David Halliday (artist)
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David Halliday (artist)
David Halliday may refer to: * Dave Halliday, Scottish professional footballer * David Halliday (physicist) David Halliday (March 3, 1916 – April 2, 2010) was an American physicist known for his physics textbooks, ''Physics'' and ''Fundamentals of Physics'', which he wrote with Robert Resnick. Both textbooks have been in continuous use since 1960 and ..., American physicist and textbook author * David Halliday (software engineer), former CEO of Silvaco {{hndis, Halliday, David ...
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Dave Halliday
David Halliday (11 December 1901 – 5 January 1970) was a Scottish association football player and manager. He achieved numerous distinctions and high rankings as a prolific goal-scoring forward with six senior clubs; St Mirren, Dundee, Sunderland, Arsenal, Manchester City and Clapton Orient. He bookended his senior career playing at then non-league Queen of the South and Yeovil and Petters United. Halliday's three goals in the FA Cup proper for Yeovil give him a career total of 368 senior goals. From being player-manager at Yeovil, he went on to win trophies managing Aberdeen and Leicester City. He is the most recent of only two players to be outright top scorer in both Scottish and English football's top divisions with 38 Dundee goals in 1923–24 and 43 Sunderland goals in 1928–29. He is the quickest player in history to 100 goals in English football's top division, taking 101 games when at Sunderland. He is the only player to score 30 or more goals in four consecutive s ...
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David Halliday (physicist)
David Halliday (March 3, 1916 – April 2, 2010) was an American physicist known for his physics textbooks, ''Physics'' and ''Fundamentals of Physics'', which he wrote with Robert Resnick. Both textbooks have been in continuous use since 1960 and are available in more than 47 languages. Halliday attended the University of Pittsburgh both as an undergraduate student and a graduate student, receiving his Ph.D. in physics in 1941. During World War II, he worked at the Radiation Lab, MIT Radiation Lab developing radar techniques. In 1946 he returned to Pittsburgh as an assistant professor and spent the rest of his career there. In 1950, he wrote ''Introductory Nuclear Physics'', which became a classic text and was translated into four languages. In 1951 Halliday became the Department Chair, a position he held until 1962. His ''Physics'' has been used widely and is considered by many to have revolutionized physics education. Now in its tenth edition in a two-volume set revised by Jear ...
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