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         Hoffmann Roald:     more books (46)
  1. Chemical Sciences in the 20th Century: Bridging Boundaries
  2. Ukrainian Nobel Laureates: Roald Hoffmann, Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Selman Waksman, Simon Kuznets
  3. Galician Jews: Stanislaw Ulam, Roald Hoffmann, Billy Wilder, Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Karl Radek, Hugo Steinhaus, Melanie Klein
  4. Ukrainian-American Jews: Noam Chomsky, Isaac Stern, Roald Hoffmann, Fred Savage, Danny Kaye, Leonard Nimoy, Norman Granz, Bugsy Siegel
  5. Biography - Hoffmann, Roald (1937-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2002-01-01
  6. Roald Hoffmann
  7. Polish Nobel Laureates: Marie Curie, Menachem Begin, Wislawa Szymborska, Lech Walesa, Roald Hoffmann, Henryk Sienkiewicz, Czeslaw Milosz
  8. Polish Physical Chemists: Roald Hoffmann, Ferdynand Antoni Ossendowski, Józef Zawadzki, Jan Zawidzki
  9. Theoretischer Chemiker: Robert Ghormley Parr, Linus Carl Pauling, Peter Debye, Joachim Sauer, Roald Hoffmann, Peter Schuster, Ralf Ludwig (German Edition)
  10. Harvard Centennial Medal Recipients: Margaret Atwood, E. O. Wilson, John Adams, Roald Hoffmann, James Tobin, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Sandra Faber
  11. Sloan Research Fellowships: John Forbes Nash, Jr., Richard Feynman, Roald Hoffmann, Murray Gell-Mann, John Milnor, William Thurston
  12. Stuyvesant High School Alumni: Paul Cohen, Roald Hoffmann, James Cagney, Thelonious Monk, Samuel P. Huntington, Bob Frankston, Hubert Selby
  13. International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science Members: Linus Pauling, Louis de Broglie, Edward Teller, Robert S. Mulliken, Roald Hoffmann
  14. Polish-American Jews: Arthur Miller, Benny Goodman, Jack Ruby, Jerzy Kosinski, Stanislaw Ulam, Michael Bloomberg, Roald Hoffmann, Fred Savage

21. Hoffmann, Roald. The American Heritage® Dictionary Of The English Language: Fou
hoffmann, roald. SYLLABICATION Hoff·mann. PRONUNCIATION h f m n, hôf män.DATES Born 1937. Polishborn American chemist. He shared a 1981 nobel Prize for
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22. The Same And Not The Same; ; Roald Hoffmann
nobel laureate roald Hoffman confronts Expertly weaving together examples from theworlds of art, literature, and philosophy, hoffmann illustrates his
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023110/0231101392.HTM
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January, 1997
paper
294 pages
121 illus
ISBN:
Columbia University Press
September, 1995
cloth
294 pages
ISBN: Columbia University Press New Book Bulletins
The Same and Not the Same
Roald Hoffmann "Hoffmann . . . has never given up his lifelong campaign to illuminate the beauties of chemistry for the unenlightened . . . . The Same and Not the Same consists of roughly equal parts art and science, and its relaxed style, uncomplicated explanations, and clever illustrations could qualify it as a primer for chemistry haters." Biologist Nobel laureate Roald Hoffman confronts some of the major ethical controversies in chemistry today. Expertly weaving together examples from the worlds of art, literature, and philosophy, Hoffmann illustrates his uniquely accessible dialectic about the creative activity of chemists. For more information, please contact Customer Service
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23. Science In Poland - Nobel Prize Laureates
1980, Czeslaw MILOSZ, Literature. 1981, roald hoffmann, Chemistry. 1983, LechWALESA, Peace. ? ? ? ? Results from searching of The nobel Foundation's database.
http://main.amu.edu.pl/~zbzw/ph/sci/pl-nobel.html
Polish-origin
Nobel Prize
Laureates
Year Person Discipline Maria SKLODOWSKA-CURIE Physics Henryk SIENKIEWICZ Literature Albert Abraham MICHELSON Physics Maria SKLODOWSKA-CURIE Chemistry Walther Hermann NERNST Chemistry Wladyslaw Stanislaw REYMONT Literature Tadeus REICHSTEIN Physiology or Medicine Maria GOEPPERT-MAYER Physics Shmuel Yosef AGNON Literature Andrew V. SCHALLY Physiology or Medicine Isaac Bashevis SINGER Literature Menachem BEGIN Peace Czeslaw MILOSZ Literature Roald HOFFMANN Chemistry Lech WALESA Peace Klaus von KLITZING Physics Georges CHARPAK Physics Shimon PERES Peace Józef ROTBLAT Peace Wislawa SZYMBORSKA Literature Günter GRASS Literature Günter BLOBEL Physiology or Medicine WHO NEXT?
Results from searching of
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's database
Please also visit page Famous Polish discoveres, travelers and scientists
Physics 1903
The prize was divided, one half being awarded to:
BECQUEREL, ANTOINE HENRI, France, École Polytechnique, Paris, * 1852, + 1908:
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his discovery of spontaneous radioactivity"
the other half jointly to:
CURIE, PIERRE, France, École municipale de physique et de chimie industrielles, (Municipal School of Industrial Physics and Chemistry), Paris, * 1859, + 1906:

24. University Of Westminster
nobel laureate Professor roald hoffmann presented the first in a series of lecturescelebrating the centenary of the nobel Prize at the University of
http://www.wmin.ac.uk/news.asp?ID=194

25. HotWired: Intelligent Agent - "Nobel Chemist On Nanotechnology"
nobel Chemist on Nanotechnology Dr. roald hoffmann has made numerous contributionsin the field of chemistry, most notably in geometrical structure and
http://www.foresight.org/Hotwired.all.files/Nano/url22.html
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Reprinted with permission from Foresight Update 20 (foresight@cup.portal.com): Nobel Chemist on Nanotechnology
Dr. Roald Hoffmann has made numerous contributions in the field of chemistry, most notably in geometrical structure and reactivity of molecules. His contributions have earned him numerous honors, including the 1981 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He is currently a professor of chemistry at Cornell University, focusing in the area of applied theoretical chemistry. He is also on the technical advisory board of Molecular Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. (MMEI). Here he gives his initial and expanded reactions to the goal of nanotechnology:
The first reaction is "I'm glad you guys [that includes women, of course] found a new name for chemistry. Now you have the incentive to learn what you didn't want to learn in college." Chemists have been practicing nanotechnology, structure and reactivity and properties, for two centuries, and for 50 years by design.
What is exciting about modern nanotechnology is (a) the marriage of chemical synthetic talent with a direction provided by "device-driven" ingenuity coming from engineering, and (b) a certain kind of courage provided by those incentives, to make arrays of atoms and molecules that ordinary, no, extraordinary chemists just wouldn't have thought of trying. Now they're pushed to do so.

26. Jewish Nobel Prize Laureates - Chemistry
Year, nobel Laureate, Country of birth. 1981, hoffmann, roald for their theories,developed independently, concerning the course of chemical reactions , Poland.
http://www.science.co.il/Nobel-Chemistry.asp
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Nobel Prize Subject Biomedical Chemistry Economics Physics ... Literature Sort options Country Name Year Order A - Z Z - A Show citation Yes No
Jewish Laureates of Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Year Nobel Laureate Country of birth Heeger, Alan J.
"for the discovery and development of conductive polymers" USA Kohn, Walter
"for his development of the density-functional theory" Austria Olah, George A.
"for his contribution to carbonation chemistry" Hungary Marcus, Rudolph A.
"for his contributions to the theory of electron transfer reactions in chemical systems" Canada Altman, Sidney
"for their discovery of catalytic properties of RNA" Canada Hauptman, Herbert A.
"for their development of direct methods for the determination of crystal structures" USA Karle, Jerome
"for their development of direct methods for the determination of crystal structures" USA Klug, Sir Aaron
"for his development of crystallographic electron microscopy and his structural elucidation of biologically important nuclei acid-protein complexes" Lithuania Hoffmann, Roald

