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13 result(s) for "Murray, Prof. Gilbert"
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ENGLISH HISTORY: CHAPTER III. THE GENEVA NAVAL CONFERENCE
Government and Disarmament (pg. 78-79). Geneva Naval Conference (pg. 79). British Proposals (pg. 79). British and American Disagreement on Cruisers (pg. 79-80). Mr. Bridgeman's Speech (pg. 80). American Reply (pg. 80-81). Sir A. Chamberlain's Statement (pg. 81). Publication by Foreign Office (pg. 81-82). New British Proposal (pg. 82). Breakdown of Conference (pg. 82). Final Meeting (pg. 82-83). Lord Balfour's Disclaimer (pg. 83). Mr. Churchill on the Breakdown (pg. 83-84). Resignation of Lord R. Cecil (pg. 84). His Memorandum (pg. 84-85). Prime Minister's Reply (pg. 85). Effect of the Resignation (pg. 85). Servian War Debt (pg. 85-86). Sacco and Vanzetti Demonstrations (pg. 86). Rhineland Evacuation (pg. 86). Mr. Baldwin on Canada (pg. 86). Trade Union Congress (pg. 86-87). Mr. Hicks's Suggestion (pg. 87). Mr. Tomsky's Message (pg. 87). Breach with Moscow (pg. 87-89). T.U.C. and Second International (pg. 89). T.U.C. and Minority Movement (pg. 89). Resolution on Industrial Peace (pg. 89-90). Peace Spirit at the Congress (pg. 90). Trade Union Organisation (pg. 90). Congress and Trade Union Bill (pg. 90). Welcome to Mr. Ramsay MacDonald (pg. 90-91). State of Trade (pg. 91). Mr. Lloyd George's Appeal (pg. 91-92). Employers and Proposed Round Table Conference (pg. 92-93). Sir A. Chamberlain in Paris (pg. 93). Speech at Geneva on Disarmament (pg. 93-94). Reception of Speech (pg. 94-95). Sir A. Chamberlain on the League Session (pg. 95). Pauperism and Unemployment (pg. 95). Text of Unemployment Insurance Bill (pg. 95-96). Labour Party Conference: Memorandum on Surtax (pg. 96-97). Mr. Roberts's Address (pg. 97). Debate on Labour Programme (pg. 97-98). Mining Policy (pg. 98). Defeat of Communists (pg. 98). Adoption of Surtax (pg. 98-99). Conservative Party Conference (pg. 99). Mr. Baldwin's Address (pg. 99-100). Conference and Safeguarding (pg. 100). Liberals and Disarmament (pg. 100). League of Nations Union Campaign (pg. 100-101). Lord Cecil's Speech (pg. 101-102). Mr. Lloyd George's Speech (pg. 102). Sir A. Chamberlain and His Critics (pg. 102-103). Mr. Lloyd George's Reply (pg. 103). Prime Minister and Disarmament (pg. 103-104). Conservatives and Disarmament (pg. 104). Chancellor's Conversion Operations (pg. 104-105). Committee on Street Offences (pg. 105). Ministerial Changes (pg. 105-106). Mr. McNeill on the League of Nations (pg. 106). Mr. Baldwin's Guildhall Speech (pg. 106).
ENGLISH HISTORY: CHAPTER II. THE FAILURE OF SANCTIONS
Mr. Eden at Geneva (pg. 34). Mr. Baldwin on Sanctions (pg. 34-35). The Budget (pg. 35-36). Defence Loan Foreshadowed (pg. 36-37). Leakage of Budget Secrets (pg. 37-38). Supplementary Navy Estimates (pg. 38). British Public and Ethiopian Defeat (pg. 38-39). League of Nations Union Deputation (pg. 39). Labour Indictment of Government (pg. 39). Mr. Eden's Reply (pg. 39-40). Repeal of Sanctions Demanded (pg. 40). Protest Mass Meeting (pg. 40-41). Lords Debate Collective Security (pg. 41). Premier on Failure of League (pg. 41-42). Export of Dum-dum Bullets by England Denied (pg. 42). Questionnaire to Germany (pg. 42-43). Government and Return of German Colonies (pg. 43). Bill for Abolition of Trial by Peers (pg. 43). New Coal Mines Bill Drafted (pg. 43-44). New Coal Mines Bill Amended (pg. 44). New Coal Mines Bill Withdrawn (pg. 44-45). Government Guarantee for Special Areas (pg. 45). Tithe Bill Second Reading (pg. 45). King George V. Memorial (pg. 45). Air Transport Subsidy (pg. 45-46). Education Bill Passed (pg. 46). Chancellor's Defence of Finance Bill (pg. 46-47). Resignation of Mr. J. H. Thomas (pg. 47). Sir T. Inskip on Military Preparations (pg. 47-48). Proposal to Appoint Minister of Supply Rejected (pg. 48). Five Cruisers Scrapped (pg. 48-49). Coronation Date Fixed (pg. 49). Report of Budget Leakage Tribunal (pg. 49). Statements in House of Commons (pg. 49-50). Sir S. Hoare becomes First Lord of