Willmore Conjecture - Perfect Doughnut
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Willmore Conjecture - Perfect Doughnut
Willmore may refer to: People * Ben Willmore, American photographer and technology writer * Henrietta Willmore (1842–1938), Australian musician and suffragette * Ian Willmore (1958–2020), British activist * James Tibbits Willmore (1800–1863), British engraver * Jeff Willmore (born 1954), Canadian artist * Micheál Mac Liammóir (1899–1978), British–Irish actor, writer, painter etc. * Norman Willmore (1909–1965), politician in Alberta, Canada * Patrick Willmore (1921–1994), British seismologist * Thomas Willmore (1919–2005), English geometer * William Erwin Willmore (either 1844 or 1845–1901), English-born American teacher and the founder of a colony Other * The Willmore, an apartment building in California * Willmore Wilderness Park, Alberta, Canada See also * Willmore energy in differential geometry ** Willmore conjecture In differential geometry, the Willmore conjecture is a lower bound on the Willmore energy of a torus. It is named after the English ...
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Ben Willmore
Ben Willmore is an American photographer, author and founder of Digital Mastery, a training and consulting firm that specializes in photography and Photoshop. He is best known for his digital imaging expertise and for writing the book Photoshop Studio Techniques. Career Willmore, who attended the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, is a Photoshop instructor and a featured speaker at publishing conferences and events. He is a regular contributor to MacWorld magazine and had a monthly column in '' Photoshop User'' magazine. His book, ''Photoshop Studio Techniques'' is printed in nine languages: English, French, German, Greek, Chinese, Spanish, Czech, Japanese, Polish. In 2004, Willmore was a recipient of a Photoshop Hall of Fame Award. ''Up to Speed'', one of Willmore's books, was described in Rob Galbraith's blog as "perhaps the most useful book we've picked up on Photoshop in a long time ... because it painstakingly outlines what's ...
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Henrietta Willmore
Henrietta Willmore (27 March 1842–22 August 1938) was an Australian pianist and musician who was popular in the late 19th century. She was also a suffragette, active in the Queensland Women's Suffrage League among other organisations. Biography Willmore née Pervical was born in London, England on 27 March 1842. In 1862 she married Alfred Mallalieu with whom she had five children. She and Alfred emigrated to Australia in 1864. She made her musical debut in Brisbane in 1866. Willmore began her teaching career in 1867. She needed the income from teaching because of her husband's insolvency and his subsequent death, in January 1884. Willmore was a church organist at St John's Pro-Cathedral from 1882 to 1885 and subsequently married her teacher Walter Graham Willmore in 1885. She played at other churches, and pioneered organ recitals and organ-based concerts in Brisbane. In 1892 she played the opening event for the installation of the Willis organ at the Exhibition Building ...
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Ian Willmore
Ian Willmore (5 November 1958 – 7 April 2020), is a British activist who played a leading role in defending the independence of the civil service in the 1980s. He also campaigned for legislation to ban smoking in public places and standardised packaging of tobacco products. Biography Willmore was born in Cardiff on 5 November 1958 to parents Oliver Willmore (architect) and Anne (née Burnell). He died following a heart attack on 7 April 2020. Career After Marlborough College, he studied Philosophy and Theology at Oriel College, Oxford before joining the Civil Service as an administrative trainee at the Department of Employment. In December 1983 he leaked a memorandum to Time Out which included information about advice the Master of the Rolls, Sir John Donaldson, had given advice to Michael Quinlan, the Permanent Secretary in the Department of Employment, on the future of the law relating to industrial relations. He took this action because he believed this was cynical ...
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James Tibbits Willmore
James Tibbits Willmore (Birmingham September 180012 March 1863 London) was a British engraver. Biography He was born at Bristnal's End, Handsworth (then Staffordshire, now West Midlands). Contemporaneous authorities differ on the spelling of his middle name, as seen in the citations below. His father, James Willmore, was a manufacturer of silverware. At the age of fourteen Willmore was apprenticed to the Birmingham engraver William Radclyffe. His younger brother Arthur Willmore (1814–1888) trained with him, and also became an engraver. Radclyffe had received drawing lessons in Birmingham from Joseph Barber. He married, and in 1823 he went to London where he worked for Charles Heath for three years. He later worked on the plates of William Brockedon's ''Passes of the Alps'' and Turner's ''England and Wales''. He made engravings after Chalon, Leitch, Stanfield, Landseer, Eastlake, Creswick and Ansdell, and especially after Turner. Willmore engraved thirteen pictures on ...
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Jeff Willmore
Jeffrey John Willmore (born December 23, 1954) is a Canadian artist based in London, Ontario, whose work combines painting, performance and storytelling. His paintings are held in the collections of The University of Western Ontario, Museum London, and the Canada Council Art Bank, (Ottawa). Early life After living in a number of small towns in Northern Ontario, Willmore's family settled in Sarnia, Ontario. Willmore later moved to London, Ontario, to study art. He enrolled on a design course at Fanshawe College in the early 1970s, but didn't complete his studies, leaving to work in construction trades; he later returned to Fanshawe and completed a Fine Art diploma program in 1980. Work After graduating from Fanshawe, Willmore produced neo-expressionist painting, drawing and collage. He exhibited at Museum London, Nancy Poole’s gallery in Toronto, and at the London Forest City Gallery including its annual performance art festival. In the early 1990s, he created a series of p ...
