142 résultats
1970144148N.p.: N.p. 1970. Draft script for an unproduced film. With occasional holograph annotations in blue ink throughout. <br/><br/>Adapted for the screen from Alan Morris' 1970 novel "The Tale Of The Lazy Dog." A ragtag group consisting of an Irish journalist a French woman married to a man in the CIA a mercenary pilot and a shameless adventurer are amuck in the war torn region of Laos Cambodia and Vietnam attempting to extort one and a half billion dollars. <br/><br/>Set in Laos Cambodia and Vietnam. <br/><br/>Blue titled wrappers. Title page present noted as with credits for screenwriter Dursley Berkeley and novelist Alan Williams. 112 with last page of text numbered 114. Mechanical duplication. Pages Fine wrapper Fine bound with three gold brads. N.p. unknown books
1938133673Burbank CA: Warner Brothers 1938. Final Draft script for the 1938 film. From the library of producer Mark Hellinger who wrote the film's screenplay bound in red three-quarter leather with gilt titles and designs marbled endpapers raised bands trimmed edges and Hellinger's name in gilt on the front board. Also included is a typescript on onionskin stock with the title and credits for Hellinger and story writer Faith Baldwin on the front wrapper in holograph ink. Finally laid in is a typed letter signed by Bette Davis dated March 31 1939 on Davis' stationery thanking Hellinger for kind words regarding her film "Dark Victory" 1939 and discussing her dismay with the script for "Comet Over Broadway" and her resulting decision to part ways with the film. <br/><br/>Mark Hellinger's first screenplay for Warner Brothers. His other credits include the noir antecedent "The Roaring Twenties" 1939 screenwriter "It All Came True" 1940 producer and his notable series of foundation noir films "High Sierra" 1941 associate producer "The Killers" 1946 producer and "The Naked City" 1948 producer. <br/><br/>Based on a story by Faith Baldwin published in "Cosmopolitan" in 1937 about Eve Appleton Francis wife of garage owner Bill Appleton Litel and aspiring actress. Bill gets into an argument with an actor over Eve and accidentally kills him. Eve takes her infant daughter and tries to make her way on Broadway while Bill is imprisoned. Set in New York. <br/><br/>Bound script:<br/><br/>Noted as FINAL on the distribution page dated 3/28/38 with credits for Hellinger Robert Buckner N. Brewster Morse Fritz Falkenstein and Frank Cavett on the following page flatsigned by Walter MacEwen. Distribution page present with receipt intact. 155 leaves mimeograph duplication dated August 19 1938 and August 22 1938 screenwriters' credit page. Pages and binding Near Fine. <br/><br/>Typescript:<br/><br/>Blue wrappers. "Comet Over Broadway by Mark Hellinger / after a story by Faith Baldwin" in holograph ink on the front wrapper. Title page present with credits for screenwriter Hellinger and story writer Baldwin. 78 leaves typed watermarked "MILLERS FALLS." Pages Near Fine wrapper Very Good plus bound with two gold brads. <br/><br/>Bette Davis letter and envelope: <br/><br/>Light soil and a closed tear to the envelope. Letter folded horizontally else Near Fine. Warner Brothers unknown books
199837600New York: American Printing History Association 1998. Small 4to 27.3 cm; 10.75". vi 181 8 pp. <br><br>One of 500 copies and no. 50 of 50 special copies signed by the designer Roderick Stinehour and bound by Judi Conant at Guildhall VT with the inclusion of => three wood engravings by Rudolph Ruzicka printed by the Merrymount Press in addition to the many reproductions prepared for this volume. The correspondence was edited by Elizabeth French Lathem and Edward Connery Lathem and the text and illustration together well exemplify the collaboration between two giants of the Book Arts during the first half of the 20th century.<br>Â Â Â Â => The wood engravings are absolutely stunning.<br>Â Â Â Â Provenance: From the library of American collector Albert A. Howard small booklabel "AHA" at rear. Quarter blue cloth with gray paper spine label over lovely marbled paper; issued without a dust jacket. The least scattering of light foxing-spots to lower fore-edges not margins of last few leaves; indeed a => bright clean copy. American Printing History Association hardcover books
