semiofficial

  • 111VEIGELSBERG, LEO — (1846–1907), Hungarian journalist. Born in Nagyboldogasszony, Veigelsberg studied medicine in Vienna, became a teacher in Hungary and contributed essays to the Prague newspaper, Politik. Later he joined the Neuer Freier Lloyd, then the Neues… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 112VÉSZI, JOZSEF — (1858–1940), Hungarian editor and journalist. A poet and translator in his youth, he became editor in chief of the daily Pesti Napló in 1894, founded the Budapesti Napló in 1896 and brought before the public, among other writers …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 113WAGNER, RICHARD° — (1813–1883), German composer. Disillusioned by the failure of the 1848 revolution, in which he had played an active part, Wagner (like proudhon and other early socialists) made a bitter attack on the Jews, whom he portrayed as the incarnation of… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 114WAR CRIMES TRIALS — Crystallization of the Principles of International Criminal Law Immediately after the outbreak of World War II, when the first Nazi violations of the laws and customs of war as defined by the Hague and Geneva Conventions were revealed (and in… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism