IEEE Princeton/Central New Jersey Section History: Difference between revisions

From ETHW
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<p>'''Are you a member of this section? Please help expand the article by using the edit tab....''' </p>
'''Are you a member of this section? Please help expand the article by using the edit tab.'''
The Princeton section of the Institute of Radio Engineers first met on Thursday, 9 October 1947, in Princeton University's Frick Chemical Laboratory auditorium. The first speaker was RCA consultant and founding editor of the Proceedings of the IRE, Dr. Alfred Goldsmith. His presence was not that surprising; he lived in New York City and had been consulting for RCA ever since stepping down as its first director of research. His subject that night was "Surprises on [sic] Atomic Energy Development," an appropriate topic as President Harry S. Truman had signed off on the creation of the civilian Atomic Energy Commission at the beginning of the year for research and promotion of nuclear energy and technologies. By the end of 1947 the AEC had licensed 25 institutions, iincluding six Veterans Administration hospitals for nuclear medicine research, to receive radioisotopes from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory reactors.


<p>[http://ewh.ieee.org/r1/princeton-centraljersey/ Link to Section Homepage] </p>
References:


<p>[[Media:IEEE_Geographic_Unit_Organizing_Document_-_Princeton_Central_Jersey.pdf|IEEE Geographic Unit Organizing Document - Princeton Central Jersey]] </p>
"University Notices," Daily Princetonian, 8 October 1947, p. 4.


[[Category:IEEE|Princeton]] [[Category:Geographical units|Princeton]] [[Category:Sections|Princeton]]
[http://ewh.ieee.org/r1/princeton-centraljersey/ Link to Section Homepage]
 
[[Media:IEEE_Geographic_Unit_Organizing_Document_-_Princeton_Central_Jersey.pdf|IEEE Geographic Unit Organizing Document - Princeton Central Jersey]]
 
[[Category:IEEE|Princeton]] [[Category:Geographical_units|Princeton]] [[Category:Sections|Princeton]]

Revision as of 18:44, 15 April 2013

Are you a member of this section? Please help expand the article by using the edit tab. The Princeton section of the Institute of Radio Engineers first met on Thursday, 9 October 1947, in Princeton University's Frick Chemical Laboratory auditorium. The first speaker was RCA consultant and founding editor of the Proceedings of the IRE, Dr. Alfred Goldsmith. His presence was not that surprising; he lived in New York City and had been consulting for RCA ever since stepping down as its first director of research. His subject that night was "Surprises on [sic] Atomic Energy Development," an appropriate topic as President Harry S. Truman had signed off on the creation of the civilian Atomic Energy Commission at the beginning of the year for research and promotion of nuclear energy and technologies. By the end of 1947 the AEC had licensed 25 institutions, iincluding six Veterans Administration hospitals for nuclear medicine research, to receive radioisotopes from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory reactors.

References:

"University Notices," Daily Princetonian, 8 October 1947, p. 4.

Link to Section Homepage

IEEE Geographic Unit Organizing Document - Princeton Central Jersey