Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Willstatter Richard Martin

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 63    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Willstatter Richard Martin:     more detail
  1. Willstätter, Richard Martin: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Chemistry: Foundations and Applications</i>

41. Tropical Medicine Manuscript Collections At NLM--A Subject Guide: Alphabetical L
was an American biochemist who shared the 1972 nobel Prize for Cummings, martin Marc. Aftera year of study with richard willstatter in Zurich, he returned to
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/manuscripts/tropical/alpha.html
Tropical Medicine Manuscript Collections at NLM
A Subject Guide
1. Abraham Jacobi papers, 1890-1893. Jacobi, A. (Abraham).
Physical Description: 16 items.
Call Number: MS C 94 Contains notes, correspondence, and clippings pertaining to cholera and tuberculin. Jacobi is referred to as the father of pediatrics, opening the first children's clinic at the New York Medical College in 1860. 2. Account of the yellow fever of 1794 as it appeared in Baltimore ... in a series of letters to Dr. Benjamin Rush / Thomas Drysdale, 1794. Drysdale, Thomas. Rush, Benjamin.
Physical Description: 318, [6] p.; 25 cm.
Call Number: MS B 76 Manuscript is prefaced with an autographed letter from Dr. Rush to John Redman Coxe, dated July 31, 1804, transmitting ms. for publication in the Philadelphia Medical Museum. 3. AIDS files from the Public Health Service, Office of the Surgeon General. United States. Public Health Service. Office of the Surgeon General.
Physical Description: 19 items (14 boxes of files, 5 boxes publications).
Call Number: MS ACC 630 Subject files on AIDS from the Surgeon-General's Office. Includes 14 boxes arranged according to the alphabetical file listing and 5 boxes of publications. Subject files include publications, copies of articles, and copies of some memoranda and correspondence.

42. Finding Aid To The Michael Heidelberger Papers, 1901-1990 (bulk 1940-1975)
After a year of study with richard willstatter in Zurich, he of Why I Failed to Winthe nobel Prize 24, 2, Mayers, Manfred martin 19161984 - biographical memoir
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/manuscripts/ead/heidelberger.html
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary Biographical Note Collection Summary Index Terms ... Series 11: Photographs, 1901-1988 (bulk 1950-1980)
Finding Aid to the Michael Heidelberger Papers, 1901-1990 (bulk 1940-1975)
Archives and Modern Manuscripts Program, History of Medicine Division
Processed by Kate Dillon
Machine-readable finding aid encoded by John P. Rees
Descriptive Summary
Collection Number: MS C 245a Creator Heidelberger, Michael, b. 1888 Title Michael Heidelberger Papers Dates: 1901-1990 (bulk 1940-1975) Quantity: 22 linear feet (38 boxes) Abstract: Michael Heidelberger (1888-1991) is known as one of the founders of quantitative immunochemistry, and in the course of his career studied, among others, bacterial polysaccharides (particularly pneumococcal), as well as the immunochemistry of proteins, antibodies, and antigens. The papers deal primarily with Heidelberger's career as a teacher, researcher, and active member of the scientific community.
Biographical Note
In 1927, he left the Rockefeller Institute and moved to Mt. Sinai Hospital where he was both chemist to the hospital and a researcher. From 1928 to 1956, he worked for the Columbia University Medical Center was he continued his work as both a researcher and an instructor. In 1955, Heidelberger retired from Columbia and moved to the Institute of Microbiology at Rutgers University, where his research and teaching work continued. After nine years, he moved to the New York University School of Medicine, where he remained until his death. Heidelberger never really retired and was active in his field for nearly 80 years. In 1916, Heidelberger married Nina Tachau (1889-1946). They had one son, Charles (1920-1983) namesake of Heidelberger's younger brother Charles (1890-1914). Nina Tachau Heidelberger, an active member of the American Association for the United Nations and the League of Women Voters, died of cancer in 1946. In 1956, Heidelberger married Charlotte Rosen, who died in 1988.

