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1406717770.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1443722936.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
2007x-1406717770Maugham Pr 2007. Paperback. New. 316 pages. 8.40x5.40x0.60 inches. Maugham Pr paperback
048308638X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0282665471.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
92543Princeton Princeton University Press 1947. Gr.8° X 304 S. OLwd. Rücken etw. beschienen Kopf min. beschienen Papier min. gebräunt. 2. korrigierte Auflage. = Princeton Mathematical Series. - Exemplar des Schweizer Mathematikers Kurt Strebel von diesem Stempel a. Vs. - «Kurt Strebel 20. April 1921 in Wohlen - 26. Oktober 2013 in Zürich war ein Schweizer Mathematiker der sich mit Funktionentheorie befasste. Strebel wurde 1953 bei Rolf Nevanlinna an der Universität Zürich promoviert Über das Kreisnormierungsproblem der konformen Abbildung. 1953 bis 1955 war er am Institute for Advanced Study und an der Stanford University. Er wurde 1955 Professor in Fribourg und 1963 der Nachfolger von Nevanlinna an der Universität Zürich als dieser zurück nach Finnland ging. Er gründete mit dem Nevanlinna-Schüler und Professor Hans Künzi das Nevanlínna Colloquium in Zürich später auch an anderen Orten um die Kontakte mit dem ehemaligen Professor in Zürich Rolf Nevanlinna aufrechtzuerhalten. 1977 wurde er Mitglied der Finnischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Er war Invited Speaker auf dem Internationalen Mathematikerkongress 1974 in Vancouver On quadratic differentials and extremal quasiconformal mappings. Nach ihm benannt sind die Strebel-Differentiale in der Teichmüller-Theorie» Wikipedia. 010 Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1947 unknown
54597Other: Other. Very Good. Hardcover. Princeton: Princeton University Press 1940. Covers show some soiling and scuffing to edges previous owner bookplate otherwise Very Good. . Other hardcover books
180041860Boston 1800. 19 1 blank pp. Stitched. With the half title in elegant typescript. Bound in contemporary pale blue wrappers heavy ink writing has caused some wrapper tears no printed text affected. Mild foxing. Upper margins trimmed closely removing page numbers but not affecting the text of the Oration. Good.<br /> <br /> "'Boston' in the imprint is a logogram" ESTC.<br /> Unlike most countries we assemble "not to pay the servile homage of adulation for the birth of kings and despots." Our revolution was not the "demon of anarchy"-- as in France-- and there are "no provinces defolated to mark the flaming path of Equality." <br /> Evans 38402. ESTC W28799. unknown
180028346Boston: Printed by John Russell 1800. First edition. Self wrappers. Stitching absent else a very good copy with scattered foxing. 19 1 pp. Sm. 8vo. Engraved title-vignette and tail piece. Half-title is: Luther Richardson's oration. Evans 328402. ESTCW28799. Sabin 71074. Printed by John Russell unknown
180035808Boston 1800. 19 1 blank pp. With the half title. Light to moderate foxing disbound Good.<br/><br/> Unlike most countries we assemble "not to pay the servile homage of adulation for the birth of kings and despots." Our revolution was not the "demon of anarchy"-- as in France-- and there are "no provinces defolated to mark the flaming path of Equality." <br/>Evans 38402. unknown books
180028346Boston: Printed by John Russell 1800. First edition. Self wrappers. Stitching absent else a very good copy with scattered foxing. 19 1 pp. Sm. 8vo. Engraved title-vignette and tail piece. Half-title is: Luther Richardson's oration. Evans 328402. ESTCW28799. Sabin 71074. Printed by John Russell unknown books
1991247041PN. New. 1991. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
16101Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. "Crisis in America's Cities; An Analysis of Social Disorder and a Plan of Action Against Poverty Discrimination and Racism in Urban " First Edition unpublished mimeograph draft. 5 pages plus cover. King's nationwide call to action against urban poverty the most ambitious Civil Rights Campaign in the Northern United States culminating in the 1968 Fair Housing Act with significant differences from King's final speech. King authored this brief but influential treatise after riots spread through the urban north due to intense discrimination and poverty. "The white society did not move and Newark came after Watts and was followed by Detroit. We will have to make them move. We will have to remind them that in the 18th century Thomas Jefferson said 'I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just.'" First Editions of the original speech made by King are extremely rare with only one known in the holdings of the King Center archives. This earlier draft held in the files of King's organization the SCLC is the only known draft of this speech in existence. <br/><br/> On August 15 King delivered what is probably the most fiery of his speeches entitled "The Crisis in American Cities." He pointed a finger at hypocrisy declaring "if the total slum violations of law by the white man over the years were calculated and compared with the lawbreaking of a few days of riots the hardened criminal would be the white man." The blame for