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1953ABE-165763662359284 PAGES-EN COUVERTURE; BETTY FURSTENBERG-CRITIQUES PAR FRANÇOIS VILMAIN DES LIVRES "LES MAINS DU MANCHOT" DE MARIANNE ANDRAU ET "PRÉMÉDITATION" DE FRANCIS ILES-DEUX FOIS UN TROIS PAR JEAN MONTEAUX-"MES ROBES NOIRES" PAR CHRISTIAN DIOR, 2P-DEMAIN J'AURAI 30 ANS PAR HÉLÈNE MARKEL-"JE NE FUME PAS JE NE BOIS PAS" PAR ANITA PEREIRE-"LUI" PAR DANIEL GRAY-LA ROBE PRINCESSE: SES INTERPRÉTATIONS, SES VARIATIONS-"LE JOUR ENSEVELI" PAR ROSAMOND LEHMANN-PETIT DICTIONNAIRE DES GRANDS AMOUREUX; MME DE WARENS, ANTOINE WATTEAU,BÉATRICE WEBB, ORSON WELLES, HERBERT GEORGE WELLS-"LE BEL AMOUR" PAR DOMINIQUE AUBIER-BECKER FAIT TOURNER GABIN, SARTRE FAIT JOUER BRASSEUR-
63pp. 23 cm. Hardcover Very good condition Printed by D. B. Updike, The Merrymount Press. Smith
Staple-bound. 8 1/4"w x 10 7/8"h. Slight creases to cover. 23 pages. Smells a bit of nag champa incense.
40801Mercure de France.1991.In-8,couv.souple illustrée d'un portrait.607 p. BE.
1969012360San Francisco - Berkeley Black Panther Party 1969 In-4 En feuilles
171355993London, Printed by G. James, for Henry Clements, 1713. 8vo. Contemporary marbled full calf boards, prettily rebacked in period style with gilt title-label, raised bands and gilt ornamentations to spine. During the re-backing, new end-papers have been inserted, but the original front end-paper , containing old owners' inscriptions, has been preserved and is still withbound. Three old owners' names to title-page, two of them crossed out. The title-page had been repaired at the outer margin, affecting three letters in the last three lines of the subtitle (To open a Method for rendering the/ SCIENCES more easy, useful, and/ compensious), namely the ""he"" in ""the"" and the ""d"" in ""and"" as well as part fo the double-ruled border, which has been drawn up again. The final leaf with a somewhat crode repair causing loss of some words towards the hinge. A small hole in A3, not repaired. A bit of brownspotting, mostly at beginning and end. With its flaws, still and overall acceptable copy of this extremely rare title. (10), 166 pp.
1905B001G67960Used; Good. 5-C-26 George Bell and Sons 1905 Hardcover. Please note this is the 1905 and not the 1892 edition. Text is clean and unmarked. Covers have light wear for age with a little bumping at spine. Book Condition; Good . 1905. HARDCOVER. hardcover
1348114037.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
19278282London: Robert Holden & Co. Ltd. 1927. FIRST EDITION NEIL GUNN’S COPY 8vo pp. 192. Original quarter blue cloth patterned orange and grey paper boards paper label printed in blue to spine. A touch of spotting to edges. Binding a little rubbed. Ink ownership inscription of ‘N.M. Gunn’ to front flyleaf with later corroborating note and ownership inscription of Colin MacDonald to front pastedown. The scarce sole edition of this radio play by writer and Liberal politician Reginald Berkeley 1890-1935 which was originally commissioned by the BBC for public broadcast but never saw production. Berkeley wrote for the stage and began writing ‘for the microphone’ with <em>The Dweller in the Darkness</em> first broadcast by the BBC in April 1925. Berkeley decided to publish <em>Machines</em> when he received a letter from the BBC rejecting the script as ‘far too controversial for purposes of broadcasting’ and he includes his entire correspondence with two representatives of the BBC. Here Berkeley argues that his play is deemed controversial for the fact that ‘it does not happen to glorify Conservatives at the expense of working people’. This copy belonged to Scottish novelist Neil M. Gunn 1891-1973 with his ownership inscription on the front flyleaf and a later ownership inscription confirming ‘from Gunn’s library’ dated 12/1/83. Robert Holden & Co., Ltd. hardcover
1979BT6149-219Lohra-Rodenhausen, Winddruck-Verlag, (1979). 118 S., Querformat 19 x 21 cm, farbig illustrierte Broschur, mit zahlreichen Abbildungen.