27. Harapan's Bookshelf: Nobel Prize 1981Chemistry
nobel Prize 1981 Chemistry last updated on 02/02/25. Fukui, Kyoto University, Kyoto,Japan, and the other half to Professor roald hoffmann, Cornell University
http://www.harapan.co.jp/english/e_books/E_B_nobel_che81_e.htm
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Amazon.com customer service Amazon.com Shipping Information Are you in Japan? Are you interested in Japan? English Books in Japan Books in Japanese Nobel Prize 1981: Chemistry last updated on jointly to
Professor Kenichi Fukui , Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan, and the other half to
Professor Roald Hoffmann , Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA,
for their theories, developed independently, concerning the course of chemical reactions press release
Frontier Orbitals and Reaction Paths : Selected Papers of Kenichi Fukui (World Scientific Series in 20th Century Chemistry, Vol 7)
Kenichi Fukui(Editor), et al / Hardcover / Published 1997
An Einstein Dictionary
Sachi Sri Kantha, Kenichi Fukui (Introduction) / Hardcover / Published 1996
Theory of Orientation and Stereoselection (Reactivity and Structure Concepts in Organic Chemistry, Vol 2)
Kenichi Fukui / Hardcover / Published 1975
Roald Hoffmann
Chemistry Imagined : Reflections on Science
Roald Hoffmann, et al / Paperback / Published 1995

28. Adelphi University's Jerry March Memorial Lecture Presents Dr. Roald Hoffmann
roald hoffmann shared the nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1981 with Kenichi Fukui, andhas won fame for communicating science to nonscientists as an accomplished
http://events.adelphi.edu/whatsnew/20020925.shtml
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29. Hoffmann, Roald
hoffmann, roald 1937, American chemist, b. Poland, Ph.D. Harvard Univ., 1962. themechanics of chemical reactions led to his sharing the nobel Prize in
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    Hoffmann, Roald 1937-, American chemist, b. Poland, Ph.D. Harvard Univ., 1962. After receiving his degree and working with Robert Woodward at Harvard (1962-65), he became (1965) a professor at Cornell Univ. His work analyzing the mechanics of chemical reactions led to his sharing the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1981 with Fukui Kenichi of Japan.
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  • 30. Oxygen, By Carl Djerassi And Roald Hoffmann Information - Ohio State Events Cale
    Event Oxygen, by Carl Djerassi and roald hoffmann. Date and time March 4, 2003800 PM. Information The nobel Foundation decides to award a retronobel for
    http://www.acs.ohio-state.edu/events/eventView.php?Event_ID=70415

    31. Oxygen, By Carl Djerassi And Roald Hoffmann Information - Ohio State Events Cale
    Event Oxygen, by Carl Djerassi and roald hoffmann. Date and time March 5, 2003800 PM. Information The nobel Foundation decides to award a retronobel for
    http://www.acs.ohio-state.edu/events/eventView.php?Event_ID=70416