43. Nobel-chemical
willstatter,richard 1872.8.131942.8 Synge,richard Laurence Milington ?martin,Arther
http://village.infoweb.ne.jp/~fwns0200/nobel-chemical.html
ƒm[ƒxƒ‹‰»ŠwÜŽóÜŽÒ 1901.@Van f t Hoff,Jacobus Henricus 1852.8.30-1911.3.1 —n‰t‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚錤‹†¬‰Ê
  • Fischer,Emil Herman 1852.10.9-1919.7.15 “œ—ނƃvƒŠƒ“—Þ‚ÌŒ¤‹†‹ÆÑ Arrhenius,Svante August 1859.2.19-1927.10.2 “d‹C‰ð—£‚Ì—˜_ Baeyer,Adolf von 1835.10.31-1917.8.20 —L‹@õ—¿‚ÌŒ¤‹†‚É‚æ‚é—L‹@‰»Šw‚Ɖ»ŠwH‹Æ‚Ö‚Ì‹ÆÑ Moissan,Ferdinand Frederic Henri 1852.9.28-1907.2.20 ƒtƒb‘f‚Ì’P—£¬Œ÷A“d‹C˜F‚Ì”­–¾‚È‚Ç‚ÌŒ÷Ñ Wallach,Otto 1847.3.27-1931.2.26 ƒeƒ“ƒvƒ‹‚¨‚æ‚уJƒ“ƒtƒ‹‚ÌŒ¤‹† Currie,Marie 1867.11.7-1934.7.4 ‹à‘®ƒ‰ƒWƒEƒ€‚Ì•ª—£ Grignard,Frsn ois Auguste Victor 1871.5.6-1935.12.13 ƒOƒŠƒjƒƒ[ƒ‹ŽŽ–ò‚Ì”­Œ©
    Sabatier,Paul 1854.11.5-1941.8.14 ŠÒŒ³‹à‘®‚Æ‚­‚ɃjƒbƒPƒ‹‚É‚æ‚é—L‹@‰»‡•¨‚̐…‘f“Y‰Á–@‚Ì”­Œ©‚Æ‚»‚ÌŒ¤‹†‚̐¬‰Ê Werner,Alfred 1866.12.12-1919.11.15 –³‹@—§‘̉»Šw‚ðŽ÷—§ Richards,Theodore William 1868.1.31-1928.4.2 ³Šm‚ÈŒ´Žq—Ê‚Ì‘ª’è–@‚Ì‘æˆêlŽÒ Willstatter,Richard 1872.8.13-1942.8.3 ƒAƒ‹ƒJƒƒCƒhAƒNƒƒƒtƒBƒ‹‚Ȃǂ̐A•¨F‘f‚ÌŒ¤‹† Haber,Fritz 1868.12.9-1934.1.29 ƒn[ƒo[–@‚Ì‹ÆÑ Nernst,Hermann Walther 1864.6.25-1941.11.18 ”M—ÍŠw‚Ì‘æŽO–@‘¥‚Ì”­Œ© Soddy,Frederick 1877.9.2-1956.9.22 “¯ˆÊŒ³‘f‚Ì”­Œ©,Œ¤‹†
  • 44. Richard Martin Willstatter
    Translate this page
    http://www.sobiografias.hpg.ig.com.br/RichaMaW.html
    enzimas e dos pigmentos clorofila
    Nova B U S C A :

    45. Search Results For Nobel Prize - Encyclopædia Britannica - The Online Encyclope
    The nobel Prize in Chemistry 1915 The Noble Foundation Biography ofRichard martin willstatter. Includes text of the presentation
    http://search.britannica.com/search?query=nobel prize&fuzzy=N&ct=igv&start=6&sho