180025312Philadelphia: Way & Groff 1800. First edition. 34pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Disbound and resewn. Apart from some staining a very good copy. First edition. 34pp. 1 vols. 8vo. The author argues that the class of medicines commonly known as 'sedatives' are actually stimulants.<br /> He considers the likes of digitalis opium nitre and saccharum.<br /> <br /> Scarce: OCLC locates 5 copies. Evans 36942 Way & Groff unknown
18998239San Francisco: The Trustees of the Phoebe A. Hearst Architectural Plan 1899. Very Good. 1899. First Edition. Softcover. Oblong 4to. 10 x 14 inches. 152pp.; original printed wrappers stabbed & tied at inner margin. Profusely illustrated with photographic plates drawings and plans including a portrait of Mrs. Hearst portraits of the six members of the jury 3 shots of the jury deliberating on the site. Laid in is a folded 23" x 10" 1933 map of the campus and a 19" x 13.5" folded section from California Architect and Building News illustrating the General Elevation and Plan 4th Prize Design - Howard and Cauldwell Architects. Covers soiled. A record of the Hearst competition for the Berkeley campus reproducing 110 drawings and giving an historical account of the competition the final programme the report of the jury the secretarys report etc. Reproduces a series of drawings by the winner Benard; also second prize by Howells Stokes and Hornbostel third prize by Despradelle and Codman fourth prize by Howard and Cauldwell fifth prize by Lord Hewitt and Hull and a series of other deigns by Whitney Warren Herr Rudolph Dick J. H. Freedlander and others. . The Trustees of the Phoebe A. Hearst Architectural Plan (1899) paperback
18998240San Francisco: The Trustees of the Phoebe A. Hearst Architectural Plan. Good. 1899. Softcover. Oblong 4to. 10 x 14 inches. 152pp.; original printed wrappers stabbed & tied at inner margin. Profusely illustrated with photographic plates drawings and plans including a portrait of Mrs. Hearst portraits of the six members of the jury 3 shots of the jury deliberating on the site. Covers soiled; corners chipped with closed tear to cover foot of spine and a triangular 1" piece out bottom edge. A record of the Hearst competition for the Berkeley campus reproducing 110 drawings and giving an historical account of the competition the final programme the report of the jury the secretarys report etc. Reproduces a series of drawings by the winner Benard; also second prize by Howells Stokes and Hornbostel third prize by Despradelle and Codman fourth prize by Howard and Cauldwell fifth prize by Lord Hewitt and Hull and a series of other deigns by Whitney Warren Herr Rudolph Dick J. H. Freedlander and others. The Memoral Stadium Promotional booklet is unpaginated 12 3/4 x 9 1/2 inches decorative wrappers stabbed & tied at spine; includes architectural renderings of the stadium letters from Stadium Committee members The Architectural Plan Financial Plan photo illustrations of athletes from California. . The Trustees of the Phoebe A. Hearst Architectural Plan paperback
189173666Cambridge: Riverside Press 1891. First edition of Updike's first book. Tall octavo. 154 1 colophon 1 pp. Complete with both fold-out charts. Publisher's half black morocco over marbled boards expertly rebacked to style gilt spine lettering marbled endpapers. Minor foxing to first three and last three leaves mainly blanks. Armorial bookplate. An untrimmed and very handsome copy of this scarce title. According the RBH the last copy to appear at auction was in 1940.The first book designed by Mr. Updike printed under his supervision at the Riverside Press. “Before he began work on his own account Updike had made one book and only one in which he had had entirely his own way. It is a simple volume with little that is distinctive or decorative about it except that there is nothing wrong; the proportions of page and margins title size of types and composition tone of paper and quality of press work offer nothing for obvious criticism. The book is ‘An Inquiry into the Naming of Churches in the United States’ compiled by two laymen of the Diocese of Rhode Island that is Mr. Updike and his closest friend Harold Brown of Newport. . . .â€---G. P. Winship The Merrymount Press of Boston. Riverside Press hardcover
197587447Berkeley CA: Berkeley High School 1975. Hardcover. Near fine with scant number 4-5 of inscriptions. Binding tight boards just a very wee bit edge-rubbed. Large quarto in color photo illus back and front cloth-backed boards; 302p; chiefly b& w some color photos. This is the original not a reprint. Great photos of a mostly bygone era. Includes a 5" x 7" b&w class photo of the 1972 City of Berkeley Cazadero Music Camp laid in. Berkeley High School hardcover
