168,224 research outputs found
J. Willard Marriott, Helen F. Boehm and President Gerald Ford with a sculpture titled "The Eagle of Freedom."
Photo of J. Willard at an event with President Gerald Ford. Also pictured is porcelain magnate Helen Boehm, her husband designed the world-renowned Boehm sculpture, circa 1970
Boehm, J W (John Wilfred), VX47040
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/372425Surname: BOEHM
Given Name(s) or Initials: J W (JOHN WILFRED)
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: VX47040
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 37989183343
Item: [2016.0049.04750] "Boehm, J W (John Wilfred), VX47040
J. Willard Marriott with First Lady Betty Ford and President Gerald Ford with Helen Boehm looking at a sculpture titled "The Eagle of Freedom."
J. Willard Marriott with First Lady Betty Ford and President Gerald Ford with Helen Boehm looking at a sculpture titled "The Eagle of Freedom." Helen Boehm\u27s husband designed the sculpture, circa 1970s
J. Willard Marriott with First Lady Betty Ford and President Gerald Ford with Helen F. Boehm looking at a sculpture titled "The Eagle of Freedom."
Photo of J. Willard with First Lady Betty Ford and President Gerald Ford with porcelain magnate Helen F. Boehm, her husband designed the world-renowned Boehm sculpture, circa 1970
Interview with Felix H. Boehm
An oral history interview in three sessions in 1999 with Felix Hans Boehm, Caltech Research Fellow, 1953-1958, and Professor of Physics, 1958-1995 (emeritus 1995- ). Born in Basel, Switzerland, and educated at the University of Geneva and the ETH (Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule) in Zurich (diploma, 1948; PhD, 1951, in physics), Boehm recounts first coming to the US to Columbia University in 1952 to work in nuclear physics under C. S. Wu. In July 1953 he arrives at Caltech as postdoc; associations with physicists J. DuMond in Bridge Laboratory and C. C. Lauritsen and the Kellogg Lab group. Experimental work in 1950s and 1960s on aspects of nuclear structure and particle behavior, especially parity violation. Interaction with R. Feynman and M. Gell-Mann on parity violation in nonleptonic processes. He takes leave to Europe: Heidelberg 1957-58 and Copenhagen 1965-1966; meets R. Mössbauer and helps bring him to Caltech (1960-1964), where he receives Nobel Prize (1961). Reminiscences of Niels Bohr. At Caltech begins collaboration with P. Vogel (1970); developing interest in neutrino oscillations; neutrino mass and search for dark matter. Visits to Aspen Center for Physics; collaborations with French (Laue Langevin Institute, Grenoble) and Swiss scientists (Paul Scherrer Institute, Zurich) on neutrino detection; experiment set up in Gotthard Tunnel. Work at Caltech on double beta decay; building of time-projection chamber (TPC); attempts to set up neutrino detector near San Onofre nuclear plant scuttled by environmentalists; lab eventually built in Palo Verde, Arizona. Comments on Caltech presidents and future of Caltech
Boehm, Gottfried
Voce "Gottfried Boehm" per l'Enciclopedia Treccani dell'arte contemporanea
J. Maritain, Cléments de Philosophie, I. Introduction générale à la Philosophie, 1920
Boehm Alfred. J. Maritain, Cléments de Philosophie, I. Introduction générale à la Philosophie, 1920. In: Revue des Sciences Religieuses, tome 2, fascicule 1, 1922. p. 112
J. Maritain, Cléments de Philosophie, I. Introduction générale à la Philosophie, 1920
Boehm Alfred. J. Maritain, Cléments de Philosophie, I. Introduction générale à la Philosophie, 1920. In: Revue des Sciences Religieuses, tome 2, fascicule 1, 1922. p. 112
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