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Wilson, Arthur

Wilson, Arthur], The Jive yeares of King James (1643). [Pg.245]

Submitted by Arthur Larworth and Wilson Baker. Checked by J. D. Conant and Mildred Evans. [Pg.88]

Waite, Arthur Edward. The brotherhood of the Rosy Cross being records of the house of the Holy Spirit in its inward and outward history with a new introduction by John C. Wilson. London William Rider 8c Son, 1924 reprint, New Hyde Park (NY) University Books, 1961. xx, 652p. [Pg.474]

I prepared a white paper and circulated it among members of the Committee, which included Chaunccy Starr, Bertram Wolfe, Edward Arthur, Richard Kennedy, Anthony Favale, Richard Wilson, Pierre Zaleski, and Glenn Seaboig. Their viewpoints and comments were taken into consideration while revising the white paper. I received a letter from Edward Teller delivered by Federal Express indicating that he would not sign it. At... [Pg.47]

Baker, W. J. Chem. Soc. 1933, 1381. Wilson Baker (1900-2002) was bom in Rnn-com, England. He studied chemistry at Manchester under Arthur Lapworth and at Oxford under Robinson. In 1943, Baker was the first one who confirmed that penicillin contained sulfur, of which Robinson commented This is a feather in your cap. Baker. Baker began his independent academic career at University of Bristol. He retired in 1965 as the head of the School of Chemistry. Baker was a weU-known chemist centenarian, spending 47 years in retirement ... [Pg.17]

During the decade of 1920-1929, no Americans were honored in chemistry, physiology, or medicine, but the Nobel prize in physics went to Robert Milliken in 1923 and to Arthur Compton (with the Englishman Charles Wilson) in 1927. Thereafter, U.S. scientists would receive about one of every three Nobel prizes in physiology, chemistry and medicine combined. The vitality of U.S. science was also found in the production of Ph.D. s in chemistry from 1921 to 1930. During this... [Pg.3]

Weston, Arthur W., 3. 9 Whaley, Wilson M., 6 WUds, A. L., 2 Wiley, Richard R, 6 Williamson, David H., 24 WUson, C. V., 9 Wilson, Stephen R 43 Wolf, Donald E., 6 Wolff, Hans. 3 Wollowitz, Susan, 44 Wood, John L., 3 Wulff, William D., 70 Wynbeig, Hans. 28... [Pg.582]

The support of colleagues Arthur Wilson in polyimide processing and helpful discussions, and Qiarles Baker in preparation and application of the sodium lauryl sulfate controlled contamination solutions is gratefully acknowledged. Mary Mayfield and James Field assisted in the processing of the samples, and Ronald Huff made some of the electrical measurements. Their careful work is much appreciated. [Pg.170]

A[nthony] W[eldon], The court and character of King James no [Arthur Wilson], The five... [Pg.1]

C6H5CH = C(CN)C02H+NaCl Submitted by Arthur Lapworth and Wilson Barer. Checked by J. B. Conant and W. C. Boyd. [Pg.11]

Submitted by C. F. H. Allen and C. V. Wilson. Checked by Arthur C. Cope, Frank S. Fawcett, and Harold R. Nace. [Pg.33]

In 1906, she moved to Dorking to work for 3 years with J. B. Wilson, an accomplished pharmacist and a cultivator of medicinal plants. She passed the Major examination in 1909, after which she became a research assistant at the Pharmacy School with Henry Greenish, studying components of quinine. Having been recommended by Arthur Crossley,63 Borrowman subsequently left the School s laboratories and took up a better-paying appointment as Research Chemist in the London laboratory of the Rubber Growers Association of Malaya and Ceylon. [Pg.405]

It is somewhat surprising that, in spite of what has been said in earlier chapters about the loss of phase information in the X-ray diffraction experiment, the intensity distribution contains information on whether the structure is centrosymmetric or noncentrosymmetric. This information is important when there is a spaoe group ambiguity in which one possibility is centrosymmetric, while the other is not (see Chapter 4. Arthur J. C. Wilson - noted that, while the intensities of Bragg reflections on the average depend only on the atomic contents of the unit cell, the distribution of intensities is different depending on whether the structure is centrosymmetric or noncentrosymmetric. The intensities... [Pg.288]

