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Introduction to Physical metallurgy by Sidney H. Avner, second edition, McGraw hill publications. Steels: Processing, Structure, and Performance, Chapter 15 High-Carbon Steels: Fully Pearlitic Microstructures and Applications Archived 2012-08-13 at the Wayback Machine by George Krauss, 2005 Edition, ASM International.
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This list of Jewish mathematicians includes mathematicians and statisticians who are or were verifiably Jewish or of Jewish descent. In 1933, when the Nazis rose to power in Germany, one-third of all mathematics professors in the country were Jewish, while Jews constituted less than one percent of the population. [1]
Trevor Colbourn writes that Sidney's political thought was a significant influence on Andrew Eliot, Jonathan Mayhew, Sam Adams and Josiah Quincy Jr. [27] The Discourses was in the personal libraries of John Adams, Robert Carter I, Robert Carter III and Thomas Jefferson (listed in 1771). [28] Adams in particular was "a lifelong Sidney enthusiast".
Erdős in 1992. Paul Erdős (1913–1996) was a Hungarian mathematician. He considered mathematics to be a social activity and often collaborated on his papers, having 511 joint authors, many of whom also have their own collaborators.
[8] Though initially Avner hesitated to work with Begin, he considered him "exceptional" among all the 4 prime ministers discussed. [8] Rabin advised Avner to work with Begin, as he was "[his] kind of Jew". [9] Eshkol, Meir and Rabin did not trust Abba Eban, Foreign Affairs Minister of Israel from 1966-1974. Eshkol even called him a ...
David P. Baron; Timothy F. Bresnahan; Jeremy I. Bulow; John Y. Campbell; JOHN C. Cox; Vincent P. Crawford; Douglas W. Diamond; Pradeep Dubey; Louis-André Gérard-Varet
Avner Ben-Zaken, "Exploring the Self, Experimenting Nature", in Reading Hayy Ibn-Yaqzan: A Cross-Cultural History of Autodidacticism (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011), pp. 101–125. ISBN 978-0801897399