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Micheál Mac Liammóir
Micheál Mac Liammóir (born Alfred Willmore; 25 October 1899 – 6 March 1978) was an actor, designer, dramatist, writer and impresario in 20th-century Ireland. Though born in London to an English family with no Irish connections, he emigrated to Ireland in early adulthood, changed his name, invented an Irish ancestry, and remained based there for the rest of his life, successfully maintaining a fabricated identity as a native Irishman born in Cork. With his partner, Hilton Edwards, and two others, Mac Liammóir founded the Gate Theatre in Dublin, and became one of the most recognisable figures in the arts in twentieth-century Ireland. As well as acting at the Gate and internationally, he designed numerous productions, wrote eleven plays, and published stories, verse and travel books in Irish and English. He wrote and appeared in three one-man shows, of which ''The Importance of Being Oscar'' (1960) was the most celebrated, achieving more than 1,300 performances. Life and care ...
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Norman Willmore
Norman Alfred Willmore (February 13, 1909 – February 2, 1965) was a politician from Alberta, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta from 1944 until his death in 1965 as a member of the Social Credit caucus in government. He served as a cabinet minister in the government of Ernest Manning from 1953 until his death. Personal life Born in Fessenden, North Dakota, Willmore moved to Canada in 1915 with his parents and was raised in Edmonton, Alberta. He was married to Dorothy and had one son. Political career Willmore first ran for a seat to the Alberta Legislature for the first time in the 1944 general election. He stood as the Social Credit candidate in the electoral district of Edson and won a solid majority over two other candidates to pick up the seat for Social Credit. In the 1948 general election Willmore defeated former MLA Christopher Pattinson, and In the 1952 election Willmore defeated Liberal candidate William Switzer by 400 votes. On November 1 ...
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Patrick Willmore
Dr Patrick Lever Willmore FRSE (1921–1994) was a 20th-century British seismologist remembered as inventor of the Willmore seismometer. In authorship he is P. L. Willmore. He was Director of the Institute of Geological Science. Life Patrick Willmore was a pupil at Worthing High School for Boys. In 1939, he took up a scholarship to read for a BA in Natural Sciences at St John's College, Cambridge. From 1946 to 1952 he was a Research Fellow at St John's College, Cambridge specialising in seismic activity. In 1952 he was appointed government Seismologist at the Dominion Observatory in Ottawa in Canada. In 1952 he was commissioned to investigate volcanic activity on the island of St Vincent in the Caribbean and concluded that the source of volcanic activity could not be located during or after the event and concluded that sensitive areas required continual monitoring by a seismometer. He returned to Cambridge University in 1961/62 then became Senior Seismologist at the R ...
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Thomas Willmore
Thomas James Willmore (16 April 1919 – 20 February 2005) was an English geometer. He is best known for his work on Riemannian 3-space and harmonic spaces. Willmore studied at King's College London. After his graduation in 1939, he was appointed as a lecturer, but the onset of World War II led him to working as a scientific officer at RAF Cardington, working mainly on barrage balloon defences. During the war, he found the time to write his Ph.D. on relativistic cosmology, and gained his Ph.D. on ''Clock regraduations and general relativity'' as an external student of the University of London in 194 In 1946, he was given a lectureship at the Durham University, University of Durham. He wrote an influential book with Arthur Geoffrey Walker and HS Ruse entitled ''Harmonic Spaces'' in 1953. He left Durham in 1954 for the University of Liverpool to join Walker, after a supposed dispute between Willmore and a Durham colleague who refused to order German textbooks after being wounde ...
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William Erwin Willmore
William Erwin Willmore (either 1844 or 1845 – January 16, 1901) was an English-born American headmaster and the founder of a small colony named after him, Willmore City in 1876. This piece of land, roughly 4000 acres, partitioned from the former Los Cerritos ranchero, was bought by Jotham Bixby, who helped found what would initially become the city of Long Beach, California. Willmore City was initially incorporated as a neighbourhood of the city of Long Beach in 1886. Mr. Willmore was born in England, supposedly in Sheffield, and moved to California in 1855 after the local magistrate seized his family's estate as a result of a government dispute with estate taxes that were due to the British crown. After several years of diligent planning of his colony, Mr. Willmore became a senior manager of the California Immigrant Union, an organisation founded in 1869 to promote the Willmore City settlement on the partitioned lands of the Los Cerritos ranchero, that was later purchased by ...
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Teacher
A teacher, also called a schoolteacher or formally an educator, is a person who helps students to acquire knowledge, competence, or virtue, via the practice of teaching. ''Informally'' the role of teacher may be taken on by anyone (e.g. when showing a colleague how to perform a specific task). In some countries, teaching young people of school age may be carried out in an informal setting, such as within the family (homeschooling), rather than in a formal setting such as a school or college. Some other professions may involve a significant amount of teaching (e.g. youth worker, pastor). In most countries, ''formal'' teaching of students is usually carried out by paid professional teachers. This article focuses on those who are ''employed'', as their main role, to teach others in a ''formal'' education context, such as at a school or other place of ''initial'' formal education or training. Duties and functions A teacher's role may vary among cultures. Teachers may provide ...
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The Willmore
The Willmore, formerly known as The Stillwell, is a historic apartment building in downtown Long Beach, California. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since May 20, 1999. Design The Willmore was designed in the Renaissance Revival style by Fisher, Lake and Traver, the architects of The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. It was originally designed as a U-shaped structure. However, only one wing was completed. The building is designed in the Renaissance Revival Renaissance Revival architecture (sometimes referred to as "Neo-Renaissance") is a group of 19th century architectural revival styles which were neither Greek Revival nor Gothic Revival but which instead drew inspiration from a wide range o ... and Beaux-Arts styles. It has an underground parking garage. History Built in 1925 by the Trewitt-Shields Company, the structure has an L shape with a ten-story wing and an eleven-story wing. With The building's current name honors William E. Willmore, d ...
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