194018101New York: The Grolier Club 1940. Edition limited to 1000 copies printed by The Pynson Printers this 1 of 150 copies for the Grolier Club signed by Updike in pencil on the colophon; 8vo pp. 47 7; vignette title-page and 3 vignettes in text; fine in orig. brown cloth over beige paper-covered boards lettered in gilt on spine. 850 copies were also printed for the A.I.G.A. which were bound in wrappers and not signed. Addresses given at the Grolier Club at the opening of an exhibition on Updike and the Merrymount Press with a check-list of Updike's writings. <br/><br/> The Grolier Club hardcover books
1928142254London: London Book Company 1928. First UK Photoplay Edition. Photo-illustrated with stills from the film. <br/><br/>Based on the 1928 film directed by Herbert Wilcox and starring Sybil Thorndike itself based on the stage play by Berkeley. One of the most controversial British films of the silent era about the execution of British nurse Edith Cavell by German forces during World War I. <br/><br/>Near Fine in a Very Good dust jacket. Jacket is lightly chipped with several closed tears repaired with cello tape on the verso. London Book Company unknown books
1928142596London: London Book Company 1928. First UK Photoplay Edition. Photo-illustrated with stills from the film. <br/><br/>Based on the 1928 film directed by Herbert Wilcox and starring Sybil Thorndike itself based on the stage play by Berkeley. One of the most controversial British films of the silent era about the execution of British nurse Edith Cavell by German forces during World War I. <br/><br/>Very Good Plus in a Very Good dust jacket. Light edgewear spine lean faint foxing. Jacket with several chips and creases reinforced on both sides with cello tape at the top and bottom edges. London Book Company unknown books
1992180653Berkeley: The Graduate Minority Students' Project Graduate Assembly UC Berkeley 1992. Paperback. vi 110p. 8.5x11 inches foreword photos drawings tables figures essays contact info very good first edition oversized trade paperback original in pictorial wraps. The Graduate Minority Students' Project, Graduate Assembly, UC Berkeley paperback books
19691309905Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press 1969. Hardcover. Octavo; pp 379; VG/no-DJ; dark green spine with gilt text; 3/4 bound binding with dark green spine and light green boards; cloth shows minor rubbing to edges; light shelf wear to exterior; text block has dark green endpapers; previous owner's stamped to head edge and ffep; interior clean; illustrated. 1309905. FP New Rockville Stock. The University of North Carolina Press hardcover books
197576129Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Very Good in Very Good dust jacket. 1975. Hardcover in jacket. 9 1/4 x 6 1/2 inches bound in blue cloth with pictorial end pages. Complete in 283 pages with some illustrations. . University of North Carolina Press hardcover books
1990M4556Philadelphia: Saunders 1910; Birmingham:: Classics of Surgery Library 1990. 1990. 25 cm. 379 pp. Illus. index. Full navy blue gilt-stamped cowhide a.e.g. Fine. Bookplate. Special edition. "Moynihan greatly advanced our knowledge of duodenal ulcer. He developed the concept of the so-called ulcer sequence pain-food-ease and he stressed the well-ordered sequence of symptoms. More than any other he established treatment of duodenal ulcer on a sound basis." See: Garrison and Morton 3535. Classics of Surgery Library, 1990. unknown books
1947432481947. <p>Berkeley Edmund C. 1909-88. Electronic machinery for handling information and its uses in insurance. Offprint from Transactions of the Actuarial Society of America 48 1947. 36-52pp. 228 x 153 mm. Original printed wrappers a few tiny spots almost invisible staple-holes in front wrapper. Very good copy. Former owner's name-stamp Clifford J. Maloney on wrappers. </p> <p>First Edition Offprint Issue. The first published paper on the commercial application of electronic / electromechanical computing in private industry outside of the telephone company. Drawing on material that he would later publish in his famous Giant Brains or Machines that Think 1949 Berkeley described the four large-scale computing machines then in operation—MIT's Differential Analyzer; Harvard's Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator; the Moore School's ENIAC; and Bell Laboratories' Relay Calculator—and discussed the machines' information-processing capabilities and their potential uses in the insurance industry. "It is natural to call these machines mechanical or electronic brains and to speak of them as machinery that thinks. This new machinery is certain to have far-reaching effects in all fields where the handling of information is the bulk of the work. . . . Much of the material in this paper is taken from a