Admiralty (pg. 50). Other Government Changes (pg. 50). Emperor of Ethiopia in London (pg. 50-51). Mr. Chamberlain Condemns Sanctions (pg. 51). Government Decide to Abandon Sanctions (pg. 51). Mr. Eden's Speech (pg. 51-52). Government Condemned by Mr. Greenwood (pg. 52). By Mr. Lloyd George (pg. 52-53). Premier's Defence (pg. 53). Labour Manifesto (pg. 53). Labour Vote of Censure (pg. 53-54). Sir J. Simon's Defence (pg. 54). Premier's Statement (pg. 54-55). Further Statement (pg. 55). National Liberal Conference (pg. 55). Opposition Liberal Convention (pg. 55-56). Lords Debate on the Reading of Speeches (pg. 56). Government and Disturbances in Palestine (pg. 56-57). Mr. Duff Cooper on Anglo-French Friendship (pg. 57). Labour Protest (pg. 57). Lords Debate (pg. 57-58). Premier and Lord Londonderry (pg. 58). Answer to Attacks (pg. 58-59). Mr. Eden and the League (pg. 59). Raising of Sanctions (pg. 59). By-elections (pg. 59). Britain and Montreux Conference (pg. 59-60). Finance Bill Passed (pg. 60). Supplementary Service Estimates (pg. 60). Subsidy for Livestock Industry (pg. 60-61). Problem of Country's Food Supply (pg. 61). Minister of Health on Malnutrition (pg. 61-62). On Social Services (pg. 62). B.B.C. Charter Extended (pg. 62-63). New Telephone Facilities (pg. 63). Hard Case of Jarrow-on-Tyne (pg. 63-64). Mr. Runciman's Survey of Trade and Industry (pg. 64). Government and Lords Reform (pg. 64). Attempt on the King (pg. 64-65). Sir T. Inskip on Defence Programme (pg. 65). Vote of Censure Defeated (pg. 65). Deputation to Premier on Defence (pg. 65-66). Complaints against Police (pg. 66). Effects of Unemployment “Standstill Act” (pg. 66-67). Government Prepare New Regulations (pg. 67). New Regulations Issued (pg. 67). Debate in Parliament (pg. 67-68). Anglo-French-Belgian Conference (pg. 69). Communiqué Issued (pg. 69-70). Mr. Eden's Survey of Foreign Affairs (pg. 70-71). Discussion in Commons (pg. 71). Lords Debate League Reform (pg. 71-72). Lord Cranborne's Statement (pg. 72). Canadian Pilgrims in London (pg. 72). Overcrowding Statistics (pg. 72-73). Anglo-Italian Trade Relations (pg. 73). Ministerial Changes (pg. 73). Parliament Adjourned (pg. 73-74).
PART II: OBITUARY OF EMINENT PERSONS DECEASED IN 1902
JANUARY (pg. 100-105). FEBRUARY (pg. 105-113). MARCH (pg. 113-121). APRIL (pg. 121-123). MAY (pg. 124-128). JUNE (pg. 128-132). JULY (pg. 132-135). AUGUST (pg. 135-137). SEPTEMBER (pg. 137-141). OCTOBER (pg. 141-143). NOVEMBER (pg. 143-146). DECEMBER (pg. 146-149).
Scientists Find Catchy Names Help Ideas Fly
Even a cursory spin through contemporary journals reveals an abundance of suggestive, metaphoric names. Chemistry has its \"buckyballs,\" spherical frameworks of carbon atoms named after Buckminster Fuller and also called \"buckminsterfullerenes.\" Physics has its \"spin glass\" and \"WIMP's,\" for weakly interactive massive particles. Besides \"chaperone\" molecules, which oversee the proper manufacture of proteins in cells, cell biology boasts its \"leucine zippers,\" regions of gene-regulating proteins that link up before interacting with the DNA molecule. \"During the spring and summer of 1963, I thought of them as quarks, but I didn't know how I was going to spell it,\" he said. \"I considered spelling it k-w-o-r-k. Then during the fall, I was paging through \"[Finnegan]'s Wake\" and saw the line, 'Three quarks for Muster Mark!' \" [James Joyce]'s pronunciation, rhyming with \"lark,\" wasn't quite right, but through a \"feeble' chain of reasoning, Dr. [Murray Gell-Mann] convinced himself he could pronounce it to rhyme with \"fork.\" \"It's a specific phenomenon that's going to occur, and it's got features you can study,\" he says. \"If you don't have a name for it, you can't see it. Once you have a name for it, you can see it. And the name has to be suggestive. I tell people that it's terrible to name something using a person's name, like the 'Mandelbrot set.' It doesn't help you see it. Gravitational lens is a better name than an Einstein lens. And chaos is a better name than '[James A. Yorke]-like behavior.' \"