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         Hoffmann Roald:     more books (46)
  1. Ukrainian Immigrants to the United States: Isaac Stern, Roald Hoffmann, Theodosius Dobzhansky, Milla Jovovich, Yakov Smirnoff, Israel Gelfand
  2. Priestley Medal: Linus Pauling, Robert S. Mulliken, Peter Debye, Glenn T. Seaborg, Roald Hoffmann, Thomas Midgley, Jr., Carl Djerassi
  3. Theoretical Chemists: Linus Pauling, Robert S. Mulliken, Roald Hoffmann, John Pople, Erich Hückel, Robert Parr, Ilya Prigogine, Kendall Houk
  4. Pericyclic Reactions - A Textbook: Reactions, Applications and Theory by S. Sankararaman, 2005-11-07
  5. Oxigeno. Obra en 2 actos (Spanish Edition) by Djerassi Carl y Roald Hoffmann (coaut.), 2003-12-31
  6. Lo mismo y no lo mismo (Spanish Edition) by Roald Hoffmann, 2000-12-31
  7. Charles Seliger : The Nascent Image : Recent Paintings (an exhibition catalogue). by Charles; Hoffmann, Roald (essay); Harrisburg, Halley K. (interview). Seliger, 1999
  8. Sein Und Schein - Reflexionen Uber Die Chemie (Paper Only) by Roald Hoffmann, 1997-07-31
  9. On poetry & the language of science.: An article from: Daedalus by Roald Hoffmann, 2002-03-22
  10. Química imaginada. Reflexiones sobre la ciencia (Seccion de Obras de Ciencia y Tecnologia) (Spanish Edition) by Roald y Vivian Torrence Hoffmann, 2004-01-01
  11. Creative Solutions to Ecological Issues. By Gail Enid Gelburd. Foreword by Al Gore; preface by Roald Hoffmann. June-Aug. 1993. by Dallas. Dallas Museum of Natural History., 1993
  12. Vino viejo, anforas nuevas. Reflexiones sobre la ciencia y la tradicion judia. by Roald Hoffmann, 2005
  13. The Same and Not the Same. by Roald. Hoffmann, 1995
  14. Optimization of Measurement Techniques for Very Low-Level Radioactive Waste Material by Roald Hoffmann, B. Leidenberger, 1991-12-31

41. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Roald Hoffmann
columnist, roald hoffmann is the Frank HT Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters andprofessor of chemistry at Cornell University. He shared the 1981 nobel Prize
http://www.sigmaxi.org/programs/prizes/mcgovern.hoffmann.shtml
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    Roald Hoffmann
    2001 John P. McGovern Science and Society Award A frequent American Scientist columnist, Roald Hoffmann is the Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters and professor of chemistry at Cornell University. He shared the 1981 Nobel Prize in chemistry with Kenichi Fukui for his work in predicting the course of chemical reactions. Hoffmann's other honors include the Arthur C. Cope Award of the American Chemical Society, the National Medal of Science, the National Academy of Sciences Award in the Chemical Sciences and the Priestly Medal. He has been awarded numerous honorary degrees, from Columbia and Yale universities, among others. Hoffmann graduated from Columbia in 1958 and earned a Ph.D. in chemical physics from Harvard in 1962. He began teaching at Cornell in 1965. He is the author of three books of poetry, including The Metamict State (1987) and Gaps and Verges (1990), both from the University of Central Florida Press, and co-wrote the play Oxygen with distinguished fellow chemist and Sigma Xi member Carl Djerassi. Considered one of the most important chemists in the past 75 years, a designation bestowed on him by , Hoffmann is also esteemed as a stellar educator. He continues to teach freshman introductory chemistry courses each year and has participated in the production of a television course about chemistry. He has also written popular and scholarly articles on science and other subjects.
  • 42. American Scientist Bookshelf - Forced To Choose
    roald hoffmann nobel Prize winner in chemistry; author of, most recently, OldWine, New Flasks and cowriter (with Carl Djerassi) of the play Oxygen.
    http://www.sigmaxi.org/amsci/bookshelf/roald.html
    Forced to Choose
    Participants
    Roald Hoffmann Lynn Margulis John McPhee John Bahcall Donna Shirley ...
    November-December 1999