    46. Alfred Nobel: A Biography
    Some of the More Than 650 nobel Prize Winners (19011996). Peace. 1915Richard martin willstatter for his research on chlorophyll. Physics.
    http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/world/nobel_biography/
    Father of the Nobel Prize
    Alfred Bernhard Nobel
    AWARDS GIVEN
    Dario Fo
    Stanley B. Prusiner
    International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) and Jody Williams
    Robert C. Merton and Myron S. Scholes
    Steven Chu, William D. Phillips and Claude Cohen- Tannoudji
    TBA - 10/15
    Some of the
    More Than 650 Nobel Prize Winners (1901-1996) Peace
    Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo and Jose Ramos-Horta, East Timor Yasser Arafat, Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin, the Middle East Nelson Mandela and Fredrik Willem De Klerk, South Africa Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma The Dalai Lama, Tibet Elie Wiesel, U.S. Desmond Tutu, South Africa Mother Teresa, India Henry Kissinger, U.S. and Le Duc Tho, Vietnam Martin Luther King Jr., U.S. Thomas Woodrow Wilson, U.S. Theodore Roosevelt, U.S. Literature Wislawa Szymborska, Poland Toni Morrison, U.S. Naguib Mahfouz, Egypt Pablo Neruda, Chile Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, U.S.S.R. Jean-Paul Sartre, France John Steinbeck, U.S. Boris Pasternak, U.S.S.R. Ernest Hemingway, U.S. William Faulkner, U.S. Pearl Buck, U.S.

    47. Famous Scientists
    Georges Urbain (18721938). richard willstatter (1872-1942). Archer JohnPorter martin (1910- ). richard Laurence Millington Synge (1914-1994).
    http://www.nidlink.com/~jfromm/elements/history.htm
    Famous Scientists
    Thales of Miletus (638-548 B.C.) - Greek philosopher; developed theory of matter based upon water. Heraclitus (c.540-475 B.C.) Pythagoras (581-497 B.C.) - Greek philosopher and mathematician; held that numbers were basic to matter; the Pythagorean Theorem is named for his geometric formulation; developed atomic theory; students of his philosophy emphasized geometrical form as a basic property of atoms; developed mathematical relationships which led to musical harmony. Empedocles (c.490-c.430 B.C.) Socrates (470-399 B.C.) - Greek philosopher; emphasized the study of human nature in relationship to society; influence the growth of science through standards for clear definitions and classifications, for logic and order, and for prudent skepticism. Democritus of Abdera (460-370 B.C.) - Greek philosopher; developed atomic theory; elaborated idea that matter consisted of atoms having physical size and shape which constantly moved in a void and interacted in different ways; Greek word atoma means indivisible. Leucippus (c.450 B.C.)

    48. Famous Scientists
    Georges Urbain (18721938). richard willstatter (1872-1942). Philip Hauge Abelson(1913- ). martin D. Kamen (1913- ). richard Laurence Millington Synge (1914-1994).
    http://www.nidlink.com/~jfromm/history.htm
    Famous Scientists
    Thales of Miletus (638-548 B.C.) - Greek philosopher; developed theory of matter based upon water. Heraclitus (c.540-475 B.C.) - Greek philosopher; first of the Greeks to develop a theory of the human soul; he praised its creative resources and spoke of the importance of self-exploration; he spoke of the logos that is common to all and said that the universe is ruled by logos; he always urged that close attention be given to the polarites and concealed structures emodied in language. His famous claim that an idividual can and cannot step into the same river twice reveals an interest in criteria of unity and identity; even though all material constituents have undergone change, it is still, in a sence, the same river. Preoccupied with change, he declared that fire is the central element of the universe, and he postulated a world with no beginning and no end Pythagoras (581-497 B.C.) - Greek philosopher and mathematician; held that numbers were basic to matter; the Pythagorean Theorem is named for his geometric formulation; developed atomic theory; students of his philosophy emphasized geometrical form as a basic property of atoms; developed mathematical relationships which led to musical harmony. Empedocles c.490

