Paul Schmidt (stabbing Victim)
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Paul Schmidt (stabbing Victim)
Paul Schmidt may refer to: * Paul Schmidt (footballer) (1917–1961), Australian rules footballer * Paul Schmidt (interpreter) (1899–1970), German interpreter for Adolf Hitler * Paul Schmidt (inventor) (1898–1976), German engineer and inventor * Paul Schmidt (runner) (born 1931), German middle-distance runner * Paul Schmidt (stabbing victim) (198?–2023), Canadian homicide victim * Paul Schmidt (translator) (1934–1999), American translator, poet, playwright, and essayist * Paul Felix Schmidt (1916–1984), chess International Master and chess writer * Paul Gerhard Schmidt (1937–2010), German medievalist and professor of medieval Latin philology * Paul Karl Schmidt alias Paul Carell Paul Carell was the post-war pen name of Paul Karl Schmidt (2 November 1911 – 20 June 1997) who was a writer and German propagandist. During the Nazi era, Schmidt served as the chief press spokesman for Joachim von Ribbentrop's Foreign Ministry. ... (1911–1997), chief press spokesman for ...
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Paul Schmidt (footballer)
Paul Bernard Schmidt (23 April 1917 – 17 June 1961) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Carlton Football Club, Carlton in the Australian Football League, VFL. Schmidt was a half forward, he topped Carlton goalkicking every season from 1940 to 1942. His best season tally came in 1941 when he managed 77 goals, including 11 in Carlton's Round 16 game against St Kilda. He was a premiership player in 1938 and missed the 1943 season due to military commitments. Schmidt moved to Tasmania to captain-coach the Devonport Football Club in the North West Football Union in 1945. He died on 17 June 1961, and was buried at Melbourne General Cemetery. References External links *Blueseum profile
1917 births 1961 deaths Australian rules footballers from Victoria (state) Carlton Football Club players Carlton Football Club premiership players Devonport Football Club players VFL/AFL premiership players Australian military personnel of World War II Burials at Melbourn ...
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Paul Schmidt (interpreter)
Paul Otto Gustav Schmidt (23 June 1899 – 21 April 1970) was an interpreter in the German foreign ministry from 1923 to 1945. During his career, he served as the translator for Neville Chamberlain's negotiations with Adolf Hitler over the Munich Agreement, the British Declaration of War and the surrender of France. Early years In 1917 and 1918, Schmidt was a soldier in the First World War and was wounded on the Western Front. Later, he studied modern languages in Berlin and worked simultaneously for an American newspaper agency. In 1921, he took courses in the Foreign Office to train conference interpreters. Schmidt distinguished himself there by virtue of his outstanding memory. In July 1923, Schmidt, still preparing for examinations, accepted his first assignment for the translating and interpreting service of the Foreign Office at the Permanent Court of International Justice in the Hague. He married in 1925 and had a son the following year. Foreign Office After studying mo ...
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Paul Schmidt (inventor)
Paul Schmidt (26 March 1898 18 October 1976) was a German aerospace engineer and inventor based in Munich, mainly known for his contribution to the development of the pulsejet. Life Schmidt was born on 26 March 1898 in Hagen, Westphalia. His early work involved efforts to improve the performance and efficiency of aircraft power plants. In 1928 he decided the most promising technology was intermittent thrust generation. With meagre resources, he worked on developing pulse engines. German ministry officials visited him in the early 1930s to make an assessment of his work. He initially started pushing the concept of the pulse engine in 1931. Patent DE523655 contained the first sketch of an impulsive duct. In the mid 1930s, the Luftwaffe was interested in applying Schmidt's work . His development of the Pulse Engine was referred to as the Schmidtrohr (Schmidttube) and he obtained both German and British patents for it. He used the term "pulsating incineration" in reference to the ...
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Paul Schmidt (runner)
Paul Schmidt (born 9 August 1931) is a German middle-distance runner. He competed in the 800 metres at the 1956 Summer Olympics and the 1960 Summer Olympics The 1960 Summer Olympics (), officially known as the Games of the XVII Olympiad () and commonly known as Rome 1960 (), were an international multi-sport event held from 25 August to 11 September 1960 in Rome, Italy. Rome had previously been awar .... References 1931 births Living people Athletes (track and field) at the 1956 Summer Olympics Athletes (track and field) at the 1960 Summer Olympics German male middle-distance runners Olympic athletes for the United Team of Germany Place of birth missing (living people) West German Athletics Championships winners 20th-century German sportsmen {{Germany-middledistance-athletics-bio-stub ...
