1 160 résultats
19855502BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1985. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 33.
19875495BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1987. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 35
19885496BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1988. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 36
19895513BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1989. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 37.
19905497BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1990. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 38
19925498BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1992. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 39/40
19945506BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1994. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 42.
19955503BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1995. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 43.
19975501BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1997. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 45.
19985519BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1998. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. Neu, noch in Folie verschweisst Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 46.
19995511BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1999. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 47.
19995512BBMünchen Schild Verl. 1999. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. sehr gut. Zust. Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 47.
20015500BBMünchen Schild Verl. 2001. 8° 480 S.: zahrl. Abb. Or.Pp. Neu , noch in Folie verschweisst Deutscher Soldatenkalender , 48./49.
2665paris ernest flammarion éditeur sans date in 12 broché 264 pages
0259781983.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
19421093291942 Editions Berger-Levrault - 1942 - In-8, broché, couverture sous protection plastique - 65 p. + XV planches coloriées à la main - Quelques illustrations in-texte en N&B
6235PARIS, Ed. Calmann-Levy - 1872 - In-16 - 1/2 Reliure frottée - Titre doré - 127 pages + table
PARIS, Ed. Calmann-Levy - 1872 - In-16 - 1/2 Reliure frottée - Titre doré - 127 pages + table
1916WOC-709Une Ame d'Elite–Francis Desbiolles–Séminariste-Soldat. Mort au Champ D'Honneur en Alsace le 27 Mai 1915. Portrait en frontispice. Thonon-les-Bains, Imprimerie Jules Masson, 1916. In-8 (22x14cm) broché, dos avec petite restauration. II,104pp.
076-Do.J. Feder in Braun, braun laviert, mit einzelner schwarzer Federlinie umrandet, auf Bütten. 16,2:15,6 cm. Papier etwas gebräunt., sonst sehr gut erhalten. Provenienz: Sammlung Christian Hammer, Stockholm.
189017551Paris, Garnier Frères, 1890 ; fort in-8, cartonnage polychrome sur fond kaki, titre doré, dos décoré et doré, second plat décoré en noir, plats biseautés, tranches dorées ; (4), 1138 pp. , 54 illustrations aquarellées à la main, dont 16 hors-texte, 30 en-tête et 8 dessins in-texte, 7 vignettes en noir et blanc.
2000120072Ilsfeld. Privatdruck. 2000. 96 Seiten. Mit mehreren Abbildungen. Farbig ill. Original-Karton-Einband. Gutes Exemplar. 21x15 cm
201330679München : Kunstmann, 2013. 236 S. Pb.
199851153Berlin : Aufbau-Verl. 1998. 229 S. : 30 Abb.. ; 22 cm, mit Schutzumschlag Top Zustand, Pp., gebundene Ausgabe, Hardcover/Pappeinband, Exemplar in sehr gutem Erhaltungszustand
1932100747<p>New York November 14 1932. 1932. Very good. - Over 85 words typed on his 8-5/8 inch high by 6-1/2 inch wide "90 Broad Street" stationery. Addressing the young campaign volunteer Seymour J. Halpern William J. Donovan the future head of the Office of Strategic Services writes "We have been through a hard fight together. We did not win the title but we did a real job." He goes on to show his appreciation to the young autograph collector "I want you to know that I appreciate that the fight could not have been fought as it was if it had not been for your continued loyalty and support. Please accept this as my symbol of appreciation." Signed in full "William J. Donovan". Donovan ran for Governor of New York State to succeed FDR in 1932. A Republican he lost to Herbert Lehman. Folded in half for mailing the edges are soiled and there are tears to the edges of the fold. Very good.</p><p>To house his law firm in March of 1932 Colonel William J. Donovan leased a large suite of offices in the Stone & Webster Building at 90 Broad Street in New York City.</p><p>The American attorney diplomat soldier and intelligence officer William J. Donovan 1883-1959 is best known as the head of the OSS the Office of Strategic Services which was the war time precursor to the CIA. A veteran of World War I Donovan was awarded the Medal of Honor the Distinguished Service Cross the Distinguished Service Medal and the National Security Medal. In 1941 FDR established the Office of the Coordination of Information with Donovan as its director. Once the U.S. entered the war the COI became the OSS in June of 1942 with Donovan now a major general as its head. Donovan created the OSS as a military psychological warfare service to include both psychological and unconventional warfare. The service would soon include elements that would be called "special operations" the first phase of which would be intelligence penetration including research and analysis and propaganda followed by a second stage incorporating sabotage and subversion. This second stage would be followed by guerilla action commando raids and support of resistance movements.</p><p>An avid autograph collector in his youth the then 19-year old campaign volunteer the future Queens New York Republican Congressman Seymour Halpern 1913-1997 started his political career as a campaign aide to New York's powerful mayor Fiorella La Guardia and first served in New York's State Senate for 14 years before seeking a seat in the U.S. Congress. In Albany Halpern sponsored 279 bills that became law including measures on schools housing civil rights nutrition and mental health. A Liberal he was something of an anomaly as the lone Republican representative from New York City and generally garnered support from Labor Unions and endorsement from the Liberal Party. Yet he never even considered switching parties as he considered membership in the Republican Party a family tradition and commitment. While he found ample time for his private pursuits including painting and collecting autographs he took his legislative duties very seriously. Of these he was proudest of his co-sponsorship of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and of the original 1965 Medicare legislation.</p> [New York], November 14, 1932.