Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Bhopal disaster" ¶ 70
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

London and Institution
He is a member of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, London, a registered professional engineer in Connecticut and Ohio, and a chartered electrical engineer in Great Britain.
Fleming went to Loudoun Moor School and Darvel School, and earned a two-year scholarship to Kilmarnock Academy before moving to London, where he attended the Royal Polytechnic Institution.
In 1803 in London he became involved with the Jennerian Institution, a society concerned with promoting vaccination to eradicate smallpox.
* Petranka, James W. ( 1998 ) Salamanders of the United States and Canada, Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press.
" Some unusual engines ", 1975 The Institution of Mechanical Engineers, London.
In 1892, Fleming presented an important paper on electrical transformer theory to the Institution of Electrical Engineers in London.
As stipulated in the concessions, de Lesseps convened the International Commission for the piercing of the isthmus of Suez ( Commission Internationale pour le percement de l ' isthme des Suez ) consisting of thirteen experts from seven countries, among them McClean, President of the Institution of Civil Engineers in London, and again Negrelli, to examine the plans of Linant de Bellefonds and to advise on the feasibility of and on the best route for the canal.
In 1883 secretary of the Institution John Henry Reynolds reorganised the Institution as a Technical School using the schemes and examinations of the City and Guilds of London Institute.
Tesla delivered the presentation before the Institution of Electrical Engineers of London ( February 3, 1892 ) in which he suggested that messages could be transmitted without wires.
On 26 January 1926, Baird repeated the transmission for members of the Royal Institution and a reporter from The Times in his laboratory at 22 Frith Street in the Soho district of London.
London: The Institution of Electrical Engineers, 2000.
In 1804, he was chosen to give a course of lectures on natural philosophy at the Royal Institution in London, where he delivered another course in 1809 – 1810.
James Dewar died in London in 1923, still holding the office of Fullerian Professor of Chemistry at the Royal Institution, having refused to retire.
On 13 March 1882 he lectured at the Royal Institution in London in front of a sell-out audience, which included members of the Royal Family, notably the future King Edward VII.
The pub was named in honour of the almshouses on Lea Bridge Road built in 1857 by the London Master Bakers ' Benevolent Institution.
In 1902, the Institution developed into the Hartley University College, with degrees awarded by the University of London.
The institution was founded in 1916 as the School of Oriental Studies at 2 Finsbury Circus, London, England, the then premises of the London Institution.
Savoy Place is the London headquarters of the Institution of Engineering and Technology.
He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society on 29 March 1798, and in 1815 he served as a Manager of the newly built London Institution.
He took a leading part in his profession and became president of the Victorian Institute of Engineers and a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, London.
Fuller was a supporter and sponsor of the Royal Institution in London.
He studied law at the Birkbeck Literary and Scientific Institution for a degree of the University of London in his spare time, while holding down an office job.

London and Chemical
He was founder of the Chemical Society of London in 1841, being its first Treasurer and second President.
Bakelite Limited, a merger of three phenol formaldehyde resin suppliers ( Damard Lacquer Company Limited of Birmingham ; Mouldensite Limited of Darley Dale and Redmanol Chemical Products Company of London ) was formed in 1926.
The double sided vinyl was finally released just before The Chemical Brother's much anticipated New Year's Eve gig at the famous Turnmills in London.
* Emeritus Professor Gavin P Vinson, at the School of Biological & Chemical Studies, Queen Mary, University of London.
Graham also founded the Chemical Society of London in 1841.
* First President of the Chemical Society of London ( 1841 )
He was granted honorary membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1933 ; in the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1955 ; the Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore, in 1955 ; the Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, in 1962 ; was elected Corresponding Member of the German Academy of Sciences, Berlin, in 1955 ; member of the German Academy of Natural Scientists, Leopoldina ( Halle-Saale ) in 1956 ; Foreign Member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences, Copenhagen, in 1962 ; Vice-President of the International Union of Physics from 1951 to 1957 ; President and first honorary member of the Polarographic Society, London ; honorary member of the Polarographic Society of Japan ; honorary member of the Chemical Societies of Czechoslovakia, Austria, Poland, England and India.
* Jacob Israelachvili, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Materials, Elected Fellow of the Royal Society of London, 1988
Kazenin, Hydrodynamics, Mass and Heat Transfer in Chemical Engineering, Taylor & Francis, London, 2002.
* 1970 Lecturer of the Chemical Society of London, receives Faraday Medal
* Humphry Davy publishes Elements of Chemical Philosophy in London.
* A Practical Essay on Chemical Re-agents or Tests: Illustrated by a Series of Experiments, London 1816, expanded second edition 1818 with the title Practical Treatise on the Use and Application of Chemical Tests with Concise Directions for Analyzing Metallic Ores, Metals, Soils, Manures and Mineral Waters, Third edition 1828 ; reprint Philadelphia 1817 ; French Traité pratique sur l ’ usage et le mode d ’ application des réactifs chimiques, Paris 1819 ; Italian ( translation of second English edition ) Trattato practico per l ’ uso ed apllicazione de ’ reagenti chimici, Milan 1819
* Chemical Amusement, a Series of Curious and Instructive Experiments in Chemistry Which Are Easily Performed and Unattended by Danger, London 1817, Second edition 1817, Third edition 1818, fourth reprint 1819 ; German Chemische Unterhaltungen: eine Sammlung merkwürdiger und lehrreicher Erzeugnisse der Erfahrungschemie, Kopenhagen 1819, entitled Chemische Belustigungen Nürnberg 1824 ; second American edition based on the third English edition with additions by Thomas Cooper, Philadelphia 1818 ; French translation by V. Riffault Manual de Chimie Amusante ; ou nouvelles recreations chimiques, contenant une suite d ’ experiences d ’ une execution facile et sans danger, ainsi qu ’ un grand nombre de faits curieux et instructifs, 1827, Second edition 1829 later reprinted by A. D. Vergnaud, final and sixth reprinting Paris 1854 ; two volume Italian translation Divertimento chimico contenente esperienze curiose, Milan 1820, second expanded edition by Pozzi La Chimica dilettevole o serie di sperienze curiose e instruttive di chimica chi si esequiscono con facilità e sicurezza, Milan 1854
He also helped create the first chemistry laboratory for undergraduates at University College London, and was head of the short-lived London Chemical Society of the 1820s.
* Sir Frank Baines ( 1877 – 1933 ), former Principal Architect of the government's Office of Works and chiefly known for designing Thames House and Imperial Chemical House in London, lived at ' Hillside ' and built other large houses in Loughton
* Chemical Society of London founded by Thomas Graham.
His work on medium-sized alicyclic and heterocyclic rings established him as a pioneer in stereochemistry and conformational theory and brought an invitation to give the first Centenary Lecture of the Chemical Society in London in 1949.
His successes in this post ( and after promotions to permanent secretary ) included the establishment of the post of the Chemical Research Laboratory in Teddington, the appointment of a Director of Scientific Research to the Air Force ( H. E. Wimperis ) and finally the decision to leave to become the Rector of Imperial College, London, in 1929, a position he held until 1942.
He was also president of the Geological Society of London, 1874 – 1876 ; the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1877 – 1879 ; the Society of Chemical Industry, 1891 – 1893 ; and the British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1897 – 1898.
Born in 1942 in Karbala, Iraq, Shahristani received a BSc in Chemical Engineering from Imperial College London in 1965, and an MSc from the University of Toronto in 1967, from where he also received a PhD in Chemical Engineering in 1970.

0.544 seconds.