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         Moore Stanford:     more books (58)
  1. King of the 40th Parallel: Discovery in the American West by James Gregory Moore, 2006-02-06
  2. Exploring the Highest Sierra by James Gregory Moore, 2000-07
  3. God's Beauty Parlor: And Other Queer Spaces in and Around the Bible by Stephen Moore, 2002-09-01
  4. The Kafkaesque case of Hua Di.: An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Mike Moore, 1999-11-01
  5. Contesting terrain in Zimbabwe's eastern highlands: the cultural politics of place, identity, and resource struggles (2 Volumes) by Donald Shearer Moore, 1995-01-01
  6. Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards 1954 by Robert Thomas, edited by MOORE, 1954-01-01
  7. Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards 1955: A Compilation of Original Poetry Published in Magazines of the English-Speaking World in 1954 by Robert Thomas, edited by MOORE, 1955-01-01
  8. Marine Chartwork. by D Moore, 1988
  9. Marine Chartwork - Second Edition by D. A. Moore, 1985
  10. Best Poems of 1957: Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards, 1958 by Robert T., edited by) (MOORE, 1958
  11. Best Poems of 1955 Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards 1956 by Robert T. editor (SYLVIA PLATH) Moore, 1957-01-01
  12. Best Poems of 1955: Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards 1956
  13. Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards 1955
  14. Borestone Mountain Poetry Awards 1954: A Compilation of Original Poetry Published in Magazines of the English-speaking World in 1953 by Robert Thomas (Editor) - Adrienne Rich, James Wright, W.S. Merwin, Cid Corman, John Ciardi, May Sarton, Louis Simpson, and Josephine Jacobsen (Contributors) Moore, 1954

41. Chemistry - Links For Chemists - Topics - Biographies
Links to biographies of over 200 people who have advanced and refined the field of chemistry. A section Category Science Chemistry History...... Millikan, Robert Andrews @ CalTech US; Moissan, Henri; moore, stanford; Moseley,Henry Virginia US; Nicholson, William @ Britannica.com US; nobel, Alfred Bernhard
http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/refbiog.html
Links for Chemists
Chemistry section of the WWW Virtual Library
Virtual Library
Science Chemistry : Biographies of Famous Chemists
Unless otherwise stated, the biographies listed below are provided and listed with the kind permission of the The Nobel Foundation . If you know of any biographies of Chemists or scientists whose work has advanced chemistry, that we do not list, please inform us via our comments form
  • Alder, Kurt
      US @ St. Andrews UK
    Anfinsen, Christian B Arrhenius, Svante August Arfwedson, Johan August Astbury, William T. @ Leeds UK Aston, Francis William Avogadro, Lorenzo Romano AMADEO Carlo, comte de Quaregna et de Ceretto Baekeland, Leo Hendrik @ Time Magazine US von Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Barton, Sir Derek Harold Richard Balmer, Johann Jakob @ St Andrews UK Beckman, Arnold Orville IL Beer, August Bequerel, Henri Antoine
  • 42. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
    A listing of nobel Prize winners in chemistry from 1901 to 1999.Category Science Chemistry History......Deutsche Version; nobel Prize for Chemistry (with pictures). 1972 Christian B. Anfinsen(USA, *191603-26) Studies on ribonuclease stanford moore (USA, 1913-09
    http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_chemie_e.html
    Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
    Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (Netherlands, 1852-08-30 - 1911-03-01)
    Discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and of the osmotic pressure in solutions
    Emil H. Fischer (Germany, 1852-10-09 - 1919-07-15)
    Synthetic studies in the area of sugar and purine groups
    Svante A. Arrhenius (Sweden, 1859-02-19 - 1927-10-02)
    Theory of electrolytic dissociation
    Sir William Ramsay (United Kingdom, 1852-10-02 - 1916-07-23)
    Discovery of the indifferent gaseous elements in air (noble gases)
    Adolf von Baeyer (Germany, 1835-10-31 - 1917-08-20)
    Organic dyes and hydroaromatic compounds
    Henri Moissan (France, 1852-09-28 - 1907-02-20)
    Investigation and isolation of the element fluorine
    Eduard Buchner (Germany, 1860-05-20 - 1917-08-13)
    Biochemical studies, discovery of fermentation without cells
    Sir Ernest Rutherford (United Kingdom, 1871-08-30 - 1937-10-19)
    Decay of the elements, chemistry of radioactive substances
    Wilhelm Ostwald (Germany, 1853-09-02 - 1932-04-04)
    Catalysis, chemical equilibria and reaction rates

