Event class: professor, university, became, department, appointed, institute, physics, director, faculty
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Events with high posterior probability
Halide Edip Ad?var | She returned to Turkey in 1939, becoming a professor in English literature at the Faculty of Letters in Istanbul. |
Kaisa Sere | In 1998, she became a full professor of Computer Science and Engineering in the Department of Information Technology at Åbo Akademi University. |
Vasko Simoniti | After a short period of work in the public administration of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia, he started teaching at the Ljubljana University in 1981. |
Ernest Fenollosa | After eight years at the University, he helped found the Tokyo School of Fine Arts and the Tokyo Imperial Museum, and subsequently acted as its director in 1888. |
Bo Berndtsson | Since 1996 he has been a professor at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg. |
Oswald Heer | In 1851 Heer became professor of botany in the university of Zürich, and for some time he was the director of what is now the Old Botanical Garden in that city. |
Chen Jia'er | From 1955, he was a teacher in the department of technology physics at Peking University, and was elevated to vice department chair. |
G. Arthur Cooper | In 1957 he became the Head Curator of Department of Geology, and 6 years later became the chairman of the newly formed Department of Paleobiology. |
Walter Weizel | From late in 1931, Weizel was an ordentlicher Professor (ordinarius professor) of theoretical physics at the Technische Hochschule Karlsruhe (today, the University of Karlsruhe). |
Allan Mackintosh | In 1970 he became Professor of Experimental Solid State Physics at the University of Copenhagen, a chair he held until his death. |
Shen Tianhui | In 1960's, she held a position at Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry of Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), studying the purification of silica material. |
Tine Hribar | In 1992 Hribar became a professor at the University of Ljubljana again. |
Joseph Orbeli | He continued his work at St. Petersburg University (in 1917, he was appointed an assistant professor of Armenian-Georgian studies), but occasionally taught at Moscow's Lazarev Institute of Oriental Languages as well. |
Wilhelm Engerth | He returned to Vienna in order to devote himself to engineering, became a teacher of mechanics at the Polytechnikum, then professor of descriptive geometry and, in 1844, professor of mechanics and engineering principles at the Joanneum in Graz. |
Ernst Gehrcke | On 9 February 1922, Max Planck nominated Gehrcke, Max von Laue, G. Müller, Walther Nernst to sit on the Kuratorium, and they were installed by the Preußische Akademie der Wissenschaften (Prussian Academy of Sciences). |
Gregor Tomc | In 1982, he became a researcher in the Institute for Sociology of the University of Ljubljana, where he was the co-worker of the philosopher Slavoj Žižek. |
Paul Heinrich von Groth | In 1883, he was appointed professor of mineralogy and curator of mineral s in the state museum at Munich. |
Alexander Novikov | Following his retirement in 1958, Novikov accepted an offer to become head of the Higher Civil Aviation School in Leningrad, where he worked for ten years. |
Friedrich Ruge | Afterward, he became a member of the faculty at the University of Tübingen, eventually becoming an Associate Professor on 21 July 1967 there. |
Enrico Bernardi | In 1867, Bernardi became the chair of Physics and Mechanics at the Royal Institute of Vocational Industry in Vicenza. |
Ernst Florian Winter | 1960 he returned to Austria on the call of Drimmel and Klaus, to establish the field of study of political science. |
Shamil Shetekauri | Since 2010 he has served as a Chief Researcher and Head of Department Plant Systematic and Geography Tbilisi Botanical Garden and Institute of Botany. |
Fran?ois Englert | He then returned to the ULB where he became a university professor and was joined there by Robert Brout who, in 1980, with Englert coheaded the theoretical physics group. |
Mavro Sachs | In 1849, he was the first to teach the forensic medicine at the Zagreb'' Royal Academy of Science'' and'' Faculty of Social Sciences''. |
Mark G. Kuzyk | He has been a Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Washington State University since 1990, where he has served as associate chair of Physics, Chair of the Materials Science Program, and Chair of Graduate Studies in Physics. |
