id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_xwtt3tc7e5am5hpb5cv3cvvyfe Ann M. Hentschel Peripatetic Highlights in Bern 2005 23 .pdf application/pdf 8892 681 66 Key words: Albert Einstein; Fritz Houtermans; Aimé Forster; Paul Gruner; Heinrich significant scientific sites in Bern will use the local legacy of its most illustrious residents, Albert Einstein (1879–1955), who lived there from 1902–1909, and Fritz Houtermans (1903–1966), who lived there from 1952–1966, as its guiding thread through the There is nothing left of the train station where Albert Einstein arrived in Bern in early to the corner of Aarbergergasse, and you'll be at Einstein's old haunt, the Café Bollwerk, formerly the Brasserie Bollwerk, which was just across the street from his workplace in the Telephone Exchange (figure 1), where the Patent Office relocated in 1907 fessor of Physics Heinrich Wild (1833–1902).6 This building currently houses Einstein's ern department of experimental physics in a state-of-the-art science building.* Houtermans had completed his Ph.D. degree in 1927 at the University of Göttingen and during the next decade had made fundamental contributions to theoretical nuclear ./cache/work_xwtt3tc7e5am5hpb5cv3cvvyfe.pdf ./txt/work_xwtt3tc7e5am5hpb5cv3cvvyfe.txt