Whereas Bernal had to rely primarily on mechanically produced random sphere packings in his work on liquid structure, the molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo computer simulation techniques have, during the past three decades, provided researchers with new and powerful experimental tools enabling a much closer look into the structure of the liquid—one has available the trajectory of every atom. Despite this, computer simulation has been used principally to calculate liquid-state correlation functions. This situation, to quote Lumsden and Wilson [6], ... appears to stem in part from a peculiar and fundamental relation that has always existed between experiment and theory in science the importance of experimental data is judged by the theory to which it is applied. As the physicist Arthur Eddington said half seriously, no fact should be accepted as true until it has been confirmed by theory. Unless an attractive theory exists that decrees certain kinds of information to be important, few scientists will set out to acquire the information. Thus, it is only infrequently that computer simulations have been used to characterize liquid structure in ways other than those dictated by the prevailing liquid theory. [Pg.546]

Arthur decides he wants to go back to his old life and so informs the company. Furthermore, he will not cooperate with them to find a replacement for himself. The company destroys Arthur, now called Tony Wilson, using his body to help another reborn client. [Pg.195]

The journey that Arthur Hamilton, 55-year-old banker, will take is to be transformed into a 35-year-old artist, Tony Wilson (Rock Hudson), living in Malibu. Much effort is put into acclimatizing Arthur/Tony to his new life. [Pg.195]

Many company employees and other "reborns" participate. When Arthur/Tony finally feels comfortable in his new life (he has the love of a woman, a relationship), a drunken indiscretion about who he really is breaks the facade. His lover in fact is an employee of the company. His neighbors are all linked to the company. Totally disillusioned, Arthur/Tony returns to Westchester. There he visits his wife under the pretext of securing one of her husband s paintings. There he discovers what his wife thought of her husband—that he had been dead long before he was the victim of a hotel fire (the ruse to cover his transformation from Arthur Hamilton to Tony Wilson). Now he understands—it was not his age it was his attitude toward life. He wants to go back. He is returned to the company in New York, but he is non-cooperative. He does not know it, but his fate is sealed—he no longer has any value for the company. It kills him. [Pg.196]

Seconds is plot-driven, focusing on Arthur Hamilton s transformation into Tony Wilson and then his desire to become Arthur Hamilton again. Throughout, he is a victim of his own alienation and his unhappiness. When... [Pg.196]

Nicolaas Bloembergen, Arthur L. Schawlow, 1927 Arthur H. Compton, C.T.R. Wilson... [Pg.122]

Compton, Arthur Holly (1892-1962) US physicist, who became professor of physics at the University of Chicago in 1923. He is best known for his discovery (1923) of the Compton effect, for which he shared the 1927 Nobel Prize for physics with C. T. R. Wilson. In 1938 he demonstrated that cosmic radiation consists of charged particles. [Pg.184]

Military appreciation of chemical weapons varied considerably. In September 1914, Lieutenant-General the Earl of Dundonald apprised Lord Kitchener of the various plans left by his grandfather. Admiral Sir Thomas Cochrane, for the use of sulphur dioxide clouds to drive an enemy from a fortified position. Kitchener at once discounted them as did Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson. Only Winston Churchill s imaginative interest kept the scheme alive, and eventually a modified version of Cochrane s proposal was put into practice, not as lethal gas clouds but as naval smoke screens. Even when line officers returned from France and inquired about the possibility of using stink bombs to dear enemy dug-outs, the response was unfavourable. Some lachrymatory substances were examined at the Imperial College of Sdence, and, unoffidally, stink bombs were offered to Sir John French in case the enemy resorted to similar methods. The Commander-in-Chief brusquely rejected the offer. ... [Pg.14]


See other pages where Wilson, Arthur is mentioned: [Pg.253]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.789]    [Pg.996]    [Pg.573]    [Pg.710]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.501]    [Pg.574]    [Pg.1273]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.264 , Pg.288 ]




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