7 résultats
1894D175531894. Hardcover. Very Good. Black cloth. 44pp. In part "Left New York June 6th 1894 on steamship "City of Paris.arrived at Southampton.Saw the crown jewels.the beheading block where Anne Boleyn Lady Jane Grey and other were beheaded.Left for Paris at 10am on Orient Express." Many foreign words are mispelled/americanized. Detailed descriptions from England Germany Sweden France etc. The typescript ends: "the voyage is over." <br/><br/> hardcover
24273Couverture rigide. Bon. circa 1920 39ff. tapuscrits sur papier quadrillé A4 en feuilles Tapuscrit original corrigé à la plume par l'auteur. Georges Friedel définit la loi générale des macles en associant toute macle à une opération de symétrie de réseau. ""Il distingue 4 classes de macles celles par mériédrie et par pseudomériédrie réticulaires étant nouvelles. A l'exception d'un très petit nombre de cas douteux et d'autres qui devinrent plus tard les macles monopériodiques les macles aberrantes n'existent pas. Friedel les a étudiées une à une. Il suffit de changer leur définition pour les faire entrer dans le cadre de la théorie générale car une macle peut se définir de bien des manières. Friedel nous donne à cette occasion la marche à suivre pour reconnaître toutes les définitions possibles d'une macle ce qui permet de choisir celle qui est le plus exactement d'accord avec les bonnes mesures. Intéressant document témoignant de l'évolution de la pensée de Friedel sur la théorie des macles qui constitue un apport incontournable au domaine de la cristallographie. Joint la brochure imprimée de ce texte: FRIEDEL Georges. Sur la loi générale des macles et sur les macles aberrantes. Paris Imprimerie Nationale 1921; in-8 29pp. Broché. Extrait des ""Comptes rendus du Congrès des Sociétés savantes en 1920"" unknown
24282Couverture rigide. Bon/le. Strasbourg le 6 juin 1924 14ff. tapuscrits sur papier A4 en feuilles Tapuscrit signé par les auteurs. Il s'agit probablement de la version finale de l'article que les auteurs ont remise à l'éditeur. Il n'y a aucune correction. Le premier feuillet porte l'entête des deux auteurs. Les ""Nouveaux débats Einsteiniens"" paraissaient dans la ""Revue universelle"" dirigée par Jacques Bainville unknown
1968bob356private 1968 Koln 1968 large paperback silver titles to purple covers 243 pages comes with Review Request letter dated 24th April 1969 from the British Council and a rewiew response letter from same dated 5th May 1969 to Dr Ellis Evans the well respected Oxford Don Academic and Linguist with his Signature to fep. rubbing wear to covers Otherwise inside in VERY GOOD CLEAN TIGHT READING ORDER. Full refund if not satisfied. 24 hour dispatch. If not pictured in this listing a scan of the actual book is available on request. Soft cover. Good. private paperback
19679098New York: Hart - Multi-copy printing 1967. Quarto-sized typescript play 28.5 x 22.5 cm. 1-52 2-31 pages with some holograph corrections. The stage book based on the published book by the prolific American humorist Dan Greenburg. Originally published in 1964 Greenburg's work became the best-selling non-fiction book of 1965. The book and the subsequent musical dealt in familiar tropes of the Jewish woman and has more recently been considered anti-Semitic for doing so. This was Seymour Vall's stage book for the musical version produced for Broadway in 1967 with music by Michael Leonard and lyrics by Herbert Martin. How to Be. opened with Molly Picon in the lead at the Hudson Theater December 28th 1967 and closed January 13th 1968 after just 20 performances. Vall went on to have greater success on Broadway as a Producer on a 1972 revival of Stephen Sondheim's A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. There are modest holograph corrections throughout though this is not signed and thus unclear who the annotator may have been. In blue metal post-bound binder titled in silver. Fine. Hart - Multi-copy printing unknown
194756552Madison WI: Univ. of Wisconsin School of Commerce Bureau of Business Research & Service 1947. Thick 4to. 4 viii 1 201 leaves including several large folding hand-coloured manuscript tables charts diagrams old scotch tape at folds as originally prepared. Green cloth gilt lettering stamped on front cover minor edgewear rubbing VG exemplar. An intriguing unpublished typescript manuscript of the American labor movement focusing on the forces that effected the labor movement’s growth and analyzing those forces or factors. The author felt that not enough efforts had been made historically prior to World War II on applying the science of statistical analysis to labor unions their membership and the potential impacts on the economic life of the United States. In addition he employs statistical analysis of the union membership by many different unions trades and occupations in order to measure the strength of the labor movement reducing dependence on the analysis of strike frequency threats of strikes elections or other factors which can be indeterminate. Although he does draw upon the work of Barnett “Growth of Labor Organization in the United States 1897-1914†and Wolman “The Growth of American Trade Unions 1880-1923†Current believed their numbers were flawed in the 19th Century and includes a substantial statistical analysis of how he corrects those numbers as well as those from other historical sources. Of additional interest are the two critical letters bound into the volume with the first from famed Wisconsin labor historian Selig Perlman 1888-1959 which notes that Current “is entitled to credit for ingenuity industry and optimism. The valuable part of the manuscript is the statistical one. . . and full credit for debunking some of the loose estimates of membership at the peaks of 1836 and 1872.†Perlman himself has received recently significant criticism regarding his racist views and limited understanding of the evolution of the labor movement which did not try to include race status ethnicity or other sociological factors. Perlman’s letter The second from W.D. Knight notes that Current’s study may impede on work underway for publication by Professor Moberly. Current 1923-2013 received his BA from the University of Wisconsin later worked for Kennedy Economic Development in Oregon and aided the Oregon Shakespeare Festival wrote on the conditions of migrant workers in the Willamette Valley in the 1950s and authored several works on philately and stamp cancels. Univ. of Wisconsin, School of Commerce, Bureau of Business Research & Service, hardcover
1920D7518likely the 1920s or early 1930s. Ephemera. Very Good. A small archive of works by Michele Andree Guy: "La France Contemporaine" in French 9 leaves 208 x 270 mm typed on the recto only and bound with a clasp at top corner; "Alphonse de Chateaubriant Romancier" in French 11 leaves 208 x 270 mm typed on the recto only and staple-bound at the top corner; and the translation into English of "Alphonse" 11 leaves 203 x 328 mm lined paper handwritten in black ink on the recto only with corrections in ink and pencil staple-bound at tope corner. All in excellent condition some light wrinkling or flattened creases along the edges nowhere infringing upon text. Alphonse de Chateaubriant was a prize-winning French novelist who became an ardent supporter of Nazism after a trip to Germany in 1935. The essay included here focuses on his writing making no mention of his abhorent political beliefs and a pencil notation indicates that it may have been a submission to the Bermondsey Book literary magazine edited by Frederick Heath and published December 1923 to May 1930. However we find no record of publication. <br/><br/> unknown