    Roald Hoffmann Nobel Prize winner in chemistry; author of, most recently, Old Wine, New Flasks and co-writer (with Carl Djerassi) of the play Oxygen. In a 1993 book ( Chemistry Imagined: Reflections on Science In the story of Carver I was fascinated by the transformations he wrought with the peanut and the sweet potato. Ink and coffee from peanuts, rubber and glue from the sweet potato! Perhaps part of the romance was that I had never seen or tasted either peanuts or sweet potatoes. Years have passed. The boy whose interest in science was stirred by German translations of a story of a black American applied scientist and a French-Polish woman chemist is older. He rereads these books, and sees that they are hagiographies. The romance is off the radium. But Marie Curie still makes him cry. Sigma Xi About Us Latest Issue Bookshelf ... Web Admin

    43. Roald Hoffmann - Theoretical Chemistry - Cornell University
    roald hoffmann. 222 Baker Laboratory. PhD, Harvard University, 1962. MA, HarvardUniversity, 1960. BA, Columbia College, 1958. •nobel Prize, 1981 (chemistry
    http://www.chem.cornell.edu/department/Faculty/Hoffmann/hoffmann.html
    Roald Hoffmann 222 Baker Laboratory PhD, Harvard University, 1962 MA, Harvard University, 1960 BA, Columbia College, 1958
    Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters
    Our 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. We are interested in why they have the structures they do, how they might react, and whether they are stable or good conductors. The answers lie in the electronic structure of the molecules. Thus we do molecular orbital calculations, often very simple ones, seeking orbital explanations and relationships between the molecule at hand and any related systems. The following study illustrates our approach: In a February 1995 issue of Angewandte Chemie, W. S. Sheldrick and M. Wachhold published a paper on the synthesis and structure of Cs Te . The beautiful structure of this molecule (fig. 1) displays unusual features. Discrete crown Te entities (well known for sulfur and selenium, they had not been previously observed for tellurium) can be easily identified, as can infinite two-dimensional sheets that are formed by Te atoms and include one Cs atom per six telluriums. If one assumes the Te

    44. JCE 2001 (78) 283 [Mar]
    roald hoffmann Department of Chemistry, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 148531301.We've written a play on the nobel Prizethe ultimate reward in the kudos
    http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/Journal/Issues/2001/Mar/abs283.html
    Oxygen
    Oxygen
    Carl Djerassi
    Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5080 Roald Hoffmann
    Department of Chemistry, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-1301 We've written a play on the Nobel Prizethe ultimate reward in the kudos-driven culture of scienceas well as on a chemical theme, the discovery of the element oxygen. What is discovery? Why is it so important to be first? These are the questions that trouble the people in this play. Oxygen alternates between 1777 and 2001the Centenary of the Nobel Prizewhen the Nobel Foundation decides to inaugurate a "Retro-Nobel" Award for those great discoveries that preceded the establishment of the Nobel Prizes one hundred years before. The Foundation thinks this will be easy, that the Nobel Committees who select the laureates can reach back to a period when science was done for science's sake, when discovery was simple, pure, and unalloyed by controversy, priority claims, and hype.
    Citation : Djerassi, Carl; Hoffmann, Roald. J. Chem. Educ.