1791015762London: Printed for John Stockdale Piccadilly. 1791. Hardcover. Very Good. Volume I only. Full leather with gilt title on spine; gilt ruled borders; dentelle. Spine scuffed; corners lightly worn. Starting crack to inner front hinge. Marbled endpapers. Armorial bookplate on front pastedown. Interior is clean with some occasional light foxing. pp. 2 3-271. A volume of letters by Anne Berkeley c. 1707-1786 wife of philosopher Bishop Berkeley George Berkeley addressed to Adam Gordon c. 1745-1817. The matter includes her arguments against the free-thinkers who here husband also attacked and references Shaftesbury Hume Voltaire Bolingbroke and Rousseau. In addition to addressing various theological and philosophical matters Anne largely waxes upon the importance of Christian education and morality. According to the Berkeley scholar Stefan Gordon Storrie Anne's correspondence here started around 1764 when Anne was approaching her sixties and Adam Gorden was still a young man. Volume I is divided into two parts: a the Preface by the editor Rev. Adam Gordon Rector of Hinxworth which is dated December 18 1790; and b 31 of the 41 letters by Anne Berkeley. For reference Volume II which is not offered included a the final ten letters by Anne b the ''Anniversary Addresses from a father to his son on his birthday'' by Adam Gordon and c ''Six letters to a Lady of Quality'' by the historian and Christian mystic Nathaniel Hooke. Printed for John Stockdale, Piccadilly. hardcover
63-4962Berkeley CA: Arthur Eugene Hutson 1980. Typed Signed Letter. 8.5" x 5.5" Single Page on UC Berkeley English Department letterhead Good with marginal tears.Provenance: Peter Howard Serendipity Books Berkeley. Berkeley, CA: [Arthur Eugene Hutson], 1980. unknown
197055912Berkeley: Berkeley Political Poster Workshop 1970. Original illustrated poster silkscreened in camo green on repurposed computer listing paper with perforated tractor strips measuring 38cm x 56cm 15" x 22". Some splitting along the center fold discreetly and archivally reinforced on verso; Very Good. <br /> <br /> An arresting image portraying the gears of the war machine with silhouettes of human beings inside each one and a conscience-provoking slogan. One of some 600 designs created by Berkeley student members of the Political Poster Workshop in 1970; on average fewer than 100 copies of each design were printed for distribution on and around campus. See WILLIAMS 32-33. 55912. Berkeley Political Poster Workshop unknown
115600Berkeley CA University of California at Berkeley c. 1950. . 14 mimeographed typescript lectures on 144 leaves rectos only; diagrams throughout the text some pencilled notes contents a little toned; brown pressboard binder housed in a custom brown cloth folding case later manuscript title to upper cover some sticker residue edges a little rubbed corners bumped very good condition.<br /> A rare set of mimeographed lecture notes from an experimental physics course connected with Berkeley's Radiation Laboratory with chapters by three Nobel Prize winners. Mimeographed lecture notes of this kind were made by students for themselves and their colleagues and exist in very small numbers. We have located only two auction records for this set the present one sold in 2018 and a copy at Christie's in 2002. <br /><br />Berkeley's '290' physics courses are 'graduate level courses that feature a weekly seminar on physics topics' 'many of which are open to the public' generally meaning the research community Berkeley website. The present lectures are all labelled '290f' what was then a course in experimental physics connected with the Berkeley Radiation Laboratory. Now known as the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory this research centre was established in 1931 by Ernest Lawrence and centred around his development of the cyclotron a new and more powerful type of particle accelerator for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize. The laboratory has remained a leader in physics research up to the present day and was responsible for numerous twentieth century breakthroughs including electronic enrichment of uranium for the Manhattan Project the discovery of the transuranic elements and the anti-proton and measurement of the cosmic microwave background radiation.<br /><br />Taking place around 1950 none of the reference sources listed in the text have publication dates past 1949 the present course begins with relatively basic concepts in electrical engineering necessary for anyone doing hands-on experimental work at the Radiation Laboratory and proceeds to linear accelerators the cyclotron and beta ray spectrographs. Of the fourteen lectures three were presented by Nobel Prize winners:<br /><br />Chapter 7 Ionization: Emilio Segré 1905-1989 discovered the antiproton and the elements technetium and astatine. An Italian Jew he was made stateless by the Mussolini government in 1938 while on a visit to Berkeley and was offered a position at the Radiation Laboratory. Between 1943 and 1946 he worked at Los Alamos after which he returned to Berkeley until his retirement in 1972.