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         Molina Mario:     more books (55)
  1. Global Environmental Diplomacy by Mostafa K./ Rummel-Bulska, Iwona/ Molina, Mario J. (FRW) Tolba, 2008-03-31
  2. Derecho Constitucional General by Carlos Mario Molina BetancurMario Alfonso Alvarez MontoyaFernando Pelaez Arango, 2006-01-01
  3. El derecho al aborto en Colombia. I Parte: El concepto juridico de vida humana by Carlos Mario Molina Betancur, 2006-01-01
  4. La accion de repeticion by Carlos Mario Molina BetancurMartha Cecilia Canon Solano, 2008-01-01
  5. Aspectos novedosos de la contratacion estatal y de la responsabilidad del estado by Carlos Mario Molina Betancur Editor Academico, 2008-01-01
  6. OPORTUNIDADES PARA LA EXPORTACION DE ENERGIA A ESTADOS UNIDOS: MAS ALLA DEL TLC by ED. GARCIA MOLINA MARIO, 2000-01-01
  7. Mario Molina y la Carrera por el Ozono (Libros del Rincón) by Carlos Chimal, 2004
  8. RESPONSABILIDAD PENAL DE LOS ADMINISTRADORES DE EMPRESAS by MOLINA A. CARLOS MARIO, 2000-01-01
  9. Ga biyalhan yanhit benhii ke will / Donde la luz del sol no se pierda by Mario Molina Cruz, 2001-01-01
  10. Trazados Masónicos by Samuel Mario Molina del Angel, 1999
  11. Corte Constitucional 10 años. Balance y perspectivas by Carlos Mario Varios autores; MOLINA BETANCUR, 2003
  12. PRINCIPIO DE PROTECCION A LAS VICTIMAS by Carlos Mario Molina Arrubla, 2005-01-01
  13. DERECHO CONSTITUCIONAL COLOMBIANO (PARTE HISTORICA) by Carlos Mario Molina Betancur, 2007-01-01

41. MOLINA, MARIO J. - CIRS
Professor mario molina has been involved in developing our understanding of the chemistry of the stratospheric ozone layer and its susceptibility to
http://www.cirs-tm.org/researchers/researchers.php?id=215

42. ScienceDaily -- Browse Topics: Science/Chemistry/Nobel_Prize_in_Chemistry/Nobel_
April 01, 2002. More books about molina, mario J . Autobiography of mario molina molina shared the 1995 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for work on the fate
http://www.sciencedaily.com/directory/Science/Chemistry/Nobel_Prize_in_Chemistry
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Changes In Ozone Layer Offer Hope For Improvement, Says Team Of Scientists (August 31, 2005) full story Ozone Layer Decline Leveling Off, According To New Study (August 30, 2005) full story U. T. Dallas-led Research Team Produces Strong, Transparent Carbon Nanotube Sheets (August 19, 2005) full story Decreased Breast Cancer Survival Associated With High TRAIL-R2 Expression (July 25, 2005) full story New Report Shows Female Lung Cancer Death Rates In Europe Still Rising (July 15, 2005) full story Researchers Discover Molecule That Causes Secondary Stroke (June 1, 2005) full story Younger Is Better When Implanting Cochlear Implants, Indiana University Study Finds (May 12, 2005) full story Male Combat Veterans Rank High In Heart Disease Risk (May 4, 2005)

43. Indexleft1.html
Yves A. Mantz, Franz M. Geiger, Luisa T. molina, mario J. molina, and Bernhardt L. Trout J. Phys. Chem. A, 106, 69726981 (2002) .
http://www.chem.northwestern.edu/~geigerf/new_page/pubs1.html
LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 26. "Second Harmonic Generation Phase Measurements of Cr(VI) at Methyl Ester-Functionalized Fused Quartz/Water Interfaces"
Amanda L. Mifflin, Michael J. Musorrafiti, Christopher T. Konek, and Franz M. Geiger
Submitted ( 25. "DNA Single Strands Tethered to Fused Quartz/Water Interfaces Studied by Second Harmonic Generation"
Faith C. Boman, Michael J. Musorrafiti, Julianne M. Gibbs, Brian R. Stepp, Anne M. Salazar, SonBinh T. Nguyen, and Franz M. Geiger
Submitted ( 24. "Nonlinear Optical Studies of the Agricultural Antibiotic Morantel Interacting with Silica/Water Interfaces"
Christopher T. Konek, Kimberly D. Illg, Hind A. Al-Abadleh, Andrea B. Voges, Grace Yin, Michael J. Musorrafiti, Catherine M. Schmidt, and Franz M. Geiger
J. Am. Chem. Soc., in press ( 23. "Kinetic Studies of Chromium (VI) Binding to Carboxylic acid- and Methyl Ester- Functionalized Silica/Water Interfaces Important in Geochemistry"
Hind A. Al-Abadleh, Amanda L. Mifflin, Michael J. Musorrafiti, and Franz M. Geiger