    43. Pictures Of Nobel Laureates - Chemistry
    This is an index of photographs of the winners of the nobel Prize in 1971 GerhardHerzberg; 1972 - Christian B. Anfinsen; 1972 - stanford moore; 1972 - William H
    http://chemistry.about.com/library/blchemists.htm
    zfp=-1 About Homework Help Chemistry Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
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    Index of Pictures - Nobel Laureates in Chemistry This is an index of photographs of the winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

    44. SLAC's Three Nobel Laureates
    SLAC's Three nobel Laureates. (from left to right Burton Richter, MartinPerl, and Dick Taylor). Photo by PA moore (xanadu@slac.stanford.edu).
    http://www.slac.stanford.edu/slac/feature/951011/photos/3nobels.html
    SLAC's Three Nobel Laureates
    (from left to right: Burton Richter, Martin Perl, and Dick Taylor)
    Photo by P.A. Moore (xanadu@slac.stanford.edu). SLAC Back to Photos Page

    45. SLAC Staff Attend Press Conference For Martin Perl, Nobel Laureate
    SLAC Staff Attend Press Conference for Martin Perl, NobelLaureate. Photo by PA moore (xanadu@slac.stanford.edu).
    http://www.slac.stanford.edu/slac/feature/951011/photos/tiers.html
    SLAC Staff Attend Press Conference for Martin Perl, Nobel Laureate
    Photo by P.A. Moore (xanadu@slac.stanford.edu). SLAC Back to Photos Page

    46. Prix Nobel De 1970 à 1974
    Translate this page Cest là qu'ils feront les découvertes qui leur vaudront le prix nobel de chimie.stanford moore a séjoumé durant plus d'une année en Europe à l
    http://membres.lycos.fr/xjarnot/Chimistes/Nobel_1970.html
    P rix Nobel de 1970 à 1974 Luis F. Leloir Gerhard Herzberg Christian B. Anfinsen Stanford Moore et William Howard Stein Ernst Otto Fischer ) et Geoffrey Wilkinson Paul John Flory
    1970. Luis F. Leloir
    Pour la découverte du rôle des nucléotides-sucres (oses) dans la biosynthèse des hydrates de carbone. (Paris, 1906 - ) Les parents de ce biochimiste argentin, né à Paris le 6 septembre 1906, sont partis vivre à Buenos Aires alors que leur fils n'était âgé que de deux ans. En 1932, Luis F. Leloir est docteur en médecine de l'Université de Buenos Aires. Il commence alors une carrière de chercheur scientifique à l'Institut de physiologie de la capitale argentine sous la direction du professeur Bemardo A. Houssay (qui recevra le prix Nobel de médecine en 1947). Ses travaux mettent en évidence le rô1e de l'hypophyse dans le métabolisme des hydrates de carbone. En 1936, il part travailler au laboratoire de biochimie de Sir F. G. Hopkins, à Cambridge, en Angleterre; il revient ensuite en Argentine où, aux côtés de J. M. Muiloz, il s'intéresse au mécanisme d'oxydation des acides gras dans le foie, et à la formation de l'angiotensine (un polypeptide). En 1944, il se rend aux Etats-Unis, à Saint-Louis, où il est assistant du Dr C. F. Cori (futur co-lauréat du prix Nobel de physiologie-médecine de 1947 avec B. A. Houssay), qui s'intéresse aussi au métabolisme des hydrates de carbone. Il effectue en outte un séjour chez D. E. Green, à l'Université Columbia de New York. De retour en Argentine, il occupe les fonctions de directeur de l'Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquimicas, Fundacion Campomar, qu'il finance en partie avec ses revenus personnels. C'est avec ses premiers collaborateurs, R. Caputto, C. E. Cardini, R. Trucco et A. C. Paladini, qu'il va faire de grandes découvertes sur les donneurs de glucose. Nommé professeur à la Faculté des Sciences de Buenos Aires, il continue, avec l'aide de Nicolás Beluens, ses travaux sur le rô1e des polyprénols et du dolichol (1) dans les mécanismes de transfert du glucose dans les tissus du règne animal.

