Extractions: Watch your heros on video or DVD. Support this website! A to Z Home's Cool Homeschooling Explorations 4 Kids I am Ann Zeise , your guide to the best and most interesting and useful sites and articles about home education on the web. Search All of A to Z Articles Calendar Curriculum Explorations 4 Kids Field Trips Jokes Laws Links Methods Older Kids Regional Religion/Cultural The Web Home New Kids Links One Exploration A Day Contact Ann Zeise ... Curriculum Shopping
Ralph P. Mason CV Supervisor Dr. JKM Sanders, Department of Organic chemistry E and Zdec-5-en-l-ol,trisubstituted alkenes and Z-a-bisabolene, AD Buss, N. Greeves, http://cip.swmed.edu/ICMIC/mason_cv.htm
Extractions: HERMAN MARK WAS WIDELY known as the father of polymer science and the contribution he made to his chosen field was crucial in many ways. His research and inspiring teaching and lecturing were only part of his activities. Being completely devoid of academic snobbery, Mark was equally at home at universities and industrial laboratories and was most influential in the phenomenal growth of the polymer industry. Deeply concerned with establishing the study of polymers as a discrete branch of chemistry, he designed the first graduate curricula in that discipline, founded a polymer journal and monograph series, and was one of the chief architects of the Polymer Section of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. Because of the informality of his nature, Mark was affectionately called by the nickname "Geheimrat" to stress his extreme difference from the pompous professors who had been adorned with this "Secret Councillor" title. His constant cheerfulness reflected his enviable ability to recall the good part of his life's experience while choosing to forget all the unpleasantness. EARLY LIFE AND EDUCATION Herman grew up in Vienna as the second son of Herman Carl Mark and Lily Mueller. His father was a physician, and Herman was early impressed with the conversation around the family dinner table with guests such as the psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, the dramatist Arthur Schnitzler, and the founder of zionism Theodore Herzl. The musical life of the period, when Gustav Mahler was conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic, made a great impression. Mark was also enthusiastic about sports, particularly skiing and soccer, and on one occasion he was a member of the Austrian national soccer team.
Extractions: This database offers full text of articles from a wide range of academic areas including business, social sciences, humanities, general academic, general science, and education. It features full text for over 1,800 journals with many dating back to 1990, abstracts and indexing for over 3,000 scholarly journals, over 1,700 of them peer-reviewed journals.
A To Z List Of Electronic Databases - Leeds University Library Electronic resources,a to z, databases. Fulltext biographies of all notablepublic figures who have influenced British history and culture in the new http://www.leeds.ac.uk/ROADS/atoz/dataset/D.htm
UMIST Library And Information Service - Database A To Z A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z A huge abstracting servicecovering chemistry and allied disciplines, searched via keywords, http://www.umist.ac.uk/departments/library/resources/database-A-Z.htm
Extractions: Library and Information Service Library and Information Service Information Resources Index News ... Text-only Search : LIS Resources section Resources by Subject Resources by Type of Material Databases A to Z Electronic Journals ... Reference Shelf You are here: Library and Information Service Resources Databases A to Z Caution : This is a legacy websites of the University of Manchester. The information it carries was frozen on 30th September 2004 and may no longer be accurate. The process of migration to www.manchester.ac.uk is in progress. The John Rylands University Library website can be found at: http://www.manchester.ac.uk/library Use these databases to do a keyword or author search to find journal articles, data etc . Some services give only bibliographic details but many also include links to full-text material. If there is no full text link, check our catalogue and/or electronic journals list to find whether UMIST has the item in printed or electronic form.