    45. JCE 2002 (79) 436 [Apr] Oxygen (by Carl Djerassi And Roald Hoffmann)
    The playwrights, Carl Djerassi and roald hoffmann, are distinguished hoffmann isan essayist and poet whose work the 100th anniversary of the nobel prizes, a
    http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/Journal/Issues/2002/Apr/abs436_1.html
    Oxygen (by Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann)
    reviewed by Jeffrey Kovac
    Department of Chemistry, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996-1600 Wiley-VCH: Weinheim, 2001. viii + 120 pp. ISBN 3-527-30413-4. $14.95. Oxygen, a new play in two acts, which had its premier April 2, 2001, in San Diego in conjunction with the National ACS meeting, has been published in a handsome little volume by Wiley-VCH giving those of us who were unable to see the stage version the opportunity to read the script. The playwrights, Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann, are distinguished chemists who have also pursued literary careers. As a writer Djerassi is probably best known for his autobiographies and novels, especially Cantor's Dilemma, which is part of his "science in fiction" project. Hoffmann is an essayist and poet whose work touches on the creative and human aspects of chemistry as well as its relationship to society and culture. The overall theme of the play is scientific discovery as illustrated by the discovery of oxygen told through two interlocking plots. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Nobel prizes, a committee has been asked to select a chemist to receive a "retro-Nobel" for a discovery that predates the origin of the prizes in 1901. The discussions of this committee comprise one of the stories. The second is an imaginary meeting of Carl Wilhelm Scheele, Joseph Priestley, and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier and their wivesor in the case of Scheele, his housekeeper and future wifein Stockholm in 1777 at an event where the King of Sweden will honor one of them for the discovery of oxygen. Such meetings are a well-known theatrical device. Steve Martin recently imagined a meeting of Einstein and Picasso in Paris in

    46. The College Of Arts And Sciences At Syracuse University
    keynote speakers for the 5th Annual Sojourner Storytelling Conference; and a presentationby poet, playwright, and nobel chemist roald hoffmann, a survivor of
    http://www-hl.syr.edu/news/newssymposium.htm

    47. The College Of Arts And Sciences At Syracuse University
    the keynote speakers for the 5th Annual Sojourner Storytelling Conference; and apresentation by poet, playwright, and nobel chemist roald hoffmann, a survivor
    http://www-hl.syr.edu/news/news.html

    Home
    News and Events College News Current News
    Current News Stories:
    Old News Archives: Masingila Named Among New Meredith Professors By Judy Holmes

    48. Writings Other Than Science Or Poetry Of Roald Hoffmann
    roald hoffmann. 103. A Mission Statement for the nobel Museum ,nobelmuseet Newsletter 4 (1999), roald hoffmann. 104. Chimica
    http://hamiltonian.chem.cornell.edu/roald_otherpub.html
    Writings Other than Science or Poetry of Roald Hoffmann
    Books Chemistry Imagined
    Roald Hoffmann and Vivian Torrence , Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, 1993. The Same and Not the Same Roald Hoffmann , Columbia University Press, New York, 1995. Translated into Korean, German, Chinese, Spanish. Old Wine, New Flasks: Reflections on Science and Jewish Tradition Roald Hoffmann and Shira Leibowitz Schmidt , W.H. Freeman, New York, 1997. Plays
    Oxygen
    Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2001; in German, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2001. 2. Reading at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, on October 6, 1999, by faculty members from the Ithaca College Theater Arts Department, directed by Lee Byron. 3. Staged, rehearsed reading sponsored by Playbrokers at the ODC Theater in San Francisco on December 6, 1999, directed by Ed Hastings. 4. Staged, rehearsed reading at the Tricycle Theatre in London on February 6, 2000, directed by Erica Whyman. 5. Ten performances of a fully rehearsed workshop production at the Eureka Theatre in San Francisco, May 3-14, 2000, directed by Andrea Gordon (co-artistic director, Eureka Theatre) , supported principally by the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, with an additional contribution from the Alafi Foundation. Oxygen: Excerpts from a work in progress Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann , with text by Rachel Nowak, New Scientist , October 16, 8. “Science-in-Theater: Oxygen,” Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann, in Connecting Creations: Science, Technology and the Arts, ed. M.A. Safir, Centro Galego de Arte Contemporanea (CGAC), Santiago de Compostela, Spain, July 2000.