    47. Tous Les Prix Nobel De Chimie
    Prix nobels, Alfred nobel. A. Kurt Alder. Sydney Altman. Christian B. Anfinsen. FerdinandFrédéric-HenriMoisssan. Mario Molina. stanford moore. Robert Mulliken. N.
    http://membres.lycos.fr/xjarnot/Chimistes/Prix_Nobel_alphabetique.html

    48. Oakland Tribune
    he outlines areas of science where the moore Foundation might He hit stanford atan excellent time DNA had Arthur Kornberg, who would win the nobel Prize in
    http://www.oaklandtribune.com/cda/article/print/0,1674,82%7E1865%7E649672,0.html
    Oakland Tribune
    UC's dean of health, Chiron co-founder, quits to head foundation
    By William Brand OAKLAND EDWARD PENHOET. It's not exactly a name that everyone will recognize
    but it's a name with international scientific cachet. And if ever the old stock headline "Local Boy Makes Good" fit anyone
    it would be this guy.
    Staff Writ
    Monday, June 03, 2002
    - EDWARD PENHOET. It's not exactly a name that everyone will recognize, but it's a name with international scientific cachet. And if ever the old stock headline "Local Boy Makes Good" fit anyone, it would be this guy. , Staff Writer At 62, Ed Penhoet has done a lot. Riding the first wave of molecular DNA discoveries, biochemist Penhoet in 1981 co-founded Chiron Corp., the Emeryville-based biotech giant that created the first hepatitis B vaccine and discovered the hepatitis C virus. After 17 years as Chiron chief executive, he moved on in 1998 to the University of California, Berkeley, where as dean of the School of Public Health, he helped launch a bold new health services initiative that has united researchers from many disciplines into one medical science unit. He leaves UC Berkeley June 30. He will be succeeded by UC Berkeley professor Stephen Shortell, a prominent health policy researcher.

    49. ?
    Alphabetical listing of nobel prize laureates in Chemistry. Name. Year Awarded. Alder,Kurt, 1950. Molina, Mario, 1995. moore, stanford, 1972. Mulliken, Robert S. 1966.
    http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_ch.htm

    50. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Nobel Laureates
    About Sigma Xi » Overview » nobel Laureates S. Mulliken 1968 Lars Onsager 1970Luis F. Leloir 1972 Christian B. Anfinsen 1972 stanford moore 1972 William H
    http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/overview/nobel.shtml
    Overview Leadership Organization News ... Contact Us About: Overview
    Overview
    Physics
    1907 Albert Michelson
    1921 Albert Einstein
    1923 Robert A. Millikan
    1925 James Franck
    1927 Arthur H. Compton
    1936 Carl D. Anderson
    1937 Clinton J. Davisson 1938 Enrico Fermi 1939 Ernest O. Lawrence 1943 Otto Stern 1944 Isidor Isaac Rabi 1945 Wolfgang Pauli 1946 Percy Williams Bridgman 1952 Felix Bloch 1952 Edward M. Purcell 1955 Polykarp Kusch 1955 Willis E. Lamb, Jr. 1956 John Bardeen 1956 Walter H. Brattain 1956 William Shockley 1957 Chen Ning Yang 1958 Igor Y. Tamm 1959 Owen Chamberlain 1959 Emilio G. Segre 1960 Donald A. Glaser 1961 Robert Hofstadter 1963 Eugene P. Wigner

    51. Nobel Prize Winners: Chemistry
    nobel Prize Winners Chemistry. The descriptions in green are for work that isrelevant to high school chemistry Year. Article. Country*. moore, stanford. US.
    http://www.emsb.qc.ca/laurenhill/science/nobelcm.html
    Nobel Prize Winners: Chemistry
    The descriptions in green are for work that is relevant to high school chemistry Year Article Country* Achievement Hoff, Jacobus Henricus van't The Netherlands laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure Fischer, Emil Germany work on sugar and purine syntheses Arrhenius, Svante Sweden theory of electrolytic dissociation.
    Arrhenius not only proposed that acids and bases break up into ions, but he used ions to explain neutralization reactions and electrical conductivity of solutions. Ramsay, Sir William U.K. discovery of inert gas elements and their places in the periodic system.
    Through fractional distillation and spectral analysis of liquid argon from liquid air, Ramsay discovered neon, krypton and xenon. Baeyer, Adolf von Germany work on organic dyes, hydroaromatic compounds Moissan, Henri France isolation of fluorine ; introduction of Moissan furnace
    By electrolysis of HF, Moissan isolated fluorine and remarked that it could attack even cold silicon, burning it with occasional sparks. Buchner, Eduard

