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) A. N. Whitehead, while reading some of Peirce's unpublished manuscripts soon after arriving at Harvard in 1924, was struck by how Peirce had anticipated his own " process " thinking.
Paul Whitehead had been the Secretary and Steward of the Order at Medmenham.
In 1890, Whitehead married Evelyn Wade, an Irish woman reared in France ; they had a daughter and two sons.
This was a subject that fascinated Whitehead but was also one that he had also not previously studied or taught.
Whitehead, however, had no results of a general nature.
Russell and Alfred North Whitehead wrote their three-volume Principia Mathematica ( PM ) hoping to achieve what Frege had been unable to do.
After Whitehead moved to Los Angeles, Genesis signed with the art collective Hipgnosis, whose artists had created high profile album covers for Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon and Led Zeppelin's Houses of the Holy.
In 1986, while a Professor of Biology at MIT and Director at Whitehead, Baltimore co-authored a scientific paper on immunology with Thereza Imanishi-Kari ( an Assistant Professor of Biology who had her own laboratory at MIT ) as well as four others.
In 1882, Headmaster Henry Whitehead Moss moved the school from its original town centre location to a new site over the River Severn, in Kingsland ( a site which had, amongst other things, housed the Shrewsbury workhouse and a foundling hospital ).
The final two episodes of the series feature a new arrival ( Geoffrey Whitehead ), who tries to organise a rebellion of the demons in Hell, with Thomas's help, with exactly the same degree of success that Gary and Thomas had in series 1.
In the United Kingdom, Divine would sing his hit " You Think You're A Man " – a song which he had dedicated to his parents – on BBC television show Top of the Pops, and also gained a devout follower in the form of Briton Mitch Whitehead, a man who would declare himself to be Divine's " number 1 fan ", tattooing himself with images of his idol and eventually aiding Bernard Jay in setting up for Divine's show onstage.
Paul Whitehead, a close friend of Sir Francis Dashwood, had been the Secretary and Steward to the Hellfire Club.
The Sterns had the Whitehead family's bank accounts frozen and sought warrants for their arrest.
Further, Whitehead had strongly supported Rosenstock-Huessy in his disagreements with members of the Harvard faculty.
In late 1860, after Garibaldi had appointed Seymour as his " Military Secretary ", he accused a brother officer ( who happened to be a favourite of Garibaldi's ) of embezzling Garibaldi funds, the said brother officer challenged Seymour to a duel that his superior officer ( Colonel John Whitehead Peard-Garibaldi's " Englishman ") forbade him to attend.
Spitzer has had a longstanding feud with LMDC chairman John Whitehead.
Henry Whitehead, Bishop of Madras, who had studied mathematics at Oxford, and was the nephew of Alfred North Whitehead and Isobel Duncan.
Affidavits from people who knew Whitehead or lived nearby were collected more than 30 years later ; many of these asserted that Whitehead had flown, though some denied it.
The newspaper reported that trees blocked the way after the flight was in progress, and quoted Whitehead as saying, " I knew that I could not clear them by rising higher, and also that I had no means of steering around them by using the machinery.
The book described Whitehead as one of the " latest of the enthusiasts in the soaring field " who had devised several " soaring apparatuses ".
Randolph sought out people who had known Whitehead and had seen his flying machines and engines.

Whitehead and about
Malik wrote his PhD dissertation about Whitehead, in which Malik compared Whitehead's Metaphysics of Time to that of Martin Heidegger.
Whitehead Lectures: " Logicism, Wittgenstein, and De Re Beliefs about Natural Numbers ".
Eurogamer's Dan Whitehead wrote, " Purists like me will almost certainly find something to grumble about over the span of the game, but the overall impact of the redesign is undeniably for the better.
Gustave Albin Whitehead, born Gustav Albin Weisskopf ( 1 January 1874 – 10 October 1927 ) was an aviation pioneer who emigrated from Germany to the U. S., where he designed and built early flying machines and engines meant to power them from about 1897 to 1915.
During his period of active aeronautical work, Whitehead attracted notice from various newspapers, Scientific American magazine, and a book about industrial progress.
According to an affidavit given in 1934 by Louis Darvarich, a friend of Whitehead, the two men made a motorized flight together of about half a mile in Pittsburgh's Schenley Park in April or May 1899.
Whitehead piloted his Number 21 aircraft in a controlled powered flight for about half a mile up to high and landed safely.
The article about Whitehead is widely attributed to journalist Dick Howell.
The ability to control the air ship in this manner appeared to give Whitehead confidence, for he was seen to take time to look at the landscape about him.
Whitehead also built gliders until about 1906 and was photographed flying them.
"... his mood changed to anger when I asked him about Gustave Whitehead.
He flatly refused to talk about Whitehead, and when I asked him why, he said: ' That SOB never paid me what he owed me.
Two Connecticut Whitehead fans said they heard about yet another photograph ; high school science teacher and pilot Andy Kosch and Connecticut State Senator George Gunther.
They were told that a sea captain named Brown made a logbook entry about Whitehead flying over Long Island Sound and even photographed the airplane in flight.
In 1937, Stella Randolph stated in her first book that the late Richard Howell was the reporter who wrote the article about a Whitehead flight in the 18 August 1901 Bridgeport Herald The article carried no byline.
" Howell died before the controversy about Whitehead began.
As to whether Whitehead's wife resented matters, Stella Randolph wrote " Mrs. Whitehead talked very freely and frankly with the writer, who made several visits to her home, in the 1930s, and there was never any intimation that she harbored any resentment about the past.
Beach claimed authorship of only one Scientific American article about Whitehead, that of 8 June 1901, a few weeks before the report in the Bridgeport Sunday Herald.
In 1939, Beach wrote down his thoughts about Whitehead, stating, " I do not believe that any of his machines ever left the ground under their own power in spite of the assertions of many persons who think they saw him fly.
Gunther said he had been having " cordial " conversations with the Smithsonian about giving credit to Whitehead, " but after O ' Dwyer blasted them in his book, well, that totally turned them off.
O ' Dwyer said it was " hard to understand " why the Smithsonian never contacted Whitehead or his family to learn more about the flight claims.
The girls recorded about five demos ( according to Mr. Whitehead ).
For three or four hours X Ray Company were pinned down on the slopes of the mountain. Naval gunfire ripped back and forth across the mountain, but the Argentine 3rd Platoon of Llambías-Pravaz held the Royal Marines off and were not dislodged until about 2. 30 am local time. Colonel Andrew Whitehead realized that a single company could not hope to secure Two Sisters without massive casualties, and brought up the battalion's two other companies.
# about 1650 at Broughton Castle, to Frances Whitehead, daughter of Richard Whitehead of Tuderley, Hants, by whom he had four daughters, Anne, Frances, Mary and Celia.

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