「Manhattan」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)7ページ目

Manhattan

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該当件数:1924件

  • tween Park Place and Barclay Street in Lower Manhattan, opposite City Hall.
  • s to the Park Row terminal in New York City ( Manhattan) opposite the New York City Hall.
  • 9 Saint Vincent's Catholic Medical Center of Manhattan, originally a separate institution founded b
  • ern, Hibernian House, at 42 Prince Street in Manhattan owned by John Heaney, whose niece, Elizabeth
  • Located in lower Manhattan, Pace High School is offered a high level of
  • and general partner of private equity funds Manhattan Pacific Partners, an investment fund, Thayer
  • The Manhattan parish was established and the church built
  • amber musician, he has collaborated with the Manhattan, Parissi, Charleston, Shanghai, Tokyo and Ta
  • To Manhattan, Paul opens a French restaurant, the "Victor
  • mployed by P. T. Barnum's American Museum in Manhattan, performing ceremonial Indian dances.
  • before he was assassinated on the streets of Manhattan, perhaps by agents of Mussolini.
  • rs, he has authored two supernatural novels, Manhattan Pharaoh (2004) and Devil Goddess (2006).
  • i Toscas, Irene Maddox, Nicholas Milton, The Manhattan Philharmonic Orchestra, The John Hays Hammon
  • au after finding his telephone number in the Manhattan phone book.
  • ovember 19, 1826 - September 14, 1902) was a Manhattan physician and abortion provider in the 1870s
  • his senior year he was the New York Newsday Manhattan Player of the Year, a New York Daily News Al
  • Entrance from One Chase Manhattan Plaza
  • One Chase Manhattan Plaza (right) and 40 Wall Street (center)
  • One Chase Manhattan Plaza is currently occupied by the successor
  • A Manhattan plot is a type of scatter plot, usually used
  • In GWAS Manhattan plots, genomic coordinates are displayed alo
  • he smaller, unconsolidated City of New York ( Manhattan plus part of The Bronx).
  • Spitzer or Silver giving the job to another Manhattan politician."
  • torious Tammany Hall machine that controlled Manhattan politics; he was a strong opponent of prohib
  • The Manhattan portion from the Church Street bellmouth to
  • n The Bronx on her way to dance practices in Manhattan, prior to her stardom.
  • ntellectually curious and sensitive child of Manhattan progressives.
  • Oak Ridge, Tennessee, the newly established Manhattan Project community to which his family moved
  • tes as part of the British delegation to the Manhattan project between 1944 and 1945.
  • tizes the creation of the atomic bomb in the Manhattan Project and the subsequent bombing of Japan.
  • f the nuclear bomb, which was code named the Manhattan Project because of the location of the divis
  • eph Rotblat, the only scientist to leave the Manhattan Project on moral grounds, remarked that he "
  • pending much of the war years working on the Manhattan Project coordinating the American, British,
  • lie Groves' executive officer as part of the Manhattan Project after World War II.
  • (During the war with Japan, the Manhattan Project was put on the back-burner, so that
  • He became a member of the theatre groups the Manhattan Project and the Cooper-Keaton Group.
  • trict comprises much of Oak Ridge's original Manhattan Project townsite, laid out by Skidmore, Owin
  • He worked on the Manhattan Project as medical officer during World War
  • the-clock operating schedules at Oak Ridge's Manhattan Project production facilities that required
  • Manhattan Project scientists argued that further nucle
  • He was a security officer for the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos, and, toward the end o
  • nheimer is highly regarded for depicting the Manhattan Project scientific director as a man weary f
  • was taken over by the Federal Government for Manhattan Project facilities in 1942.
  • Late in life, after a long career in the Manhattan Project and at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • ector of the Metallurgical Laboratory of the Manhattan Project and, after the war, became concerned
  • He starts with the Manhattan Project and works through the policy debate.
  • ounder and first conductor was Waldo Cohn, a Manhattan Project biochemist and an accomplished celli
  • education was interrupted by service on the Manhattan Project from 1944 to 1945.
