Vysokie derevia/ Tall trees - Rare Book Insider
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Vysokie derevia/ Tall trees

A collection of poems by the famous Soviet Balkarian poet.
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Lyndon B. Johnson Signing Pen for Voting Rights Act of 1965

"One of the pens used by the President, August 6, 1965, in signing S. 1564, An Act to enforce the fifteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and for other purposes," per original printed slip in original box. Clear barrel pen, "The President-The Whitehouse" printed in white, with "Esterbrook" on the nib, 6 3/8 in. long. With additional artifacts. This artifact came from Arnold "Pappy" Noel (1922-2009), a longtime news photographer who at that time was in the Public Affairs Office of the Secretary of Defense. Noel earned his nickname in World War II as a B-29 tail gunner. After the war and his retirement, he joined United Press International as a newsreel and still photographer, filming presidential and White House events, marches on Washington and Selma, fires and riots in Washington and Detroit, and early NASA events. At the 1968 Democratic Convention, he became part of the story when he was injured and arrested for refusing to hand over his film of "excessive abuse of law enforcement agents towards demonstrators." He was president of the White House Press Photographers Association for two years, leaving the press corps to work as a public affairs assistant to President Ford. Historical BackgroundThe Civil Rights Act of 1964 barred discrimination and segregation in education, public facilities, jobs, and housing. President Kennedy sent the Act to Congress in 1963, but the Judiciary Committee held it back. Gaining support after the September 1963 March on Washington, it still did not pass until July of 1964, after Kennedy's assassination. Even then, the job was still not done. On March 15, 1965, a week after Bloody Sunday, President Lyndon B. Johnson addressed the nation, declaring that "all Americans must have the privileges of citizenship regardless of race." He announced that he was sending a new bill to Congress with more power to prevent states and election officials from denying southern blacks the vote.The Voting Rights Act of 1965 outlawed poll taxes, literacy tests, and other practices that had prevented southern blacks from voting. Where local authorities continued to disfranchise African Americans, it authorized the attorney general to send federal officials to register black voters and authorized the federal government to supervise elections. There was an immediate effect. By the middle of 1966, over half a million Southern blacks had registered to vote, and by 1968, almost four hundred black people had been elected to office.
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Über das Modell der Wasserstoffmolekülions. Inscribed to H. A. Kramers

Pauli, Wolfgang (1900-1958). Über das Modell des Wasserstoffmolekülions. Offprint from Annalen der Physik, 4th series, 68 (1922). 177-240pp. 227 x 145 mm. Without wrappers as issued, small splits in spine. Minor wear and toning but very good. Presented by Pauli to Dutch physicist H. A. Kramers (1894-1952), with Pauli's pencil inscription "Herrn Dr. Kramers" on the first leaf. First Edition, Rare Offprint Issue of Pauli's doctoral thesis. At the urging of his teacher, Arnold Sommerfeld, Pauli chose as his topic the quantum theory of ionized molecular hydrogen (H2+), which contains two protons and one electron. As Heisenberg (also a student of Sommerfeld's) later recalled, Pauli "wanted to examine if, in a complicated system for which one was just barely capable of doing the calculations, Bohr's theory and the Bohr-Sommerfeld quantum conditions led to the experimentally correct result. For, in our Munich discussions doubts had come to us whether the hitherto obtained successes of the theory were not limited to simple systems and whether a failure might not occur already in the more complicated system" (quoted in Enz, No Time to be Brief: A Scientific Biography of Wolfgang Pauli, p. 63). Pauli's efforts, although they obtained him his doctorate, did not yield a successful quantum theory of H2+; according to Born, who reviewed Pauli's work on H2+ in his Lectures on Quantum Mechanics, the resulting energy values "cannot be made to agree with the measurements of the ionization and excitation voltages" (quoted in Enz, p. 69). The problem of the hydrogen molecular ion was not solved until 1927, when Øyvind Burrau published the first successful quantum-mechanical treatment of H2+. Pauli presented this paper to H. A. Kramers, one of the key architects, together with Schrödinger, Pauli and Werner Heisenberg, of quantum mechanics. Among his many contributions to physics are the Kramers-Heisenberg formula; Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin approximation; Kramers-Kronig relations; Kramers-Wanner duality; Kramers model for polymer chains; Kramers-Anderson superexchange; Kramers' degeneracy theorem; Kramers-Moval expansion; and the Kramers opacity law. 45900.
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THE HAUNTED MAN and THE GHOST’S BARGAIN

A Fancy for Christmas-Time. New York: Harper & Brothers, n.d. [1849]. 2 pp undated ads. Original brown printed wrappers. First American Edition of Dickens's fifth and last Christmas book; there had been no late-1847 Christmas book, as Dickens had then been busy with DOMBEY AND SON. Though undated, this Harper edition in wrappers came out on January 6, 1849; this is earlier in January than was the case for their four previous Christmas books, and for good reason: in December Harper had paid Dickens five pounds for advance sheets -- the first amount an American publisher paid Dickens for a Christmas book. With the earlier four books, several American publishers leapt at the chance to be first; however, for this one, since Harper had a head-start, no other American publisher bothered to make the effort. In this copy, the (inside and outside) wrapper ads are the primary ones cited by Smith; the terminal ad leaf (pp [35-36]) has "Valuable Geographic Works" (Smith's state "c") on the recto, and "Harper's Family Library" (Smith's state "f") on the verso. Smith notes that "it is not possible to prioritize the states [of the ad leaf] accurately." This copy is in near-fine condition, with the front wrapper unusually clean and the delicate spine quite intact. There are a few marks on the rear wrapper, the usual foxing on the leaves within, plus some wear at the fore- and lower edge of the wrapper -- a common problem for this booklet, as the wrapper extends past the textual leaves. There is also a little marginal damage to some leaves, due to improper opening. We do not see this book in much better condition. Smith pp 104-107; Podeschi (Yale) A120; Carr (UTexas) B426(1).
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Vauquelin relate son voyage effectué en Normandie avec son maître le chimiste Antoine-François Fourcroy

