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Scott: Walter

Scott, Walter, editor and translator. Hermetica The Ancient Greek and Latin Writings Which Contain Religious or Philosophic Teachings Ascribed to Hermes Trismegistus Vol. I. Boston Shambhala Publications, 2001. [Pg.131]

The CCPS RASC was chaired by Dennis C. Hendershot (Rohm 8i Haas Company), and committee members included Daniel A. Crowl (Michigan Technological University), Scott W. Ostrowski (Exxon Mobil Chemical), Randy Ereeman (Solutia, and subsequently, EQE), William Lutz (Union Carbide), Chuck Eryman (EMC Corporation), Della Wong (NOVA Chemicals), Walter Silowka (Air Products and Chemicals, Inc.), William Tilton (DuPont), Arthur Woltman (Shell), and Thomas Gibson (CCPS). [Pg.87]

Chen J, Lake MR, Sabet RS, Niforatos W, Pratt SD, Cassar SC, Xu J, Gopalakrishnan S, Pereda-Lopez A, Gopalakrishnan M, Holzman TF, Moreland RB, Walter KA, Faltynek CR, Warrior U, Scott VE (2007) J Biomol Screen 12 61... [Pg.82]

And how Walter Scott makes his Shakespeare-date people talk is different again, being halfway between then and now... ... [Pg.258]

Hermes Trismegistus.Hermetica the writings attributed to Hermes Trismegistus edited and translated by Walter Scott. Edited by Walter Scott. Oxford Clarendon P,... [Pg.480]

Faraday first extracted benzene (which he called bicarbonate of hydrogen ) from distillates of whale and codfish oil obtained from Sir Walter Scott, the writer see M. Miller, Michael Faraday and the Dynamo (Philadelphia, Clinton Book Co., 1968), p. 124. [Pg.356]

Poetry often uses words in unexpected ways. This forces the reader to consider the deeper meanings of words, while also reflecting on the idea that the poet hopes to get across. Consider both the words and the ideas in this poem by Sir Walter Scott. [Pg.165]

I thank the following for their direct contributions in the preparation of this paper Charles Overberger, Ray Seymour, Paul Flory, James Scott Long, Zeno Wicks, Maurice Huggins, A1 Zettle-moyer, Walter Stockmayer, Fred Elrich, Fred Billmeyer, Malcolm Renfrew, Carl Marvel and Malcolm Dole and Edgar Hardy for suggestions as to how to develop the presented material. [Pg.142]

F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby [1925] (New York Macmillan, 1991), pp. 17,137 Walter Benn Michaels, Our America Nativism, Modernism, and Pluralism (Durham Duke University Press, 1995), pp. 23-29. [Pg.322]

Jacobs, Jewish Statistics, pp. v, xiv Efron, Defenders, pp. 79-80 Maurice Fishberg, The Jews A Study of Race and Environment (n.l. Walter Scott, 1911) Sander Gilman, The Case of Sigmund Freud Medicine and Identity at the Fin de Siecle (Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993), pp. 11-68 Sander Gilman, Freud, Race, and Gender (Princeton Princeton University Press, 1993), pp. 12-48. [Pg.332]

Murray JB, Seyhan AA, Walter NG, Burke JM, Scott WG (1998) Chem Biol 5 587 O Rear JL, Wang S, Feig AL, Beigelman L, Uhlenbeck OC, Herschlag D (2001) RNA 7 537... [Pg.249]

Weeks, M. E., Some scientific friends of Sir Walter Scott, J. Chem. Educ,... [Pg.231]

Although the statement that nitrogen was discovered tn 1772 by Daniel Rutherford appears in most histories of chemistry, this Scottish scientist has remained almost unknown to chemists. Nevertheless, the life story and personal character of Dr. Rutherford emerge from the correspondence of his distinguished nephew, Sir Walter Scott, in a most pleasing manner. Both Dr. Rutherford and his father served as physicians to the Scott family, and the great novelist s allusions to them combine admiration, sincere affection, and pardonable family pride. [Pg.235]