  • erful indictment of an important part of the Manhattan Project and a warning of the evil that suppo
  • of Virginia to study physics, worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II and received his
  • professor at Harvard who participated in the Manhattan Project and later served as President Eisenh
  • dwick pressed for British involvement in the Manhattan Project to the fullest extent.
  • As part of the Manhattan Project in 1944, he and his research team be
  • For the physicist who was involved with the Manhattan Project and later became a faculty member at
  • For the Manhattan Project plant, see Clinton Engineer Works.
  • of nuclear fission in the 1930s, through the Manhattan Project and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima
  • Compared to the Manhattan Project (one of the largest scientific and e
  • been developed at Los Alamos as part of the Manhattan Project but had not previously been used.
  • Report, the first official US history of the Manhattan Project which developed the first nuclear we
  • During World War II he worked on the Manhattan Project as part of the Special Engineer Deta
  • neral Leslie R. Groves, who was chief of the Manhattan Project (1947-1949).
  • l, the "S-1 Section", which later became the Manhattan Project and developed the first nuclear weap
  • ignate historic sites and the foundations of Manhattan Project labs still exist.
  • h atomic research was subsumed then into the Manhattan Project until after the war, and a large tea
  • He worked briefly on the Manhattan Project at Princeton University.
  • He also joined the Manhattan Project to develop the first nuclear weapon
  • e Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, Director of the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, of his security clear
  • had helped Fuchs pass information about the Manhattan Project to the Soviet Union by way of Soviet
  • Nichols remained with the Manhattan Project after the war until it was taken ove
  • appointed to chair a committee to survey the Manhattan Project and review all aspects of the bomb r
  • of Alsos, and Lt. Col. Boris Pash, a former Manhattan Project security officer, was its military l
  • tage flattop house, one of many inhabited by Manhattan Project workers in Oak Ridge, opened as a wa
  • He shortly afterward joined the Manhattan Project in the United States, which develope
  • During World War II, the Manhattan Project at what is now Oak Ridge brought in
  • He joined the Manhattan Project in 1941 and was among the leading sc
  • ions for Project Alberta, the portion of the Manhattan Project tasked with dropping of the weapons
  • By late 1943, Manhattan Project scientists were confident enough to
  • It was there that he became involved in the Manhattan Project during World War II; he was Director
  • primary research and production sites of the Manhattan Project were at Hanford, Washington, Oak Rid
  • was an American physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project and was director of the Scripps Inst
  • Glendenin was among the Manhattan Project scientists who in 1945 signed the Sz
  • Jungk, is the first published account of the Manhattan Project and the German atomic bomb project.
  • He led a survey team from the Manhattan Project to assess the effects of the atomic
  • f Chicago was removed and reassembled at the Manhattan Project site in Red Gate Woods.
  • at the University of Chicago, as part of the Manhattan Project under Glenn T. Seaborg; their patent
  • He was a research associate on the Manhattan Project from 1943 - 1946, and has been a pro
  • lbert Einstein as a chemical engineer on the Manhattan Project to help the United States develop th
  • From 1943 to 1945, he coordinated Manhattan Project work on plutonium purification and p
  • as a member of the British delegation to the Manhattan Project and helped in the development of exp
  • was an Armenian-American physicist with the Manhattan Project who accidentally irradiated himself
  • their allies, Britain and Canada, began the Manhattan Project to produce the first atomic weapons.
  • mportant trigger in the establishment of the Manhattan Project and the subsequent development of th
  • K-65 ores were refined as a key part of the Manhattan Project during World War II at the Linde Cer
  • he usual condition for people to work on the Manhattan Project was that they had to become U.S. cit
  • t with James Chadwick's group to work on the Manhattan Project to build the first atomic bombs.
