Philosopher Images Sources And Credits Anselm of Canterbury Antisthenes Hannah Arendt marcus Aurelius Epictetus Epicurus rudolph Eucken Michel Foucault Jakob Friedrich Fries http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/ImageSources.aspx
Marcus, Rudolph A. Mona Rowe Bulletin Article; rudolph marcusrudolph marcus, Nobel Laureate The BNL Connection When rudolph marcusreceived his Nobel prize, both Norman Sutin and John R. Miller attended. http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/M/Marcus/Rudolph
Extractions: Marcus, Rudolph A. My first encounters with McGill University came when I was still in a baby carriage. My mother used to wheel me about the campus when we lived in that neighborhood and, as she recounted years later, she would tell me that I would go to McGill. There was some precedent for my going there, since two of my father's brothers received their M.D.'s at McGill. I have always loved going to school. Since neither of my parents had a higher education, my academic "idols" were these two paternal uncles and one of their uncles, my great-uncle, Henrik Steen (né Markus). My admiration for him, living in faraway Sweden, was not because of a teol.dr. (which he received from the University of Uppsala in 1915) nor because of the many books he wrote - I knew nothing of that - but rather because he was reputed to speak 13 languages. I learned decades later that the number was only 9! Growing up, mostly in Montreal, I was an only child of loving parents. I admired my father's athletic prowess - he excelled in several sports - and my mother's expressive singing and piano playing. My interest in the sciences started with mathematics in the very beginning, and later with chemistry in early high school and the proverbial home chemistry set. My education at Baron Byng High School was excellent, with dedicated masters (boys and girls were separate). I spent the next years at McGill University, for both undergraduate and, as was the custom of the time, graduate study. Our graduate supervisor, Carl A. Winkler, specialized in rates of chemical reactions. He himself had received his Ph.D. as a student of Cyril Hinshelwood at Oxford. Hinshelwood was later the recipient of the Nobel Prize for his work on chemical kinetics. Winkler brought to his laboratory an enthusiastic joyousness in research and was much loved by his students.
Rudolph Lewis Bio I Am New Orleans Other Poems By marcus Bruce Christian. Edited by rudolph Lewisand Amin Sharif. New Orleans Xavier Review Press, 1999. http://www.nathanielturner.com/rudolphlewisbio.htm
Extractions: ChickenBones: A Journal Home Curriculum Vitae Rudolph Lewis rudolphlewis@hotmail.com EDITORIAL WOR K Editor ChickenBones: A Journal (www.nathanielturner.com), an online educational web site, 2001 to present. Editor . New Orleans: Xavier Review Press, 1999. Editorial Assistant Labors Heritage , Spring 1997. Contributing Editor The New Laurel Review , Spring/Fall 1984; Spring/Fall 1987 CRICKET: Poems and Other Jazz . New Orleans, 1985. LIBRARY APPOINTMENTS Librarian, Baltimore City College High School, 2004 to Circulation/Reference Librarian Reference Librarian Enoch Pratt Free Library, Baltimore, 1997-1999 Reference Librarian Baltimore City Community College, Baltimore, 1997 Archival Consultant George Meany Memorial Archives, Silver Spring, 1996-1997 EDUCATION M.L.S., 1997 University of Maryland, College Park Archival Internship George Meany Memorial Archives, 1997.