    49. Scientific Publications Of Roald Hoffmann
    roald hoffmann. 188. Building Bridges Between Inorganic and Organic Chemistry, R.hoffmann, in Les Prix nobel 1981, Almqvist and Wiksell, Stockholm 1982.
    http://hamiltonian.chem.cornell.edu/roald_pub1.html
    Scientific Publications of Roald Hoffmann Books The Conservation of Orbital Symmetry R. B. Woodward and R. Hoffmann , Verlag Chemie and Academic Press, Weinheim and New York, 1970. Solids and Surfaces: A Chemist's View of Bonding in Extended Structure s, R. Hoffmann , VCH, New York, 1988. Translated into Russian by A. L. Tchougreev, Mir, Moscow, 1990. Articles
    Quick jump by 5 year block.
    Back to Top 1. Heats of Formation of Hexacalcium Dialumino Ferrite and Dicalcium Ferrite, E. S. Newman and R. Hoffmann J. Res. NBS 2. Efficient Low-Level Counting System for C11, J. B. Cumming and R. Hoffmann Rev. Sci. Inst. Back to Top 3. Theory of Polyhedral Molecules. I. Physical Factorizations of the Secular Equation, R. Hoffmann and W. N. Lipscomb J. Chem. Phys. 4. Theory of Polyhedral Molecules. II. A Crystal Field Model, R. Hoffmann and M. P. Gouterman J. Chem. Phys. 5. Theory of Polyhedral Molecules. III. Population Analyses and Reactivities for the Carboranes, R. Hoffmann and W. N. Lipscomb J. Chem. Phys. 6. The Boron Hydrides; LCAO-MO and Resonance Studies

    50. Other Research Projects Apollo Bioinformatics Molecular
    Senior advisors roald hoffmann (above) nobel Prize winner (Chemistry, 1981)and Frank HT Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters at Cornell University.
    http://hrst.mit.edu/hrs/materials/public/advisors_and_staff.htm
    Other Research Projects: Apollo Bioinformatics Molecular Evolution Physics of Scale Materials Research Activities
    Advisors and staff
    Senior advisors:
    Roald Hoffmann (above): Nobel Prize winner (Chemistry, 1981) and Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters at Cornell University. Larry Holmes (above): Avalon Professor of the History of Medicine at Yale University. His books include Lavoisier and the Chemistry of Life (University of Wisconsin Press, 1985), and the two-volume biography of Hans Krebs Robert Friedel (with the characteristic big smile above) has taught the history of technology and science at the University of Maryland since 1984. Prior to that he was Director of the IEEE Center for the History of Electrical Engineering and a historian at the Smithsonian Institution. His publications range widely; those on materials include contributions on the history of plastics, aluminum, and new materials research in the late 20th century.
    Staff: Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent (center): professor of history and philosophy of science at Paris X University (France). She is the author of several books, including

    51. Untitled Document
    roald hoffmann was born in 1937 in Zloczow, Poland. He has received many of the honorsof his profession, including the 1981 nobel Prize in Chemistry (shared
    http://www.butler.edu/woodslectures/aboutHoffman.htm
    THE SAME AND NOT THE SAME
    BIOGRAPHY Roald Hoffmann was born in 1937 in Zloczow, Poland. Having survived the war, he came to the U. S. in 1949, and studied chemistry at Columbia University and Harvard University (Ph.D. 1962). Since 1965 he is at Cornell University, now as the Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters. He has received many of the honors of his profession, including the 1981 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (shared with Kenichi Fukui). "Applied theoretical chemistry" is the way Roald Hoffmann likes to characterize the particular blend of computations stimulated by experiment and the construction of generalized models, of frameworks for understanding, that is his contribution to chemistry. Dr. Hoffmann also writes essays and poems. Two of his poetry collections, "The Metamict State" (1987) and "Gaps and Verges" (1990), have been published by the University Presses of Florida. In 1993 the Smithsonian Institution Press published "Chemistry Imagined". A unique art/science/literature collaboration of Roald Hoffmann with artist Vivian Torrence, "Chemistry Imagined" reveals the creative and humanistic f sparks of the molecular science. In 1995, Columbia University Press published "The Same and Not the Same", a thoughtful account of the dualities that lie under the surface of chemistry. There will be German, Spanish, Korean, Chinese, and Japanese editions of this book. In 1997 W.H. Freeman published Old Wine, New Flasks; Reflections on Science and Jewish Tradition, by Roald Hoffmann and Shira Leibowitz Schmidt, a book of the intertwined voices of science and religion. Dr. Hoffmann is also is the presenter of a television course, "The World of Chemistry", now aired on many PBS stations and abroad.

