Biographical Memoirs: Volume 88, Volume 88Biographic Memoirs Volume 88 contains the biographies of deceased members of the National Academy of Sciences and bibliographies of their published works. Each biographical essay was written by a member of the Academy familiar with the professional career of the deceased. For historical and bibliographical purposes, these volumes are worth returning to time and again. |
Contents
STANLEY ARTHUR BARBER | 25 |
DAVID MAHLON BONNER | 41 |
CHARLES STACY FRENCH | 63 |
HERBERT FRIEDMAN | 91 |
EDWARD LEONARD GINZTON | 111 |
THOMAS GOLD | 145 |
HERBERT SANDER GUTOWSKY | 159 |
VLADIMIR HAENSEL | 175 |
LACEY | 229 |
FRITZ ALBERT LIPMANN | 247 |
FRANCIS DANIELS MOORE | 269 |
WALLE J H NAUTA | 285 |
CHARLES NORWOOD REILLEY | 305 |
ROBBINS | 323 |
RICHARD EVANS SCHULTES | 339 |
THOMAS DALE STEWART | 353 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accelerator acid active American Andrews applications Association Award became become began biology Board brain building career changes Chem chemical chemistry colleagues completed continued contributions David Department director early effect elected electron energy engineering experience exploration field formed Fred French Friedman friends Ginzton Gold graduate Hardy Harvard heat Henry human important Institute interest International John known laboratory Lacey later Lipmann lived major measure medicine ment method microwave moved National Academy nature needed noted nutrition observation organization pain period phosphate physics plant position problems production professor published reactions received resonance response returned root School Sciences scientific scientists served showed skin Society soil Stacy Stanford structure successful television temperature tion turned United University uptake Washington World X-ray York Zworykin