Yasuo Matsuyama | Since 1996, Matsuyama is a Professor of Waseda University, Department of Computer Science and Engineering. |
John Pourdehnad | Since 2000 he has been a Professor and Associate Director of the Ackoff Center for Advancement of Systems Approaches (A-CASA) which is a part of the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering in the same university. |
C?sar Lattes | In 1967, Lattes accepted a position of full professor with the new'' Gleb Wataghin'' Institute of Physics at the State University of Campinas (Unicamp), which he helped to found. |
Paul Ehrlich | Influenced by the mayor of Frankfurt am Main, Franz Adickes, who endeavored to establish science institutions in Frankfurt in preparation of the founding of a university, Ehrlich's institute moved to Frankfurt In 1899 and was renamed the Royal Prussian Institute of Experimental Therapy (Königlich Preußisches Institut für Experimentelle Therapie). |
Mstislav Keldysh | He also headed the Department of Applied Mechanics of the Steklov Institute for Mathematics (in 1966 the department became Institute for Applied Mechanics, named after Keldysh). |
Friedrich Rosen | From 1887 onwards, he taught Persian and Urdu at the Department of Oriental Languages of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Berlin. |
Werner Heisenberg | From 24 January to 4 February 1944, Heisenberg traveled to occupied Copenhagen, after the German Army confiscated Bohr's Institute of Theoretical Physics. |
Lars Bildsten | Rising from assistant to associate professor, in both the physics and astronomy departments, he moved to UCSB in 1999. |
Grigore Moisil | Moisil moved to Bucharest, where he became a Professor in the Faculty of Mathematics (later the Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science) at the University of Bucharest, on December 30, 1941. |
Nikolay Bogolyubov | On 26 January 1953, Nikolay Bogolyubov became the Head of the Department of Theoretical Physics at MSU, after Anatoly Vlasov decided to leave the position on January 2, 1953. |
Fritz Arndt | In October 1915 he was appointed to the newly created Chair in Chemistry at the University of Istanbul. |
Enrique Finochietto | He also taught as a Clinical Professor of Surgery at the University of Buenos Aires, and became the president of the Buenos Aires Surgical Society in 1922. |
Herbert Arthur Stuart | From 1955, he was the head of the high polymer physics laboratory at the University of Mainz. |
Paul Drude | In 1905 he became the director of the physics institute of the University of Berlin. |
Wilhelm Groth | From 1950, occupying the new created Lehrstuhl für physikalische Chemie (chair of physical chemistry), he was head of the Department of Physical Chemistry and an ordentlicher Professor (ordinarius professor) at Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn. |
Marcelo Damy | Back in Brazil, Damy worked as a research scientist for the Brazilian Navy, especially in the development of a sonar, working in a laboratory on the premises of the department of physics at the USP Faculty of Philosophy, Science and Letters until the end of World War II (1945). |
Gesine Schwan | Schwan was appointed full professor at the Department of Political Science at FU Berlin in 1977. |
Muneer Ahmad Rashid | In 2005, after being requested by the President of Pakistan, Rashid returned to Pakistan, and joined the Centre for Advanced Mathematics and Physics (CAMP) at National University of Science and Technology (NUST), where he teaches applied mathematics. |
Smilja Avramov | Since 1949 until her retirement Avramov worked as an assistant and professor in the Faculty of Law in Belgrade where she was also head of the Department for International Law and Relationships and director of the Institute for International Law. |
Wolfgang Nebel | In 1993 he was appointed to the professorship VLSI design at the department of computer science at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. |
Martin Heidegger | When Husserl retired as Professor of Philosophy in 1928, Heidegger accepted Freiburg's election to be his successor, in spite of a counter-offer by Marburg. |
Fujishima Takeji | He returned to Japan in 1910 and became a professor at the Tokyo Art School and a member of the Imperial Art Academy. |
Hugo Bernatzik | Finally, at the beginning of 1939, he was appointed at the -LSB- University of Graz -RSB- to the Institute of Geography. |
Leiv Kristen Sydnes | In 2009 he applied for the position as rector of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology ; here the rectors are hired rather than elected. |
