Don Carlos Travis Jr.

Don Carlos Travis Jr., was an American Associate professor emeritus of German studies at the University of Texas at Austin.

Don C. Travis Junior
Personal details
Born(1911-12-13)13 December 1911
Kenosha, Wisconsin
DiedMarch 1, 1996(1996-03-01) (aged 84)
Resting placePlot Sec 3, Lot 728 of the Oakwood Cemetery (Austin, Texas)
Spouse(s)Nevenna Travis (1916 - 2012)
ChildrenNeven Don and Andrew David
FatherDon Carlos Travis developer of a Self-Tilting Bed
Education
Alma mater

Government Service

Publications

  • Editor, with introduction. A Hegel Symposium. Austin: U. of Texas, 1962; introduction, pp. 3-7
  • German Graphics of the Sixties: Catalogue of the Exhibition, February -March 1971, UT Art Museum (translated Introduction by Juliane Roh and compiled short biographies of the artists)
  • Reconciliation in the Work of Stefan Andres. Studies in Literature and Language , III, 2 (Summer 1961): 243-250
  • Texas Symposium: The German Language in America, Die Unterrichtspraxis II, 104-112 Wilhelm Grose
  • In 1980 he edited: Stefan Andres: Ein Reader zu Person und Werk. Trier: Spee-Verlag, includes Die Rache der Schmetterlinge pp. 144-159 (trans. by Frau Alma Zens from 1959 U. Wisconsin dissertation)

Translations

  • Karl Jaspers, Truth and Science, (Wahrheit und Wissenschaft) Graduate Journal, V, 1 (Spring 1962): 24-42
  • Rainer Maria Rilke, Buddhahood and Tod des Dichters, Modern European Poetry. New York:Bantam Books, 1966: 116 & 125
  • Günter Herburger, Where Ancestors Lived, Dimension II, 2 (1968): 226-245
  • Uwe Brandner, On the Eleventh Day: A Prose Song, Dimension II, 2 (1968): 324-333
  • Oskar Sandner, The Serpentine is Sensual, and other poems, Dimension 8 (1975):314-319
  • Oskar Sandner, Life is Hard in the Mountains Dimension 8 (1975): 320-327 [4]

Footnotes

  1. Library of Congress,
  2. Kenneth D. Alford, Nazi Plunder: Great Treasure Stories Of World War II, 2003,
  3. Teresa Palomo Acosta (*1949 in McGregor, Texas) University of Texas at Austin, May 24, 2001.
  4. WorldCat , DNB-IDN 181317702,
gollark: Why would you think that randomly playing music without asking is a good idea?
gollark: ...
gollark: The weather should be under the control of a UN committee, not the moon. The moon is inscrutable, uncontrollable and may decide to damage the weather at *any moment*.
gollark: > 1. lets us see in the nightThis can easily be replaced with "torch" or "streetlight" technology. Alternatively, replace the moon with a giant mirror or directional light system.> 2. Keeps the earth spinning moreIt does not.> 3. Makes tides, which can create free energyNuclear is cooler anyway.> 4. Where the fuck would we put all the moon parts when we blow it upEither convert them to a nice ring, which will look really cool, or just move them to Jupiter or something. Or possibly use them to build tastefully decorated affordable housing.> 5. It costs money to buy explosivesWe could crowdfund the lunar destruction project.
gollark: I hope transistors are restored soon.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.