Marcus Bruce Christian Memories of marcus B. Christian By Deborah Parker Cains. Christian s BioBibliographicalRecord By rudolph Lewis. Introduction to I AM NEW ORLEANS By rudolph http://www.nathanielturner.com/marcusbrucechristian.htm
Extractions: Marcus Bruce Christian New Orleans Poet, 1900-1976 Mission Nathaniel Turner Marcus Bruce Christian Guest Poets ... Support ChickenBones Portrait of poet as young man The Writings of Marcus Bruce Christian Poems Diary Notes Letters Essays on Christian Memories of Marcus B. Christian By Deborah Parker Cains Christian's BioBibliographical Record By Rudolph Lewis Introduction to I AM NEW ORLEANS By Rudolph Lewis A Theory of a Black Aesthetic By Rudolph Lewis By Rudolph Lewis Marcus Bruce Christian New Orleans poet A Literary Soldier by Deborah Parker Cains Yes, Dr. Christian by Deborah Parker Cains Letters from Xavier Review Letters from LSU and Skip Gates Activist Works on Next Level of Change By Gregory Kane The Sun , 15 December 1999 Marcus Bruce Christian BioBibliographical Record Poems in the Key of Life A Labor of Genuine Love ... Diary Notes from the Archives of Marcus Bruce Christian photo right: Lyle Saxon SELASSIE AT GENEVA An Ex-King Speaks Drums of Menelik By Marcus Bruce Christian Support ChickenBones: A Journal We need your help. Any level of support would be greatly appreciated
Die Morgenshow Translate this page Der Dicke marcus rudolph hat es sich nicht nehmen lassen, persönlich jeden einzelnen Das der Dicke aus der Bremen Vier Morgenschow, marcus rudolph, http://www.bremen4u.de/rb4/dud.jsp?session=
PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results You searched for rudolph* +marcus (subject(s) All ). rudolph Arthur marcusThis Canadian chemist won a Nobel Prize for his work on electron-transfer http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/psisearch.pl?term1=Rudolph Marcus&limit=0
Canadian Who's Who 1997: Nobel Prize [sample] marcus, rudolph Arthur, B.Sc., Ph.D., FRSC; chemistry educator, professor of Laura Hearne marcus 27 Aug. 1949; children Alan rudolph, Kenneth Hearne, http://www.utpress.utoronto.ca/cww/marcus.html
Extractions: chemistry educator, professor of chemistry MARCUS, Rudolph Arthur, B.Sc., Ph.D., FRSC; chemistry educator, professor of chemistry; b. Montreal, Que. 21 July s. Myer and Esther (Cohen) M.; e. McGill Univ. B.Sc. 1943, Ph.D. 1946; m. Laura Hearne Marcus 27 Aug. 1949; children: Alan Rudolph, Kenneth Hearne, Raymond Arthur; ARTHUR AMOS NOYES PROF. OF CHEMISTRY, NOYES LABORATORY OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 1978 ; Postdoct. Rsch., NRC 1946-49; Univ. of N. Carolina 1949-51; Asst. Prof., Polytechnic Inst. of Brooklyn 1951-54; Assoc. Prof. 1954-58; Prof. 1958-64; Acting Head, Div. of Physical Chem. 1961-62; Mem., Courant Inst. of Math. Sci., N.Y. Univ. 1960-61; Prof., Univ. of Illinois 1964-78; Head, Div. of Physical Chem. 1967-68; Visiting Prof. of Theoretical Chem., IBM, Univ. of Oxford 1975-76; Professorial Fellow, Univ. Coll., Univ. of Oxford 1975-76; Hon. Fellow 1995 ; Visiting Linnett Prof. of Chem., Univ. of Cambridge 1996; Hon. Prof., Fudan Univ. (Shanghai, China) 1994;
Marcus marcus, rudolph A. (szül. 1923. júl. 21. Montreal, Québec, Kanada), kanadaiszármazású amerikai vegyész. A kémiai rendszerekben zajló elektronátlépési http://www.mezgazd-koszeg.sulinet.hu/diak/kemia/DATA/Tudosok/data/bh3/marcus.htm
Extractions: Marcus, Rudolph A. (szül. 1923. júl. 21. Montreal, Québec, Kanada), kanadai származású amerikai vegyész. A kémiai rendszerekben zajló elektron-átlépési reakciók elméletének kidolgozásáért 1992-ben kémiai Nobel-díjjal tüntették ki. A Marcus-féle elmélet különbözô jelenségek például a fotoszintézis, a sejt-anyagcsere és a korrózió értelmezését is elôsegíti. Marcus a montreali McGill Egyetemen doktorált 1946-ban; 1951-tôl New Yorkban, a brooklyni muszaki egyetemen dolgozott. 1964-ben az Illinois-i Egyetem, 1978-ban a California Institute of Technology (Kaliforniai Muegyetem) munkatársa lett. Az elektron-átlépési reakciókat az 1950-es években kezdte tanulmányozni; 1956 és 1965 között publikált cikksorozatában azt vizsgálta, hogy az oldatokban a reagáló anyagokat körülvevô oldószer-molekulák milyen szerepet játszanak a redoxreakciók sebességének kialakításában (a redoxreakciókban oxidáció és redukció játszódik le, amelynek során a reaktánsok elektronokat cserélnek). Marcus kimutatta, hogy a reaktánsok és a környezô oldószer-molekulák molekulaszerkezetében apró változások keletkeznek; ezek a változások befolyásolják, hogy az elektronok mennyire képesek mozogni a molekulák között. Marcus azt is megállapította, hogy az elektron-átlépési reakció hajtóereje és a reakciósebesség közötti összefüggés parabolával írható le. A reakció hajtóerejének növekedésével tehát a reakció sebessége eleinte nô, késôbb csökkenni kezd. A teória nagy kétkedést váltott ki, amelyet az 1980-as években szerzett kísérleti bizonyítékok oszlattak csak el.
