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Alberts, Alfred

Alfred Kastler and Yves Noel, in Hommage a Albert Kirrmann, 18-page reprint, courtesy of ENS Bibiotheque des Lettres. Walter Sullivan, "Dr. Alfred Kastler, 81, Nobel Prize Winner, Dies," New York Times, January 6, 1984. Sullivan says there were five students admitted hor concours-, Kastler says there were eight. [Pg.169]

Kastler, Alfred, and Yves Noel, eds. Hommage a Albert Kirrmann. Paris Ecole Normale Superieure, 1970. 18 pp. [Pg.324]

Nobelium (No, [Rn]5/I47.s2), named after the scientist Alfred Nobel. Identified (1958, Berkeley) by Albert Ghiorso and co-workers. [Pg.364]

Group led by American Physicist Albert Ghiorso Synthesized by bombarding curium-244 and curium-246 with carbon-12 ions little is known of its properties named for Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor of dynamite. [Pg.255]

Many eminent persons have had children with serious mental problems and have had at least one child take his or her life. Robert Frost s daughter was committed to the state mental hospital and another daughter had a nervous breakdown. One of Albert Einstein s children was diagnosed as schizophrenic. Ambrose Bierce s oldest son committed suicide, and his other died of alcoholism at age 27. Thomas Edison had two children who became alcoholics, one of whom committed suicide. Alfred Stieglitz s daughter was psychotic and committed to a mental institution. James Joyce had two children. His son became an alcoholic his daughter went mad and, as discussed, was admitted to an asylum for schizophrenia. Numerous other examples demonstrate the frequent problems of geniuses children. Many of these children tried unsuccessfully to pursue careers similar to their eminent parents, but it is not clear if this played any role in their mental problems. [Pg.134]

Lionel Delaude Albert Demonceau Alfred F. Noels (IS )... [Pg.155]

Thomas Lanio, Albert Jeltsch, and Alfred Pingoud... [Pg.309]

Alfred Pingoud, Claus Urbanke, Jim Hoggett and Albert Jeltsch... [Pg.366]

Nobelium is named after Alfred Nobel. Two American laboratories and one Russian one claimed the creation of element 102, but the 1958 synthesis by the team of Albert Ghiorso, Torbjprn Sikkeland, J. R. Walton, and Glenn... [Pg.151]

Then there are the people who find their eternal memorial in the kingdom. Lecoq, as we have seen, has had his little joke with gallium. Most people don t presume to give their own names to elements, and the other personal names have all been bestowed by committee in the nominee s honor. It is appropriate that the southern shoreline, including the southern strip of the Southern Island, should commemorate forever—or for as long as we exist— the contributions of Albert Einstein (einsteinium), Enrico Fermi (fermium), Dmitri Mendeleev (mendelevium), Alfred Nobel (nobelium, for stimulation to discovery, maybe, rather than discovery itself), and Ernest Lawrence... [Pg.61]

Albert P.Foundos, President Alfred F.Kersey, Gas Industry Manager Fluid Data, Inc. [Pg.134]

Delaude, Lionel Demonceau, Albert Noels, Alfred F., Macromolecules, 2003, 36, 1446-1456... [Pg.464]

Hayden, J. Allen Horton, Alfred John Kinsman, Hemy Koster Jr., E. E. Lauer, Harold F. Millman, Fred W. Misch, Leon Mason Monell, Robert E. Morse, Henry N. Oellrich, Frank E. Prentice, Frank H. Reichel (fired), Edward Schmidt, Ralph B. Shivel, Theodore F. Spear, Gerald Thorp, Earl Albert Tyler, Charles Wadsworth III (Harvard Ph.D.), Roger Churchyard Williams, and Louis Harrington Zepfler. [Pg.568]

Methylated Metal(loid) Species in Humans Alfred V. Himer and Albert W. Rettenmeier... [Pg.592]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.419 ]




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