1 lettre autographe signée 1 p. 1/4 In-4 6 floréal an 9 [26 avril 1801] Adresse au dos. Bon Vauquelin relateles honneurs faitsà son maîtrelechimiste Antoine-François Fourcroy et à lui-même, lors d'un voyage en Normandie. "Madame Fourcroy vous aura sans doute dit comment son mari a été reçu par les lieux où il a passé, et dans celui de sa mission; il n'est guère possible de faire plus d'honneur à un délégué du gouvernement. Le préfet d'Evreux, homme aimable, d'une fort bonne tenue et paraissant fort instruit, avait envoyé au devant de nous, à deux lieues de distance, un détachement de gendarmerie, commandé par un capitaine, lequel a escorté la voiture jusqu'à l'hôtel de la préfecture où nous descendîmes et où nous dînâmes. Le Cn Debrotonnes enchanté de nous voir, nous fit mille amitiés ; il avait prévenu toutes les autorités civiles et militaires, ainsi que les établissements scientifiques, de l'arrivée du Cn Fourcroy, et tous les membres qui les composent vinrent lui rendre visite, et chacun dans la partie qu'il professe lui présenta des observations. Après dîner nous allâmes nous promener à Navare, lieu véritablement enchanteur par la position de son site, par l'abondance et la beauté des eaux qui y circulent de toutes parts [.]" Fourcroy avaitquasiment élevéVauquelin : il en fut le précepteur puis le maître et enfin le directeur de thèse. Son élève de toujours devint ensuite son collaborateur et son ami. Chimiste, découvreur du chrome.
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Livre de termes d’animaux et leurs antipaties. Fort utile pour toutes sortes de personnes se meslants dussein.

In-12 de 1 titre gravé et 51 planches suivies de 51 pp. de texte, vélin souple de l'époque. Nouvelle édition de l'ouvrage de Joseph Boillot « Nouveaux pourtraitz et figures de termes pour user et l'architecture » (Langres, 1592) réduit en petit format.Elle comporte 51 des 55 planches originales de Boillot, regravées sur cuivre et inversées. Les textes, intégralement gravés, reprennent assez fidèlement la version originale. « Publié en 1592 à Langres, cet ouvrage est composé de termes zoomorphes. L'auteur le destine aux architectes et leur propose de substituer à la figure humaine, jusqu'ici usitée pour de tels supports, une figure animale qu'il juge plus prompte à accomplir ce lourd travail de soutien de l'architecture. La proposition n'est pas aussi anodine qu'il y paraît puisque Boillot transgresse une tradition décorative établie depuis l'Antiquité quand piliers, pilastres et colonnes prirent formes de cariatides et d'atlantes » (Élodie Desserle).Joseph Boillot (1546-1605) issu d'une famille de maçons ; on possède peu de renseignements sur sa vie, mais à s'en rapporter aux deux ouvrages qu'il publia, on apprend qu'il exerça à Langres l'emploi de contrôleur pour le roi au magasin et grenier à sel et plus tard celui de garde du magasin des poudres et salpêtres.Provenance : Morell, Intendant-général des sels à Berne (ex-libris imprimé) ; Abraham Küntz (signature).Très bon exemplaire complet. Petit manque marginal de papier au bas d'une planche.Élodie Desserle, L'énigmatique bestiaire de Joseph Boillot ; Paulette Choné, L'ornement zoomorphe comme signe politique : le Recueil de Boillot (1592) et son temps.
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De anima brutorum, quae hominis vitalis ac sensitiva est, exercitationes duae.

Two parts in one volume. 4to (197 x 149 mm). [56], 16, 33-565 (i.e. 563), 11 pp., 8 engraved plates of brain anatomy (5 folding); imprimatur leaf bound opposite title, longitudinal half-title g2 bound before the divisional title g1 for part one; page 563 misnumbered 565; general index at the end. Signatures: [pi]2 A4 b-f4 g2 2A-Z4 Aa-Zz4 Aaa-Yyy4 Zzz4(Zzz1 + "Zzzz Aaaa"4, Bbbb2). Bound in full contemporary speckled English calf, rebacked with new morocco spine label lettered in gilt, corners mended, endleaves renewed, dark sprinkled edges (rebacking rubbed, joints cracking). Text with light even browning, occasional spotting mostly to outer margins; instances of very faint blue vertical bands on some leaves, perhaps offsetting from bookmarks that are no longer in place; book block mostly split before p. 87; leaf Zzz4 with small patch of paper torn at fore-margin not affecting text. Provenance: Dr. Michael Stone's Psychiatry Collection. Complete except for the 4 publisher's advertisement leaves found in some copies. ---- FIRST EDITION, Oxford imprint, published shortly before the first octavo edition the same year, and thus the true first. In this earliest English work of medical psychology, Willis describes the phenomenon now known as paracusis Willisii, based on his observation of deaf woman who could hear only when a drum was beating. Willis recognized the difference between the symptoms of gross brain disease and those of mental illness. Because he postulated a disturbance of the brain and nerves in terms of disordered "animal spirits" in the absence of pathological findings, he is often considered the first to have equated mind disease with brain disease. Also includes probably the earliest description of general paralysis. References & Bibliography: Norman 2244. Garrison-Morton-Norman 1544; Hunter & Macalpine, pp. 187-92. - Visit our website to see more images!