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  1. Robley Dunglison Evans (May 18, 1907, University Place, Nebraska – December 31, 1995, Paradise Valley, Arizona) was an American nuclear physicist and pioneer of nuclear medicine. He was the president of the Health Physics Society in 1972–1973.

  2. Robley Dunglison Evans (18 August 1846 – 3 January 1912), born in Floyd County, Virginia, was a rear admiral in the United States Navy, who served from the American Civil War to the Spanish–American War.

  3. 4 de ene. de 1996 · Dr. Robley D. Evans, professor emeritus of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, winner of the 1990 Enrico Fermi Award and a pioneer in studying the effects of radium on the human body, died December 31 in Paradise Valley, AZ, where he lived in retirement. He was 88.

  4. 10 de ene. de 1996 · Dr. Robley D. Evans, professor emeritus of physics, winner of the 1990 Enrico Fermi Award and a pioneer in studying the effects of radium on the human body, died of respiratory failure on December 31 in Paradise Valley, AZ, where he lived in retirement. He was 88.

  5. Robley Dunglison Evans, 1907-1995, was a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He attended the California Institute of Technology, earning a BS in 1928, MS in 1929, and PhD in 1932 in physics.

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries, Cambridge, 02139-4307
  6. Dr. Robley D. Evans, a nuclear physicist who helped persuade the Government to allow the use of radioactive isotopes in medical research in the 1940's and who helped set the standard for...

  7. Robley Dunglison (4 January 1798 – 1 April 1869) was an English-American physician, medical educator and author who served as the first full-time professor of medicine in the United States at the newly founded University of Virginia from 1824 to 1833.