All Databases List: University Libraries A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z Covers neurobiology, chemistry, molecular biology, biochemistry and http://library.louisville.edu/research/sub/alldbs.html
Extractions: ABI/Inform searches periodicals and news sources covering different aspects of business information, including: scholarly research, businesses traditions and trends, corporate strategies, management techniques, and competitive and product information. Some full-text articles. (ProQuest Direct) More info Abridgment: Canadian Case Digest
Extractions: Email: claire.wilson@nottingham.ac.uk Dr. Claire Wilson received her BSc in Chemistry from the University of Bristol and her PhD from the University of Durham. She was a postdoctoral fellow at Aarhus University, Denmark from 1995 to 1997, using very low temperature X-ray data (from laboratory and synchrotron sources) to carry out charge density studies of transition metal complexes. In 1998 she returned to the University of Durham as a postdoctoral research associate, studying magnetically interesting materials through low temperature single crystal X-ray diffraction studies. She joined the Chemistry Department in 1999 as a Research Officer with the Crystal Structure Service. 1. "Multi-temperature crystallographic studies of mixed-valence polynuclear complexes; Valence trapping process in the trinuclear oxo-bridged iron compound, [Fe
JCE Online: Biographical Snapshots: Snapshot Biographical Snapshots of Famous Women and Minority Chemists Snapshot Marilyn; Harvey, Joy, Eds.; Routledge New York, 2000; Volume 2, LZ, pp 10767. http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCEWWW/Features/eChemists/Bios/ratner.html
Extractions: Subscriptions Software Orders Support Contributors ... Biographical Snapshots Biographical Snapshots of Famous Women and Minority Chemists: Snapshot This short biographical "snapshot" provides basic information about the person's chemical work, gender, ethnicity, and cultural background. A list of references is given along with additional WWW sites to further your exploration into the life and work of this chemist. ref Born on June 9, 1903 in New York City, Sarah was the youngest of five children of Aaron and Hannah (Seltzer) Ratner who had emigrated from Russia during the latter half of the 19th century. Since her father was a self-educated man, her home was filled with books and reading was a valued past time. She also delighted in watching her father design and build models of his inventions. Ratner became an instructor and later assistant professor at Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons, where she also collaborated with Dr. David Green on the investigation of amino acid oxidases. In 1946, after being recruited by Severo Ochoa, Sarah Ratner accepted a position as an assistant professor in the Department of Pharmacology at NYU School of Medicine. Here she began her research on amino acid metabolism and elucidation of features of the urea cycle. In 1957 Ratner joined the faculty of the Department of Biochemistry at the Public Health Research Institute of New York. She and her research group published a series of fifteen papers in the Journal of Biological Chemistry on this work, which has had far-reaching effects in the treatment of kidney disorders.
JCE Online: Biographical Snapshots: Snapshot Biographical Snapshots of Famous Women and Minority Chemists Snapshot 2, LZ.pp 11861187. RaynerCanham, Marelene; Rayner-Canham, Geoffrey. http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCEWWW/Features/eChemists/Bios/sherrill.html
Extractions: Subscriptions Software Orders Support Contributors ... Biographical Snapshots Biographical Snapshots of Famous Women and Minority Chemists: Snapshot This short biographical "snapshot" provides basic information about the person's chemical work, gender, ethnicity, and cultural background. A list of references is given along with additional WWW sites to further your exploration into the life and work of this chemist. Sherrill decided to enroll in the Ph.D. program in chemistry at the University of Chicago in 1914, where she worked under Julius Stieglitz. She maintained her connection with Randolph-Macon, either as an instructor or as an adjunct professor until 1918. Her doctoral research focused on the synthesis of barbiturates and esters of methylenedisalicylic acid. In 1918 Sherrill accepted a position as associate professor of chemistry at the North Carolina State Normal and Industrial Institute. She remained there two years while she continued her doctoral research. Mary Lura Sherrill died on October 27, 1968 in High Point, North Carolina.
President's Office: Iowa State University A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Biography Download photo Speeches Strategic plan President s staff President s Council http://www.iastate.edu/~president/about/bio.shtml
Extractions: INDEX A B C ... E-Mail/Phones ISU Search Gregory L. Geoffroy (pronounced JOE-free) became president of Iowa State University on July 1, 2001, where he also holds the rank of professor of chemistry. Dr. Geoffroy began his academic career as an assistant professor of chemistry at the Pennsylvania State University in 1974, advancing to associate professor in 1978 and professor in 1982. He was appointed head of the Department of Chemistry in 1988 and dean of the Eberly College of Science at Penn State in 1989. In 1997, Dr. Geoffroy was appointed senior vice president for academic affairs and provost at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he also served as interim president for two months in 1998. Iowa State University's aspiration is to be the best university in the nation in fulfilling its land-grant responsibilities, through excellence in learning, discovery and engagement. In leading Iowa State on this quest, Dr. Geoffroy has outlined four top priorities: raising the academic quality of the university, with more of its programs recognized as among the best in the nation;
Extractions: This Article Extract Full Text (PDF) Alert me when this article is cited ... Citation Map Services Related articles in PNAS Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Download to citation manager PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Bradley, D. Related Collections Profiles Inaugural Article Biography of Zhu Chen David Bradley, Freelance Science Writer The alchemist's symbol for arsenic is a menacing coiled serpent, and perhaps rightly so. The element of arsenic has certainly earned a great deal of infamy from the reign of the Borgias to the novels of Agatha Christie, and in more recent times as a toxic contaminant of drinking water. But the symbolic serpent also coils around the staff of Aesculapius, an international symbol for medicine; arsenic the poison is also arsenic the healer.
