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Jean Paul

I am grateful to several reviewers and commentators for uncovering misprints, omissions and factual errors which I have been able to correct in this printing. My thanks go especially to Masahiro Koiwa in Japan, Jean-Paul Poirier and Jean Philibert in France, Jack Westbrook and Arne Hessenbruch in the United States. [Pg.582]

Valerie Briois, Christian Brouder 2 Philippe Sainctavit Alfonso San Miguel, Jean-Paul Itie" and Alain Polian ... [Pg.447]

Jean-Paul Picard, Silylmethylamines and Their Derivatives Chemistry and... [Pg.467]

Many thanks are due to Mr. Jean-Paul Lepoutre (Laboratoire des ArSmes et des Substances Naturelles, BPV, INRA, Montpellier, France) for EIMS and CIMS analyses and to Dr. Malcolm O Neill (Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, The University of Georgia, USA) for his help in the identification of TMS derivatives. [Pg.77]

If we compare liquefaction to maceration, more activities are needed to liquefy the cell wall. Since 1991, new pectinases activities such as rhamnogalacturonase, pectin acetylesterase and xyloglucanases complex have been found to be important in the apple liquefaction by Henck Schols, Jean-Paul Vincken and Voragen [3]. The cellulose-xyloglucan complex accounts approximatively 57% of the apple cell-wall matrix. In a liquefaction process, an efficient enzymic degradation of this complex is crucial to increase the sugars extraction, to decrease the viscosity of the pulp then to be able to ultra-filtrate the juice without second depectinisation, at last to have negative alcohol tests required by some concentrate customers. [Pg.457]

Willard, Thomas S. Review of Histoire de I esoterisme et des sciences occultes, by Jean-Paul Corsetti. In Cauda Pavonis 11, no. 2 (Fall 1992) 13-14.. ... [Pg.513]

Fortunately for a poor, would-be chemist like Leblanc, France s aristocratic passion for the physical sciences crossed economic, social, and political borders. Intellectuals such as Rousseau and Diderot cultivated the sciences with enthusiasm and compiled encyclopedias and dictionaries of natural substances. Local academies and institutes in the far-flung provinces sponsored chemical studies. Crowds flocked to hear chemists lecture and to watch their flashy laboratory demonstrations. Even the future revolutionary, Jean-Paul Marat, experimented with fire, electricity, and light and tried—in vain—to become a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences. In America, Benjamin Franklin abandoned his printing and publishing business for physics, and in England his friend Jane Marcet wrote Mrs Marcet s Conversations in Chemistry for women and working-class men. [Pg.2]

Artis, Jean-Paul Henrio, Jean-Frangois Automotive Radar Development Methodology, International Conference on Radar Systems, Brest, France, 1999. [Pg.321]

Thomas Ruiz-Argueso,Jean-Paul Schwitzguebel, Mylene Talabardon, Esther van Praag and PingYong... [Pg.199]

Mylene Talabardon, Jean-Paul Schwitzguebel and Paul Peringer... [Pg.211]

Odors affect human behavior more than we realize. They are now appreciated as important in human health and disease. Above all, the powerful role of learning is impressive. Odors become associated with pleasant and unpleasant experiences and can retain their hedonic value lifelong. This applies to food, to social and sexual relationships, and to environments such as houses, workplaces, or landscapes. Writers rather than scientists have described such anecdotes. In Remembrances of Things Past, Marcel Proust evoked a flood of childhood memories by the taste of a madeleine dipped in lime-blossom tea. Jean-Paul Sartre tells in his autobiography Les Mots how the halitosis of his grade-school teacher became to him the odor of authority. [Pg.418]

Christophe Romier, Jean-Marie Wurtz, Jean-Paul Renaud, and Jean Cavarelli... [Pg.23]

Wilhelmjs H. J. Boesten, Jean-Paul G. Seerden, Ben de Lange, l Mubertus J. A, Dielemans, Henk L M. Elsenberg, Bernard Kaptein, ... [Pg.53]

Jean-Paul Marat, for one, helped bring about the chemist s execution. Marat was also a scientist, and he had been denied admission to the Academy of Science due to Lavoisier s denunciation of his experiments on combustion. It should be noted that Marat s later turn against the chemist and the academy bears elements of a personal vendetta. [Pg.187]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.26 , Pg.27 ]




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Jeans

Marat, Jean-Paul

Sartre, Jean-Paul

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