History Of Chemistry rudolph A. marcus 1992 The marcus model, Press Release The 1992 Nobel Prizein Chemistry, The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1992, marcus Home, rudolph A. http://www.chemistrycoach.com/history_of_chemistry.htm
Extractions: The links are organized from most comprehensive to least, except that foreign language links generally appear at the end. Although I have not given information about each link, you can learn a lot by passing the cursor over the link and reading the web address. Kurt Alder Kurt Alder Kurt Alder Kurt Alder ... Sir Humphry Davy; Electricity and Chemical Affinity , Sir Humphry Davy, Sir Humphry Davy Sir Humphry Davy
Chemistry : Alumni & Friends rudolph A. marcus was born in Montreal, Canada and received his BS and PhD inChemistry from McGill University in 1943 and 1946. http://www.che.uc.edu/alumni/oesper/recipients/marcus.html
Extractions: Professor Marcus has received many awards, including the Wolf Prize in Chemistry, the National Medal of Science, the ACS Peter Debye and Irving Langmuir awards, and the Pauling, Richards, Gibbs, Chandler and other medals. He is the recipient of a number of honorary degrees and is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society, a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London and of the Royal Society of Canada. His hobbies include skiing, tennis, music and history. He and his wife Laura, whom he met and married in 1949, have three sons.
Canadian Nobel Prize In Science Laureates marcus, rudolph (Chemist). Has been awarded the 1992 Nobel Prize in Chemistryfor his contributions to the theory of electron transfer reactions http://educ.queensu.ca/~science/main/profdev/pdjsi1.htm
Extractions: Canadian Nobel Prize in Science Laureates Scientist Year Discipline Bert Brockhouse Physics Michael Smith Chemistry Rudolph Marcus Chemistry Richard Taylor Physics Sid Altman Chemistry John Polanyi Chemistry Henry Taube Chemistry David Hubel Medicine Gerhard Herzberg Chemistry Fredrick Banting Medicine History of the Nobel Prize The Nobel Prizes were first handed out in 1901 by Alfred Nobel, the Swedish Chemist who made a fortune by inventing dynamite. In his later years Nobel was horrified to see his invention and variations of it used mainly in guns and bombs to kill millions of people. To rectify this, he willed his vast fortune to be used to fund six annual cash prizes to men and women who made outstanding contributions that enriched human life in the fields of chemistry, physics, medicine, literature, economics, and peace. The Nobel Prize Laureates each receive about one million dollars. There have been ten Canadians to win a Nobel Prize in the sciences. (Another site with an excellent background on many Canadian Scientists: Great Canadian Scientists Altman, Sid
DBLP: Rudolph J. Marcus rudolph J. marcus 1, EE, rudolph J. marcus, Eugene E. Gloye, Edwin T.Florence Computer search of a freetext data base as a tool for investigating http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/indices/a-tree/m/Marcus:Rudolph_J=.ht
Extractions: List of publications from the DBLP Bibliography Server FAQ Coauthor Index - Ask others: ACM DL ACM Guide CiteSeer CSB ... EE Rudolph J. Marcus, Eugene E. Gloye Edwin T. Florence : Computer search of a free-text data base as a tool for investigating structure-effect relationships. Edwin T. Florence Eugene E. Gloye DBLP: [ Home Author Title Conferences ... Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de) Wed Sep 14 20:37:40 2005
Nobel Prize Winning Chemists rudolph A. marcus. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1992. rudolph Arthur marcus wasborn on July 21, 1923 in Montreal, Canada. He married Laura Hearne in 1949 http://www.sanbenito.k12.tx.us/district/webpages2002/judymedrano/Nobel Winners/r
Extractions: Nobel Prize Winning Chemists Rudolph A. Marcus The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1992 Rudolph Arthur Marcus was born on July 21, 1923 in Montreal, Canada. He married Laura Hearne in 1949 and had three sons who are Kenneth, Alan, and Raymond. The Marcus theory shed light on diverse and fundamental phenomena such as photosynthesis, cell metabolism and corrosion. Marcus received his doctorate from McGill University, Montreal, in 1946. Professor Marcus is a theoretical chemist now working at the California Institute of Technology. He had a habit of breaking equipment and that would put his research on hold until the device was fixed again. Marcus began studying electron-transfer reactions in the 1950s. He investigated the role of surrounding solvent molecules in determining the rate of redox reactionsoxidation and reduction reactions in which the reactions exchange electronsin solution. Marcus determined that subtle changes occur in the molecular structure of the reactants and the solvent molecules around them; these changes influence the ability of electrons to move between the molecules. He further established that the relationship between the driving force of an electron-transfer reaction and the reaction's rate is described as a parabola. Applications of his theory include such phenomena as photosynthesis, electrically conducting polymers, chemiluminescence and corrosion. Dr. Marcus' research in many fields of theoretical chemical kinetics includes theories of electron transfer reactions, unimolecular reactions, electrode reactions, various transfer reactions, semi classical theory of collisions and of bound states, intramolecular dynamics, solvent dynamics, and chemical reaction coordinates. Major Prizes: 1992 Nobel Prize In Chemistry "for his contributions to the theory of electron transfer reactions in chemical systems"; 1985 Wolf Prize in Chemistry; 1989 National Medal of Science; foreign member, Royal Society of London; member, American Philosophical Society.
