The Rice Thresher

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Rice Thresher THE RICE THRESHER Volume LXVI, Number 12 Rice University,Houston Texas Thursday, October 26,1978 The President's Lecture Series The Latest in Birth Control Course No. 101: Premature internationally known chemist Djerassi is a chemistry Parenthood — Prerequisite: who contributed greatly to the professor at Stanford Irresponsible Sex. It's a snap development of oral contra- University and was formerly a course. Pass or fail. No exams, ceptives, will discuss thefuture research chemist for Ciba, a term papers, not even any of human birth control at 8 well-known pharmaceutical classes. All that's required is p.m., Tuesday, October 31 in company. He received his complacency about you own the Chemistry Lecture Hall. undergraduate degree summa sexuality and a basic naivete Djerassi's appearance here cum laude from Kenyon that's sure to keep vou from is part of Rice University's College in 1942 and finished being in control. President's Lecture Series. His graduate work at the If your general attitude on topic addresses an important University of Wisconsin in the subject is not unlike decision for college students. 1945. Scarlett O'Hara's "111 think Although the women's Dr. Djerassi is a member of about that tomorrow," or if magazines indicate that girls the U.S. National Academy of birth control is something you think sex should be spontan- Sciences and the American choose to leave up to him or eous and that contraception Academy of Arts; and her or to luck, this course if for would make it calculated and Sciences. During 1975-76, he you. To bury one's head in the unromantic, the dating served on the President's proverbial sand most assuredly situation at Rice makes it Advisory Group on Contri- will not eliminate the problem. almost impossible to ignore the butions of Technology to Dr. Carl Djerassi, an problem. Economic Strength. Voltaire, More Than a Philosopher Richard Dees get the beast off. known for his philosophical "Voltaire was the epitome of Perhaps the most underrated tales (e.g. Candide), but, the cosmoplitian mind and the part of Voltaire's work, ironically, he would not have cosmopolitan person," Dr. according to Topazio, is his considered these his most Virgil W. Topazio said last poetry. Voltaire was consid- important works. night in his lecture, Voltaire, ered a great poet in his times, He spent much of his later King of the Philosophes. This but his poetic works have been years writing alphabeticaJ Dr. Carl Djerassi was the first of the Provost neglected in the modern era. works (e.g. encyclopedias). In Lecture Series. Yet, he wrote many volumes of these works, Topazio said, can Voltaire was considered the poetry and many of his plays, be found the accumulation of greatest writer, poet and and even letters, were written in Voltaire's wisdom. He used How to Resist Rape thinker of his age by his verse. these writings to wage full war contemporaries. He was the Voltaire's theatrical works against Christianity, injustice, leader of a group of 18th followed a classicist style, and and ignorance. The Campus Police it will hurt was stressed but also century thinkers known as the his later works were influenced sponsored a "How to Say No to fingers-in-the-eyes was Topazio is the Dean of Philosophes. The Philosophes by Shakespeare. a Rapist" film Wednesday mentioned as a good way to Humanties and Social Sciences emphasized, above all, reason; Topazio also emphasized the and holds the Laurence Forret night in the RMC Grand Hall. counter threatened violence. they criticized everything and They received the film on the importance of Voltaire's Chair in French and he is well For the women who could took nothing for granted. In histories. These works were known tor nis expertise ol spur-of-the-moment so addition, they believed in the publicity was scarce. But a never bring themselves to hurt based on sound science and Voltaire. He was introduced by someone else even when they universality of the mind were about current topics. Provost Frank Vandiver. good crowd showed up for the through science and that to 7pm showing although many are being harmed, an attitude Voltaire revolutionized history The Provost's Lectures are • of acquiescence is rec- help improve the lot of man writing by attempting to make designed to give Dublic access were Pub goers who happened was to "resemble the gods." to walk by and became comended. Once the attacker it interesting. to work and research done by engrossed in the film. thinks you are no longer a Voltaire led a crusade However, Voltaire is best the Rice faculty. against the