the situation he placed upon "the policy makers of the white society.they created discrimination; they created slums; they perpetuate unemployment ignorance and poverty." With aching eloquence King declared that "Discrimination is the hellhound that gnaws at Negroes in every waking moment of their lives to remind them that the lie of their inferiority is accepted as truth in the society dominating them." His mission was to end the housing segregation that forced blacks into unsafe and unsanitary ghettos of the urban north. With tensions boiling over during the "long hot summer" of 1967 high unemployment discrimination and unsanitary an crowded living conditions led to riot after riot in cities across the urban north. King's message in "Crisis in America's Cities" was that love not hate was the answer to racial violence. <br/><br/>This speech was never formally published or collected but was released in small numbers of staple-bound 6 page copies with green covers and as a tri-fold printed pamphlet. The King Center Archives holds a single copy of the 6 page green variant. The copy here is an unknown earlier draft 5 pages plus a cover mimeographed all on yellow paper. This draft of "Crisis" is absent from institutional collections and auction records and it is possibly the only copy left in existence. While the theme and most content of this draft is the same as the final it is driven by emotion which is captured and organized by the time the speech reached its final form. Some cuts appear to be for clarity including a sentence on the first page which is lacking from the final draft and reads "After establishing the general cause of outbursts have an emotional content that is a reaction to the insults and depravity of the white backlash." Missing from this early draft is numbered list of points for introduction as well as numerous typos and typed over corrections which are visible through the mimeograph and differences in the distribution of paragraphs. <br/><br/>Period sources state King handwrote his speeches before handing them off to aides who would type a clean copy then mimeograph them for the press typically in a run of about 200 copies. Most if not all were distributed to the press and then lost. Today most documents from the SCLC files exist only in the collection of the King Center. Like those in the King Center this document escaped destruction because it were never distributed but rather remained as the personal copy of King or his top staffers. This can be proven by the fact that all press copies were carefully inscribed with a copyright symbol © while King's copy brought with him to the podium and other internal copies remained blank. This document spent decades in an SCLC filing cabinet where it was exposed to dampening on the left side but is otherwise untouched. It now presents in only fair condition with water staining and rust around the original staple which is still holding. Light grey water stains to left side of document and bottom left corner frayed. All text legible. The right side of the document was apparently more protected in its file and is in very good condition. It was gifted from the Estate of Thomas Offenburger to Stoney Cooks. Both Offenburger and Cooks worked with King at the SCLC with Offenburger as publicist and Cooks as a young Director of Student Affairs. King's mission was rewarded the year after "Crisis" by the passage of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 barring racial discrimination in real estate. Unfortunately King did not live to see it. King's indictment of government for causing urban suffering is extremely rare today with only one final draft Edition of "Crisis" in the King Center Archives and no copies of this early unpublished draft recorded anywhere. unknown books
2018x-1350062383Bloomsbury USA Academic 2018. Hardcover. New. 253 pages. 9.50x6.50x0.50 inches. Bloomsbury USA Academic hardcover
2020x-1350170240Bloomsbury USA Academic 2020. Paperback. New. reprint edition. 253 pages. 9.00x6.00x0.75 inches. Bloomsbury USA Academic paperback
Mm 195x285 Brossura editoriale con bandelle di pp. 246, con illustrazioni in bianco e nero e a colori. Conrtributi in inglese, italiano, tedesco. Ottimo. SPEDIZIONE IN 24 ORE DALLA CONFERMA DELL'ORDINE.
20171-3639621549Éditions universitaires européennes 2017. Paperback. New. 136 pages. French language. 8.66x5.91x0.31 inches. Éditions universitaires européennes paperback
3838665546.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
ria9783838665542_inpPaperback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; N/A paperback
0878931228New. paperback. New. Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back. paperback
17960021RfPest, Trattner, 1796. Kopf- u. Endvignetten, VIII, 517 (6) S., 9 leere Bl.; 399 (4) S., 9 leere Bl., 2 Bde. Halblederband d.Zt. Zustand 2, berieben und bestoßen, stockfleckig, wenig Textverlust durch teilweise abgerissene Ziffernreiter, S III bis VI mit gr. Tintenfleck.
1947197452Washington D. C.: Public Utilities Reports Inc 1947. Hard Cover. Very Good binding/no dust jacket. No pencil or ink markings in text. Black cloth binding with gilt lettering. Boards clean binding sound. Very Good binding / no dust jacket. Public Utilities Reports, Inc unknown books