44. Mario Molina
TA Dr. mario molina Henríquez Pasquel)(Artículo Breve) (Siempre!) (Business Wire). molina, mario (1943 ) (The Hutchinson Encyclopedia)
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0922658.html
var zflag_nid="162"; var zflag_cid="57/1"; var zflag_sid="53"; var zflag_width="728"; var zflag_height="90"; var zflag_sz="14"; in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
Daily Almanac for
Sep 15, 2005

45. The Biography Of Dr. Mario Molina
Dr. mario molina received a Noble prize in chemistry in 1995 for his work in atmospheric chemistry and the effect of CFCs on the depletion of the ozone
http://www.atomicmuseum.com/tour/sc2.cfm
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Dr. Mario Molina
In 1995, Mario Molina received a Nobel prize in chemistry for his work in atmospheric chemistry and the effect of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) on the depletion of the ozone layer. He shared the Nobel Prize with F. Sherwood Rowland and Paul Crutzen. This was the first time a Nobel Prize for research into the impact of man-made objects on the environment was awarded. The discoveries led to an international environmental treaty, which bans the production of industrial chemicals that reduce the ozone layer. Dr. Molina was named one of the top 20 Hispanics in Technology, 1998. Today, Dr. Molina is one of the world's most knowledgeable experts on pollution and the effects of chemical pollution on the environment. Mexican-born scientist Dr. Molina is currently the Lee and Geraldine Martin Professor of Environmental Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "It's very rewarding to see how one can simultaneously try to work with problems that affect society in a very direct way," he says.
National Atomic Museum.

46. News Releases
mario J. molina, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who won the 1995 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his role in elucidating the threat
http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/science/mcmolina.asp
Getting Around Campus - Online Maps - VirtualVisit to UCSD - Visitor Parking - Campus Tours - UCSD Infopath Getting Around San Diego What's Happening - Calendar of Events - Academic Calendar - UC TV Online - Showcase Calendar - UC Newswire Points of Interest - Stuart Collection - Birch Aquarium - Preuss School - UCSD Bookstore - UCSD Libraries Publications - UCSD Annual Report - UCSD Catalog Joining In - Chancellor's Associates - - Scripps Oceanographic Society - Student Foundation - Support Groups Becoming A Student - Student Affairs Other News Web sites - Engineering - International Relations - Health Sciences - Scripps Institution of Oceanography UCSD News Releases
February 5, 2004
Nobel Prize-Winning Chemist Joins UCSD Faculty By Kim McDonald Photo Credit: Donna Coveney/MIT Molina, a native of Mexico whose early research with Rowland convinced governments around the world to eliminate CFCs from spray cans and refrigerators, has focused much of his recent research on the chemistry of air pollution in the lower atmosphere. He has been working with collaborators from other countries, most notably colleagues in Mexico City, on assessing and mitigating the air pollution problems of rapidly growing cities around the world.

47. University Of California, San Diego: External Relations: News & Information: New
mario J. molina, a NobelPrizewinning professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of California, San Diego, has been named one of the
http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/awards/mctrailblazers.asp
Getting Around Campus - Online Maps - VirtualVisit to UCSD - Visitor Parking - Campus Tours - UCSD Infopath Getting Around San Diego What's Happening - Calendar of Events - Academic Calendar - UC TV Online - Showcase Calendar - UC Newswire Points of Interest - Stuart Collection - Birch Aquarium - Preuss School - UCSD Bookstore - UCSD Libraries Publications - UCSD Annual Report - UCSD Catalog Joining In - Chancellor's Associates - - Scripps Oceanographic Society - Student Foundation - Support Groups Becoming A Student - Student Affairs Other News Web sites - Engineering - International Relations - Health Sciences - Scripps Institution of Oceanography UCSD News Releases
July 14, 2005
By Kim McDonald Photo Credit: Donna Coveney/MIT Science Spectrum magazine.
Sixty five others named by the magazine include Shirley Ann Jackson, president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; John Brooks Slaughter, former director of the National Science Foundation and current president and CEO of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering; and Elias A. Zerhouni, director of the National Institutes of Health.
Media Contact: Kim McDonald
Print this story Email this story News Release on Molina Joining UCSD
Moores UCSD Cancer Center Launches Dietary Study for Prostate Cancer Patients

