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Birge and was
The Eastern side of the mountain was once owned by Sam Birge, and later Arthur Kohn.
Raymond Thayer Birge ( March 13, 1887 – March 22, 1980 ) was a physicist.
Birge was an active administrator and was the architect of the Berkeley department's prestige, seeking out physicists such as Robert Oppenheimer and Ernest Lawrence and guiding the department through its golden years of the 1930s and through the changes brought on by World War II, the Manhattan Project, and the birth of " Big Science.
In December 1964, the new Physics building at Berkeley, Birge Hall was dedicated to Raymond Birge.
At Berkeley, Urey was influenced by the work of physicist Raymond T. Birge and soon joined Niels Bohr in Copenhagen to work on atomic structure at the Institute for Theoretical Physics.
He settled in Cleveland, where he met and married his first wife, Mary Birge ( with whom he also had an acrobatic act and one child, Tina, who was born in 1949 ), and worked as a plumber and carpenter.
Overall military command of the insurgent forces was held by John Birge, a senior member of the Hunter organization in New York state.
His brother, L. Birge Harrison ( 1854 – 1929 ), also a painter, particularly successful in snow scenes, was a pupil of the École des Beaux Arts, Paris, under Cabanel and Carolus-Duran ; his November ( honourable mention, 1882 ) was purchased by the French government.

Birge and scientific
Born in Brooklyn, New York, into an academic scientific family, Birge obtained his Doctor's Degree from the University of Wisconsin – Madison in 1913.

Birge and with
* Jonathan Brewster Bingham ( 1914 – 1986 ), member of the House of Representatives for Riverdale and other sections of the Bronx from 1965 to 1983, for whom a segment of Independence Avenue north of 5000 Independence Avenue, his home with June Rossbach Bingham ( later June Bingham Birge ,) has been named.
On his arrival at Berkeley, Birge sought collaboration with the Berkeley College of Chemistry, then under the leadership of Gilbert N. Lewis.
Following their 1934 joint paper in Reviews of Modern Physics, their approaches diverged with Deming following the work of Walter A. Shewhart while Birge became interested in the more conventional statistical approaches of least squares and maximum likelihood.

Birge and on
It focuses on three important pioneers of limnology, Dr. Edward A. Birge, Chancey Juday and Arthur D. Hasler, as well as Wisconsin research laboratories and field equipment.

Birge and .
* 1851 – Edward Asahel Birge, American academic ( d. 1950 )
Prominent early American limnologists included G. Evelyn Hutchinson, Ed Deevey, E. A. Birge, and C. Juday.
Darice Birge argues that Oedipus at Colonus is a story of Oedipus ' heroization.
This act, according to Birge, is his first act as a hero.
* J. K. Birge, " The Bektashi Order of Dervishes ", London and Hartford, 1937
* June Bingham Birge ( 1919 – 2007 ), author and playwright.
* James F. Birge, PhD ( interim ) 2006 – 2007