religious fanaticism The film was entertaining as threat to him maybe his guard and social injustice of his age. well as being very relevant. It will go down for a moment and As such, he has often been seen gave many good tips on how to that is when you either run or as a proponent of democracy, repeal an attack. attack. but as Topazio pointed out, Filmed in front of a live high The movie will be rerun Voltaire was quite fond of the school audience, the speaker, sometime in November. With monarchy. Because of. his Fred Storwraski a Clinical the increasing threat of attacks, caustic nature against Psychologist in New York, women should take advantage fanaticism and injustice, gave information with visual as of any information offered. Voltaire has often been seen as well as physical demon- The escort services offered by destructive. But Voltaire strations on how to attack an many of the colleges is also likened his work to saving a attacker. another way to detour a person being attacked by a The standard knee jab where possible assault, beast: the important thing is to Texas A&M's Coach Resigns Tim Proctor could throw in the towel, which best possible game. Emory Bellard has resigned is doubtful, or they could play On Monday we worked hard as head football coach and with more emotion than ever. so that we could go to college athletic director at Texas Our main concern as a team station and outblock, A&M. This headline has been is not what Texas A&M is outtackle, and outhustle the echoing across the state of feeling. We've been working Aggies. On Tuesday, when we Texas. The question floating since Monday to get ourselves found out that Bellard had around the Rice campus has ready to play. We're always up resigned, we did not let up. been,"What effect will this have for the Aggies and this year is Whether or not the Aggies are of the football game this no exception. We cannot ready to play is their problem, weekend?" This move by concern ourselves with all of because Rice will be. Come to Bellard could do one of two the rumors in the papers. We College Station and help us beat Texas A&M Saturday. things for the Aggies; they just have to be ready to play our Dr. Virgil W. Tapazi Campanile photo The Rice Thresher, October 26,1978, Page 2 Editorials SClENCf 7U B»L«- CLEMENTS: fcl&iMfi HIGH JOHN HILL. Michelle Leigh Heard game. Early on in the election, to Texas to campaign for Bill in Congress speaks for itself. political hotbed, although famie Strauss many people thought that Hill Clements,someone pretty high He has voted against wasteful there are radicals in every Elections are two weeks off had the election in the hat, so to up in the "party" must think he spending and budget increases college. But this year get out and are you informed? Do you speak. When has Texas ever has something going for him. consistently and with seniority and vote. Even if you think one even know who is running in elected a Republican governor? What about the even more of seventeen years he stands the guy is just as bad as the next, what? Or maybe, the better (Since Santa Anna stormed publicized election for Texas best chance to win. start reading the papers and question is, "are you going to through Houston? No, Texas United States Senator? Even Paul and Gammage are at it listen to the upcoming debates voteT' was not even a state then.) though most Texas newspapers again. Both, having served between Hill and Clements Texas voters have several But Clements has proven a have fully endorsed John equal time in Congress, are Maybe your interest will weighty decisions ahead of worthy opponent, one not to be Tower, there are many battling as hard as ever. May change and the apathy will them. The gubernatorial taken lightly. If Ford and similarities in the two men. the best man win. disappear as the remnant of the election has become a guessing Reagan make a supportive visit Both Tower and Krueger were Rice has never been a seventies. educated in England and PAUL formerly taught school. Tower TOWER KRUEGER GAMNAGE taught political science ^t Midwestern University in Wichita Falls from 1951 until 1961, when he became the first Republican senator from Texas in 84 years. Bob Krueger taught at Duke until he inherited a prosperous cotton business in New Braunfels and ran for House representative. Similarly, both men are ultra- OOPS... conservative and you can bet /\W CMOtf... Op neither listens to kicker music. SHAKE' Pi<15 iOOlNg sess'on Long gone is the tall Texan HOMS Tc R0elFT» ACjArNr image of the 60's and neither man owns a Stetson. In spite of trying to present fine, upstanding images, mudslinging is very much in vogue now.