forthcoming book on the subject by the present writer and is used by special permission of the publisher" p. 36. </p> <p>Berkeley a seminal figure in the history of modern computing was introduced to computing using punched-card machine methods while working as an actuary at Prudential Insurance. In 1942 he joined the Navy and was assigned to the Harvard Computation Laboratory where he worked with Howard Aiken on the Harvard Mark II. In 1946 Berkeley returned to Prudential where he helped create a prototype premium billing trial for the Harvard Mark I and participated in studies that led to Prudential's purchase of one of the first UNIVAC I computers. He also began working on Giant Brains and in 1947 founded the Association for Computing Machinery. In 1948 he left Prudential to found his own company and in 1951 he began editing and publishing Computers and Automation later renamed Computers and People the first periodical specifically devoted to computing. He also headed his own publishing firm consulted for industry and invented and sold several build-it-yourself electronic computers and small robots Simon Squee Tyniac Brainiac etc. as educational tools. In his later years he became known as the conscience of the computer industry through his often-expressed belief that computers should be used not for military or destructive purposes but only for the benefit of society. </p> . unknown books
1916115405New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1916. First Edition. Octavo. First Edition. With matching dates on the title page and copyright page 1916. Very Good to Fine in publisher's green cloth with designs and titles in gilt and white lacking the dust jacket. Light shelfwear spine ends lightly bumped. A very presentable copy. Charles Scribner's Sons unknown books
1970131498Berkeley California: University of California Berkeley; University Art Museum 1970. Softcover. VG. White stapled wraps with triangular rainbow design. 60 pp. Unillustrated. Exhibition held Sept. 1970 in honor of the Museum's opening. Foreword by Peter Selz. Has a checklist for the exhibition listing 600 works of art. University of California, Berkeley; University Art Museum unknown books
199461086Dublin & Saskatoon: New Island Books/Thistledown Press 1994. First edition. 96 pp. Near fine in glossy illustrated wrappers. Dublin & Saskatoon: New Island Books/Thistledown Press unknown books
199451652Dundrum & Saskatoon: New Island/Thistledown 1994. First edition. 96 pp. Fine in glossy illustrated wrappers; a trade paperback original. SIGNED by Berkeley on the half-title page. Dundrum & Saskatoon: New Island/Thistledown paperback books
1967166003Berkeley: author 1967. 1p printed one side only 8.5 x 11 inches 2.75 inch closed tear near top of page else good condition. Leaflet calls on students faculty and student parents to join February 11 March on Sacramento planned by AFT and CFT. author unknown books
195422102ENew York: Collins 1954. First Edition. Review Copy with the publisher’s dated notice laid in. Near fine bright copy with a trace of offsetting to the endpapers in a very good lightly handled dust jacket with some minor dust soiling fading to the spine and tiny chips and tears. A Norman Conquest novel. Edwy Searles Brooks 1889 - 1965 was a British novelist who wrote under several pen names including Berkeley Gray Victor Gunn Rex Madison and Carlton Ross. Collins unknown books
1905EEG1117Philadelphia:: W. B. Saunders 1905. 1905. 8vo. 3 11-458 18 pp. 122 black and white and color illustrations index advertisement supplement. Black gilt-stamped cloth; library catalogue number on spine. Library book plate. Very good. W. B. Saunders, 1905. hardcover books
1957173818Berkeley: University of California 1957. hardcover. very good. In Honor of the Two Hundredth Anniversary of the Death of George Berkeley Bishop of Cloyne 1685-1753. Ownership signature on 1/2 title. Berkeley: University of California Press 1957. Very good<br/><br/> University of California unknown books
19889007284Tuscaloosa: Univ of Alabama Pr 1988. Hardcover. Book fine Dust jacket fine. History of American Science and Technology Series. <br/><br/> Univ of Alabama Pr hardcover books
198812094Tuscaloosa and London: Alabama 1988. First edition 8vo pp. xv-xviii 357; frontis. portrait and 24 illus. in text; mint in jacket. Explorer and surveyor in America before 1850 Featherstonhaugh promoted the formation of the U.S. Geological Survey. Chapters on Minnesota and Wisconsin. <br/><br/> Alabama unknown books
