964 resultados para Romanticism in Germany.
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For contents see card for microfilm reproduction: FILM 16315 PF
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Medical complex from northeast. Inscription: Printed in Germany
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Regents purchased south ten acres for $3000 in 1890. In 1902 UM received seven acres of land to the north from Dexter M. Ferry; became Ferry Field. In 1904 brick wall constructed on three sides and in 1906 gate and ticket office at northeast corner added (gift of Mr. Ferry). Wooden stands to accommodate 400 put up in 1893; burned in 1895. Rebuilt to seat 800 with later additions to facilties. By 1914, 13,600 accommodated. New stadium built in 1927.On image: Printed in Germany
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Pond & Pond, architects. Built 1887-1888. Card printed in Germany
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Fry and Kasurin, architects. Building had several uses. From 1912-1913, it was a clubhouse; from 1917-1955 an administrative building. In 1925 there was extensive renovation on the building. Back of building faces west. Demolished in 1974. Several people in image. Printed in Germany. On verso: Athletic Club House, Ferry Field
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[Hugh C. Leighton Co., Portland Oregon, made in Germany.]
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(on verso: Printed in Germany Roelling and Klapenbach Publishers, Chicago Ill. no. 308) Card was sent after the 1905 U-M Chicago game.(Original loaned to library for scanning)
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"Select bibliography": v. 2, p. [xv]-xxiii.
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"With some slight alterations, a translation of ... [the author's] introduction to the complete edition of Lassalle's Speeches and works."
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Title supplied by the University of California.
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Pt. 1-5 are bound in 1 v. with title: Descriptive lists of American, international, romantic and British novels ... Cambridge, 1891.
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Issues for 1900-41 called also n.F., 1.-41. Bd.; 1949- called also 3. F., 1.- Bd.
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Over the past decade the various triptan derivatives have been accepted as the most effective available agents for relieving migraine attacks. Prior to that, for a period of half a century, ergotamine was the only 'specific' available for this purpose. In 1918, Stoll had isolated it from the various alkaloids present in extracts of the sclerotia of the fungus Claviceps purpurea (ergot), which grow on rye and, to a lesser extent, on other grasses. By 1925 ergotamine was beginning to be used to treat migraine attacks. However, as ergotamine was present in extracts of ergot, which had been used to treat migraine first, In Italy in 1862, and then by Edward Woakes (11868) in England, and after him by Albert Eulenburg in Germany (1883), the drug had actually come into unrecognised use for the disorder more than half a century before ergotamine itself was known to exist. Unfortunately, because of ergotamine's chemical and pharmacokinetic properties, extracts of ergot of rye were incapable of producing consistent therapeutic results, so that general acceptance that the first specific substance for migraine treatment existed had to wait until pure ergotamine was available for administration. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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The life and work of Werner Sombart poses an intellectual puzzle in the genealogy of modern social theorists. During his lifetime, Sombart was probably the most influential and prominent social scientist in Germany as well as in many other countries. Today he is among the least known social scientists. Why did he lose his status as one of the most brilliant and influential scholars and intellectuals of the 20th century? Why is his work almost forgotten today? While Weber's thesis about the influence of Protestantism on the development of capitalism is widely known, even beyond sociological circles, few sociologists today know that Sombart had an alternative explanation. An obvious explanation for Sombart's fall from grace is his embrace of Nazism. As Heidegger provides a counter-example, Sombart's fate requires a more complex explanation. In addition, we explore the different reception of his work in economic and sociological circles as compared to cultural theory and history. © 2001, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.