria 1887-1927". - Materials by Eleanor Alexander relating to Wilhelm Restle who donated the Fritz Mauthner Collection to the LBI. - Fritz Mauthner Autograph Collection, AR 1106.Born in Horschitz, Austria-Hungary (now Hořice, Czech Republic), on November 22, 1849, Mauthner was an author, journalist, theatrical critic, and philosopher, known for his work on the philosophy of language. He moved to Berlin in 1876, to Freiburg im Breisgau in 1900, and died in Meersburg, Germany on June 29, 1923.Processe
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