    32. Poet, Nobel Prize-winning Chemist Relates Disciplines Of Science, Art
    roald hoffmann is an exception. The nobel prizewinning chemist and accomplishedpoet spoke at Winona State Oct. 23 as part of the 2000-2001 Lyceum Series.
    http://studentclubs.winona.edu/winonan/11-1-00/hoffmann111000.htm
    The Winonan November 1, 2000 Man of two worlds Poet, Nobel Prize-winning chemist relates disciplines of science, art Amanda Leonhardt Winonan The worlds of science and poetry rarely come together, especially in the form of one person. Roald Hoffmann is an exception. The Nobel prize-winning chemist and accomplished poet spoke at Winona State Oct. 23 as part of the 2000-2001 Lyceum Series. Hoffmann, a professor of both chemistry and human letters at Cornell University, gave a public lecture titled "One Culture: The Commonalties and Differences between the Arts and the Sciences." "What unites these two cultures is that they produce objects of human creation. Artifacts man and woman made," Hoffmann said. He continued to draw similarities between the disciplines by emphasizing that both scientists and poets seek to find the truth. "All are absorbed by a search for understanding," he said. "It’s really one culture — to understand the world." In addition to an evening lecture, Hoffmann spoke to students and faculty during two afternoon sessions. During the first, "Molecular Beauty," he explained why scientists find beauty in molecules. A later discussion featured reading of some of his poetry and an explanation on his work as a scientist and a poet.

    33. HWS Chemistry Majors Meet Nobel Prize Laureates
    Professor roald hoffmann, nobel in Chemistry 1981, hosted the First Year SeminarClass for lunch and a tour of his research laboratories at Cornell University.
    http://people.hws.edu/parish/nobel.htm
    HWS Chemistry majors meet Nobel Prize Laureates!!!!! Professor Roald Hoffmann, Nobel in Chemistry 1981, hosted the First Year Seminar Class for lunch and a tour of his research laboratories at Cornell University. In this picture Professor Hoffmann was describing the Woodward-Hoffmann rules for cycloaddition to HWS students. Students meet Professor E.J. Corey, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 1990, at the Boston American Chemical Society meeting. Students meet Gertrude Elion, Nobel Laureate in Medicine 1988, at the Boston American Chemical Society meeting. Sadly, Ms. Elion passed away recently. Students meet Professor Glenn Seaborg, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 1951, at the Boston American Chemical Society meeting. Sadly, Professor Seaborg passed away not too long after this photo was taken. Students meet Professor Roald Hoffmann, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 1981, at the Boston American Chemical Society meeting.

    34. The Scientist - Nobelist Roald Hoffmann: Chemist, Poet, Above All Teacher
    s note Next spring, Cornell University professor roald hoffmann will be For hoffmann,52, it won’t be his first He is a nobel laureate, having won the 1981
    http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1989/dec/opin1_891211.html
    The Scientist 3[24]:13, Dec. 11, 1989
    OPINION
    Nobelist Roald Hoffmann: Chemist, Poet, Above All Teacher
    By Born in Poland in 1937 to “a happy Jewish family in dark days in Europe,” Hoffmann emigrated to the United States with his mother and stepfather in 1949 after spending two years in a labor camp and another year in hiding in the attic of a schoolhouse near his hometown of Zloczow. After completing his elementary education in New York City, he went on to Stuyvesant High School, one of the city’s selective science schools. He received his B.A. in chemistry from Columbia University in 1958 and from there went on to Harvard to earn his doctorate in chemical physics four years later. Hoffmann was only 28 when he made a name for himself with the Woodward-Hoffmann rules, a set of guidelines for determining whether and how thermal and photochemical reactions occur, and his use of molecular theory to predict chemical actuality is recognized as one of this century’s great contributions to his field. In the following interview with contributing editor Julia King, Hoff mann talks about his multifaceted career as a theorist, scientist, teacher, and poet, and shares his thoughts on the current state of science literacy and education. He also offers readers an idea of what they might expect next from a scientist who has spent a lifetime reflecting about the relation between science and human values, and the behavior of molecules and people.]