    49. Synthetic Organic Chemistry
    was ignored at first, but, in the 1920's, willstatter and a by the English chemistsArcher John Porter martin (1910?) and richard Laurence Millington
    http://www.imbris.net/~jfromm/history/synorg.htm
    Synthetic Organic Chemistry
    Dyes When, in the first half of the nineteenth century, men like Berthelot began to put together organic molecules, they were extending drastically the accepted limits of their science. Instead of confining their investigations to the existing physical environment, they were beginning to imitate the creativity of nature, and it was to be only a matter of time until nature would be surpassed. In a very small way, Berthelot's work with some of his synthetic fats was a start in this direction, but much more remained to be done. Insufficient understanding of molecular structure hampered the organic chemists of the mid-nineteenth century, but such was the irresistible progress of the science that in at least one significant episode even this shortcoming actually turned out to be an advantage. At the time (the 1840's) there were few organic chemists of note in Great Britain, and August Wilhelm von Hofmann (1818-1892), who had worked under Liebig, was imported to London from Germany. For an assistant, some years later, Hofmann drew a teen-age assistant, William Henry Perkin (1838-1907). One day, in Perkin's presence, Hofmann speculated aloud on the feasibility of synthesizing quinine, the valuable anti-malarial. Hofmann had done research on chemicals obtained from coal tar (a thick, black liquid obtained by heating coal in the absence of air), and he wondered whether it was possible to synthesize quinine from a coal tar chemical like aniline. The synthesis, if it could be accomplished, would be a great stroke, he said: it would relieve Europe's dependence on the far-off tropics for the supply of quinine.

    50. LIBRARY NEW TITLES LIST
    V. ROAD TO STOCKHOLM nobel PRIZES SCIENCE AND FOR WATER MANAGEMENT/Beniston, MartinREADING THE Faraday Division richard willstatter IM BRIEFWECHSEL MIT STACK
    http://www.lib.csufresno.edu/lists/newtitles/alis98/q.html
    LIST OF NEW TITLE IN
    SCIENCE
    CATALOGED APRIL - SEPTEMBER 2002
    Go back to Library New Titles List This page was last modified on December 05, 2002

    51. Untitled
    In 1911, the German chemist richard willstatter had published contains, then proceededto substantiate willstatter's synthesis in With MM martin and MA McKervey
    http://www.ulib.org/webRoot/Books/National_Academy_Press_Books/biographical_memo
    ARTHUR CLAY COPE June 27, 1909-June 4, 1966
    BY JOHN D. ROBERTS AND JOHN C. SHEEHAN
    A RTHUR CLAY COPE, an extraordinarily influential and imaginative Organic chemist, was born on June 27, 1909, and died on June 4, 1966. He was the son of Everett Claire Cope and Jennie (Compton) Cope, who lived in Dunreith, Indiana, but later moved to Indianapolis to enhance their son's educational possibilities. Everett Cope was in the grain storage business and his wife worked for some time at the local YWCA office. In 1929 Arthur received the bachelor's degree in chemistry from Butler University in Indianapolis, then, with the support of a teaching assistantship, moved to the University of Wisconsin for graduate work. His thesis advisor at Wisconsin was S. M. McElvain, whose research program included the synthesis of Organic compounds with possible pharmaceutical uses-especially local anesthetics and barbiturates. Cope's thesis work, completed in 1932, was along these lines. It led to the discovery of a useful local anesthetic and provided the major theme of his research for many years. Cope clearly made a strong impression at Wisconsin during his graduate career. He completed his thesis work and three independent publications in three years and was recommended by the Wisconsin organic chemistry faculty (then headed by the redoubtable Homer Adkins) for one of the highly sought-after National Research Council Fellowships at Harvard. In 1933, he moved to Harvard to work under one of the leading Organic chemists of the day, E. R Kohler.

    52. Untitled
    22. the German chemist richard willstatter had published an arduous then proceededto substantiate willstatter's synthesis in 1966. With MM martin and MA McKervey
    http://www.ulib.org/webRoot/Books/National_Academy_Press_Books/biographical_memo
    NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
    OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    Biographical Memoirs VOLUME 60
    NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS WASHINGTON, D.C.
    The National Academy of Sciences was established in 1863 by Act of Congress as a private, nonprofit, self-governing membership corporation for the furtherance of science and technology, required to advise the federal government upon request within its fields of competence. Under its corporate charter the Academy established the National Research Council in 1916, the National Academy of Engineering in 1964, and the Institute of Medicine in 1970.
    INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER 0-309-04442-1 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER 5-26629
    Available from
    NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS
    2101 CONSTITUTION AVENUE, N.W.
    WASHINGTON, D.C. 20418
    CONTENTS PREFACE vii JOSEPH HALL BODINE BY E. J. BOELL ARTHUR CLAY COPE BY JOHN D. ROBERTS AND JOHN C. SHEEHAN PHILIP JACKSON DARLINGTON, JR. BY EDWARD O. WILSON JOHN FRANKLIN ENDERS BY THOMAS H. WELLER AND FREDERICK C. ROBBINS EDWARD CURTIS FRANKLIN BY HOWARD M. ELSEY