  • to Woodward, in some ways be compared to the Manhattan Project during World War II in which the ato
  • Women in the Manhattan Project
  • He participated in the Manhattan Project to do research on isotope separation
  • a) Pugwash's founder worked on the Manhattan Project and states his reason for leaving wa
  • ied in 1945, as the war and his work for the Manhattan Project were coming to an end, and subsequen
  • He worked on the Manhattan Project during the Second World War.
  • ntly stumbled onto the then-extremely secret Manhattan project - the development of the atomic bomb
  • k Ridge, Tennessee that was built during the Manhattan Project to house official visitors and that
  • During World War II, the government's Manhattan Project made use of Edgerton's discoveries t
  • in which he refers to the bombmakers of the Manhattan Project as 'lunatics' and 'babel builders.'
  • The Manhattan Project was filmed in and around Rockland Co
  • Lee Cook was transferred to Houston from The Manhattan Project by bankers W.T. Carter and Jesse H.
  • During the Manhattan Project the need arose to find volatile comp
  • contaminated as a result of research for the Manhattan Project conducted at the stadium during the
  • rock band Rush performed a song called "The Manhattan Project" depicting the events of and leading
  • t of the separation effort ("we did half the Manhattan project").
  • During World War II, he worked in the Manhattan Project's metallurgy laboratory.
  • appeared, most likely finding its way to the Manhattan Project's Oak Ridge diffusion plant; it has
  • war industries, aluminum production and the Manhattan Project's uranium enrichment operations at n
  • lic of the Congo (the initial source for the Manhattan Project) and in the Athabasca Basin in north
  • ial American development of the atomic bomb ( Manhattan Project) during World War II, but were after
  • tenant General Leslie R. Groves, head of the Manhattan Project) and commissioned on 31 March 1967,
  • rity on the American atomic bomb effort, the Manhattan Project, and its chief scientist was the emi
  • The XY Line began efforts to penetrate the Manhattan Project, code-named ENORMOUS (ENORMOZ).
  • He was director of the Manhattan Project, Columbia University Group, 1945-6,
  • rs' hometown of Oak Ridge was a base for the Manhattan Project, the operation that developed the at
  • As part of its contribution to the Manhattan Project, Canada built and operated a 6 T/a e
  • he federal government in 1942 as part of the Manhattan Project, the George Jones Memorial Baptist C
  • Z. Morgan, the scientists who had worked in Manhattan Project, to the United States where he carri
  • tonium-239 by nuclear fission as part of the Manhattan Project, the United States nuclear weapons d
  • entagon is assigned to head the ultra-secret Manhattan Project, to beat the Germans in building an
  • n ordered to find uranium by the head of the Manhattan Project, General Leslie Groves.
  • of Chicago was part of the World War II-era Manhattan Project, created by the United States to dev
  • During World War II, he worked on the Manhattan Project, where his ultracentrifuge was used
  • In the 1989 movie dramatization of the Manhattan Project, Fat Man and Little Boy, the role of
  • rom 1942 to 1944, Kaplan participated in the Manhattan Project, and then spent a year as an instruc
  • ies, General Leslie Groves, commander of the Manhattan Project, recommended to General George Marsh
  • r discovered that he had a small part in the Manhattan Project, America's effort to build the atomi
  • then secret program only referred to as the Manhattan Project, which produced the atomic bomb.
  • II, Robert became scientific director of the Manhattan Project, the Allied effort to produce the fi
  • Originally focused on the history of the Manhattan Project, the library has expanded to include
  • United States General Kenneth Nichols of the Manhattan Project, Nichols purchased the 1500 tonnes o
  • pent the war years from 1942 seconded to the Manhattan Project, working on isotope separation, befo
  • absence from Harvard and was assigned to the Manhattan Project, first in New York City, then in New
  • ic Liaison for the United States Army on the Manhattan Project, and Edward, a pioneer in Behavioris
  • in the UK) is a 1989 film that reenacts the Manhattan Project, the secret Allied endeavor to devel
  • college, Kramish was assigned to work on the Manhattan Project, working in the special engineering
  • During World War II he worked on the Manhattan project, returning to Oxford in 1945.