    52. Poetry Daily Feature: Roald Hoffmann - Soliton
    Dr. hoffmann received the nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1981 shared with About SolitonIn roald hoffmann's fourth collection of poetry, Soliton, we face the
    http://www.poems.com/solithof.htm
    Malacology
    from Roald Hoffmann's
    Soliton
    Online Bookstore Listing
    Roald Hoffmann: Roald Hoffmann was born in Zloczow, Poland in 1937, survived the Nazi occupation, and arrived in the U.S. in 1949 after several years of post-war wandering in Europe. Since 1965 he has been at Cornell University, where he is now the Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters and professor of chemistry. Dr. Hoffmann received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1981 shared with Kenichi Fukui, and has received numerous awards and honorary degrees.
    Dr. Hoffmann is the author of three other poetry books, The Metamict State, Gaps and Verges , and Memory Effects . (Photo by Vivian Torrence)
    About Soliton In Roald Hoffmann's fourth collection of poetry, Soliton
    "Roald Hoffmann remains a scientist in his poetry, and he is a poet when he teaches science."
    George and Eva Klein Interdisciplinary Science Reviews

    Soliton
    by Roald Hoffmann
    Truman State University Press
    Kirksville, Missouri 62501
    Poetry Daily / Amazon.com
    Selected books available by Roald Hoffmann: Soliton Memory Effects [Back to top] Search Poetry Daily / Amazon.com

    53. International Academy Of Quantum Molecular Science - Members - Roald Hoffmann
    nobel Prize in Chemistry 1981 (with K. Fukui). Wine, New Flasks (with Shira LeibowitzSchmidt) Oxygen (a play by Carl Djerassi and roald hoffmann) The Metamict
    http://www.thch.uni-bonn.de/IAQMS/members/IAQMS.member.Hoffmann.html
    R OALD H OFFMANN Born July 18, 1937 in Zloczow, Poland. Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Cornell University, USA. Email: rh34@cornell.edu American Chemical Society Awards: Pure Chemistry. Arthur C. Cope Award in Organic Chemistry. Nichols Medal. Pauling Award. Award in Inorganic Chemistry. Priestley Medal. Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1981 (with K. Fukui). National Medal of Science. Semenow Medal of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Author of:
      The Conservation of Orbital Symmetry (with R.B. Woodward)
      Solids and Surfaces
      Chemistry Imagined (with Vivian Torrence)
      The Same and Not the Same
      Old Wine, New Flasks (with Shira Leibowitz Schmidt)
      Oxygen (a play by Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann)
      The Metamict State
      Gaps and Verges
      Memory Effects
    Important Contributions:
      "Applied theoretical chemistry" is the way Roald Hoffmann likes to characterize the particular blend of computations stimulated by experiment and the construction of generalized models, of frameworks for understanding, that is his contribution to chemistry. In more than 450 scientific articles he has taught the chemical community new and useful ways to look at the geometry and reactivity of molecules, from organic through inorganic to infinitely extended structures. Dr. Hoffman has recently participated in the production of a television course in introductory chemistry, "The World of Chemistry."