was and unafraid
she must be poised and proud and unafraid in order to prove to the mountain that she was in earnest.
When the skies grew dark and thunder rolled across the valley, he was unafraid.
It is believed she held liberal political views and was unafraid of expressing them, a fact met with disapproval by Goya's family.
Hitler went on to accuse naval officers of being cowards not fully committed to victory, and offered a contrast with the Army, which Hitler claimed was run by brave men unafraid of death in their quest for total victory.
While Hepburn was unafraid of the leopard, Grant was terrified of Nissa and most scenes of the two interacting are done in close-ups with a stand-in.
Wherever it was essential, he was unafraid to introduce mathematics, but he tried to avoid scaring off potential readers with too many equations that did not illustrate essential points.
McCann says: " TW3 ... did its research, thought its arguments through and seemed unafraid of anything or anyone ... Every hypocrisy was highlighted and each contradiction was held up for sardonic inspection.
According to eyewitnesses, Kolchak was entirely calm and unafraid, " like an Englishman.
" A sceptical work that debunks a number of legends circulating at the time in a paradoxical and witty manner ; it displays the Baconian side of Browne — the side that was unafraid of what at the time was still called " the new learning ".
The senior Stefan was evidently unafraid of a military confrontation with his former father-in-law which could have occurred in retaliation for his actions.
P. edwardnewtoni was documented as being unafraid of humans.
He was even able to sneak a kiss from a surprised, but unafraid woman.
Throughout his Parliamentary career he was unafraid to speak his mind and often sparked strong criticism from those he criticised or offended.
Smith was unafraid to sing songs that were considered too " risky " or spoke of the realities of the modern life.
Grenouille grew up cold and unfeeling ; he was unafraid of anything and took punishment easily.
" Although primarily a Japanese chef, Michiba was unafraid of incorporating decidedly non-Japanese elements into his dishes — something that did not sit well with more traditional-minded Japanese cuisine chefs.
Bouchard was unafraid to speak his mind when he felt the occasion demanded.
The issuing of badges by lords was attacked in the Parliament of 1384, and in 1388 they made the startling request that " all liveries called badges, as well of our lord the king as of other lords ... shall be abolished ", because " those who wear them are flown with such insolent arrogance that they do not shrink from practising with reckless effrontery various kinds of extortion in the surrounding countryside ... and it is certainly the boldness inspired by these badges that makes them unafraid to do these things ".
As a competent theologian, she was unafraid to disagree with Calvin on minor points.
Tugay was also unafraid of tracking-back and getting stuck in when the game required a more physical approach.

was and scientific
It was therefore not until the publication of J.H. Round's `` The Settlement Of The South And East Saxons '', and W.H. Stevenson's `` Dr. Guest And The English Conquest Of South Britain '', that a scientific basis for place-name studies was established.
A credulousness, a distaste for documentation, an uncritical reliance on contemporary accounts, and a proneness to assume a theory as true before adequate proof was provided were all evidences of his failure to comprehend the use of the scientific method or to evaluate the responsibilities of the historian to his reading public.
In short, scientific sampling was introduced in place of subjective sampling.
Likewise, Kant formulated the nebular hypothesis, according to which the solar system was evolved from a rotating mass of incandescent gas, nearly a half century before its scientific value was made plain by Laplace in his Systeme Du Monde.
For what concerns all scientific disciplines is precisely that which can be captured for the rational, i.e., for the scientific determination of what in past ages was considered ultimate and irrational.
There was no close examination of his clothes for bloodstains, and certainly no scientific test was made of them.
An elaborate system of accounting and reports was worked out, and the trade was to be managed in the most scientific way.
Recently, the possibility that the alcohol used in mouthrinses acts as a carcinogen was raised, but there is to date no scientific consensus on the issue.
B. Rhine, who was critical in the early foundations of parapsychology as a laboratory science, was committed to finding scientific evidence for the spiritual existence of humans.
The twentieth century saw a burgeoning of technological applications of the large body of scientific knowledge that was by then in place.
The treaty was a diplomatic expression of the operational and scientific cooperation that had been achieved " on the ice ".
It was also intended so that Americans with disabilities would be kept in the mainstream in terms of scientific and medical research and developments, especially opening future opportunities in Space exploration to them, as well as public policy changes, healthcare law and policy changes, and civil rights protections and public law changes for Americans with physical, mental and cognitive disabilities.
Such breadth was customary among the leading scientific intellectuals of the day.
As a self-described " confirmed scientific rationalist ", Tylor believed that this view was " childish " and typical of " cognitive underdevelopment ", and that it was therefore common in " primitive " peoples such as those living in hunter gatherer societies.
In addition to his scientific work, he was a social activist who was critical of what he considered to be an unjust social and economic system in 19th-century Britain.
Wallace was a prolific author who wrote on both scientific and social issues ; his account of his adventures and observations during his explorations in Indonesia and Malaysia, The Malay Archipelago, was one of the most popular and influential journals of scientific exploration published during the 19th century.

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