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Margaret Bourke-White's early works
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NEWSVIEW
Margaret Bourke-White's early development led to her emergence as one of the 20th century's best-known female photographers. She strode brazenly into a field dominated by men to become not only a famous photojournalist. but a celebrity personality. Trained in modernist compositional techniques. Bourke-White photographed with an artists eye discovering beauty in the raw aesthetic of American ndustry and its factories She romanticized the power of machines through close-ups, dramatic cross-lighting, and unusual perspectives. presenting industrial environments as artful compositions. ...
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One day, Mr Leotard wore a skin tight body stocking, the next he was a househo name . . . THE MOST FAMILIAR NAMES TELL THE STRANGEST STORIES.(Correction Notice)
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England)
; ...commercially from the late 19th century. BUNSEN BURNER THE scourge of the school science lab, the Bunsen burner was named after the German chemist, Robert Wilhelm Bunsen (1811-99). Unfortunately, Herr Bunsen...
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[ * Harvard researchers discovered that costly illne... ]
Newspaper article from: Daily Breeze
; ...author. * If you've taken high school science, you've likely used a bunsen burner and wondered what a bunsen is. The gas heater was named in honor of Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, a professor of physics in 19th century Germany. * What did Paul Newman...
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[ * This one is sad: Because of notoriety and ridicule from schoolmates, the real Christopher Robin Milne, son of author A. A. Milne, grew up despising the Winnie the Pooh stories.... ]
Newspaper article from: Daily Breeze
; ...stories. * If you've taken high school science, you've likely used a bunsen burner and wondered what a bunsen is. The gas heater was named in honor of Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, a professor of physics in 19th century Germany. * At the bottom of...
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Posers and puzzlers; Just ask.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Sunday Mail (Glasgow, Scotland)
; ...it up. Q MY chemistry teacher claims the Bunsen burner was invented by a man named Bunsen but I remember seeing something on TV saying...named after German chemist and physicist Robert Wilhelm Bunsen (1811-1899). He refined an earlier...
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How spectroscopy is setting a pace for innovation: from the vastness of space to the inner workings of the human body, spectroscopic techniques and devices are quickly becoming forefront technologies in a variety of fields.(Industry Overview)
Magazine article from: R & D
; It started out simple--two scientists, Gustav Robert Kirchoff and Robert Wilhelm Bunsen took a Bunsen burner (appropriately termed) and a prism-based device to filter the visible light emitted...
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On This Day.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England)
; ...parliamentary reforms; 1897: The Tate Gallery opened in London; 1899: Death of German chemist Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, inventor of the Bunsen burner; 1930: Birth of poet Ted Hughes and the opening of the first British Empire Games at Hamilton...
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THEME FOR THE DAY.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England)
; ...parliamentary reforms; 1897: The Tate Gallery opened in London; 1899: Death of German chemist Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, inventor of the Bunsen burner; 1930: Birth of poet Ted Hughes and the opening of the first British Empire Games at Hamilton...
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Celebrating Geology on Icelandic Stamps.
Magazine article from: Faces: People, Places, and Cultures
; ...geysers, started to spout water 200 feet in the air. While studying Geysir in 1847, German chemist Robert Wilhelm Bunsen got the idea for the Bunsen burner. It forces air and gas up through a tube, similar to how a geyser works. The Great Geysir...
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Archive: On This Day.(Comment)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England)
; ...of poet AndrewMarvell; 1897: The Tate Gallery opened in London; 1899: Death of German chemist Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, inventor of the Bunsen burner; 1930: Birth of poet Ted Hughes and the opening of the first British Empire Games at Hamilton...
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On this day.(News)
Newspaper article from: Evening Chronicle (Newcastle, England)
; ...Joseph Haydn, Austrian composer, whose works include the Seasons and Creation. 1811: Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, German scientist who gave his name to the Bunsen burner. 1926: John Fowles, English novelist whose works include the French Lieutenant...
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