Verlag: New York: Life Magazine, 1949
Anbieter: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, USA
Manuskript / Papierantiquität
Zustand: Good. Tear sheets of the article including ads. Addressed to Fred G. Ruffner, Jr. 427 Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Columbus 15, Ohio. Envelope dated Feb. 7, 1949.Folio. 26.5 x 35cm. Sheets stapled together Pages numbered 109-124. Pictures of the Agonis Club; Charles W. "Chic" Harley; Coach Wes Fesler.Joel G. Sayre was a journalist, author, screenwriter and foreign correspondent. He was born December 13, 1900 in Marion, Indiana, the son of Joel Grover Sayre, a businessman, and Nora Clemens Sayre, a photographer and interior decorator. He grew up in Columbus, Ohio, attended the Columbus Academy there, and a private school in Cleveland. One of his childhood friends became the notable author James Thurber. At age sixteen, with the encouragement of the Governor of Ohio, James M. Cox, who took a personal interest in him, he attempted to enlist in the American army, but was refused because of his age. Fortified with a false certificate of birth, he succeeded in joining the Canadian Army and was sent to Siberia with its Expeditionary Force.After the war he took a degree in literature at Oxford University in England, and studied medicine, briefly, at Heidelberg. He began his career in journalism as police reporter for the Columbus Journal, a hometown newspaper which did not provide adequate scope for his burgeoning talent. After a brief stint as sports columnist for The Boston Herald, he became a reporter for the New York World and the New York Herald Tribune where he specialized in crime reporting covering closely the career of the notorious criminal, John Thomas "Legs" Diamond. During this period he wrote numerous articles for The New Yorker and published two successful satirical novels, Hizzoner the Mayor, and Rackety Rax, which dealt with corruption in politics and in college football. During the mid-thirties he was called to Hollywood as screenwriter on several films including Annie Oakley, Gunga Din, and The Road to Glory. On the latter film he collaborated with the novelist, William Faulkner.During World War II, as foreign correspondent for The New Yorker, he covered the Persian Gulf Command which supplied the Soviet Union with munitions and other materials through Iran. As correspondent he was present at the historic Teheran Conference of 1943. His New Yorker articles were later reproduced in his book Persian Gulf Command; Some Marvels on the Road to Kazvin. In 1945 the New Yorker sent him to Germany to cover the last phases of the war in Europe. His book, The House Without a Roof, about a Jewish family in the Third Reich, resulted from his experiences there.In the 1950s Sayre continued to write for The New Yorker and other magazines. In mid-decade he left Time magazine where he had briefly been a staff writer, to return to screenwriting and to his peregrinations abroad, living for a time in London. In 1960 he returned to America to take a teaching position at the Annenburg School of Communications at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1971 he retired from teaching and settled in Virginia. The year before his death on September 9, 1979, he moved to Taftsville, Vermont to be with his life-long friend, Jeanette Lowe. His wife, Gertrude, died in 1960. At the time of his death he was survived by his daughter, Nora Sayre, and a niece, Mary Sayre Haverstock, of Arlington, Virginia.The Lantern, 8 January 1986:.":OSU gets $ 3 million in donations". from Frederick G . Ruffner , Jr .By Ina Rene Lubeach: Lantern staff writer The Ohio State University Campaign is getting closer to its goal , as it received three $ 1 million gifts in December . The goal is to raise $ 350 million by 1990 . The campaign , which began late September , has raised about $ 100 million so far . This is the largest campaign for private funds in the history of public higher education . Gifts may support the university ' s academic core , student body or athletic programs . Frederick G . Ruffner Jr ., national campaign chairman and one of the donors , said he is undecided about which aspect of the campaign will benefit from his contribution . As a leader of the campaign , Ruffner said , it was very important to make an early contribution . He is excited about reaching the goal and says he has no doubt the project will be a success . "I 've been involved with other fundraising activities and I Just don't recall anything that has been so carefully planned and orchestrated and staffed with exceptionally competent people , " Ruffner , a 1950 OSU graduate , said . From the collection of Frederick Gale Ruffner Jr (1926-2014) , the founder of Gale Research, Detroit.
Verlag: Vienna: 1926, 1970, 1946
Anbieter: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, USA
Kunst / Grafik / Poster Signiert
Zustand: Good. Etching. 37 x 52cm sheet size.Signed and dated by The artist Hubert Woyty-Wimmer : Painter, printmaker and designer of banknotes;pupil of Erwin Puchinger and Rudolf von Larisch at the 'Graphische Lehr- und Versuchsanstalt' in Vienna; from 1922, pupil of the engraver Alfred Cossmann; in 1950, designed banknotes for Thomas de La Rue & Co. in London.Presented by Josef Bick the director of the Nationalbibliothek in 1946 to Ralph Adrian Ulveling . Presented by Ralph Adrian Ulveling to Frederick Gale Ruffner Jr. in 1970. .Due to his prominent position within the Austro-fascist regime, Bick was dismissed from all his offices by the Nazis for political reasons in 1938 and deported to Dachau concentration camp on April 1, 1938, via the so-called "prominent transport." He was later imprisoned in Sachsenhausen concentration camp. He was released from prison at the end of August 1938. After liberation, Bick was able to resume his former positions as director of the National Library and the Albertina, as well as his role as a lecturer at the University of Vienna.Ralph Adrian UlvelingRalph Adrian Ulveling (May 9, 1902 - March 21, 1980) was an American librarian best known for his support of intellectual freedom, interracial understanding, and the advancement of the library and information science profession. He is listed as one of the most important contributors to the library profession during the 20th century by the journal American Libraries.Josef BICK, geb. am 22. Mai 1880 in Wildeck b. Heilbronn, gest. am 5. April 1952 in Piesting, war Privatdozent (tit.ao. Univ.-Prof.) für Klassische Philologie an der Philosophischen Fakultät der Universität Wien.Bick wurde 1938 aufgrund seiner exponierten Stellung im Austrofaschismus im Nationalsozialismus aus politischen Gründen all seiner Ämter enthoben und am 1. April 1938 mit dem sogenannten Prominententransport in das Konzentrationslager Dachau gebracht, später im Konzentrationslager Sachsenhausen inhaftiert. Seine Entlassung aus der KZ-Haft erfolgte Ende August 1938. .Nach der Befreiung konnte Bick seine alten Posten als Direktor der Nationalbibliothek, der Albertina wie auch als Privatdozent der Universität Wien wieder in Anspruch nehmen.