  • number of dignitaries during the top-secret Manhattan Project, including Enrico Fermi, Robert Oppe
  • nd the United States), branched off from the Manhattan Project, to investigate the German nuclear e
  • During early phases of Manhattan Project, in 1943, uranium hydride was invest
  • one of the Kodak researchers assigned to the Manhattan Project, which led to the development of the
  • equipment for ships and went to work on the Manhattan Project, successively at UC Berkeley, Prince
  • he 1980s, including Simon, Lovesick, and The Manhattan Project, as well as Sister Mary Explains It
  • "I've known people who worked on the Manhattan Project," says Mark Brickell, who at the tim
  • physicist and the scientific director of the Manhattan Project.
  • He also worked on the Manhattan Project.
  • n American physicist who participated in the Manhattan Project.
  • to document the role Oak Ridge played in the Manhattan Project.
  • States as part of the operation against the Manhattan Project.
  • rnment assumed ownership of the land for the Manhattan Project.
  • o - August 31, 2002), a physicist inside the Manhattan project.
  • ith plutonium by doctors associated with the Manhattan Project.
  • This technology was transferred to the Manhattan Project.
  • Corps of Engineers to manage Y-12 during the Manhattan Project.
  • y" as Oak Ridge was known at the time of the Manhattan Project.
  • ence Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films for The Manhattan Project.
  • to the Special Engineering Detachment of the Manhattan project.
  • The Laboratory traces its roots to the Manhattan Project.
  • much information from the joint work on the Manhattan Project.
  • businessman, and an important figure in the Manhattan Project.
  • for a number of Soviet spy rings during the Manhattan Project.
  • he building's location gives its name to the Manhattan Project.
  • II, he was sent to Los Alamos to work on the Manhattan Project.
  • suggest that PERS was a Soviet source on the Manhattan Project.
  • - Quantum physicist who was involved in the Manhattan Project.
  • y to become Deputy Commanding General of the Manhattan Project.
  • uranium isotope separation endeavor for the Manhattan Project.
  • rector after working closely with him on the Manhattan Project.
  • both the Radiation Laboratory at MIT and the Manhattan Project.
  • e two tons of pure uranium in support of the Manhattan Project.
  • Wu also did research and development for the Manhattan Project.
  • int of Robert Oppenheimer, the leader of the Manhattan Project.
  • Fermi at the Red Gate Woods site during the Manhattan Project.
  • d in 1942 when the area was acquired for the Manhattan Project.
  • here remain unidentified atomic spies on the Manhattan Project.
  • cused on technical fields in the wake of the Manhattan Project.
  • n early phase in what would later become the Manhattan Project.
  • ron Novick (1919 - 2000) was a member of the Manhattan Project.
  • ey before becoming a group leader during the Manhattan Project.
  • this eventually led to what would become the Manhattan Project.
  • nents, materials and process development for Manhattan Project.
  • ichols, who had been deputy to Groves on the Manhattan Project..
  • bia University Press and Icon Books Ltd, The Manhattan Project: Big Science and the Atomic Bomb by
  • instein himself had only a minor role in the Manhattan Project: he had cosigned a letter to the U.S
  • uate studies at the University he joined the Manhattan Project; and became the assistant Director o
  • ess man sleeping on the sidewalk in downtown Manhattan projected on to a building.
  • The 1798 outbreak of yellow fever in Manhattan prompted his family to send him to healthier
  • In 1914, in one of the many Manhattan properties she and her husband owned, Gertru
  • Robert Braam - Library Board Trustee ( Manhattan Public Library, Will County)
  • that even though the cities of Brooklyn and Manhattan put up most of the money, they essentially h
  • Plans for connecting Manhattan, Queens and the Bronx were first announced b
  • s in the five boroughs (Brooklyn, the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens and Staten Island) of New York City
  • Club, located at 77 White Street in downtown Manhattan, quickly became a major fixture in the city'
  • Born in Manhattan, Quittner grew up in Reading, Pennsylvania.
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