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Royall studies

Royal CoUege of General Practitioners, Oral Contraceptives and Health An Interim Report from the Oral Contraception Study, Pitman Medical, New York, 1974. [Pg.124]

Ronald E. Hester is Professor of Chemistry in the University of York. He was for short periods a research fellow in Cambridge and an assistant professor at Cornell before being appointed to a lectureship in chemistry in York in 1965. He has been a full professor in York since 1983. His more than 300 publications are mainly in the area of vibrational spectroscopy, latterly focusing on time-resolved studies of photoreaction intermediates and on biomolecular systems in solution. He is active in environmental chemistry and is a founder member and former chairman of the Environment Group of the Royal Society of Chemistry and editor of Industry and the Environment in Perspective (RSC, 1983) and Understanding Our Environment (RSC, 1986). As a member of the Council of the UK Science and Engineering Research Council and several of its sub-committees, panels and boards, he has been heavily involved in national science policy and administration. He was, from 1991-93, a member of the UK Department of the Environment Advisory Committee on Hazardous Substances and is currently a member of the Publications and Information Board of the Royal Society of Chemistry. [Pg.100]

The Royal Society, The Nitrogen Cycle of the United Kingdom A Study Group Report, The Royal Society, London, 1983. [Pg.4]

E. Mundt, The Performance of Displacement Ventilation Systems Flxperimental and Theoretical Studies, Stockholm,. Sweden Royal Institute of Technology, 1996... [Pg.624]

Herrlin, M. K. Airflow studies in inultizone buildings, models and applications. Belletin No. 2,3. Stockholm Royal Institute of Technology, Department of Building Services Engineering, 1992. [Pg.1094]

Lord Rayleigh (Royal Institution, London) investigations of the densities of the most important gases and for the discovery of argon in connection with these studies. P. Lenard (Kiel) work on cathode rays. [Pg.1300]

The award of a Beit Memorial Fellowship for medical research in 1933 provided him with more financial security and independence. Stacey moved to London and for the next 3 years worked full-time in Raistrick s laboratory. He was given the task of working on vaccines against typhoid fever. The work was successful eventually and the vaccines were used by the Royal Air Force and also were sent to the Air Force in New Zealand. Also, some advances were made in studies of the carbohydrate components of the vaccines. In addition to this research, he completed, by part-time study, the diploma course in bacteriology. [Pg.6]

Born in Oban, Argyll, in 1960, Duncan Macquarrie studied Pure and Applied Chemistry at the University of Strathclyde, graduating with a first class degree in 1982 and a PhD in 1985. He then moved to York, where he carried out research in Phase Transfer Catalysis. He subsequently spent time in industry, where he worked in the UK and abroad, mostly in synthetic chemistry, but always with an interest in method development and catalysis. He returned to York in 1995 to take up a Royal Society University Research Fellowship, and has developed a range of novel catalysts for green chemistry. He is Associate Editor of Green Chemistry, and a National Member of Council with the Royal Society of Chemistry. [Pg.187]

Born in London, Paul May grew up in Redditch, Worcestershire. He went on to study at Bristol University, where he graduated with a first class honours in chemistry in 1985. He then joined GEC Hirst Research Centre in Wembley where he worked on semiconductor processing for three years, before returning to Bristol to study for a PhD in plasma etching of semiconductors. His PhD was awarded in 1991, and he then remained at Bristol to co-found the CVD diamond research group. In 1992 he was awarded a Ramsay Memorial Fellowship to continue the diamond work, and after that a Royal Society University Fellowship. In October 1999 he became a full-time lecturer in the School of Chemistry at Bristol. He is currently 36 years old. His scientific interests include diamond films, plasma chemistry, interstellar space dust, the internet and web technology. His recreational interests include table-tennis, science fiction, and heavy metal music. [Pg.188]

Armstrong, H. E., Armstrong, F. and Horton, E. 1912. Herbage studies. 1. Lotus comiculatus, a cyanophoiic plant. Proc. Royal Soc. Series B 84 471 84. [Pg.302]

Okamoto K and Yoshinaga J (1999) Proper use of reference materials for elemental speciation studies. In Fajgelt A and Parkany M, eds. The use of matrix reference materials in environmental analytical processes, pp 46-56. Royal Sodety of Chemistry, Cambridge. [Pg.18]

Karaali, A., Meydanoglu, F., and Eke, D. (1988). Studies on composition, freeze-drying and storage of Turkish royal jelly. /. Apicult. Res. 27,182-185. [Pg.129]


See other pages where Royall studies is mentioned: [Pg.416]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.325]    [Pg.1048]    [Pg.1225]    [Pg.1226]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.501]    [Pg.862]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.425]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.110]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.83 , Pg.129 ]




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