Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Brigadier General James Creel Marshall (15 October 1897 – 19 July 1977) was a United States Army Corps of Engineers officer who was initially in charge of the Manhattan Project to build an atomic bomb during World War II.

  2. 5 de jun. de 2014 · The summer of 1942 proved to be troublesome for the fledgling bomb project. Col. James C. Marshall, with the Syracuse, New York Army Corps of Engineers, was picked to direct the new Laboratory for the Development of Substitute Metals (DSM).

  3. U.S. Military–Marine Security Guard. Deceased January 31, 1968. Cpl. James Conrad Marshall, Marine Security Guard (MSG), died on January 31, 1968, in Saigon, South Vietnam. He was killed in a Viet Cong attack/penetration of the U.S. Embassy Compound as part of the Tet Offensive. He was the first MSG to die in defense of a U.S. embassy or ...

  4. Colonel James C. Marshall set up the Manhattan Engineer District (MED), established by general order on August 13, 1942. Marshall presided over the initial stages of the Project until General Leslie R. Groves assumed control on September 17, 1942. In this interview, Marshall discusses the military’s involvement in the Manhattan Project and ...

  5. Colonel James C. Marshall was the Director of the Laboratory for the Development of Substitute Metals, or DSM, the military’s initial cover name for the Manhattan Project. In 1942, Marshall immediately moved from Syracuse, NY where he served in the Corps’s Syracuse Engineer District, to New York City.

  6. Initial Problems. Summer 1942--during which the American island hopping campaign in the Pacific began at Guadalcanal-proved to be a troublesome one for the fledgling bomb project. Colonel James C. Marshall received the assignment of directing the Laboratory for the Development of Substitute Metals, or DSM.

  7. INTRODUÇÃO. Uma conhecida revolução no pensamento econômico separa J. S. Mill e Alfred Marshall, dois grandes pensadores da Economia Britânica. J. S. Mill foi o último grande representante da Economia Política Clássica Inglesa, já Marshall foi aquele que consolidou a Revolução Marginalista na Inglaterra.