    53. FECS Millennium Project - Willstätter
    20th Century. Willstätter, richard Born Karlsruhe (Germany), 1872 Died Muralto(Switzerland), 1942. In 1915 he received the nobel Prize for chemistry.
    http://www.chemsoc.org/networks/enc/fecs/Willstatter.htm
    FECS Millennium Project
    100 Distinguished European Chemists
    20th Century
    Born: Karlsruhe (Germany), 1872
    Died: Muralto (Switzerland), 1942
    Adolf v. Baeyer Links
    www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1915/index.html

    www.almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/1915a.html
    For further information on this chemist search the RSC's historical chemistry information service provided by the Library and Information Centre Go to 20th Century Chemists About ENC FECS ...
    Visit chemsoc, the RSC’s chemical science network

    54. Untitled
    In 1931, a German biochemist, richard willstatter rediscovered the In 1973, Nobellaureate Harold Urey 'published a comments of David Edge and Brian martin.
    http://www.nih.gov/welcome/director/ebiomed/history1.htm
    Source: Social Studies of Science , vol. 25, pp. 165-183 (1995) The Plight of the Obscure Innovator in Science ABSTRACT In his informative and thoughtful paper, Professor Juan Miguel Campanario raises issues which are of the greatest possible importance to scientific progress. In this response, I should like to augment Campanario's review with additional data, interpretations, and reflections. Three Views on the Extent of Resistance to New Ideas in Science Everyone agrees that some seminal work has been refused publication, ignored, or scorned by the scientific community. The extent of such rejection is, however, highly controversial. This uncertainty may strike a newcomer to this field as odd, for it can be resolved through systematic historical studies. Nonetheless, such studies are yet to be carried out, and the subject at this writing remains as contentious as it has ever been. The minimalist position states that rejection of new scientific ideas is rare and, hence, that it is of little consequence to scientific progress. 1. When Scholars talk a matter over one with another, then is there a winding up, an unraveling; one or the other is convinced of error, and he then acknowledges his mistake; distinctions are drawn, and contra-distinctions; and yet thereby they are not angered. Thus do scholars, O king, discuss.

    55. O Século Da Química
    Translate this page ser contemplada ainda em 1915, com willstatter, que descobriu nobel em Química) Osvencedores do nobel em Química SIR HAROLD W. KROTO , e richard E. SMALLEY
    http://www.qmcweb.org/artigos/nobel_prize/nobel_frames.html
    QMCWEB apresenta
    Uma das definições da Química diz que " ". É graças a química que, hoje, temos automóveis, computadores, máquinas de lavar louças, sabonetes hidratantes, remédios e colchões ortopédicos. O conforto é um produto do século 20 - uma consequência da evolução da Química!
    passado a palavra "plástico" sequer existia em nosso vocabulário. Graças ao desenvolvimento da química orgânica e sintética, no século 20, os plásticos (polímeros sintéticos) se tornaram onipresentes em nossa vida. Os plásticos também já estiveram presentes aqui no QMCWEB. Confira:
    van't Hoff Arrhenius Ostwald
    arquivo://Ecstasy.set.you.free

    56. Chemists That Shaped The Science
    Alfred Bernhard nobel, (18331896); Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleyev, (1934-1907 RichardMartin willstatter, (1872-1942); Arthur Lapworth, (1872-1941); Hans Karl August
    http://www.pmf.ukim.edu.mk/PMF/Chemistry/chemists/chemists.htm
    Institute of Chemistry
    Chemists
    This site contains a list of the most important people who have contributed to the development of chemistry. It is planned to include a biography with the most important details of their life and their scientific contribution. The list is chronological by the date of birth. To locate someone on the list, the browser's 'find' function can be used. If you want to submit a biography or have any comments on any of the already published materaial, please contact one of the authors of the list. It would be preferable that the subimissions be in Engish but other languages are also acceptable. If you are aware of any other sites that contain a bioghrphy please supply the link so the material can be used.
    Zosimus, (~250-?)
    Geber, Abu Musa Jabir Ibn Hayyan, (~721-~815)
    Rhazes, Abu Bakr Muhamed Ibn Zakariyya Ar-Razi, (~845-~930)
    Arnold de Villanova, (~1235-1311)
    Geber

