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Chemistry World June 1, 2012 Bibiana Campos Seijo |
Bubbleology Science I recently had the pleasure of attending a dramatic reading of Carl Djerassi's latest book, Chemistry in theatre: Insufficiency, phallacy or both, at the University of Cambridge, UK.This play deals with the science of bubbleology. |
Chemistry World December 2008 Richard Van Noorden |
Editorial: Fiction failure Rare as it is for chemistry and its ideas to star in fiction, it's rarer still to find a story with a character who happens to be a chemist, but is also simply a well-rounded human being. |
Chemistry World September 30, 2014 Ben Valsler |
Carl Djerassi - chemistry and theatre Despite a long and venerable career as an organic chemist -- he wrote novels and now teaches an interdisciplinary seminar on science and theatre. |
Chemistry World November 3, 2014 John Mann |
In retrospect: from the pill to the pen One glaring Nobel Prize omission from the pantheon of life-changing drugs is the contraceptive pill. As one of the probable prize recipients, Carl Djerassi is, I believe, justly bitter about this oversight. |
Chemistry World July 1, 2014 Bibiana Campos Seijo |
Chemistry and art We often write about art-related chemistry, so this issue gives us an opportunity to analyze some of these stories in a bit more depth. |
Chemistry World February 20, 2015 Mark Peplow |
A large life, fully lived 'I'm basically an extremely curious person,' Carl Djerassi told Chemistry World last year. That curiosity -- fueled by boundless energy -- remained undimmed right up until his death on 30 January. |
Chemistry World January 8, 2015 Derry W Jones |
Great minds: reflections of 111 top scientists This perceptive and enjoyable compendium, though intelligible to non-scientific readers, will appeal especially to professional scientists aware of the characters' achievements. |
Chemistry World March 3, 2015 Philip Robinson |
Are you sitting comfortably? Storytelling and narrative are part of the very fabric of human culture. And while science itself is objective and dispassionate, the scientists who conduct it are anything but. |
Chemistry World October 22, 2013 Marie Cote |
Oliver Kappe: Freedom to explore Oliver Kappe is professor of chemistry at the University of Graz in Austria. Research in the Kappe group focuses on enabling technologies for synthesis, including microwave and continuous flow methods. |
Science News October 27, 2007 |
Science Safari: Chemistry--Weird and Otherwise Visit this computational chemist's blog to learn the who, what, when, where, and why of chemistry. |
Chemistry World June 2007 |
Student Book Reviews Chemistry for CSI Fans... At the Heart of Molecular Biology... A Broad Vista of Chemistry...Rings Are Not Just for Carbons... etc. |