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Oxford University Press, 1946 ; reprinted Four Courts Press: Dublin and Portland, OR, 1994.
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Oxford and University
The compilation work was undertaken by a number of interested crystallographers in the Department of Mineralogy of the University Museum at Oxford.
Editors for Volumes 1, and 2, were M. W. Porter and the late R. C. Spiller, both of Oxford University.
Now, not only are there considerably more laity as students and professors at Oxford, but there are also numerous houses of religious orders existing in respectable and friendly relations with the non-Catholic members of the University.
Oxford, UK and Indianapolis, US, The Fridtjol Nansen Institute & The International African Institute in association with James Currey and Indiana University Press.
* Robin Le Poidevin, ( 2010 ) Agnosticism: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-957526-8
* Guide to the Elements – Revised Edition, Albert Stwertka, ( Oxford University Press ; 1998 ) ISBN 0-19-508083-1
F. Rahman, Avicenna's Psychology: An English Translation of Kitab al-Najat, Book II, Chapter VI with Historical-philosophical Notes and Textual Improvements on the Cairo Edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1952.
* Lewis Ayres, Nicaea and its Legacy: An Approach to Fourth-Century Trinitarian Theology ( New York: Oxford University Press, 2004 ).
* Sarah Parvis, Marcellus of Ancyra And the Lost Years of the Arian Controversy 325-345 ( New York: Oxford University Press, 2006 ).
* Hiscock, Eric C .; Cruising Under Sail, second edition, 1965 Oxford University Press ; ISBN 0-19-217522-X
* Peter Heather, The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians, Oxford University Press ( 2006 ) pg. 151
Oxford and Press
* G. H. Hardy and E. M. Wright 1978, 2000 ( with general index ) An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers: 5th Edition, Clarendon Press, Oxford UK, ISBN 0-19-853171-0
Oxford and 1946
‘ Wells, Herbert George ( 1866 – 1946 )’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 ; online edn, Jan 2011 accessed 21 Mar 2012.
* Alfred Tarski ( 1946 ) Introduction to Logic and the Methodology of the Deductive Sciences, page 118, Oxford University Press.
The Oxford English Dictionary, citing the use of the term in a 1946 New York Times report on the destroyed city of Hiroshima, defines ground zero as " that part of the ground situated immediately under an exploding bomb, especially an atomic one.
Roland Berrill, an Australian barrister, and Dr Lancelot Ware, a British scientist and lawyer, founded Mensa at Lincoln College, in Oxford, England, in 1946.
Berlin was to remain at Oxford for the rest of his life, apart from a period working for British Information Services in New York from 1940 to 1942, and for the British embassies in Washington, DC, and Moscow from then until 1946.
** A Study of History: Abridgement of Vols I-VI, with a preface by Toynbee ( Oxford University Press 1946 )
He began teaching at Brasenose College at Oxford University in 1946, and he was the principal of the college from 1978 to 1989.
* Gareth Evans ( philosopher ) ( 1946 – 1980 ), philosopher at Oxford University and student of Michael Dummett
RAF Harwell, was some sixteen miles south of Oxford near Didcot and the village of Harwell, and on 1 January 1946 the Atomic Energy Research Establishment was formed, coming under the Ministry of Supply.
He then travelled to the United Kingdom and spent a year at Balliol College, Oxford, before joining the Inner Temple in London in 1946, to study to become a barrister.
Born in Newport, Monmouthshire, son of a civil servant, he was educated at the former Hampton Grammar School, a boys ' voluntary aided school, now Hampton School, an independent school, between 1946 and 1948, and thereafter at St Paul's School, a boys ' independent school in Barnes, London and at Magdalen College, Oxford where he graduated with a BA Degree in Law ( 1958 ) and four years later his MS degree in International Law and Regulations ( 1962 ).
Within three years the Oxford University Tiddlywinks Society was formed ; although the two universities had been playing matches since 1946.
Ganilau was educated at Northern Provincial School, Queen Victoria School and Wadham College, Oxford University, whence he graduated from the Devonshire Course for administration officers in 1946.
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