Displaying: 376 400 of 420 matches for “1936 Olympics”
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376. Erna Rettberg Bauer papers
images of the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, correspondence between Anna and Julius and their son in the United
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377. Oral history interview with Hans Tuch
Catholic school; his father’s death in 1936; seeing Jesse Owens perform at the 1936 Olympics; being
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378. Morck and Mayer families papers
owned a real estate business. Anne was a German National Swim Team member and qualified for the 1936 ... Olympic Games. In the summer of 1938, Hugo was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to Sachsenhausen ... 3: Morck, Alice, 1919-1944 Folder 4: Morck, Heinz, 1938-1939 Folder 5: Morck, Anne, 1936-1944 Folder
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379. Electrotherapy machine used by a Jewish German US Army medic
athletic organizations. In the year leading up to the 1936 Berlin Olympics, Bruno was invited to ... leading up to the 1936 Berlin Olympics, Bruno, a sprinter althou not Olympic caliber, was invited to ... Margaret was a Jewish athlete who was banned from competing in the Olympics by the Nazi authorities, and ... participate in a Jews-only training camp, though he was not an Olympic-caliber athlete. The camp was part of
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380. Touring Berlin, postwar
pans to plaque reading: "16 August 1936 in Olympic Stadium in Berlin" with reference to Adolf Hitler ... of a horseman with man standing next to it. Stevens and others inside the Olympic Stadium. Camera ... Pan of stadium area, VS of diving board and Olympic swimming pools. GIs taking pictures around the
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381. Heinz Praeger papers
1936 Berlin Olympic Games. Printed materials include two Japanese publications (one with an ... was a Communist, left for Switzerland in 1933, and from there, moved to Argentina. In 1936, after Karl ... Kitzingen between the summer of 1936 and November 1938. The Jewish men of Kitzingen, including Karl Heinz
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382. A German officer looks on as the wife of a hanged man kisses her husband's hand.
who covered the 1936 Berlin Olympics. That fall, however, he was fired for refusing to join the Nazi
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383. Werner Katzenstein postcards
Wilhelm Schaefer, and others; and blank postcards documenting the 1936 Olympics, bear Deutsches Reich
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384. Ruth Mueller papers
wartime photographs of family, friends, day trips, and a visit to the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.
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385. Sources of the Rhein river
after the war. Four reels contain footage showing the 1936 Olympics in Berlin while the other two
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386. Frankfurt -- city views
after the war. Four reels contain footage showing the 1936 Olympics in Berlin while the other two
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387. Oral history interview with Annelise Hentschel
taking part in the 1936 Berlin Olympics; being in the youth group at her synagogue; vacationing in Sweden
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388. Oral history interview with Wolfdieter Skottke
members and their political affiliations; joining the Jungvolk in 1930; attending the Berlin Olympic games ... in 1936; the burning of the synagogue in Stettin; his friendly relations with his Jewish neighbors
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389. Oral history interview with Guenter Lewy
in a large extended assimilated family; his memory of seeing Hitler at the 1936 Olympics; belonging
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390. Oral history interview with Frank Ephraim
until 1937 and his participation in the 1936 Olympics events; how Kristallnacht was the impetus for his
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391. Oral history interview with Agnes Mandl Adachi
attending the 1936 Olympics in Berlin; traveling to England and Italy and learning teaching methods from
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392. Factory-printed Star of David badge printed with Jude, acquired by a German Jewish man
Jews from citizenship and mandated the separation of Jews and non-Jews. In pre-Olympic trials in 1936 ... family, Edwin and Gretel returned to Germany so Gretel could train as a German for the 1936 Berlin ... Olympics. In 1935, Edwin became Deputy Director of the “Reichs Union of Jewish Veterans – Laupheim,” and ... Gretel matched the German high jump record, but weeks before the Olympics were to begin, she was removed
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393. Waffen SS recruitment poster featuring a young uniformed soldier
and the Cunard Line. He also created posters for beer and cigarette companies and for the 1936 Olympic ... were translated into several languages and sent to every corner of Nazi occupied Europe. In 1936, Anton
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394. Poster advertising the flagships of the Hamburg-Amerika Line
and the Cunard Line. He also created posters for beer and cigarette companies and for the 1936 Olympic ... were translated into several languages and sent to every corner of Nazi occupied Europe. In 1936, Anton
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395. Oral history interview with Walter Frankenstein
days of the Olympics in 1936 with his uncle; being athletic; his teacher Erna Samuel, whom he admired ... until 1936 until he was expelled by the antisemitic principal; attending a Jewish school in Berlin
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396. Oral history interview with James Gibson Hull
concentration camp. His wife, who is present during the interview, recalls attending the 1936 Olympics in ... his father was a banker and his grandfather a doctor. Graduating college in 1936, he describes his
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397. Nathan Rapoport personal archives (RG-95-80)
Nathan Rapoport (1911-1987), born in Warsaw, Poland, was a Jewish sculptor. In 1936, he won a ... 1936, his piece, The Tennis Player, was submitted by the Polish government for exhibition in Berlin as ... part of the Summer Olympics, but Rapoport refused to let it be shown in Nazi Germany. In June 1939
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398. Rothschild and Weyl families papers
taken by Nazi photographers, including Heinrich Hoffmann, of Nazi officials, the 1936 Olympics, musical ... (née Klein, 1888-1977) Rothschild. In March 1936 Walter immigrated to the United States aboard the SS ... Germany, their immigration to the United States in 1936 and 1938, and Walter’s experience as a Ritchie Boy
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399. Rudolph Daniel Sichel papers
1936. He worked for R.H. Macy & Co from 1936 to 1943. His father was arrested during Kristallnacht ... Olympics. The negatives in the collection correspond to some of the photographs of Nordhausen/Dora
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400. Collection of Nathan Rapoport prints and sketches (RG-94-4)
Nathan Rapoport (1911-1987), born in Warsaw, Poland, was a Jewish sculptor. In 1936, he won a ... 1936, his piece, The Tennis Player, was submitted by the Polish government for exhibition in Berlin as ... part of the Summer Olympics, but Rapoport refused to let it be shown in Nazi Germany. In June 1939