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Walters, John

Pagel, Walter. John Baptist van Helmont De Tempore and the history of the biological concept of time. Isis 33, no. 5 (Mar 1942) 621-623. [Pg.198]

Bohm, Walter. John Mayow and his contemporaries. Ambix 11. [Pg.268]

Eyring, Henry, Walter, John and Kimball, George E., Quantum Chemistry, John Wiley Sons, New York (1944). [Pg.410]

Summary DINA can be prepared by direct nitration of diethanolamine in the presence of hydrogen chloride. The reaction mixture is then heated, and upon completion of the reaction, the mixture is cooled and then mixed with ice. The precipitated product is then filtered-off, and then washed. Commercial Industrial note For related, or similar information, see Serial No. 570,814, December 30th, 1944, by Advisory Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, to George F. Wright, Toronto, Ontario, Walter John Chute, Kentville, Nova Scotia, Canada. Part or parts of this laboratory process may be protected by international, and/or commercial/industrial processes. Before using this process to legally manufacture the mentioned explosive, with intent to sell, consult any protected commercial or industrial processes related to, similar to, or additional to, the process discussed in this procedure. This process may be used to legally prepare the mentioned explosive for laboratory, educational, or research purposes. [Pg.258]

George F. Wright, Toronto, Ontario, Walter John Chute, Kentville, Nova Scotia, Canada Advisory Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Ottawa Ontario Canada Dec. 30th 1944... [Pg.372]

R. Scott Stricoff and Douglas B. Walters. John Wiley Sons. Inc., 1990, ISBN 0471-61756,330pages. 84.95. [Pg.142]

I come finally to the work of Walter John, certainly a man of genius like Fernholz, who at 32 died a hero s death as a soldier, but not before his talents as a lucid and inspiring teacher and his research capacity were fully shown. John first purified and determined the structure of -tocopherol and worked out sound variants in the synthesis of the toeopherols (John, 1937). As I refer to him this morning, I tell this audience of the extreme delight of John s son, now in his early twenties, when I told him that we would commemorate his father on this occasion. [Pg.384]

Wainwright Thomas Everett 278 Walker P. Duane 571 Walmsley Stuart H. 459 Walsh Stephen P. 792 Walter John 776,789,845 Wang Yan Alexander 601,602 Watson James 878 Watson James Dewey 285 Watts Robert O. 302 Weeks John D. 748 Wegener Alfred Lothar 228 Weidmann Jean-Luc 856 Weinberg Steven 493 Weinfurter Harald 3,14, 47 Weinhold Frank 135 Weinreich Gabriel 617, 647 Werner Hans-Joachim 564 Weyl Hermaim 70, 72, 986 Wheeler John Archibald 8, 53, 105, 106, 430, 619... [Pg.1075]

Walker P. Duane, 669 Wahnsley Stuart H., 535 Walsh Stephen R, 915 Walter John, 676, 897, 911, 966, e32... [Pg.1028]

Michael A. Walters John J. Shay Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, USA... [Pg.162]

J. L. White, in K. Walters, ed., RJ)eometry Industrial Applications, Research Studies Press, a division of John Wiley Sons, Inc., New York, 1980, pp. 209-280. [Pg.204]

The Batch Reaction Subcommittee was chaired by Walter L. Lrank of EQE International. Current members of the subcommittee, listed alphabetically are David J. Christensen, Union Carbide Corporation Warren Greenfield, International Specialty Products Philip P. Malkewicz, Nalco Chemical Company Peter L. McGrath, Olin Corporation Louisa A. Nara, Bayer Corporation Leslie A. Seller, CCPS Staff Consultant Robert Schisla, Eastman Chemical Company Anthony Torres, Eastman Kodak Company Dr. Jan C. Windhorst, Nova Chemicals and Paul Wood, Eli Lilly Company. Eormer subcommittee members who contributed much in getting this project started were Eelix Ereiheiter, CCPS Staff Consultant (deceased) A1 Noren, Monsanto Company-Searle (deceased) John Noronha, Eastman Kodak Company (retired) and Robert Stankovich, Eli Lilly Company. [Pg.176]

The Shockley involved in this symposium was ihe same William Shockley who had participated in the invention of the transistor in 1947. Soon after that momentous event, he became very frustrated at Bell Laboratories (and virtually broke with his coinventors, Walter Brattain and John Bardeen), as depicted in detail in a rivetting history of the transistor (Riordan and Hoddeson 1997). For some years, while still working at Bell Laboratories, he became closely involved with dislocation geometry, clearly as a means of escaping from his career frustrations, before eventually turning fulltime to transistor manufacture. [Pg.114]

Ohl demonstrated his results to Kelly early in 1940 Kelly felt that his instincts had been proved justified. Thereupon, Bell Labs had to focus single-mindedly on radar and on silicon rectifiers for this purpose. It was not till 1945 that basic research restarted. This was the year that the theorist John Bardeen was recruited, and he in due course became inseparable from Walter Brattain, an older man and a fine experimenter who had been with Bell since the late 1920s. William Shockley formed the third member of the triumvirate, though from an early stage he and Bardeen found themselves so mutually antagonistic that Bardeen was sometimes close to resignation. But tension can be productive as well as depressing. [Pg.258]

The study of electrons trapped in matter (commonly termed solid state ) led eventually to the invention of the transistor in 1947 by Walter Brattain, John Bardeen, and William Shockley at Bell Laboratories, and then to the integrated circuit hy Robert Noyce and Jack Kilby a decade later. Use of these devices dominated the second half of the twentieth century, most notably through computers, with a significant stininlus to development being given by military expenditures. [Pg.399]

Barth, Delbert S., 97 Burkhalter, Richard A., Carra, Joseph S., 53 Flatman, George T., 43 Harris, Daniel J., 27 Heath, Clark W., Jr., 7 Hynes, H. Patricia, 1 Joumel, Andre G., 109 Liggett, Walter, 119 Mason, Benjamin J., 97 McCall, Merley F., 15 Mix, Theodore J., 15 Provost, Donald 0., 15 Provost, Lloyd P., 79 Splttler, Thomas M., 37 Taylor, John K., 105 Thomas, Ralph E., 67... [Pg.140]

Webster, John. Metallographia or, an history of metals. London A.C. for Walter Kettilby, 1671 reprint, New York Amo P, 1978. 388p. ISBN 0-405-10462-6... [Pg.101]


See other pages where Walters, John is mentioned: [Pg.517]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.1028]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.517]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.1028]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.1944]    [Pg.2055]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.538]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.768]    [Pg.230]    [Pg.481]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.101]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.62 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.31 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.6 , Pg.60 , Pg.72 , Pg.75 , Pg.77 , Pg.84 , Pg.147 ]




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