<br /><br />Chapter 10 General Accelerator Considerations: Edwin McMillan 1907-1991 was with Glenn Seaborg the first to produce a transuranic element neptunium. He joined the Radiation Laboratory in 1933 and during the Second World War worked on microwave radar and the Manhattan Project. When hostilities ended he returned to Berkeley co-developed the synchrotron and became director of the laboratory after Lawrence's death in 1958.<br /><br />Chapter 12 Linear Accelerators: Louis Alvarez 1911-1988 was a pioneer who made fundamental discoveries in physics through his development of the hydrogen bubble chamber. He joined the laboratory in 1936 and worked with the experimental team headed by Robert Oppenheimer. During the war he contributed significantly to radar research joined the Manhattan Project and then returned to Berkeley.<br /><br />The full contents are as follows: 1. Electrical Measurements no author listed; 2. Vacuum Tubes and Amplifiers by A. Bratenahl; 3. Pulse Circuits by R. Mozely; 4. Oscillators by D. Gow; 5. Rectifiers and Power Supplies by D. Gow; 6. General Considerations of Particle Counters by B.J. Moyer; 7. Ionization Chambers by Emilio Segré; 8. Geiger Counters by R. Chasson; 9. Proportional Counters by H.F. York; 10. General Accelerator Considerations by E. McMillan; 11. Van de Graaf Electrostatic Accelerators by A.J. Hudgins; 12. Linear Accelerators by Louis Alvarez; 13. The Cyclotron by R.L. Thornton; 14. Beta Ray Spectrographs by A.C. Helmholz.<br /> Berkeley, CA, University of California at Berkeley, c. 1950. hardcover
197035425Berkeley: Berkeley Political Poster Workshop 1970. Original illustrated poster silkscreened in black on white repurposed computer listing paper with perforated tractor strips measuring ca.38cm x 56cm 15" x 22". A Fine copy / A. <br /> <br /> A simple powerful anti-war image by an uncredited Berkeley student. The image is reproduced from a 1968 AP photograph of the bodies of US Marines on Hill 689 in Khe Sanh South Vietnam. The poster "is an indirect invocation of the political order in the United States and for those who remember a reminder that both Lyndon Johnson in 1964 and Richard Nixon in 1968 won the presidency with promises of peace - which were then contradicted by their actions." Benson Thomas W. Posters for Peace: Visual Rhetoric and Civic Action. One of some 600 designs created by Berkeley student members of the Political Poster Workshop in 1970; on average fewer than 100 copies of each design were printed for distribution on and around campus. Not individually listed in OCLC though we note copies held at Yale and Penn State. WILLIAMS 28. Berkeley Political Poster Workshop unknown
197055917Berkeley: Berkeley Political Poster Workshop 1970. Original illustrated poster silkscreened in black and burnt orange on repurposed computer listing paper with perforated tractor strips measuring 38cm x 56cm 15" x 22". Thin strip of toning a few tiny splits; Near Fine. <br /> <br /> Among the most striking designs created by Berkeley student members of the Political Poster Workshop in 1970 depicting a young Vietnamese boy carrying his baby brother on his back. On average fewer than 100 copies of each design were printed for distribution on and around campus. This variant not in WILLIAMS 4973: Berkeley Protest Posters 1970 - see p.118. Berkeley Political Poster Workshop unknown
83078Berkeley: Political Poster Workshop 1970. Original silkscreen in red printed on white poster paper measuring 77.74cm x 58.5cm 29" x 23". Short repaired tear in left margin; hand-inked date 7/2/70 at upper right else Near Fine. Unlike the majority of BPPW posters this one is not printed on repurposed computer paper but rather on higher-quality poster paper in a larger than usual format. <br /> <br /> One of some 600 designs created by Berkeley student members of the Political Poster Workshop a student anti-war graphics collective over the course of the 1970 academic year; on average fewer than a few hundred copies of each design were printed for distribution on and around campus. Not in Williams. unknown
388732 volumes in-12 (168 x 98 mm), plein vélin rigide de l'époque, dos titrés à la plume, (8), 372, (10) p. et (2), 218, (6), 133, (15) p., planche gravée dépliante de figures géométriques au tome I. La Haye, P. Gosse & J. Neaulme, 1734.
18268894Paris, Arthus Bertrand, 1826. 2 volumes in-8 de [6]-391 et [6]-305 pages, demi-veau moucheté à petits coins, dos lisses ornés de filets, roulettes, mentions "G. Roman", tomaison et titre dorés, étiquettes de titre brunes, tranches mouchetées. Un coin épidermé.
1725371588London: H. Woodfall 1725. 24pp. 8vo. Nineteenth century half red morocco and marbled boards minor wear. Numerical stamp on verso of title bookplate. 24pp. 8vo. Proposes the creation of a college in Bermuda for training young American Indians to serve as missionaries throughout the British colonies. First published the year prior. Scarce. ESTC T14337; Sabin 4878 H. Woodfall unknown