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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1998  > October  >
Chemical Education Today
Commentary
How Linus Pauling Finally Got the Priestley Medal of the American Chemical Society
Derek A. Davenport
Purdue University, Department of Chemistry, 1393 Brown Bldg., West Lafayette, IN 47907

Cover
October 1998
Vol. 75 No. 10
p. 1211

Abstract
Late in 1981 I started firming up plans for a symposium marking the 250th anniversary of the birth of Joseph Priestley in 1733. The symposium was scheduled for the 1983 Fall Meeting of the American Chemical Society to be held in Washington D. C. Because of Priestley's wide-ranging interests and activities, the speakers were to include not only chemists and historians but also a political scientist, a grammarian, and a Unitarian minister. The closing session was to open with Melvin Calvin speaking on "Artificial Photosynthesis"-a phenomenon Priestley was the first to observe, albeit somewhat confusedly. Next came Fred Basolo, then president of the American Chemical Society, on "Synthetic Oxygen Carriers of Biological Interest"-Priestley had abeen among the first to remark on the role of dephlogisticated air (oxygen) in the interconversion of venous and arterial blood.
More Information
*  Citation
Davenport, Derek A. J. Chem. Educ. 1998 75 1211.
*  Keywords
history, philosophy
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
June 21, 1999
June 24, 2005
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1998 > October > Page 1211


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