African-American History: Selected Reference Sources George Sewell and Margaret L. Dwight. (Jackson, MS University Press of Z 5942 C689 no.951. Online Catalog. Sources Bibliography Biography Other http://www.lib.lsu.edu/hum/mlk/srs212.html
Extractions: search visiting exhibitions online let's talk ... bibliography Bibliographic sources for Marie Curie available at the Science Museum Library (smlinfo@nmsi.ac.uk, tel: 020 7942 4242) Biographies of Marie Curie Cotton, Eugénie. Les Curies. Paris: Seghers, 1963. Shelfmark 92 CUR [A biography in French of Marie Curie, incorporating biographical details of Pierre and Irene. It also contains a selection of texts by Marie, Pierre, Irène and Frédéric Joliot, partly dealing the scientific work of the family Accessible for fluent French speaker, not scientific] Crowther, James Gerald. Marie Curie. In: Six great scientists, by J. G. Crowther. 1955, p.181-221. Shelfmark 92:5 [A short biographical text about her life, work and the scientific development in her time. Recommended for students writing an essay on the subject] Curie, Eve. Madame Curie. London: Heinemann, 1938. Shelfmark 92 CUR [This is a personal biography by her daughter Eve, a non-scientist. Very accessible.] Etudes consacrées à Marie Sklodowska-Curie et a Marian Smoluchowski. Monografie z dziejow nauki i techniki, vol.51. Warsaw: Polska Akademia Nauk Komitet Historii Nauki, 1970. Shelfmark STS Pers 5:93 MONOGRAFIE
Biographical Information State University of New York at Buffalo. Biographical Information Z; L.Boxer and R. Miller, Parallel dynamic computational geometry, The Journal of New http://www.cse.buffalo.edu/faculty/miller/Biographical.htm
Extractions: Parallel Algorithms and Architectures, High-Performance Computing, Grid Computing, Computational Crystallography, Computational Geometry, Image Analysis. For many years, Dr. Miller and colleagues (most notably, Prof. Quentin F. Stout, U. Mich), explored the boundaries of producing efficient and optimal algorithms for fundamental problems in computational geometry and image analysis on traditional parallel architectures, including the mesh, pyramid, hypercube, and PRAM, as well as innovative architectures, such as the reconfigurable mesh. A number of seminal papers have been published in these areas.
SULAIR: Databases And Articles: Databases A-Z A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford Stanford only http://www-sul.stanford.edu/catdb/alldata.html
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Levi Primo The work uses the Russian chemist Mendeleyev s periodical table of For furtherreading The Double Bond Primo Levi, a biography by Carole Angier (2002) http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/primo.htm
Extractions: A B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Primo Levi (1919-1987) Italian-Jewish writer and chemist, who first gained fame with his autobiographical story SE QUESTO È UN UOMO (1947, If This is a Man) of survival in Nazi concentration camps. For the last forty years of his life Levi devoted himself to attempting to deal with the fact that he was not killed in Auschwitz. "The worst survived, that is, the fittest; the best all died," he said. Levi also published poetry, science fiction, essays, and short stories. In 1987, at the age of 67, he killed himself. Italo Calvino called Levi "one of the most important and gifted writers of our time." Consider whether this is a man, Primo Levi was born in Turin into a Jewish middle-class family. His grandmother Bimba was a baroness. She and her entire family had been made barons by Napoleon, because they had supported him economically. . As a youth Levi knew very little about Jewishness, but Mussolini's anti-Semitic policy soon taught Levi that it was not ''a cheerful little anomaly'' in a Catholic country. An underdeveloped, quiet boy, Levi was derided at school for his size. Through cycling and mountain climbing he acquired friends, but according to a biography he did not have any sexual experience before meeting his wife, Lucia, in 1946. Just before the Fascist racial law of 1938 forbade Jews access to academic status, Levi started his chemistry studies at the University of Turin. He graduated first in his class in 1941, the year after Italy had entered World War II as an ally of Germany. During the war Levi wrote for the resistance magazine
Extractions: Hours Services UA Libraries Catalog Reserves ... UL Home We recommend that you connect to web-based library resources through a University of Akron Internet connection (campus network or UA Dial-In Access). You must have a UAnet ID in order to access these resources via a UA Internet connection. There are several options for connecting to library resources from off-campus Announcements: A B C ... Z Source for statistical information on and analysis of products traded at the Chicago Board of Trade, as well as reports, data, and related links.