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Paul Schmidt (stabbing Victim)
Paul Schmidt may refer to: * Paul Schmidt (footballer) (1917–1961), Australian rules footballer * Paul Schmidt (interpreter) (1899–1970), German interpreter for Adolf Hitler * Paul Schmidt (inventor) (1898–1976), German engineer and inventor * Paul Schmidt (runner) (born 1931), German middle-distance runner * Paul Schmidt (stabbing victim) (198?–2023), Canadian homicide victim * Paul Schmidt (translator) (1934–1999), American translator, poet, playwright, and essayist * Paul Felix Schmidt (1916–1984), chess International Master and chess writer * Paul Gerhard Schmidt (1937–2010), German medievalist and professor of medieval Latin philology * Paul Karl Schmidt alias Paul Carell Paul Carell was the post-war pen name of Paul Karl Schmidt (2 November 1911 – 20 June 1997) who was a writer and German propagandist. During the Nazi era, Schmidt served as the chief press spokesman for Joachim von Ribbentrop's Foreign Ministry. ... (1911–1997), chief press spokesman for ...
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Paul Schmidt (translator)
Paul Francis Schmidt (January 29, 1934 – February 19, 1999) was an American translator, poet, playwright, and essayist. Biography He graduated from Nashua High School in 1951, Colgate University in 1955, and studied at Harvard University. He studied mime with Marcel Marceau and acting with Jacques Charon. He served in the U.S. Army Intelligence, from 1958 to 1960. Schmidt was professor at the University of Texas at Austin, from 1967 to 1976. He also taught at the Yale School of Drama. He translated Euripides, Chekhov, Velimir Khlebnikov, Brecht, Genet, Gogol, Marivaux, Mayakovsky, and Rimbaud. He wrote three plays, one of which, ''Black Sea Follies'' won the Helen Hayes Award, and the Joseph Kesselring Prize for best play. Schmidt's work was profiled in ''The New York Review of Books''. He was married to Stockard Channing. He is buried at Green-Wood Cemetery Green-Wood Cemetery is a cemetery in the western portion of Brooklyn, New York City. The cemetery i ...
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Paul Felix Schmidt
Paul Felix Schmidt ( – 11 August 1984) was an Estonian and German chess player, writer and chemist. Biography Schmidt was born in 1916, in Narva (then Russian Empire), two years before Estonia became an independent country. He excelled in chess from an early age. In June 1935, Schmidt won, ahead of Paul Keres, at a nationwide tournament in Tallinn. In May 1936, he drew a match against Keres (+3 –3 =1) at Pärnu. In 1936, he won the 8th Estonian Championship at Tallinn. In December 1936, he placed 2nd, behind Keres, at Tallinn. In July 1937, he won Estonia's first-ever international tournament at Pärnu, ahead of two world title contenders, Salo Flohr and Keres, as well as Gideon Ståhlberg. In 1937, he won at Tallinn (9th EST–ch). In August 1937, he played for Estonia (2nd board) at the 7th Chess Olympiad in Stockholm (+4 –4 =8). In June 1938, he tied for 8th-10th at Noordwijk. The event was won by Erich Eliskases. In August–September 1939, he played for Estonia (3 ...
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Paul Gerhard Schmidt
Paul Gerhard Schmidt (25 March 1937 – 25 September 2010) was a German medievalist and professor emeritus of medieval Latin philology. Biography Schmidt was born on 25 March 1937 in Pieske near Frankfurt (Oder). He took his abitur in 1956 at the ''Evangelischen Gymnasium'' in Berlin-Grunewald, and studied classical and medieval Latin philology in Berlin and Göttingen. He received his Ph.D. in July 1962 from the University of Göttingen, with the dissertation ''Supplemente lateinischer Prosa in der Neuzeit: Ein Überblick über Rekonstruktionsversuche zu lateinischen Autoren von der Renaissance bis zur Aufklärung'', and then went to Rome where after a two-year study of Auxiliary sciences of history he received the diploma ''Palaeographus et Archivarius Vaticanus''. His 1970 habilitation in Göttingen was based on a critical edition of the ''Architrenius'' by Johannes de Hauvilla, which was published in 1974. Schmidt became professor at the University of Marburg in 1978. In 1989 ...