Recommended publications
  • Carl Djerassi: Chemist and Entrepreneur
    Carl Djerassi: Chemist and entrepreneur Eugene Garfield 534 CHEMTECH SEPTEMBER 1983 Much has been said about the scientific entrepreneur. established a precedent for the widely used fragment coding Although the term ordinarily is applied to the person who system employed in the Index Chemicus Registry System has been successful in business—one thinks of Thomas (ICRS) and other systems. Edison or Edwin Land, among others—there also are At the end of the 1940s, much of the excitement centered scientific entrepreneurs in the academic community. It is on the discovery that cortisone could alleviate arthritis not often that one finds a scientist who can fit both symptoms. The chemical was derived from animal bile, but descriptions. To maintain a credible academic existence one initially in amounts too small for treating this chronic, needs enormous dedication and energy; to function in a widespread disease. Scientists around the world were racing scientifically oriented business these qualities as well as to find a more practical method of synthesis. In 1951, significant managerial competence are needed. That rare Djerassi and his team at Syntex won the race; they found a combination of qualities is found in my friend Carl relatively simple way to make cortisone using a readily Djerassi. available raw material, the Mexican yam (2). I recently had the honor of speaking informally at an That same year, Djerassi's team synthesized another unusual event. The numerous friends and collaborators of compound, which received much less attention at the time. Djerassi attended a party celebrating the publication of his They named it "norethisterone," and it was to become the thousandth paper.
    [Show full text]
  • The 1990 Nobel Prize Winners
    Current CX3mrnerits” EUGENE GARFIELD INSTITUTE FCR SCIENTIFIC INFORMATGW 3YJ1 MARKET ST PHILAOELFHIA, PA 19104 The 199Q Nobel Prize Winners: A Citationist Retrospective Number 11 March 18, 1991 For more than a decade, we have devoted Before the awards were announced last essays to each year’s Nobel Prizes. These year, the biweekly newspaper ?% Scien- reports, usually published six months or tkt @ published a series of axticles in which more after the prize, have provided a unique Nobel Prize contenders were listed, based citationist perspective on the wimers. In ad- on citation frequency and predictor dition to identifying their most-cited works, awards.$7 One would think that with all of especially Citation Clussics ~, we have the non-Nobel awards that abound,g.g there highlighted work that has influenced key re- would be few recipients not in that category. search fronts.1 Nevertheless, this does occur km time to When pertinent, we’ve also listed the time. winners’ contributions to the review litera- One interesting aspect of this year’s ture. And+whe~ possible, we’ve contacted awards is the relatively low level of citations the Nobelists or close colleagues to de- for several of the winners. This could be due termine whether or not our data rein- to factors similar to those of the famous forced or contradicted perceptions of de- Watson and Crick paper in 1953,10 for layed recognition, as in the case with which they teceived the 1%2 Nobel Prize in Barbara Mc(lintock.z Her 1983 Nobel for physiology or medicine. It had been cited physiology or medicine may have been de- just under 1,100 times when we last studied layed, but she was widely recognized in the it.11This is an indication of obliteration by genetics community.
    [Show full text]
  • Robert Burns Woodward
    The Life and Achievements of Robert Burns Woodward Long Literature Seminar July 13, 2009 Erika A. Crane “The structure known, but not yet accessible by synthesis, is to the chemist what the unclimbed mountain, the uncharted sea, the untilled field, the unreached planet, are to other men. The achievement of the objective in itself cannot but thrill all chemists, who even before they know the details of the journey can apprehend from their own experience the joys and elations, the disappointments and false hopes, the obstacles overcome, the frustrations subdued, which they experienced who traversed a road to the goal. The unique challenge which chemical synthesis provides for the creative imagination and the skilled hand ensures that it will endure as long as men write books, paint pictures, and fashion things which are beautiful, or practical, or both.” “Art and Science in the Synthesis of Organic Compounds: Retrospect and Prospect,” in Pointers and Pathways in Research (Bombay:CIBA of India, 1963). Robert Burns Woodward • Graduated from MIT with his Ph.D. in chemistry at the age of 20 Woodward taught by example and captivated • A tenured professor at Harvard by the age of 29 the young... “Woodward largely taught principles and values. He showed us by • Published 196 papers before his death at age example and precept that if anything is worth 62 doing, it should be done intelligently, intensely • Received 24 honorary degrees and passionately.” • Received 26 medals & awards including the -Daniel Kemp National Medal of Science in 1964, the Nobel Prize in 1965, and he was one of the first recipients of the Arthur C.