The correspondence of Sir Walter Scott, his family genealogy, and the ten-volume biography by his son-in-law, J. G. Lockhart, contain frequent allusions to Scott s grandfather, Dr. John Rutherford, one of the founders of the medical school at the University of Edinburgh, and to his uncle, Dr. Daniel Rutherford, who is usually regarded as the discoverer of the element nitrogen. In the genealogy of the Scott family one may read ... [Pg.235]

By his first wife, Jean Swinton, Professor John Rutherford had a son, John, who died young, and a daughter Anne, who married0 Walter Scott, writer to the Signet, and became the mother of Sir Walter Scott Bart. He married, secondly, on the 9th August, 1743, Anne M Kay, by whom he had five sons and three daughters.. . . Daniel Rutherford, second son of Professor John Rufcher-... [Pg.235]

Sir Walter Scott gave some of the same facts in the following passage from his autobiography ... [Pg.236]

As might be expected, the Rutherfords, both father and son, served as physicians to the Scott family. When Sir Walter was only eighteen months old, Ins right leg became paralyzed, and, after the best physicians had failed in their attempts to restore the use of it, his grandfather, Dr. John Rutherford, had him sent to live in the country (3, 4). During a serious illness in later life, Scott submitted without a murmur to the severe discipline prescribed by his affectionate physician [Dr. Daniel] Rutherford. . . (5). [Pg.236]

According to Florence MacCunn, both Sir Walter Scott and his mother inherited their homely features and look of good-tempered shrewdness from old Dr. Rutherford, whose homely, heavy, sensible face hangs in the rooms of the Edinburgh College of Physicians (8). [Pg.237]

Sir Walter Scott, 1771-1832. Scottish novelist and poet. His writings contain many interesting allusions to his uncle, Dr. Daniel Rutherford. Scott s circle of friends included Dr William Hyde Wollaston, Sir David Brewster, Dr. John Davy, Sir Humphry Davy, and Joseph Black. [Pg.239]

In 1786 Rutherford was appointed successor to John Hope, the professor of botany at the University of Edinburgh, and in the same year he was married to Harriet Mitchelson of Middleton (I). With pardonable family pride, Sir Walter Scott once said that Dr. Rutherford ought to have had the chemistry class, as he was one of the best chemists in Europe ... [Pg.244]

Rogers, C, Genealogical Memoirs of the Family of Sir Walter Scott, Bart, of... [Pg.249]

MacCunn, F., Sir Walter Scott s Friends, Wm. Blackwood Sons, Edin-... [Pg.249]

Cornet Walter Scott), Boweb, History of the University of Edinburgh, Vol. 3 1830, pp. 260-1. Quoted by Lockhart. [Pg.250]

Douglas, David, Familiar Letters of Sir Walter Scott, Vol. 1, Houghton... [Pg.250]

On February 21, 1809, Hatchett became a member of the famous Literary Club which had been founded in 1764 by Dr. Samuel Johnson and Sir Joshua Reynolds (51). As treasurer of the club, Hatchett prepared a brief historical account of it, which appears in Boswell s Life of Johnson (25). The club also included, among others, Edmund Burke, Oliver Goldsmith, David Garrick, Edward Gibbon, Adam Smith, Sir Joseph Banks, Sir Charles Blagden, Sir Humphry Davy, Dr. W. H. Wollaston, Sir Walter Scott, Sir Thomas Lawrence, and Dr. Thomas Young. [Pg.384]

Submitted by JAMES E. HUTCHISON, EVAN W. FOSTER, MARVIN G. WARNER, SCOTT M. REED, and WALTER W. WEARE Checked by WILLIAM BUHRO and HENG YU ... [Pg.228]


See other pages where Scott: Walter is mentioned: [Pg.485]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.948]    [Pg.485]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.948]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.369]    [Pg.480]    [Pg.480]    [Pg.480]    [Pg.481]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.835]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.250]    [Pg.7]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.231 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.152 , Pg.153 , Pg.158 ]




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