Curt Netto | In 1889, on the recommendation of noted chemist Clemens Winkler, Netto accepted a post as head of the technical department of Metallgesellschaft in Frankfurt am Main. |
Gustav Bickell | He then taught Oriental languages at the Academy of Münster, and in 1871 was appointed extraordinary professor. |
Volker Oppitz (scientist) | 1971 he became Assistant Professor at the Dresden University of Technology at Faculty of Economics. |
Hans Ertel | After Second World War, Ertel was interested in a professorship for geophysics at the University of Munich, but was instead appointed to professor for geophysics at Berlin University in 1946, where he also become the director of the Institute for Meteorology and Geophysics which belonged to the university. |
Oskar Sosnowski | In the fall of 1918, the recently renovated building of the Faculty of Architecture at the Warsaw University of Technology (Warsaw Polytechnic) was occupied by the Bolshevik army causing many Polish students enlisted to drive them out, and following this brief interruption, new professors arrived at the Faculty ; including Sosnowski, who took the post of the Chair of Polish Architecture Division. |
Anton Pelinka | In October 2004, Anton Pelinka was appointed as a full professor at the University of Innsbruck. |
Shu Shien-Siu | In 1973, Shu invited Mao Gao-wen (毛高文) to be the Dean of NTHU's engineering faculty, Shen Chun-shan (沈君山) to be the Dean of science faculty, and Fung Yan-Hsiung (馮彥雄) to be the Dean of Nuclear Science and Technology. |
Feng Kang | In 1951 he was appointed as assistant professor at Institute of Mathematics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. |
Theodor des Coudres | In 1901 he went to the University of Würzburg and took over the chair for theoretical physics as an extraordinary professor. |
Ali Akbar Jalali | Dr. Jalali is an Adjunct Professor in LCSEE from April 2002 and at the same time he is an associate professor at the Iran University of Science and Technology (IUST). |
Pope Benedict XVI | In 1966, Ratzinger was appointed to a chair in dogmatic theology at the University of Tübingen, where he was a colleague of Hans Küng. |
Raj Pathria | In 1967, he returned to India to take up Professorship of Theoretical Physics at the Panjab University, Chandigarh where (apart from conducting research in a variety of subjects in Mathematical Physics) he continued his mission of disseminating among his students the knowledge of the fundamentals of Statistical Mechanics. |
Marceli Landsberg | On 1 October 1950 he became an associate professor in the Medical Academy in Lodz, as well as a director of the Contagious Clinic in the Academy. |
Max Horkheimer | When the Institute for Social Research's directorship became vacant in 1930 after the departure of Karl Grunberg, Horkheimer was elected to the position. |
Carsten Niemitz | At the age of 32 he was appointed Professor of Human Biology at the Free University of Berlin, a post he held as head of the Institute until 2010. |
Hieronymus Georg Zeuthen | In 1871 he was appointed as an extraordinary professor at the University of Copenhagen, as well as becoming an editor of Matematisk Tidsskrift, a position he held for 18 years. |
Abraham Alikhanov | On December 1, 1945 he founded the Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics in Moscow. |
Oleksiy Kartunov | In 1977 he was invited for teaching job in the Kiev Institute of Trade and Economics where he worked for 10 years as a senior lecturer and assistant professor. |
Boris Podolsky | In 1935, he took a post as professor of mathematical physics at the University of Cincinnati. |
Johannes Wislicenus | In 1870, he was chosen to succeed Georg Staedeler as Professor of General Chemistry at the Swiss Polytechnical Institute in Zürich, retaining also the position of full professor at the University of Zürich. |
Daniel Joseph Bradley | He returned in 1973 to Imperial College to a chair in laser physics, and headed a group in optical physics, laser physics and space optics. |
Winfried Otto Schumann | In 1924, he was made professor and director of the Electrophysical Laboratory at the Technical University of Munich. |
Alexander Catsch | No later than 1942, he was at the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Hirnforschung (KWIH, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Brain Research) of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft, in Berlin-Buch. |
Samuel Mitja Rapoport | In 1951 Humboldt University in East Berlin offered Rapoport the professorship and directorship of the Institute for Physiological Chemistry at the Charité Hospital. |