134-137 The other two, natives of Montreal, were rudolph marcus and Sidney Altman. In 1992, Montrealborn rudolph marcus was attending a scientific conference http://collections.ic.gc.ca/heirloom_series/volume5/134-137.htm
Extractions: Eight Scientific Researchers Who Discovered... Guessing the number of Canadians who have won the Nobel Prize for scientific discoveries might well be a question for the TV game show Jeopardy, but the answer would be open to debate, for at least three of the eight recipients were born in other countries and four of the five native-born winners were recognized for research accomplished in the United States. Six scientists have won outright or jointly won, a Nobel Prize for chemistry and two have won for physics. Three of the chemistry winners were born elsewhere: Gerhard Herzberg, born in Germany, left in 1935 because his wife was Jewish; John Polanyi, a University of Toronto professor, was also born in Germany; and Michael Smith, now at the University of British Columbia, is a native of Blackpool, England. The first Canadian-born chemist to with the Nobel Prize was Henry Taube, from the mixed-farming community of Neudorf, Saskatchewan, for studies accomplished at three American universities. The other two, natives of Montreal, were Rudolph Marcus and Sidney Altman. Two Alberta-born scientists have won the Nobel Prize for physics: Bertram Brockhouse in 1994 for discoveries made 40 years earlier at Chalk River, Ontario, and Richard Taylor for researching subatomic particles called "quarks." He was jointly awarded the Nobel Prize with two Americans in 1990.
Informationsbesuch - Kontakt - Über Uns - Radio Bremen Translate this page marcus rudolph, Jens-Uwe Krause in gelb-blauen Morgenmänteln Quelle Radio marcusrudolph und Jens-Uwe Krause von der Bremen Vier Morgenshow http://www.radiobremen.de/ueber_uns/kontakt/fuehrung.html
University College Dublin - News, University College Dublin L H award Nobel Laureate Professor rudolph marcus with Honorary Fellowship (l to r) Frank Kennedy, Auditor of L H, Professor rudolph marcus and Stephen http://www.ucd.ie/news/oct04/lnhmarcus.htm
Office Of Science - DOE Nobel Prizes 1992, Chemistry, marcus, rudolph, California Institute of Technology. 1990,Physics, Friedman, Jerome, Massachusetts Institute of Technology http://www.er.doe.gov/Sub/Accomplishments/Heroes/heroes.htm
Extractions: DOE Nobel Laureates The most prestigious scientific awards in the world are the Nobel Prizes for Chemistry, Physics, and Physiology or Medicine. All three of these Nobel Prizes have been presented since 1901, with the Nobel Prizes in Chemistry and Physics awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded by the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet. (The Nobel Prize web site is accessible at http://nobelprize.org Going back to the earliest days of the Manhattan Project, the Department of Energy and its predecessor agencies have blended cutting-edge research and innovative problem-solving to keep the United States in the forefront of scientific discovery for decades. As testimony to the high quality and impact of the research DOE underwrites, the Department of Energy has sponsored 40 Nobel Laureates since DOE's inception in 1977 - and a total of 80 Nobel Laureates since 1934 (associated with DOE and its predecessor agencies). (These Nobel Prize-winning scientists were recognized for work conducted while they were employed by DOE or predecessor agencies; for work conducted using DOE laboratory facilities; or because a national laboratory or a DOE program office provided long-standing and significant support for their other research efforts.) The complete roster of 80 DOE Nobel Prize winners, their biographies and photos is available at