Ocean Instrument Program Led By Scripps Set To Achieve World Coverage

Jacobs School Researchers Work With HPWREN On Allocating Resources In Wireless Sensor Networks
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Rady School Of Management Launches Full-Time MBA Program
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48. Hispanic Heritage - Mario Molina Interview Transcript
mario molina made important discoveries about the danger of chemicals to the mario molina won a Nobel Prize for the important discoveries he and two
http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/hispanic/molinatscript.htm
Scholastic Home About Us Site Map Search ... Tools Mario Molina made important discoveries about the danger of chemicals to the earth's atmosphere. He won a Nobel Prize. Interview Transcript Mario Molina won a Nobel Prize for the important discoveries he and two other scientists made about the dangers of chemicals to the earth's ozone layer. He was the first Mexican American to receive a Nobel Prize. Students interviewed Molina on Oct. 6, 1998.
Were you interested in science when you were young?
When I was in elementary school, I was very interested in science already. I must have been ten or eleven years old. I started experiments with chemistry sets at my home in Mexico. I was able to borrow a bathroom and convert it to a laboratory. My parents supported it. They were pleased. My friends just tolerated it. It was very thrilling to find out how nature works. I remember playing with toy microscopes. I discovered I could see all sorts of life, like a drop of water that had been in contact with pesticides. I could see all kinds of creatures that were moving but that seemed invisible.
Did you have any role models when you were growing up?

49. Remarks In Senate
molina, mario J. Remarks in Senate. Heinz Family Foundation Heinz Award for the Environment recipient, S3080 4MR
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?j108:I08577:j108MINGO.html

50. NUÑEZ-MOLINA-MARIO
Translate this page NÚÑEZ molina, mario - DIRECTORIO DE PÁGINAS WEB DE PROFESORES UNIVERSITARIOS.
http://www1.universia.net/CatalogaXXI/C10059PPESII1/E133492/

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NÚÑEZ MOLINA, MARIO
Enlace: http://www.uprm.edu/socialsciences/mnunez/ Fecha Alta: Descripción: Esta página tiene como propósito principal complementar la enseñanza de mis cursos en el Recinto Universitario de Mayagüez. La exploración de estas nuevas tecnologías de información y comunicación le ha impartido a mis cursos una vitalidad insospechada. También, considero que mis estudiantes han descubierto el milagro del ciberespacio y se han sentido transformados en el proceso. Palabras clave: Recinto Universitario de Mayagüez,Universidad de Puerto Rico,ciencias sociales,Mario Núñez Molina
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51. NUÑEZ-MOLINA-MARIO
Translate this page NÚÑEZ molina, mario - DIRECTÓRIO DE PÁGINAS WEB DE PROFESSORES UNIVERSITÁRIOS.
http://www1.universia.net/CatalogaXXI/C10059PPPTII2/E133492/

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NÚÑEZ MOLINA, MARIO
Enlace: http://www.uprm.edu/socialsciences/mnunez/ Fecha Alta: Descripción: Esta página tiene como propósito principal complementar la enseñanza de mis cursos en el Recinto Universitario de Mayagüez. La exploración de estas nuevas tecnologías de información y comunicación le ha impartido a mis cursos una vitalidad insospechada. También, considero que mis estudiantes han descubierto el milagro del ciberespacio y se han sentido transformados en el proceso. Palabras clave: Recinto Universitario de Mayagüez,Universidad de Puerto Rico,ciencias sociales,Mario Núñez Molina
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52. Meet Mario Molina
Click for larger image! mario molina. In 1973 mario molina was a postdoctoral researcher working in the laboratory of F. Sherwood Rowland at the University
http://www.chemheritage.org/EducationalServices/FACES/env/readings/molina.htm