    54. Cornell News: "Oxygen" The Play
    chemists with a passion for theater and the result is Oxygen, a twoact play byCarl Djerassi and roald hoffmann that is set hoffmann, a nobel laureate in
    http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/May00/oxygen.release.html
    Chemists discover "Oxygen" has a life of its own
    Play by renowned scientists Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann gets a 10-day run at the Eureka Theatre in San Francisco; headed for American and European stages in 2001
    FOR RELEASE: May 3, 2000 Contact: Franklin Crawford
    Office: (607) 255-9737
    E-Mail: fac10@cornell.edu
    ITHACA, N.Y. Combine the literary talents of two renowned chemists with a passion for theater and the result is "Oxygen," a two-act play by Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann that is set for 10 performances at the Eureka Theatre Company in San Francisco, through May 14. Directed by Andrea Gordon, "Oxygen" is a fully staged professional workshop production at the same theatre where Tony Kushner's "Angels in America" began. Hoffmann, a Nobel laureate in chemistry and the Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor in Humane Letters at Cornell University, and Djerassi, professor of chemistry at Stanford University, best known as developer of the oral contraceptive pill, describe "Oxygen" as "a play about priority and competition in science and the moral consequences of these ... about the discovery of oxygen and revolutions, chemical and political ... and it is about the Nobel Prize." "Oxygen" alternates between 1777 and the year 2001 when the Nobel Foundation decides to begin awarding a "retro-Nobel" for those great discoveries that preceded the establishment of the Nobel Prizes 100 years before. Foundation members think the task will be a simple matter of reaching back to a period when science was done for science's sake, when discovery was pure and unalloyed by controversy and hype. But the plot thickens when the French chemist Antoine Laurent Lavoisier is forwarded as a candidate. Lavoisier seems a shoo-in: the father of modern chemistry, he is credited with the discovery of oxygen. But did he really discover oxygen? Or was it Joseph Priestley, the English Unitarian minister? Or was it the Swedish apothecary Carl Wilhelm Scheele? And what do their wives have to say about it all?

    55. Symposium Honors Roald Hoffmann
    Cornell chemist roald hoffmann. hoffmann, the Frank HT Rhodes Professor of HumaneLetters and professor of chemistry, poet and author, won the nobel Prize in
    http://www.news.cornell.edu/Chronicle/97/7.10.97/Hoffmann.html
    On-campus symposium in honor of Roald Hoffmann will be July 19-20
    Scientists, humanists, poets and painters will gather at Cornell on Saturday and Sunday, July 19 and 20, at a symposium in honor of the 60th birthday of Cornell chemist Roald Hoffmann. Hoffmann, the Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters and professor of chemistry, poet and author, won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1981. Here is the symposium schedule:
      Saturday, July 19 Baker Laboratory of Chemistry, Room 200, Second Floor
    • 8:45 a.m.: Paul Houston, chairman, chemistry department, Cornell Welcome and opening remarks
    • 9 a.m.: Lionel Salem, director, Center for Popularization of Knowledge, University of Paris "Popularization of Knowledge: Another Access to Culture"
    • 9:45 a.m.: Malcolm Chisholm, professor of chemistry, Indiana University "Two and Two Makes Four in More Ways Than One"
    • 11 a.m.: Cynthia Friend, professor of chemistry, Harvard University "A Chemist's View of Surfaces: Bridging the Cultures of Solid State Physics and Molecular Chemistry"
    • 1:30 p.m.: Vivian Torrence, illustrator, Munich, Germany "Celebrating Solutions"

    56. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
    PRIZE YEAR. nobel CHEMISTS. SUPERVISOR. Ph.D. UNIVERSITY. DATES. Age (years). Ageat Prize. 1910 . 54. 1981. hoffmann, roald. M. Gouterman, WN Lipscomb, Jr. 1962.Harvard.
    http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/CHEM/
    Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
    Department of Chemistry, York University
    4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ONTARIO M3J 1P3, CANADA For suggestions, corrections, additional information, and comments please send e-mails to jandraos@yorku.ca http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/ NOBEL PRIZE CHEMISTRY YEAR NAMES OF SCIENTISTS NATIONALITY TYPE OF CHEMISTRY Jacobus van't Hoff Dutch physical Emil Fischer German organic Svante Arrhenius Swedish physical Sir William Ramsay British physical Adolf von Baeyer German organic Henri Moissan French inorganic Eduard Buchner German organic/bioorganic Lord Ernest Rutherford British nuclear Wilhelm Ostwald Latvian physical Otto Wallach German organic Marie Curie Polish-French nuclear Victor Grignard French organic Paul Sabatier French organic Alfred Werner German inorganic Theodore Williams Richards American physical Richard Martin Willstatter German organic no prize awarded no prize awarded Fritz Haber German physical/industrial no prize awarded Walther Hermann Nernst German physical Frederick Soddy British nuclear Francis William Aston British analytical Fritz Pregl Slovenian analytical no prize awarded Richard Zsigmondy Austrian physical Theodor Svedberg Swedish physical Heinrich Wieland German organic Adolf Windaus German organic Hans von Euler-Chelpin German bioorganic Arthur Harden British bioorganic Hans Fischer German bioorganic Friedrich Bergius German physical Carl Bosch German physical Irving Langmuir American physical no prize awarded Harold Urey American nuclear Frederic Joliot French nuclear Irene Joliot-Curie French nuclear Peter Debye Dutch physical Sir Walter Haworth