    Vannoccio Biringuccio, (1480-1539)
    Philipus Aureolus Paracelsus, (1493-1541)
    Georgius Agricola, (1494-1555)
    Lazarus Ercker, (1530-1594)

    57. JudaicaSite
    Translate this page Karl Landsteiner (Premio nobel 1930 de Medicina) Ideó el Howard martin Temin (PN.1975). RichardWillstatter (PN.1915) Elaboró la tropina, la tropilina, el
    http://www.judaicasite.com/contenidos/cienciaytora/influencia.php3
    El Hombre y la Genética
    Transplante de Organos

    El Hombre y la Salud

    El aporte del Judaísmo
    ...
    Comunidad

    SIN PREJUCIOS - MENOS PERJUCIOS
    Copilado por J. Huerin
    NOTA: EN MEDICINA A. Wasserman
    Carl Koller
    Spiro y Flenne
    Ludwing Trauber Oscar Liebrich George Widal Karl Landsteiner Oskar Minkowsky Jonas E Salk y Albert B .Sabin
    : Obtuvieron la vacuna antipoliomielitica. Isaac Michael Paul Ehrlich Valdemar Mordecai Haffkine Bela Schik Kurt Holdschinsky Isaac Judaeus Ernest Boris Chaim Tadeusz Reichstein Salman Abraham Waksman Alexander Marmorek Dittel Joseph Aub Bernard Zandek Cesare Lombroso : Investigaciones y logros sobre la pelagra. Moritz Schiff : Investigaciones y logros sobre el cretinismo. Gottliev Gluye Albert Neisser : Investigaciones y logros sobre la gonorrea. Albert Franfel : Investigaciones y logros sobre el astigmatismo. Marian Eiger George Klemperes Otto Heinrich Warburg Joseph Goldberger Benvenuto Grapheus (o Rapheus): Escribió el tratado básico de oftalmología llamado: "Práctica ocularem".

    58. Bina Diamond Interview - The Harmony Project
    civilization in the manner of nobel Prize Winners 1910 Otto Wallach 1915 - RichardWillstatter 1918 - Fritz David Baltimore 1975 - Howard martin Temin 1976
    http://www.theharmonyproject.org/sacredpaths/judaism/diamond.htm
    Sacred Paths Introduction Baha'i Buddhism Christianity ... Taoism
    Harmony Project
    Introduction

    Rev. Ann Emerson
    Judaism
    Portraits of Faith
    Interview with Bina Diamond
    Interview with Mark Banschick

    Interview with Su
    zanne Benton
    Links
    http://www.jewfaq.org/ http://www.jewishnet.net/
    http://www.jewish.com/askarabbi/
    Suggested Reading Judaism for Dummies (For Dummies)
    By: David Blatner, Ted, Ph.D. Falcon Essential Judaism: A Complete Guide to Beliefs, Customs, and Rituals
    By: George Robinson The Meaning of the Dead Sea Scrolls: Their Significance for Understanding the Bible, Judaism, Jesus and Christianity
    By: JamesVanderKam, Peter Flint Jewish Book of Why - Boxed Set By: Alfred J. Kolatch (Introduction) Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy By: Jane Leavy Bina Diamond* *Bina teaches Judaism and Hebrew in Long Island, NY. She is deeply involved in passing her Jewish traditions onto the next generation.

    59. Artonline
    Gauguin dipinge Otahie Anna martin. willstatter scopre la struttura chimica della clorofilla.
    http://www.artonline.it/cronologia-print.asp?IDArtista=16

    60. Www.cotse.com/wordlists/n_surna2
    Ricci Ricciardi Riccio Rice Rich richard richards richardson St Andre St Clair StMartin St Omer Willkie Willner Wills Willson willstatter Willwerth Wilmarth
    http://www.cotse.com/wordlists/n_surna2

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 63    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

    free hit counter