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national+inspector

  • 41 Sarnoff, David

    [br]
    b. 27 February 1891 Uzlian, Minsk (now in Belarus)
    d. 12 December 1971 New York City, New York, USA
    [br]
    Russian/American engineer who made a major contribution to the commercial development of radio and television.
    [br]
    As a Jewish boy in Russia, Sarnoff spent several years preparing to be a Talmudic Scholar, but in 1900 the family emigrated to the USA and settled in Albany, New York. While at public school and at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, he helped the family finances by running errands, selling newspapers and singing the liturgy in the synagogue. After a short period as a messenger boy with the Commercial Cable Company, in 1906 he became an office boy with the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America (see G. Marconi). Having bought a telegraph instrument with his first earnings, he taught himself Morse code and was made a junior telegraph operator in 1907. The following year he became a wireless operator at Nantucket Island, then in 1909 he became Manager of the Marconi station at Sea Gate, New York. After two years at sea he returned to a shore job as wireless operator at the world's most powerful station at Wanamaker's store in Manhattan. There, on 14 April 1912, he picked up the distress signals from the sinking iner Titanic, remaining at his post for three days.
    Rewarded by rapid promotion (Chief Radio Inspector 1913, Contract Manager 1914, Assistant Traffic Manager 1915, Commercial Manager 1917) he proposed the introduction of commercial radio broadcasting, but this received little response. Consequently, in 1919 he took the job of Commercial Manager of the newly formed Radio Corporation of America (RCA), becoming General Manager in 1921, Vice- President in 1922, Executive Vice-President in 1929 and President in 1930. In 1921 he was responsible for the broadcasting of the Dempsey-Carpentier title-fight, as a result of which RCA sold $80 million worth of radio receivers in the following three years. In 1926 he formed the National Broadcasting Company (NBC). Rightly anticipating the development of television, in 1928 he inaugurated an experimental NBC television station and in 1939 demonstrated television at the New York World Fair. Because of his involvement with the provision of radio equipment for the armed services, he was made a lieutenant-colonel in the US Signal Corps Reserves in 1924, a full colonel in 1931 and, while serving as a communications consultant to General Eisenhower during the Second World War, Brigadier General in 1944.
    With the end of the war, RCA became a major manufacturer of television receivers and then invested greatly in the ultimately successful development of shadowmask tubes and receivers for colour television. Chairman and Chief Executive from 1934, Sarnoff held the former post until his retirement in 1970.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    French Croix de Chevalier d'honneur 1935, Croix d'Officier 1940, Croix de Commandant 1947. Luxembourg Order of the Oaken Crown 1960. Japanese Order of the Rising Sun 1960. US Legion of Merit 1946. UN Citation 1949. French Union of Inventors Gold Medal 1954.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Sarnoff, David

  • 42 Shrapnel, General Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Weapons and armour
    [br]
    b. 3 June 1761 Bradford-on-Avon, England
    d. 13 March 1842 Southampton, England
    [br]
    English professional soldier and inventor of shrapnel ammunition.
    [br]
    The youngest of nine children, Shrapnel was commissioned into the Royal Artillery in July 1779. His early military service was in Newfoundland and it was on his return to England in 1784 that he began to interest himself in artillery ammunition. His particular concern was to develop a round that would be more effective against infantry than the existing solid cannon-ball and canister round. The result was a hollow, spherical shell filled with lead musket balls and fitted with a bursting charge and fuse. His development of the shell was interrupted by active service in the Low Countries in 1793–4, during which he was wounded, and duty in the West Indies. Nevertheless, in 1803 the British Army adopted his shell, which during the next twelve years played a significant part on the battlefield.
    In 1804 Shrapnel was appointed Assistant Inspector of Artillery and made further contributions to the science of gunnery, drawing up a series of range tables to improve accuracy of fire, inventing the brass tangent slide for better sighting of guns, and improving the production of howitzers and mortars by way of the invention of parabolic chambers. His services were recognized in 1814 by a Treasury grant of £1,200 per annum for life. He was promoted Major-General in 1819 and appointed a Colonel-Commandant of the Royal Artillery in 1827, and in the 1830s there was talk of him being made a baronet, but nothing came of it. Shrapnel remains a current military term, although modern bursting shells rely on the fragmentation of the casing of the projectile for their effect rather than his original concept of having shot inside them.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Colonel-Commandant of the Royal Artillery 1827.
    Further Reading
    Dictionary of National Biography, 1897, Vol. 52, London: Smith, Elder.
    CM

    Biographical history of technology > Shrapnel, General Henry

  • 43 Thévénin, Léon Charles

    SUBJECT AREA: Electricity
    [br]
    b. 30 March 1857 Paris, France
    d. 21 September 1926 Paris, France
    [br]
    French telegraph engineer who extended Ohm's Law to the analysis of complex electrical circuits.
    [br]
    Following a basic education, Thévénin entered the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris, graduating in 1876. In 1878 he joined the Corps of Telegraph Engineers (which subsequently became the French PTT). There he initially worked on the development of long-distance underground telegraph lines, but he later switched to working on power lines. Appointed a teaching inspector at the Ecole Supérieure in 1882, he became increasingly interested in the problems of measurement in electrical circuits. As a result of studying Kirchoff's Laws, which were essentially derived from Ohm's Law, he developed his now-famous theorem which made it possible to calculate the currents in more complex electrical circuits.
    As well as becoming Head of the Bureau des Lignes, up until his death he also found time for teaching other subjects outside the Ecole, including a course in mechanics at the Institut National Agronomique. In 1896 he was appointed Director of the Telegraph Engineering School, then, in 1901, Engineer-in-Chief of the telegraph workshops. He retired in 1914.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1883, "Extension of Ohm's Law to complex electrical circuits", Comptes rendus 97:159 (describes Thévénin's Theorem).
    Further Reading
    F.E.Terman, 1943, Radio Engineers'Handbook, New York: McGraw-Hill, Section 3 (summarizes the relevant circuit theory).
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Thévénin, Léon Charles

  • 44 welfare

    [ˈwelfɛə]
    Councellor of Social Welfare советник по социальному обеспечению (государственная должность) infant and maternal welfare социальное обеспечение матери и ребенка; благополучие ребенка и матери material welfare материальное благополучие maternity welfare охрана материнства municipal social welfare board муниципальное управление социального обеспечения National Board of Social Welfare Национальное управление социального обеспечения old-age welfare социальное обеспечение по старости public welfare соц. общественное благосостояние refugee welfare социальная защита беженцев, обеспечение благополучия беженцев relief welfare благотворительность social welfare and health office бюро социального обеспечения и здравоохранения social welfare authority орган социального обеспечения social welfare budget бюджет социального обеспечения social welfare inspector инспектор социального обеспечения welfare: welfare = welfare work welfare: welfare = welfare work welfare благоденствие welfare благополучие welfare благосостояние, благоденствие welfare благосостояние; благотворительность welfare благосостояние welfare благотворительность welfare for the aged забота о благополучии пожилых welfare: welfare = welfare work the Welfare State полит. "государство всеобщего благосостояния"; welfare work мероприятия по улучшению бытовых условий (неимущих и т. п.); благотворительность work: welfare welfare благотворительность welfare welfare меры, направленные на повышение благосостояния youth welfare благополучие молодежи; социальное обеспечение молодежи youth welfare благосостояние молодежи

    English-Russian short dictionary > welfare

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