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Berlin Technische Hochschule

See Noelting, "Witt" (1916), Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellschaft, 1791-93, for confirmation that Witt was one of the principal editors of the lampoon also Noelting, "Witt" (1915), and Noelting, "Witt," Journal of the Chemical Society (1916). Witt was a respected dye chemist who had entered the academic world somewhat late in September 1886 he was Privat-dozent for technical chemistry at the Berlin Technische Hochschule, and five years later he was appointed professor there. Like Jacobsen, he was also a writer, poet, and humorist. [Pg.285]

Richard Willstatter 11872-19421 was born in Karlsruhe, Germany, and obtained his Ph.D. from the Technische Hochschule, Munich (18951. He was professor ol chemistry at the universities of Zurich, Berlin, and then Munich (1916-1924). In 1915, he won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work on elucidating the structure of chlorophyll. Nevertheless, as a Jew, he was subjected to anti-Semitic pressure that caused him to resign his position at Munich in 1924. He continued to work privately. [Pg.524]

Twenty years later, Isidor Traube, professor of physical chemistry at Berlin s Technische-Hochschule, distinguished between an inner atomic volume corresponding to the material core of the atom and an outer volume that included an atmosphere of bound ether the whole of the molecule then moved in a larger "co-volume" of free ether.41 Farther still from mainstream nineteenth-century chemistry, Karl Pearson developed a mathematical theory of "aether squirts," setting up a quantitative measure of chemical affinity in terms of the pulsation periods of the squirts.42... [Pg.133]

Ulknann, F. Bielecki, J. Chem. Ber. 1901, 34, 2174. Fritz UUmann (1875-1939), bom in Ftirth, Bavaria, studied under Graebe at Geneva. He taught at the Technische Hochschule in Berlin and the University of Geneva. [Pg.599]

April 10,1885, Berlin, Germany - April 15,1964, Scranton, PA, USA) Ph.D. 1908 at Technische Hochschule Karlsruhe in the group of -> Haber with studies on... [Pg.45]

Classen, Alexander— (Apr. 13,1843, Aachen, Germany - Jan. 28,1934, Aachen, Germany) Ph.D. 1864 in Berlin, since 1878 Professor at the Technische Hochschule Aachen . Classen is most well-known for his contributions to the development of -> electrogravimetry. He wrote a very influential book on that technique which was published in numerous editions [i]. [Pg.103]

Feb. 29,1908, Sankt Petersburg, Russia - Nov. 19,2002, Sofia, Bulgaria) Kaishev was born in Russia where his father was at that time at the Russian General Staff Academy. He graduated with a diploma in chemistry from Sofia University in 1930. As a Humboldt fellow he was in Germany (Berlin and Breslau) and obtained his Ph.D. degree from Technische Hochschule zu Breslau under the supervision of Franz Simon (1893-1956) in 1932 [i, ii]. [Pg.379]

Seehof-Teltow, near Berlin, with the assurance of having a relatively free hand and of being able to give lectures at the Technische Hochschule at Charlottenburg. [Pg.5]

Hanemann, Inaugural Dissertation, Technische Hochschule, Berlin, 1913. [Pg.174]

Hermann Sach e (1862-1893) was born in 6er(in, Germany, where he also received his Ph.D. (1889) and taught at the Technische Hochschule Charlottenburg-Berlin. [Pg.128]

Debye returned to Zurich in 1920 as professor of physics and principal of the Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule, and seven years later he held the same post at Leipzig. From 1934 to 1939 he was director of the Max Planck Institute of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics in Berlin-Dahlem and professor of physics at the University of Berlin. During this period he was awarded the 1936 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his contributions to our knowledge of molecular structure through his investigations on dipole moments and on the diffraction of X-rays and electrons in gases. ... [Pg.71]

Young Weizmann s conviction drove him inexorably west. At eighteen he floated on one of his father s rafts to West Prussia, worked his way to Berlin and studied at the Technische Hochschule. In 1899 he took his Ph.D. at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland, then sold a patent to Bayer that considerably improved his finances. He moved to England in 1904, a move he thought a deliberate and desperate step I was in dan-... [Pg.87]

Clarence Edward Bardsley obtained the BS degree from the Missouri Mining School, St. Louis MO in 1920, the MS degree in civil engineering there in 1924 and the ScD degree in 1926. After a short stay at Northwestern University, he moved from 1928 to 1929 to Technische Hochschule Berlin, Germany. [Pg.74]

Cambridge MA. He was then a Freeman Scholar until 1929, visiting Technische Hochschule Berlin,... [Pg.254]

Frederick Ernest Giesecke was educated at the Texas A. M. College, from where he graduated with the ME degree in 1890, at MIT with the BS degree in 1904, and Technische Hochschule Berlin, Germany. [Pg.341]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.115 ]




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