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Hard Cover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. Kurt H. Volk, 1954, 8vo., 49 pages. Three essays in book, the first by Mark titled "Not Tolerance, but Understanding, the second by Spellman "Bigotry is Un-American, and the third by Peale "Understanding a Source of Strength. Book bound in a dark cloth, marbled boards and endpapers, no dust jacket, pages uncut. Book and slip case very good condition. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Verlag: Kurt H. Volk, Inc, New York, 1954
Anbieter: Kubik Fine Books Ltd., ABAA, Dayton, OH, USA
Leather. Limited Edition. 51p. A hardcover book with a navy blue leather spine and marbled boards. Very good condition. Edges of leather lightly rubbed. Ribbon page marker discolored at the end. Otherwise, interior clean and binding tight. Comes in a slipcase. Three essays on understanding by a rabbi, a Catholic cardinal, and a Protestant minister. Limited edition; one of 1,000 copies.
Verlag: Kurt H. Volk, (1954)., New York:, 1954
Anbieter: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Montreux, VAUD, Schweiz
[3 essays in 1 vol.]. 22cm. 51 pp. Blue and black titles and headings. Quarter gilt-stamped navy calf over marbled cloth, t.e.g., gold slip-case. Fine. Like new. Limited edition of 1000 copies.
Verlag: New York: Privately printed by Kurt H. Volk, Inc., (1954). (1954)., 1954
Anbieter: Blue Mountain Books & Manuscripts, Ltd., Cadyville, NY, USA
Zustand: Fine. New York: Privately printed by Kurt H. Volk, Inc., (1954). (1954). Fine. - Octavo, blue marbled boards backed with black morocco, titled & decorated in gilt on the spine. The top edge is gilt & the endpapers are marbled. The slipcase is lacking. The head & tail of the spine are lightly rubbed. Half-title & 51 pages. There is some light foxing to the prelims, else near fine. Limited edition of 1,000 copies.From the library of Basil O'Connor with his bookplate on the front pastedown and with the library stamp of his second wife, Hazel Royall, on the verso of the front endpaper.Basil O'Connor [1892-1972] was an American lawyer. In 1919, he founded his own law firm in New York City, where he met Franklin D. Roosevelt in the early 1920s and became his legal advisor. Roosevelt, who contracted polio in 1921, partnered with O'Connor to found the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation. O'Connor succeeded Roosevelt as President of the Foundation in 1928. Ten years later the two men cofounded the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, which notably initiated an entirely new way of raising money with its radio campaign called "The March of Dimes". O'Connor's second wife, Hazel Royall, was a therapist at Warm Springs.