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Page "United States Atomic Energy Commission" ¶ 4
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AEC and chair
President Dwight D. Eisenhower with AEC chair Lewis Strauss in 1954.
Seaborg succeeded McCone as AEC chair in 1961.
AEC chair Glenn T. Seaborg with President John F. Kennedy in 1961.
AEC chair James R. Schlesinger with President Richard Nixon | Richard M. Nixon and First Lady Pat Nixon at the AEC's Hanford Site in 1971.
Dixy Lee Ray, last person to chair the AEC, with Robert G. Sachs, director of the Argonne National Laboratory.
Dean was appointed by President Harry S. Truman as one of the original Commissioners of the AEC in May 1949, by which time McMahon had become Senator ( in 1944 ), author of the Atomic Energy Act of 1946, and chair of the Joint Atomic Energy Committee of Congress.
An advocate of nuclear power, she was appointed by Richard Nixon to chair the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission in 1973 and was the only woman to serve as chair of the AEC.
Strauss ' term as AEC chair ended in 1958.

AEC and John
However, in September 2006 the AEC announced it would name the seat after John Flynn, the founder of the Royal Flying Doctor Service, due to numerous objections from people fearing the name Wright may be linked to disgraced former Queensland Labor MP Keith Wright.

AEC and .
Of course, the AEC is in a bind now.
* In Spanish, EC ( Era Común ) is used for CE, while AEC ( antes de la Era Común ) is equivalent to BCE.
The administration had discovered through its own investigations that one of the leading scientists on the AEC, J. Robert Oppenheimer, had urged that the H-bomb work be delayed ; Eisenhower removed him from the agency and revoked his security clearance, though he knew this would create fertile ground for the extremist McCarthy.
The President succeeded in getting legislation creating a system of licensure for nuclear plants by the AEC.
Fermi was among the scientists who testified on Oppenheimer's behalf at an AEC hearing in 1954.
Nehru envisioned the developing of nuclear weapons and established the Atomic Energy Commission of India ( AEC ) in 1948.
During this period the Victoria Line was opened-although work had started in the early 1960s-and the AEC Merlin single-deck bus was introduced.
" Subsequent review of the material determined that the AEC had overreacted.
In order for NASA to cooperate with the AEC, the Space Nuclear Propulsion Office was created at the same time.
Unlike the AEC work, which was intended to study the reactor design itself, NERVA's goal was to produce a real engine that could be deployed on space missions.
ACIS is used by many software developers in industries such as computer-aided design ( CAD ), Computer-aided manufacturing ( CAM ), Computer-aided engineering ( CAE ), Architecture, engineering and construction ( AEC ), Coordinate-measuring machine ( CMM ), 3D animation, and shipbuilding.
David E. Lilienthal, who chaired the AEC from its creation until 1950.
Gordon Dean, who chaired the AEC from 1950 to 1953.

AEC and McCone
A prominent industrialist, McCone also served for more than twenty years as a governmental advisor and official, including head positions at the AEC and Central Intelligence Agency ( CIA ).

AEC and T
In 1949 – 50 he was an AEC postdoctoral Fellow at M. I. T., and served as a Visiting Associate Professor of Physics at Brandeis University, 1952 – 53.

AEC and 1959
Until 1959 Fawkner was the extent of suburban electrified services, with an AEC railmotor used from 1928 until 1959 to provide a connecting service north to Somerton station.
After that date the production was of badge-engineered AEC designs and bus bodywork, until the factory was closed in 1958 and sold in 1959.
The previous exposed radiator range still attracted profitable custom and unlike Daimler ( which built its last exposed-radiator CVG6 in 1953 ), Guy ( last exposed-radiator Arab IV in 1959 ) and AEC ( last exposed-radiator Regent V in 1960 ), Leyland continued to offer this option until the end of UK Titan production.

chair and John
A lady, you made clear to me both by precept and example, never raised her voice or slumped in her chair, never failed in social tact ( in heaven, for instance, would not mention St. John the Baptist's head ), never pouted or withdrew or scandalized in company, never reminded others of her physical presence by unseemly sound or gesture, never indulged in public scenes or private confidences, never spoke of money save in terms of alleviating suffering, never gossiped or maligned, never stressed but always minimized the hopelessness of anything from sin to death itself.
From the saddlebags, hung on a Hitchcock chair, David took out a good English razor, a present from John Hunter.
Shortly before his death, he passed his chair on to John of La Rochelle, setting the precedent for that chair to be held by a Franciscan.
The physical appearance of Davros was developed by visual effects designer Peter Day and sculptor John Friedlander, who based Davros ' chair on the lower half of a Dalek.
That same year, philosopher John Dewey moved from the University of Michigan to the newly established University of Chicago where he became chair of the department of philosophy, psychology and education.
The cathedra of bishops, such as the chair of the Pope in the Basilica of St. John Lateran, represent their magisterium ( teaching authority ).
The theory has been presented in 2005 by Marc W. Kirschner, a professor and chair of Department of Systems Biology at Harvard Medical School, and John C. Gerhart, a professor in Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley.
Also in honor of Bardeen, Sony Corporation endowed a $ 53 million John Bardeen professorial chair at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, beginning in 1990.
He was elected — probably handpicked — by Marozia from the Tusculani family, as a stop-gap measure until her own son John was ready to assume the chair of Saint Peter.
** John Spenkelink is executed in Florida, in the first use of the electric chair in America after the reintroduction of death penalty in 1976.
After his death, John O ' Brien, Steve Jenkin, Chris Maltby and Greg Rose, former students of Lions, commenced a campaign to raise funds to create a chair in his name at UNSW, the John Lions Chair in Computer Science in the School of Computer Science and Engineering.
Prior to his sudden death in December 983, Otto II had installed Pope John XIV, a non-Roman who had served as Otto II's chancellor in Italy, on the chair of St. Peter.
Washington believed he had the support of John Touhy, Speaker of the House and a former party chair.
A more recent account, by Sally Jenkins ( of the Washington Post ) and John Stauffer ( chair of the Program in the History of the American Civilization and professor of English and of African and African American studies at Harvard University ), which developed from a screenplay, draws on what they claim to be more extensive research to emphasize the extent to which, in the view of those authors, Knight ended Confederate control of Jones County during the war, and the extent of Knight's Unionist and anti-racist sympathies, both during the war and during Reconstruction.
He was a friend of Christopher Heydon, the writer on astrology ; and also of John Greaves, his successor to both the Savilian chair and Linacre's lectures.
In 1805 Playfair exchanged the chair of mathematics for that of natural philosophy in succession to John Robison, whom also he succeeded as general secretary to the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
Mr. Ryerson recruited a young communications lawyer to join the station's Board, and Newton N. Minow would both chair the WTTW board and also serve President John F. Kennedy as FCC Commissioner.
He opposed Charles I from the start, and took a leading part in the disorderly scene of 2 March 1629, when the speaker, Sir John Finch, was held down in the chair after refusing to put the resolution of Sir John Eliot against arbitrary taxation and innovations in religion ( see Denzil Holles ).
On 2 March 1629, when Sir John Finch, the speaker, refused to put Sir John Eliot's Protestations and was about to adjourn the House by the king's command, Holles together with another member, Sir Walter Long, thrust him back into the chair and swore " he should sit still till it pleased them to rise.

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