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Albert Einstein at Technion; 11 February 1923. The Technikum was conceived in the early 1900s by the German-Jewish fund Ezrah as a school of engineering and sciences. It was to be the only institution of higher learning in the then Ottoman Palestine, other than the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem (founded in 1906). [15]
The Technion, 1937 The Technion, 1945 Refugees from the Holocaust arriving in Haifa. Shlomo Kaplansky was the President of the university from 1931 to 1950. [32] In the 1930s, the Institute absorbed large numbers of Jewish students and distinguished scholars from Poland, Germany, and Austria, who were fleeing the Nazi regime.
In 1950, Sydney Goldstein accepted the chairmanship of the department of mathematics at Technion. [3] The faculty was established in 1954 after Goldstein persuaded the President of the Technion, Yaakov Dori, and Prime Minister David Ben Gurion. The department expanded and developed rapidly, along with the development of the aerospace industry ...
Albert Einstein at the Technion in 1923. In 1912, the first cornerstone of the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology was laid at a festive ceremony in Haifa, which was then occupied by the Ottoman Empire. The Technion would become a unique university worldwide in its claim to precede and create a nation.
Franz Ollendorff founder of the Faculty of Technology in 1938 the ancestor of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering. The Technion Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering is an academic faculty of the Technion founded in 1947 before the State of Israel which focuses on the training of electrical engineers and computer engineers in various disciplines including CAD, VLSI, Image processing ...
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology alumni (232 P) Pages in category "Technion – Israel Institute of Technology" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total.
The American Technion Society and global Technion societies have created an international network. Many members of Technion Societies are prominent leaders in their respective fields. T3 makes every use of this international source of expertise in the service of its on-going commercialization effort. [17]
Yohanan Ratner, the first Dean of the Faculty of Architecture The Technion building, garden and surrounding buildings; aerial photograph by Zoltan Kluger 1937–1938. In its early years, the Technion was housed in a building planned by the first head of the Architecture department, Professor Alexander Baerwald (1877–1930) in the Hadar neighborhood in the heart of Haifa.