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Wesley, John

J. E. Tyworth, J. L. Cavinato, and C. John Langley, Jr., Traffic Management Planning, Operations, and Control, Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., Inc., Reading, Mass., 1987. [Pg.265]

Y. Beers, Introduction to the Theory of Error, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Cambridge, Mass., 1953. In this connection see also J. L. Doob, Stochastic Processes, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1953 R. D. Evans, The Atomic Nucleus, McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 1955. [Pg.270]

Vol. 27. Rock and Mineral Analysis. Second Edition. By Wesley M. Johnson and John A. Maxwell... [Pg.443]

B. H. Brandsen and C. J. Joaehain (1989) Introduction to Quantum Mechanics (Addison Wesley Longman, Harlow, Essex), pp. 299, 301 R. N. Zare (1988) Angular Momentum (John Wiley Sons, New York), pp. 45-8. [Pg.205]

The proof of completeness may be found in W. Kaplan (1991) Advanced Calculus, 4th edition (Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA) p. 537 and in G. Birkhofif and G.-C. Rota (1989) Ordinary Differential Equations, 4th edition (John Wiley Sons, New York), pp. 350-4. [Pg.308]

Donne, John. John Donne the Satires, Epigrams and Verse Letters. Edited by Wesley Milgate. Edited by Wesley Milgate. Oxford Clarendon P., 1967. [Pg.650]

Vol. 19 Thermal Analysis. Third Edition. By Wesley Wm.Wendlandt Vol. 20 Amperometric Titrations. By John T. Stock... [Pg.651]

Vol. 21 Reilctance Spectroscopy. By Wesley Wm.Wendlandt and Harry G. Hecht Vol. 22 The Analytical Toxicology of Industrial Inorganic Poisons. By the late Morris B. Jacobs Vol. 23 The Formation and Properties of Precipitates. By Alan G.Walton Vol. 24 Kinetics in Analytical Chemistry. By Harry B. Mark, Jr. and Garry A. Rechnitz Vol. 25 Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy. Second Edition. By Morris Slavin Vol. 26 Characterization of Organometallic Compounds (in two parts). Edited by Minoru Tsutsui Vol. 27 Rock and Mineral Analysis. Second Edition. By Wesley M. Johnson and John A. Maxwell Vol. 28 The Analytical Chemistry of Nitrogen and Its Compounds (in two parts). Edited by C. A. Streuli and Philip R.Averell... [Pg.651]

Petrali, John P., Tracey A. Hamilton, Betty J. Benton, Dana R. Anderson, Wesley Holmes, Robert K. Kan, Christina P. Tompkins, and Radharaman Ray. "Dimethyl Sulfoxide Accelerates Mustard Gas-Induced Skin Pathology." Journal of Medical CBR Defense 3 (2005) (www.jmedcbr.org). [Pg.188]

Hopcroft, John E., Jeffry D. Ullman, Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation, Addison-Wesley, 1979. [Pg.243]

The best billiard balls were made from elephant tusks, which are beautiful and have good bounce. Ivory was also used for combs, buttons, collar stays for shirts, cigarette holders, chess pieces, and many other ornamental articles. Ivory is obtained by hunting and killing elephants to extract their teeth, which is especially valuable from old and mature males. The extinction of elephants was avoided when John Wesley invented celluloid by combining nitrocellulose with camphor. [Pg.303]

Cohen, Wesley M., Richard R. Nelson, and John P. Walsh. 2002. Protecting Their Intellectual Assets Appropriability Conditions and Why U.S. Manufacturing Firms Patent (Or Not). National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 7552. [Pg.297]

The development of plastics accompanied synthetic fibers. The first synthetic plastic with the trade name Celluloid was made in 1870 from a form of nitrocellulose called pyroxylin, the same substance used to produce the first rayon. Celluloid was developed in part to meet the demand for expensive billiard balls, which at the end of the nineteenth century were produced from ivory obtained from elephant tusks. John Wesley Hyatt (1837-1920) combined pyroxylin with ether and alcohol to produce a hard substance called collodion. Hyatt s collodion, like Bernigaut s original rayon, was unstable and potentially explosive. He solved this problem by adding camphor to the collodion to produce a stable hard plastic he called Celluloid. [Pg.298]

Hippocrates, 167 Hoffman, Felix, 168 Hooke, Robert, 6, 18, 19, 297 Hyatt, John Wesley, 298... [Pg.366]

Robley D. Evans Richard F. Foster Hymer L. Friedell R.J. Michael Fry Robert O. Gohson John W. Healy Paul C. Hodges Wilfrid B, Mann A. Alan Moghissi Karl Z. Morgan Robert J. Nelsen Wesley L. Nyborg Chester R. Richmond... [Pg.44]

Robert J. Nelsen Wesley L. Nyborg Harald H. Rossi William L. Russell John H. Rust Eugene L. Saenger J. Newell Stannard Roy C. Thompson Harold O. Wyckoff... [Pg.163]

Robert H. Meade, John A. Moody, and Herbert H. Stevens of the U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado, deserve credit for designing and conducting the hydrological study of the Mississippi River that was used to compute DOC loads for this report. The author also thanks Patricia A. Brown, Terry I. Brinton, Wesley L. Campbell, John R. Garbarino, Ted I. Noyes, James F. Ranville, Terry F. Rees, Robert F. Stallard, and Howard E. Taylor of the U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado, for assisting in sample collection and analyses for the Mississippi River study. [Pg.221]

HYATT, JOHN WESLEY (1837-1920). Hyatt is generally credited as being the father of the plastics industry. In 1869. he and his brother patented a mixture of cellulose nitrate and camphor which could be molded and hardened. Its lirsl commercial use was lor billiard balls. The TM Celluloid" was the first ever applied to a synthetic plastic ptoduci, it hammahtlity hazard limits its use. [Pg.793]

D Holme and H. Peck, Analytical Biochemistry, 3rd ed. (1998), Addison Wesley Longman (Essex), pp 132-146 Introduction to all techniques of electrophoresis M Khaledi, High Performance Captllaiy Electrophoresis Theory, Techniques, and Applications (1998), John Wiley Sons (New York) Up-to-date coverage of CE W. Ruhr, Anal. Chem. 62, 403R-414R (1990) Capillary Electrophoresis ... [Pg.139]

H. Anton, C. Rorres, Elementary Linear Algebra with Applications, John Wiley, 2005 D. Lay, Linear Algebra and its Applications, 3rd updated ed., Addison-Wesley 2005 S. Leon, Linear Algebra with Applications, 7th ed, Prentice-Hall, 2005... [Pg.573]

More than a decade later, Parkes s invention was rediscovered by the American inventor John Wesley Hyatt (1837-1920). Hyatt was attempting to win a 10,000-prize offered by the Phelan and Collender... [Pg.9]

Mother Nature has provided humans with a mind-boggling array of natural products with nearly every conceivable set of physical properties and, therefore, an apparently endless variety of uses. And yet, human inventors have always tried to go Mom one better, producing synthetic products that are longer lasting, less expensive, more attractive, or preferable to "the real thing" in some other way. Such has been the case, for example, in the more than century-and-a-half development of plastics. One of the earliest pioneers in the evolution of the plastics industry was John Wesley Hyatt, an inventor who spent his whole life trying to devise new and better materials and improved methods for getting jobs done. [Pg.10]


See other pages where Wesley, John is mentioned: [Pg.461]    [Pg.461]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.779]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.741]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.396]    [Pg.2]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.83 ]




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