Klaus Hesse | Klaus Hesse has been head of the Communications Design Department at the University of Art and Design Offenbach am Main since 2000. |
Georg Joos | He remained there until shortly after the end of World War II, when, in September 1946, he was appointed as ordinarius professor of experimental physics and director of the physics department at the Technische Hochschule Munich ; he succeeded Rudolf Tomaschek, who had been suspended. |
Elie Carafoli | In 1971, he reorganized, along with Henri Coandă, the Department of Aeronautical Engineering of the Polytechnic University of Bucharest, spinning it off from the Department of Mechanical Engineering. |
Mark Muir Mills | He would become a professor of Nuclear Engineering at the university in 1957. |
Hermann Askan Demme | In the same year, he became professor for anatomy at the University of Zurich and 1834 he became professor at the University of Bern. |
Edgar Gretener | When Fritz Fischer got the call to become professor at the ETH Zurich in 1932, he made Gretener his chief assistant a few years later. |
Vladimir Beneshevich | In 1909, Beneshevich was appointed extraordinary professor, and, shortly thereafter ordinary professor of Byzantine history. |
David A. Winter | He then took up a similar position at the Technical University of Nova Scotia where was eventually promoted to Professor in 1969. |
Bruno Gironcoli | In 1977 Gironcoli became head of the School of Sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, as successor to Fritz Wotruba. |
Donald D. Clayton | During a later seven-year period (1977 -- 84) Clayton resided about 1/3 time at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg as Humboldt Prize awardee on academic leaves from Rice University. |
Massimo Cacciari | In 1985, he became professor of Aesthetics at the Architecture Institute of Venice. |
Oton Ku?era | He got his Ph. D. from the University of Zagreb with a work on Marin Getaldić and became a lecturer of higher mathematics, theoretical physics and mechanics at the Academy of Forestry in Zagreb, where he stayed until retirement in 1915. |
Vasily Garbuzov | Garbuzov became of Head of the Department of Political Science, then deputy director and since 1944, the Director of the Kiev Institute. |
Michiel B.M. van der Klis | Since 2005 he is Director of the Astronomical Institute Anton Pannekoek of the University of Amsterdam and Chair of the Netherlands Research School for Astronomy (NOVA). |
Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser | In 1907, Neisser was promoted to professor ordinarius of dermatology and sexually transmitted diseases at Breslau. |
Zenon J Pudlowski | He was also appointed Honorary Dean of the English Engineering Faculty at the Donetsk National Technical University in Ukraine in 1995. |
Ugo Mattei | In 1997 he accepted a call from the University of Turin, Faculty of Law to succeed the famous Italian scholar Rodolfo Sacco in the Chair of Civil Law. |
Eduard August von Regel | In 1855 he moved to St. Petersburg, Russia where he initially worked as a research director and later as senior botanist at the Imperial Botanical Garden. |
Gregor Wentzel | He became ordinarius professor in the Chair for Theoretical Physics, at the University of Zurich, when he succeeded Erwin Schrödinger, in 1928, the same year Wolfgang Pauli was appointed to the ETH Zurich. |
Turgut Cansever | He assumed the title of associate professor in 1960 with his'' Problems of Modern Architecture'' thesis at Istanbul University Faculty of Letters. |
Willem Saris | In 1983 he was appointed Professor Statistics and Methodology at the University of Amsterdam, the Department of Methods (nowadays the Department of Techniques for Political Science). |
Vladimir Markovich Entov | In addition, since 1983 he served as a Professor of Applied Mathematics and Computer Modeling of the Moscow Institute of Oil and Gas (now known as the Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas). |
Marcel Baltazard | In 1946, he became the director of the Institut Pasteur of Iran, where he re-planned the scientific structures and architecture. |
Gotthard Fliegel | He then became a geologist with the Prussian Geological Institute in Berlin and in 1923 became a department director. |
Heinz Winbeck | In 1988 he was appointed professor for composition at the Hochschule für Musik Würzburg. |
L? Shuxiang | Starting from 1952, he worked in the Institute of Languages in the Chinese Academy of Sciences. |
Du?an Pirjevec | In 1958, Pirjevec became an assistant at the Department for Comparative Literature of the University of Ljubljana. |