    35. Nobel Conference® XXXVII
    roald hoffmann 1981 nobel Prize in Chemistry Cornell University,roald hoffmann shared the 1981 nobel Prize in chemistry for his
    http://www.gustavus.edu/events/nobel/archive/2001/participants/hoffmann.html
    Roald Hoffmann
    1981 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
    Cornell University
    Roald Hoffmann shared the 1981 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his theory—expressed in a set of statements now called the Woodward-Hoffman rules—"concerning the course of chemical reactions." He has discovered that many reactions involving the formation or breaking of rings of atoms take courses that depend on an identifiable symmetry in the electronic structures of the reactants. The theory accounts for the failure of certain compounds to form from apparently appropriate starting materials.
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    Participants Schedule ... Gustavus Homepage
    Nobel Conference is a registered trademark of Gustavus Adolphus College.

    36. Roald Hoffmann - CIRS
    Dr. roald hoffmann has made numerous contributions in the field of chemistry Awards 1981 nobel Laureate in Chemistry for his theories, developed independently
    http://www.cirs.net/researchers/Chemistry/hoffmann.htm
    HOFFMANN, ROALD rh34@cornell.edu Hoffmann is currently a professor of chemistry at Cornell University , Ithaca, NY, USA. Research interests : Applied theoretical chemistry Dr. Roald Hoffmann has made numerous contributions in the field of chemistry, most notably in geometrical structure and reactivity of molecules. His group looks at the electronic structure of molecules of any complexity, whether organic or inorganic, discrete molecular structures, or extended arrays in one, two, or three dimensions. They are interested in why they have the structures they do, how they might react, and whether they are stable or good conductors. Awards :
    1981 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
    for his theories, developed independently, concerning the course of chemical reactions.
    American Chemical Society Priestley Medal; Arthur C. Cope Award in Organic Chemistry; Inorganic Chemistry Award; Pimentel Award in Chemical Education; Award in Pure Chemistry
    Monsanto Award
    National Medal of Science
    National Academy of Sciences Selected publications :
    Vajenine, G. V.; Hoffmann, R. Magic electron counts for networks of condensed clusters: Vertex-sharing aluminum octahedra. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1998, 120, 4200.

    37. Bloomfield Science Museum Jerusalem/Roald Hoffmann
    There could hardly be a better counterexample than to roald hoffmann to the popular Hisquality as a scientist is attested by his 1981 nobel Prize in Chemistry
    http://www.mada.org.il/website/html/eng/2_1_1-19.htm
    Birthdate July 18
    Roald Hoffmann,
    (b. 18.7.1937) (American) There could hardly be a better counter-example than to Roald Hoffmann to the popular image of a dry, white-coated scientist interested only in molecules and equations. His quality as a scientist is attested by his 1981 Nobel Prize in Chemistry , but he is also a populariser of science at the deepest level, warmly committed to the welfare of mankind and a successful poet.
    His background encapsulates the modern history of the Jews of Eastern Europe. He was borne in Zloczow in the area known as "The Pale of the Settlement". The town had been in Austria-Hungary when his parents were born there, was in Poland when he was born, and is now Russian. His "happy Jewish family" was destroyed by the German occupation. He was transported with his parents to a ghetto and then to a labour camp. His father succeeded in smuggling him and his mother out of the camp and they were hidden by a kind Ukrainian in the attic of a schoolhouse until they were liberated by the Red Army in 1944. The father, who had remained behind in the camp, had been executed by the Nazis for attempting to organise a mass break-out from the camp.
    From the Ukraine the mother and son eventually found their way via Czechoslovakia, Austria and Germany to The United States, where English became his sixth language, and the one in which he would eventually write all of his science and his