    52. News From The Washington File
    Institute of Technology James Tobin (nobel), Yale University Northwestern UniversityThomas G. moore, The Hoover Institution, stanford University Herve
    http://www.fas.org/news/china/2000/000425-prc-usia1.htm
    26 April 2000
    Text: U.S. Economists Sign Letter Supporting China's WTO Entry

    53. Stanford Executive Program (SEP) At The Stanford Graduate School Of Business
    for 200203 Professor Jeff moore specializes in Professor, Emeritus and former Dean,stanford Graduate School Business Winner of the 2001 nobel Memorial Prize
    http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/exed/sep/
    "The SEP experience was truly extraordinary; the caliber of the class members, the quality of the faculty, and the structure and environment of the program all added up to a once-in-a-lifetime experience. I recommend the program to any executive who is seeking a renewed mid-career perspective to take one's organization to new levels."
    - Phyllis Campbell
    President/CEO
    US Bank of Washington
    "The program provided a unique opportunity to review my career. It reinforced and updated a number of areas of my experience and provided a good analytical basis for strategic development."
    - Peter Hughes
    Managing Director
    PowerGen Plc
    "The Stanford Executive Program is the perfect academic refresher for senior general managers. The class-work reacquaints you with MBA basics and strategy, economics, marketing and organizational behavior. The optional lectures and workshops put you in front of some of the best business and political minds in the United States."
    - John Greenman
    President and Publisher Columbus Ledger-Enquirer "The Stanford Executive Program was easily the best educational experience I've encountered since I graduated from medical school in 1971. The quality of the curriculum, the ability and enthusiasm of the professors, the careful attention to detail, the venue at Stanford, and the broad expertise of the participants are wonderfully integrated to make this a rewarding experience for attendees from a broad variety of backgrounds and interests. I highly recommend it!"

    54. FTFA - Who Gets The Tax Break Money
    nobel Laureates. Los Angeles Harold A. Forman UFCW Marcus Alexis stanford UniversityLeland S Fryman University of West Georgia Robert E. moore Georgia State
    http://www.fairtaxesforall.org/facts/econ_names.shtml

    Who gets the money?
    How do women, families and older americans fare? Can we afford it? Will it really help small businesses? ... Press Releases, Statements and Other Coalition News
    Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
    New CBO Report Puts Deficit Under Administration Policies At $1.8 Trillion Over Ten Years
    Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
    Introduction to the Federal Budget Process
    New York Times
    GOP Senator from Maine getting cold feet on Bush tax cut
    National Women's Law Center
    Public support for Bush tax cut drops
    USA Today
    White House lobbies for tax-cut plan
    Economists' Statement
    Opposing the Bush Tax Cut
    Signers by State Nobel Laureates
    George Akerlof University of California – Berkeley
    Kenneth J. Arrow Stanford University Peter Diamond Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lawrence R. Klein University of Pennsylvania Daniel L. McFadden University of California – Berkeley Franco Modigliani Massachusetts Institute of Technology Douglass C. North Washington University Paul A. Samuelson Massachusetts Institute of Technology William F. Sharpe Stanford University

    55. Nobel Prize For Chemistry
    nobel Prize for Chemistry. and the other half jointly to stanford moore (USA,4.9.1913 23.8.1982) USA, Rockefeller University, New York, NY,. and.
    http://lem.ch.unito.it/chemistry/nobel_chemistry.html

    56. Nobel Prize In Chemistry - Wikipedia
    http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html. Odd Hassel 1970 Luis F. Leloir1971 Gerhard Herzberg 1972 Christian B. Anfinsen, stanford moore, William H
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Chemistry

    57. University Of Chicago News: Nobel Laureates
    The nobel Prize in Chemistry 1972 with stanford moore and Christian B. Anfinsen“for their contribution to the understanding of the connection between
    http://www-news.uchicago.edu/resources/nobel/chemistry.html
    University of Chicago News: Resources
    University of Chicago Chemistry Nobel Laureates Seventy-four Laureates have been faculty, students or researchers at the University of Chicago. Fourteen of those Laureates won prizes in Chemistry.
    Richard E. Smalley

    Research Associate in the James Franck Institute The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1996
    with Sir Harold W. Kroto and Robert F. Curl, Jr.
    F. Sherwood Rowland

    S.M., 1951; Ph.D., 1952; D.Sc (honorary), 1989. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1995
    with Paul J. Crutzen and Mario Molina
    Paul Crutzen