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    Mario Molina In 1973 Mario Molina was a postdoctoral researcher working in the laboratory of F. Sherwood Rowland at the University of California at Irvine, just south of Los Angeles, when he made an unsettling discovery. He had been investigating a class of compounds called chlorofluorocarbons , or CFCs. CFCs were used as refrigerants , aerosol sprays, and in making plastic foams. Molina wondered what happened to them once they were released into the atmosphere. This was a hypothetical study, but his results showed disturbingly that CFCs could, in theory, destroy a compound called ozone under the conditions that exist in the upper atmosphere. Far above the earth's surface, a thin layer of ozone floats, protecting us from the sun's ultraviolet radiation . Molina, just a young scientist at the time, was nervous about showing Rowland his theory of how CFCs might destroy ozone . But if CFCs really could wipe out ozone, the whole world would be in trouble. Rowland took his protogŽ seriously. Over the next two decades he and Molina became voices crying in the wilderness, alerting the world to the danger of CFCs and ozone depletion. They weren't always heeded. Bans on CFCs in aerosol sprays went into effect first in the United States in 1978, and later in Canada, Norway, and Sweden. CFC use for other purposes only increased. Scientists, activists, politicians, and CFC-producing companies would argue for years over the merit of Molina's theories. Mario Molina was born in Mexico City, where Marioâs father was a successful lawyer and a diplomat. As a child, Mario was fascinated with chemistry and converted one of the bathrooms in his family's house to a chemistry laboratory for himself. His aunt, Esther Molina, was a chemist, and she encouraged and mentored the boy by helping him carry out more advanced experiments than normally possible with a child's chemistry set. Recognizing his passion for science, Marioâs parents sent him to a boarding school in Europe, where they thought his fascination with science would be nurtured.

53. Meet Mario Molina - Teacher's Guide
This reading not only introduces the students to mario molina, At the same time, the work of mario molina as well as the other scientists in this module
http://www.chemheritage.org/EducationalServices/FACES/teacher/env/readings/molin

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    Home Student Version Next > This reading not only introduces the students to Mario Molina, but it also introduces the problem of ozone depletion. Molina was the first scientist to predict ozone loss due to the use of chlorofluorocarbons, and all efforts to reduce and eliminate the use of chlorofluorocarbons stem ultimately from his work. The story of his career parallels the story of the ozone-CFC issue. His involvement with the issue began early in his career, and the students should be aware of the boldness that was necessary for young scientist of unproven reputation to call on the people of the industrialized world to make significant lifestyle changes, corporations to make costly changes to their product lines, and governments to impose inconvenient regulations. The reading may be used to raise thorny issues. Clearly the dangers of science are revealed in the ozone-CFC problem. At the same time, the work of Mario Molina as well as the other scientists in this module clearly show that science is absolutely crucial to understanding and addressing the problems created by the less-enlightened use of science and technology in times past. These issues raise the question of the responsibility of the scientist. After making a frightening discovery, Molina felt responsible to enter the public arena, actively campaigning for the regulation of CFCs. Is it proper for ideally objective scientists to become involved in politics and public policy debates? Can a scientist carry out objective research if committed to one view or another? Differing opinions abound on questions like this, and the students should be encouraged to explore their own thoughts on such issues.

54. Tufts E-News -- Mario Molina
Tufts ENews Bio mario molina. Posted 03.26.03.
http://enews.tufts.edu/stories/032603Molina.htm
PRINT THIS ARTICLE SUBMIT YOUR COMMENTS Mario Molina:
Nobel Prize-Winning Scientist,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Mario Molina, Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology In 1995, he shared the Nobel Prize in chemistry In 1995, 20 years after their seminal article appeared in Nature magazine, the production of CFCs was banned in developed countries by the Montreal Protocol, an international agreement convened by the United Nations Environment Programme. Dr. Molina has continued teaching and research. When scientists discovered a huge hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica in 1984, some skeptics still questioned whether CFCs were causing the damage. He showed how chlorine-activation reactions were taking place in the presence of ice under polar stratospheric conditions and eating away the ozone layer. In recent years, he has directed a joint project between MIT and local government in Mexico City to improve the dangerous air quality situation in his hometown. Biography and photo courtesy The Heinz Awards
Keynote Speaker Margaret Marshall
Chief Justice, Mass Supreme Judicial Court

55. Tufts E-News -- Mario J. Molina's Honorary Degree
Tufts ENews mario J. molina. Posted 05-18-03. mario molina, scientist and steward of our fragile planet, it is my honor to present to you today the
http://enews.tufts.edu/stories/051803Molinadegree.htm