    38. Premios Nobel De Química
    Premios nobel de Química. Año, Tema, Ganador. 1901, Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't. 1981,Fukui, Kenichi; hoffmann, roald. 1982, Klug, Sir Aaron. 1983, Taube, Henry.
    http://fai.unne.edu.ar/biologia/nobeles/nobelq~1.htm
    Tema Ganador Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't Fischer, Hermann Emil Arrhenius, Svante August Ramsay, Sir William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Von Moissan, Henri Buchner, Eduard Rutherford, Lord Ernest Ostwald, Wilhelm Wallach, Otto Curie, Marie Grignard, Victor; Sabatier, Paul Werner, Alfred Richards, Theodore William Willstatter, Richard Martin Haber, Fritz Nernst, Walther Hermann Soddy, Frederick Aston, Francis William Pregl, Fritz Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf Svedberg, The Wieland, Heinrich Otto Windaus, Adolf Otto Reinhold Euler-chelpin, Hans Karl August Von; Harden, Sir Arthur Fischer, Hans Bergius, Friedrich; Bosch, Carl Langmuir, Irving Urey, Harold Clayton Joliot, Frederic; Joliot-Curie, Irene Debye, Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus Haworth, Sir Walter Norman; Karrer, Paul Kuhn, Richard Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann; Ruzicka, Leopold De Hevesy, George Hahn, Otto Virtanen, Artturi Ilmari Northrop, John Howard; Stanley, Wendell Meredith; Sumner, James Batcheller Robinson, Sir Robert

    39. Sito Web Italiano Per La Filosofia-ROALD HOFFMANN
    Translate this page roald hoffmann. Il Sole 24 Ore-8 DICEMBRE 2002 Auguri di buona Serendipity Il Sole24 Ore-17 OTTOBRE 1999 nobel e Ignobel Un premio anche al creazionismo.
    http://lgxserver.uniba.it/lei/rassegna/hoffmann.htm

    INDICE DEI NOMI
    ROALD HOFFMANN Il Sole 24 Ore 8 DICEMBRE 2002
  • Auguri di buona Serendipity
    Robert Merton racconta le avventure spesso nascoste dai resoconti ufficiali, delle scoperte avvenute per caso.
    span>Come la doppia elica del Dna
    Il conflitto d'interessi tra maschio e femmina, le conchiglie come parte integrante della nostra civiltà e l'universo prima del Big Bang
    di ARMANDO MASSARENTI
    Il Messaggero 25 AGOSTO 2001
  • E il professor Freud mise la letteratura sul lettino
    di GIUSEPPE SALTINI
    Il manifesto 7 LUGLIO 2001
  • Dolce come il veleno
    "Zarathustra" e il morso del serpente nell'originale interpretazione di Graziano Biondi
    Il segreto svelato, iniziazione dionisiaca, ritorno alla vita e accettazione del proprio tramonto. E' "L'enigma della serpe secondo Nietzsche", per manifestolibri
    di AUGUSTO ILLUMINATI
    Il Messaggero 28 GENNAIO 2000
  • INTERVISTA A HANS GEORG GADAMER
    di TITTI MARRONE
    Il Sole 24 Ore 17 OTTOBRE 1999
  • Nobel e IgNobel
    Un premio anche al creazionismo di SYLVIE COYAUD
  • 40. Nobel Prize Winning Chemists
    roald hoffmann came to a happy Jewish family in dark days in Europe. and gentle fatherto him until his death, two moths prior to the nobel Prize announcement.
    http://www.sanbenito.k12.tx.us/district/webpages2002/judymedrano/Nobel Winners/r
    Nobel Prize Winning Chemists Roald Hoffman The Nobel Prize In Chemistry 1981 He got a scholarship from P. O. Lowdin's Quantum Chemistry Group at Uppsala to attend a Summer School. The school was held at Lindigo, an island outside of Stockholm. He met Eva Borjesson who had a summer job as a receptionist at the school, and they were married the following year. He has received many of the honors of his profession. He is especially proud that in addition to the American Chemical Society's A. C. Cope Award in Organic Chemistry, which I received jointly with R. B. Woodward in 1973, he was selected for the Society's Award in Inorganic chemistry in 1982, the only person to receive these two awards in different subfields of our science. He was awarded the Nobel Prize jointly with Kenichi Fukui in 1981 "for their theories, developed independently, concerning the course of chemical reactions". The 1962-65 period was creative in other ways as well: Our two children, Hillel Jan and Ingrid Helena , were born to Eva and him.

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