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Paul Carell
Paul Carell was the post-war pen name of Paul Karl Schmidt (2 November 1911 – 20 June 1997) who was a writer and German propagandist. During the Nazi era, Schmidt served as the chief press spokesman for Joachim von Ribbentrop's Foreign Ministry. In this capacity during World War II, he maintained close ties with the ''Wehrmacht'', while he served in the '' Allgemeine-SS'' (General SS). One of his specialities was the " Jewish question". After the war, Carell became a successful author mostly of revisionist books that romanticized and whitewashed the ''Wehrmacht''. Career before and during World War II Born in Kelbra, Paul Karl Schmidt became a member of the Nazi Party in 1931 and a member of the '' SS'' in 1938. He graduated from university in 1934, and became an assistant at the Institute of Psychology of the University of Kiel in Germany. He held several positions in the Nazi Student Association. In the SS, Schmidt was promoted to the rank of '' Obersturmbannführer'' in ...
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Paul Wilhelm Schmidt
Paul Wilhelm Schmidt (born 25 December 1845 in Berlin; died 12 June 1917 in Riehen near Basel) was a German theologian who taught mostly in Basel. To this day he is considered one of the most important Swiss representatives of the liberal Protestant direction in theology and church at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century. Life Paul Schmidt was the second oldest son of the first teacher at the French Cathedral School Berlin, Eusebius Schmidt and - like this one from Woldenberg in the Neumark - Auguste Meyer (1819-1871) and the brother of the Berlin grammar school professor Johannes E. S. Schmidt (1841-1925). Together with his four siblings, Schmidt grew up in the rooms of the French Cathedral, in whose rooms facing Jägerstraße his father had been assigned a company flat. He attended the French Cathedral School and then the French Grammar School, where he passed the school-leaving examination at the age of 16. His brother Johannes describes him as a highly gifte ...
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Paul Schmidt (computer Programmer)
Paul Schmidt may refer to: * Paul Schmidt (footballer) (1917–1961), Australian rules footballer * Paul Schmidt (interpreter) (1899–1970), German interpreter for Adolf Hitler * Paul Schmidt (inventor) (1898–1976), German engineer and inventor * Paul Schmidt (runner) (born 1931), German middle-distance runner * Paul Schmidt (stabbing victim) (198?–2023), Canadian homicide victim * Paul Schmidt (translator) (1934–1999), American translator, poet, playwright, and essayist * Paul Felix Schmidt (1916–1984), chess International Master and chess writer * Paul Gerhard Schmidt (1937–2010), German medievalist and professor of medieval Latin philology * Paul Karl Schmidt alias Paul Carell (1911–1997), chief press spokesman for Nazi Germany's Foreign Ministry and later purchaser author * Paul Wilhelm Schmidt Paul Wilhelm Schmidt (born 25 December 1845 in Berlin; died 12 June 1917 in Riehen near Basel) was a German theologian who taught mostly in Basel. To this day he is considere ...
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Photodex
Photodex is a software company specializing in the digital imaging market, primarily known for its ProShow product line, a photo slideshow software. The company announced in January of 2020 it was shutting down it servers as of January 31, 2020. Photodex released one of the first consumer level slideshow programs in 1991 with a program named GDS, for Graphic Display System. In the mid-1990s they focused on the photo management software product CompuPic, which also included slideshow capability. In 2002 they released the first version of ProShow, which focused primarily on slideshow creation. Products Photodex's primary products were its ProShow line, consisting of ProShow Gold, ProShow Producer, and ProShow Web. ProShow Gold ProShow Gold was a consumer-level tool for creating slideshows from photos, video clips, and music. Built-in features allow users to customize slideshows with transitions, slide styles, and motion effects in the style of the Ken Burns Effect. The software ...
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