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SUBMIT YOUR COMMENTS Mario J. Molina Tufts President Lawrence S. Bacow awarded Mario J. Molina an honorary degree
during the University's 2003 Commencement ceremonies on Sunday, May 18, 2003
Medford/Somerville, Mass. The initial reaction to your scholarship was skepticism. Industry attacked your science and you personally, but you persevered. Demonstrating great courage, conviction, and meticulous scholarship, you and your collaborators conclusively established the relationship between CFC use and ozone depletion. Together with your partner and scientific collaborator, Luisa Molina, you have earned great respect for the integrity of your scholarship and for the sense of global responsibility that you both impart to the scientific community. Today, you are leading an international team seeking to improve the air quality of your native Mexico City. Mario Molina, scientist and steward of our fragile planet, it is my honor to present to you today the degree of Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa

56. Biografia De Molina, Mario
Translate this page molina, mario. (Veracruz, México, 1942) Químico mexicano. Durante los años sesenta estudió en la facultad de química de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de
http://www.biografiasyvidas.com/biografia/m/molina.htm
Inicio Buscador Las figuras clave de la historia Reportajes Los protagonistas de la actualidad Molina, Mario (Veracruz, México, 1942) Químico mexicano. Durante los años sesenta estudió en la facultad de química de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Realizó estudios de posgrado en Estados Unidos, y se doctoró en el Instituto Tecnológico de Massachusetts. Gracias a su tesón y a su interés por difundir sus conocimientos, poco después ingresó como profesor en el mismo centro y adquirió la ciudadanía estadounidense. Además de su labor docente, realizó una fructífera tarea de investigación, con especial interés por el problema del medio ambiente. Fue uno de los primeros científicos en alertar acerca del peligro que representan para la capa de ozono los clorofluorocarbonos empleados en aerosoles, tanto industriales como domésticos. Desde 1974 divulgó sus descubrimientos sobre esta materia y asesoró a empresas e instituciones públicas y privadas. En 1995 recibió el Premio Nobel de Química. Inicio Buscador Recomendar sitio

57. The Heinz Awards
mario molina and John Spengler, groundbreaking pioneers in the way air pollution mario molina, Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of
http://www.heinzawards.net/recipients.asp?action=detail&recipientID=71

58. Libros Latinos -- SEXODO By Molina, Mario.
Books in Spanish, Portuguese, English and other languages on Latin America, Spain, Portugal, Caribbean. All subjects, languages, periods.
http://www.libroslatinos.com/cgi-bin/libros/80421.html
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SEXODO by Molina, Mario.
Description: A journalistic survey of marginal sexuality including male and female homosexuality. With interviews.
Publisher: Miami, The Author, 1999
Book Condition: 134p.,wrps
Price: 30.00
BookID: 80421
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59. 'Mario Molina' Description
mario molina. (from the HispanicAmerican Biographies series, Set 2 of 2). In 1995, mario molina, a chemist and professor at the Massachusetts Institute of
http://www.raintreelibrary.com/products/title.asp?id=1410912965

60. CII Scientific Advisory Board: Dr. Mario Molina
Elements and Goals of the Harvard/Cyprus Inititative.
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/cyprus/molina.shtml
Mario Molina
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Institute Professor
Professor of Chemistry
Professor of Earth, Atmosphere, and Planetary Scineces
Professor Molina was born in Mexico City, Mexico, in 1943. He holds a Chemical Engineer degree (1965) from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, a postgraduate degree (1967) from the University of Freiburg, Germany, and a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry (1972) from the University of California, Berkeley. He is a Professor at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), with a joint appointment in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Prior to joining UCSD he was an Institute Professor at MIT, and he held teaching and research positions at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, the University of California, Irvine and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology.
Professor Molina has been involved in developing our scientific understanding of the chemistry of the stratospheric ozone layer and its susceptibility to human-made perturbations. He was a co-author, with F. S. Rowland, of the 1974 publication in the British magazine Nature, of their research on the threat to the ozone layer from chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) gases that were being used as propellants in spray cans, as refrigerants, as solvents, etc. More recently, Professor Molina has also been involved with the chemistry of air pollution of the lower atmosphere. He is also pursuing interdisciplinary work on tropospheric pollution issues, working with colleagues from many other disciplines on the problem of rapidly growing cities with severe air pollution problems.

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