    Visiting Professor in the Geophysical Sciences Division The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1995
    with F. Sherwood Rowland and Mario Molina Yuan T. Lee Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemistry , 1968-1971; Associate Professor, 1971-73; Professor, 1973-74. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1986 with Dudley Herschbach and John Polanyi Henry Taube Assistant Professor in the Department of Chemistry , 1946-1948; Associate Professor, 1948-1953; Professor, 1954-1960; Chairman, 1955-1958; Carl William Eisendrath Professor, 1960-1961. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1983 Herbert C. Brown

    58. The SLAC Tour Get An Inside Look At A High Energy Physics Lab
    of Energy laboratory, operated by stanford University. nobel laureate Burton Richteris the lab director. gallery during a tour, said spokeswoman PA moore.
    http://www.paweekly.com/PAW/morgue/monthly/1996_Jul_31.SLAC.html
    Publication Date: Wednesday Jul 31, 1996
    The SLAC tour: Get an inside look at a high energy physics lab
    Name : Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), a high energy physics lab. Address : 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park. What happens there : The lab accelerates electrons and their anti-matter counterpart, positrons, from zero to nearly the speed of light as they gain billions and billions of volts of energy while zipping down a two-mile-long pipe. Depending on the experiment, the electrons either hit a target at the end of the accelerator, or they continue into an arc where they collide with positrons coming around another arc. In both cases the collisions create other particles. What you do on a tour Who goes on the tour : Classes of sixth-graders and older students, Boy Scouts, prospective Stanford students, tourists and curious residents. The volunteer tour guides modify their presentation for different age groups, said SLAC researcher Jose Martinez, the head tour guide. The Public Affairs Office has prep materials for children age 11 and up. Who runs SLAC?

    59. Environment Abstracts At The Idea Channel
    Dr. Norman Borlaug, 1970 nobel Peace Prize winner, Dr. Robert Chandler the HooverInstitution at stanford University (http//www.stanford.edu/~moore/), was a
    http://www.ideachannel.com/EnvironmentAbstracts.htm
    Palmer R. Chitester Fund The Idea Channel Free To Choose In The Classroom
    "I am very pleased to discover that you have a page dedicated to Freidrich von Hayek...Hayek was my grandfather and I am keen to find out much about him and his work. To be able to actually see him talking is wonderful. Thank you." CJJL von Hayek
    Africa's Agricultural Crisis
    order it
    Future Global Food Production
    order it
    Global Warming
    Fred Singer and Tom Schelling begin their discussion explaining how they each got involved in the climate change issue. They continue to discuss the short history of global warming, their own research findings, and those of their colleagues. They find that scientists have not been able to validate the varied and numerous climate models that have been developed over the years. Singer explains that weather satellites are now used to measure worldwide climate change and that the raw data actually shows a slight cooling in climate. Schelling challenges Singer to explain this contradiction. Singer and Schelling go on to analyze trends in data, the impact of human activity, and the future global implications of a warming climate. order it Happiness is a Warm Planet
    Shortly after publication of his book, Climate of Fear: Why We Shouldn't Worry about Global Warming, published by the Cato Institute and available free in both eBook and PDF format, Thomas Gale Moore spoke with Daniel Klein, an economics professor at Santa Clara University. Moore, a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University (

    60. Prémios Nobel
    Translate this page . Prémios nobel de Química. 1972 - Christian B. Anfinsen (EUA), stanford moore(EUA), William H. Stein (EUA), pelos estudos efectuados sobre a sequência de
    http://luisperna.com.sapo.pt/nobel_quimica.htm
    Prémios Nobel de Química 2002 - John B. Fenn (EUA), Koichi Tanaka (Japão), e Kurt Wüthrich (Suíça), pela sua contribuição para o desenvolvimento da espectrometria de massa e ressonância magnética nuclear, métodos que permitem identificar e analisar macromoléculas biológicas, como as proteínas. Os trabalhos premiados permitiram desenvolver métodos analíticos que facilitam a compreensão das macromoléculas e a interacção destas, ou seja, basicamente aquilo que determina as funções das células do corpo humano e também revolucionaram o desenvolvimento de medicamentos e são promissores em outras áreas como, por exemplo, o controlo alimentar e o diagnóstico precoce de alguns tipos de cancro.
    William Knowles (E.U.A), Barry Sharpless (E.U.A), Ryoji Noyori (Japão), pela investigações na área da síntese catalítica assimétrica
    Alan J. Heeger (E.U.A), Alan G. MacDiarmid (E.U.A), Hideki Shirakawa (Japão), pela descoberta e desenvolvimento dos polímeros condutores.
    Ahmed H. Zewail

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