1949111716New York: John Wiley & Sons 1949. First edition second printing of this important work which popularized cognitive images of early computers. Octavo original cloth. Association copy inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper "To Erwin Tomash with warmest greetings for more than 20 years together in the computer field from Ed Berkeley October 11 1975." The recipient Erwin Tomash was an engineer who co-founded Dataproducts Corporation which specialized in computer technology specifically printers and core memory units. He is recognized for his early pioneering work with computer equipment peripherals. Tomash led the creation of the Charles Babbage Institute and is responsible for The Adelle and Erwin Tomash Fellowship in the History of Information Technology and The Erwin Tomash Library. With Erwin Tomash's bookplate to the pastedown near fine in a very good dust jacket. An exceptional association linking these two pioneers in the field. Edmund C. Berkeley became famous in 1949 with the publication of his book Giant Brains or Machines That Think in which he described the principles behind computing machines called then "mechanical brains" "sequence-controlled calculators" or various other terms and then gave a technical but accessible survey of the most prominent examples of the time including machines from MIT Harvard the Moore School Bell Laboratories and elsewhere. In Giant Brains Berkeley also outlined a device which some have described as the first "personal computer" Simon. Plans on how to build this computer were published in the journal Radio Electronics in 1950 and 1951. Simon used relay logic and cost about $600 to construct. The first working model was built at Columbia University with the help of two graduate students. Berkeley founded published and edited Computers and Automation the first computer magazine. He also created the Geniac and Brainiac toy computers. John Wiley & Sons hardcover books
1949170923007New York: John Wiley and Sons 1949. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. First edition. Flat-signed by Berkeley on front free endpaper in black ink. xvi 270pp. Original gray cloth with blue lettering. Offsetting to ffep else Fine in About Very Good price-clipped dust jacket with edge-wear creased tear to bottom of back panel tiny chip near head. A very uncommon signature from the computer science pioneer journalist and mathematician who observed the UNIVAC Simon the first personal computer designed by Berkeley himself and the Harvard Mark I among other early computers in action. This book brought the concept of the computer to the lay public for the first time. John Wiley and Sons hardcover books
1947140197Los Angeles: Twentieth Century-Fox 1947. Revised Final script for the 1948 film here under the working title "Mary O'Hara's Green Grass of Wyoming." Copy belonging to Robert Arthur who play Ken McLaughlin with his name on the front wrapper in holograph pencil and holograph pencil annotations to his scenes throughout. Laid in are three additional pages and two film negatives. <br/><br/>A mare has been lured away by a wild stallion angering the mare's owner Beaver Greenway a horse owner with a drinking problem. Meanwhile Ken McLaughlin Arthur returns home with a new horse who has developed altitude sickness. Based on the third book in Mary O'Hara's "My Friend Flicka" trilogy. Nominated for one Academy Award. <br/><br/>Set in Wyoming shot on location in Wyoming Utah and Ohio USA. <br/><br/>Red titled wrappers noted as Revised Final on the front wrapper rubber-stamped copy No. 166 and production No. 133 dated May 16 1947. Distribution page present with receipt removed. Title page present dated May 16 1947 noted as Revised Final with credits for screenwriter Martin Berkeley. 123 leaves with last page of text numbered 117. Mimeograph duplication with blue revision pages throughout dated variously between June 25 1947 and July 18 1947. Pages Very Good with dampstaining wrapper Fair to Good complete with dampstaining pages not affected and fray at the extremities bound with three gold brads. Twentieth Century-Fox unknown books
1924268329Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1924. hardcover. near fine. Slim 8vo 70 pages khaki cloth backed boards. Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1924. First Edition. Near Fine.<br/><br/> Printed by the author at the Merrymount Press. Signed presentation by Updike. Laid in is a 2 page A.L.S. and stamped envelope from Updike dated Dec. 16th 1935.<br/><br/> Harvard University Press unknown books