Jeno Mende
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* Bátorkeszi, June 3, 1883 – † Budapest, 1944 ? / physics teacher, popular science writer ; ; He graduated from the St. Benedict's High School in Esztergom. He obtained a teaching certificate in quantity and natural science from the Pázmány Péter University in Budapest. He began his teaching career in 1905 in Cegléd, and in 1912 he became a teacher at the Szent István High School in Budapest. Between 1925 and 1940, until his retirement, he was a teacher at the Kölcsey Ferenc High School. In addition to his teaching work, he was involved in popular science. He wrote the first detailed popular science work in Hungarian on radioactivity and radio broadcasting. He published hundreds of articles and translations in the Mathematical and Physical Magazines, the Natural Sciences Journal, Uránia and other journals. Due to his Jewish origin, he could no longer publish under his own name after 1941. ; ; His main works: ; Wireless Telegraphy, 1921, ; Radioactive Substances, 1921, ; The Artificial Transformation of Matter (a five-part series of articles in the Journal of Natural Sciences) 1922.