    57. GK- National Network Of Education
    Berg, Paul, 1980. Gilbert, Walter, 1980. Fukui, Kenichi, 1981. hoffmann, roald,1981. Klug, Sir Aaron, 1982. Taube, Henry, 1983. Merrifield, Robert Bruce,1984.
    http://www.indiaeducation.info/infomine/nobel/nobelarchive.htm
    Associated Agencies Booker Prize Winners International Awards World Nations: Famous Industrial Town ... Nobel Prize Winners Nobel Prize Winners
    Chemistry
    Literature Medicine Peace ... Economics
    Chemistry Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't Fischer, Hermann Emil Arrhenius, Svante August Ramsay, Sir William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Von Moissan, Henri Buchner, Eduard Rutherford, Lord Ernest Ostwald, Wilhelm Wallach, Otto Curie, Marie Sabatier, Paul Grignard, Victor Werner, Alfred Richards, Theodore William

    58. Fondo De Cultura Económica: Autor Hoffmann, Roald
    Translate this page roald hoffmann, premio nobel de Química en 1981, ha conseguido en esta obra unaproeza que a muchos les parecía imposible fascinar a los profanos con los
    http://www.fce.com.ar/autores.asp?AUT=646

    59. ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY
    ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY. Name, Year Awarded.Alder, Kurt, 1950. Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't, 1901. hoffmann, roald, 1981.
    http://www.bioscience.org/urllists/nobelc.htm
    FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE;
    ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN
    CHEMISTRY, PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE

    ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August ... Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Zinkernagel, Rolf M. Source: The Nobel Prize Internet Archive

    60. Cornell College: News Center
    1, by roald hoffmann, a nobel Prizewinning chemist who also has written booksof poetry and nonfiction, plus a play related to the discovery of oxygen.
    http://www.cornellcollege.edu/news_center/press_releases/nr2000/hoffmann.shtml

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    Nobel Prize-winning chemist to lecture, read poetry at Cornell
    Jan. 22, 2001 MOUNT VERNON Cornell College will host a lecture and poetry reading Thursday, Feb. 1, by Roald Hoffmann, a Nobel Prize-winning chemist who also has written books of poetry and nonfiction, plus a play related to the discovery of oxygen.
    Hoffmann will lecture at 11 a.m. on "Chemistry's Essential Tension: The Same and Not the Same." The lecture will address the position chemistry takes within the realm of the sciences: not dealing with the infinitely small or large, but on a human scale, affecting life all around us. At 3 p.m. Hoffmann will read from his poetry. Both events are in Hedges Conference Room of The Commons and are free.
    Hoffmann, a native of Poland who survived the Nazi occupation, is the Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters and professor of chemistry at Cornell University. He won the 1981 Nobel Prize in chemistry for theories concerning the course of chemical reactions. He shared the prize with the late Kenichi Fukui.
    Hoffmann's literary works include books of poems, "The Metamict State" (1987) and "Gaps and Verges" (1990); "Chemistry Imagined" (1993), a book about art, science and literature written with artist Vivian Torrence; "The Same and Not the Same" (1995), an account of the dualities in chemistry; and "Old Wine, New Flasks; Reflections on Science and Jewish Tradition" (1997), a book he co-authored on the intertwined voices of science and religion.

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