Robert Millikan

Felix Ehrenhaft: TIME magazine, may,22,1944: Magnetic Current?

It was a startling idea—that magnetism, like electricity, flows in currents and can decompose water (TIME, Jan. 24). U.S. physicists kept politely mum. Their skeptical silence annoyed Dr. Felix Ehrenhaft of Manhattan. Recently, before the American Physical Society at Pittsburgh, he enunciated his theory again.

November 02, 1930: Mr. Russell Upholds Theory of a "Two-Way" Universe - Proton Is Not A "Hole," He Declares

New York Times, November 2, 1930, Sunday
Section: Editorial, Page E2, 5965 words
Letters From Times Readers On Topics in the News;
MR. RUSSELL UPHOLDS THEORY OF A "TWO-WAY" UNIVERSE
Proton Is Not a "Hole," He Declares, Merely Because It Acts Like One

To the Editor of The New York Times:

October 26, 1930: Russell's Remark on Theory of Atomic Structure Upheld

New York Times, October 26, 1930
Section: Editorial, Page E2, 5833 words
RUSSELL'S REMARK ON THEORY OF ATOMIC STRUCTURE UPHELD; His "Green Cheese" Statement Is Declared to Have Considerable Justification
To the Editor of The New York Times:

August 31, 1930: Shaking Science's Foundations

New York Times, August 31, 1930, Sunday
Section: Educational, Page E2, 1866 words

SHAKING SCIENCE's FOUNDATIONS
To the Editor of The New York Times:
Several of my contemporaries in the electrical field seem to be particularly incensed because of a statement made by Walter Russell in The Times that "all modern theories of atomic structure have no more relation to nature than green cheese."

August 17, 1930: Mr. Russell Finds Scientists Too Ready to Accept Theory - His Attempt at Reformation not Based on Metaphysics

New York Times, August 17, 1930, Sunday
Section: Educational, Page 46, 6020 words

MR. RUSSELL FINDS SCIENTISTS TOO READY TO ACCEPT THEORY
His Attempt at reformation
not Based on Metaphysics, He Declares

To the Editor of The New York Times:

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