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Draper, William

Draper, William M., Ed., Environmental Epidemiology, American Chemical Society, Washington, D.C., 1994. [Pg.767]

Draper, William M., Kevin Ashley, Clifford R. Glowacki, and Paul R. Michael, Industrial Hygiene Chemistry Keeping Pace with Rapid Change in the Workplace, Analytical Chemistry, 71, 33R-60R (1999). A comprehensive review of this topic is published every 2 years in Analytical Chemistry. [Pg.838]

G. B. Kaufmann, William Draper Harkins (1873-1951) a controversial and neglected American physical chemist , J. Chem. Educ., 1985, 62, 758-761. [Pg.146]

On Harkins, see R.S. Mulliken, William Draper Harkins, 1873-1951, Biographical Memoirs of Members of the National Aca-damy of Science 47 (1975) 49-81 and G. B. Kauffman, William Draper Harkins (1873-1951) A controversial and neglected physical chemist, Journal of Chemical Education 62 (1985) 758-761. In a letter to Bertram Boltwood of February 28, 1921, Rutherford described Harkins as moderately sound and a man of intelligence, but added that I wish he did more experimenting and spent less time in theorising and in endeavouring to cover every possible idea. Quoted in L. Badash (ed.), Rutherford and Boltwood Letters on Radioactivity (New Haven, 1969), 343. [Pg.185]

Several methods of analysis have been suggested in the literature and are discussed in the context of data from half of an experiment reported by Williams (1968) and analyzed by several authors. Twenty-three factors were varied in 28 runs and one continuous response was observed. The half-fraction analyzed by Lin (1993) is shown in Table 6, which incorporates the corrections noted by Box and Draper (1987) and Abraham et al. (1999). [Pg.179]

Like most other women of the time, Cannon found that career advancement in the field of science did not come as easily as it did for her male counterparts. For example, she did not receive a permanent appointment at Harvard until 1938, after 42 years of service with the university, at which time she was made William C. Boyd professor of astronomy. She did make a number of important gender breakthroughs, however She was the first woman to be elected an officer of the American Astronomical Society, the first woman to receive an honorary doctorate from Oxford University (1925), the first woman to be awarded the Draper Gold Medal of the National Academy of Sciences (1931), and the first woman to receive a doctorate in astronomy from Gronigen University (1921). [Pg.51]

William M. Draper -, Robert D. Stephens, and Luis O. Ruzo ... [Pg.350]

John William Draper (St. Helens, Lancs., 5 May i8ii-Hastings, U.S.A., 4 January 1882) studied chemistry in London University. In 1832 he emigrated to America. In 1836 he became M.D. of Pennsylvania and professor of chemistry and physics in Hampden-Sidney College, Virginia, in 1839 professor of chemistry and physiology in New York University, later president of the faculty of science. He was the first president, in 1876, of the American Chemical Society. He published many papers and some interesting books. He experimented on phosphorescence. ... [Pg.716]

Williams (Eds), NMR in Biology Academic Press, London,pp.63-94. Draper, R.D. and Ingraham, L.L. 1970, Arch. Bioehem. Biophye. [Pg.228]

K. Hentschel, Why Not One More Imponderable John William Draper s Tithonic Rays,... [Pg.302]

D. Fleming,/olm William Draper and the Religion of Science, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1950, p. 205 W. A. Tilden, Sir William Ramsay. Memorials of His Life and Work, Macmillan, London, 1918, p. 137... [Pg.1140]

Hentschel K (2002) Why not one more imponderable John William Draper s tithonic rays. Found Chem 4 5-59... [Pg.37]

Fowkes, F. M. 1972. Harkins, William Draper. Dictionary of Scientific Biography 6 117-119. [Pg.297]

During his time in the United States, Frumkin not only gave lectures to the staff and students of the University of Wisconsin but also toured many other universities. In this way he met many important American scientists and actively discussed their work with them. For example, at the University of Chicago, he visited the Laboratory of William Draper Harkins (December 28, 1873-March 7,1951) and also met with Arthur Holly Compton (September 10, 1892-March 15, 1962). In Princeton, he discussed the polymerization of unsaturated compotmds with Hugh Stott Taylor (6 February 1890-17 April 1974) and at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, he discussed the field of electrocapillary phenomena with Karl Ferdinand Herzfeld (February 24, 1892-June 3, 1978). In Philadelphia, he was delighted to meet George Borisovich Kistyakovsky (1900-1982), a chemist with Ukrainian-Jewish roots. [Pg.59]

John William Draper J. Lawrence Smith Samuel W. Johnson Thomas Sterry Hunt Frederick A. Genth... [Pg.456]

Harkins, The KWI] Harkins, William Draper The Kaiser-Wilhelm Institut fiir physikalische Chemie und Elektrochemie, Science 34 (1911), p. 595-597. [Pg.274]


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Draper

Draper, John William

Harkins, William Draper

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