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American Chemical Society

Division of the History of Chemistry

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BULLETIN FOR THE HISTORY OF CHEMISTRY

Number 23, 1999

NOTE: This issue is now open access.

If you have any problems, please email mainz@illinois.edu.

TITLE Author Page
Number
The 1997 Dexter Award Address. A Language to Order the Chaos. Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent 1
The Delhuyar Brothers, Tungsten, and Spanish Silver. Lyman R. Caswell and Rebecca W. Stone Daley 11
British Women Chemists and the First World War. Marelene F. Rayner-Canham and Geoffrey W. Rayner-Canham 20
Erlich, Bertheim, and Atoxyl: The Origins of Modern Chemotherapy. Steven Riethmiller 28
Academia and Industry: What Should Their Relationship Be?
The Levinstein-Roscoe Dialog.
Martin D. Saltzman 34
The Key Role Played by Sugar in Early Experiments in Kinetics and Equilibria. John T. Stock 42
Gustavus Hinrichs and the Lavoisier Monument. William D. Williams 47
     
Book Notes.    
From Caveman to Chemist: Circumstances and Achievements
Reviewed by Harold Goldwhite
Hugh W. Salzberg
1991
50
Cavendish
Reviewed by William B. Jensen
Christa Jungnickel and
Russell McCormmach
1996
51
Episodes from the History of the Rare Earth Elements
Reviewed by Clarence Murphy
C. H. Evans, Ed.
1996
53
Paracelsus: Das Werk -- die Rezeption
Reviewed by Thomas W. Orme
Volker Zimmermann, Ed.
1995
55
John Dalton, 1776-1844: A Bibliography of Works by and About Him, with an Annotated List
of his Surviving Apparatus and Personal Effects

Reviewed by Lawrence M. Principe
A. L. Smyth
1997
56