    [Show full text]
  • Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholars 1956-57- 2016-2017 (61 Years)
    Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholars 1956-57- 2016-2017 (61 years) 2016-2017 (112 visits) Adorno, Rolena Spanish/Latin American literatur Yale Bialek, William physics Princeton Ehrman, Bart D. religion, New Testament UNC-Chapel Hill Grosz, Barbara J. computer science Harvard Hochschild, Jennifer L. political science Harvard Kitcher, Philip philosophy Columbia Lester, Marsha I. chemistry Penn Morse, Nora Naranjo fine arts, poetry, sculpture Espanola, NM Rodgers, Daniel T. American history & culture Princeton Sabloff, Jeremy A. anthropology, Maya Penn Weiman, David F. economic history Barnard Wexler, Laura American studies Yale Witt, John Fabian law, American history Yale Wright, Patricia anthropology/primatology SUNY, Stony Brook Xiao, Shuhai geobiology/paleobiology Virginia Tech 2015-2016 (100 visits) Michael Bérubé English, disability studies Penn State Caroline Bruzelius art, art history Duke David K. Campbell physics, engineering Boston U. Hazel V. Carby African American studies Yale Carol Greenhouse anthropology, sociocultural Princeton David B. Grusky sociology, inequality, poverty Stanford Rigoberto Hernandez biochemistry, diversity studies Georgia Tech Mae Ngai history, Asian American studies Columbia Judith Resnik law Yale Timothy Rowe paleontology, geology UTAustin Larry A. Silver art history, Renaissance Penn Harold W. Stanley political science, elections Southern Methodist Richard Sylla American economic history NYU Blaire Van Valkenburgh vertebrate paleonbiology UCLA Vincent L. Wimbush religion Inst.SignifyingScriptures 2014-2015 (96 visits) Jeffrey C. Alexander sociology Yale William Y. Arms computer science Cornell Wendy Brown political science UCBerkeley Caroline Bruzelius art, art history Duke Philip J. Deloria history, American Indian Michigan Gerald Graff English, education Illinois at Chicago Kathleen McGarry economics, aging UCLA Gregory A. Petsko neurology, neuroscience Cornell Med.
    [Show full text]
  • Carl Djerassi, Pictured Here with Artwork from His Collection
    Carl Djerassi, pictured here with artwork from his collection. This sculpture, by artist Niki de Saint Phalle, is entitled “Wise Man.” Photograph by Walter van Schalkwijk. Carl Djerassi: Renaissance Scientist Par Excellence by Krishnan Rajeshwar and Walter van Schalkwijk arl Djerassi was born in Vienna, Austria, and received his Fritzsche Award (1960), Award for Creative Invention (1973), education at Kenyon College (AB summa cum laude, Award in the Chemistry of Contemporary Technological Prob- 1942) and the University of Wisconsin (PhD, 1945). After lems (1983), Priestley Medal (1992), Willard Gibbs Medal (1997), four years as research chemist with CIBA Pharmaceutical and Othmer Gold Medal (2000). Co. in Summit, New Jersey, he joined Syntex, S.A., in Carl Djerassi is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Mexico City in 1949 as associate director of chemical Sciences and of its Institute of Medicine, as well as a member of Cresearch. In 1952, he accepted a professorship at Wayne State the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Royal Swedish University, and in 1959 his current position as professor of Academy of Sciences, and many other learned societies. He has chemistry at Stanford University. received 18 honorary doctorate degrees from various academic Concurrently with his academic positions, he also held var- institutions around the world. ious posts at Syntex during the period 1957-1972, including that Djerassi has embarked on a second career in writing of president of Syntex Research (1968-1972). In 1968, he helped including five “science-in-fiction” novels: Cantor’s Dilemma; The found Zoecon Corporation, a company dedicated to developing Bourbaki Gambit; Marx, Deceased; Menachem’s Seed; and NO.
    [Show full text]
  • Kenyon Collegian College Archives
    Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange The Kenyon Collegian College Archives 2-5-2015 Kenyon Collegian - February 5, 2015 Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian Recommended Citation "Kenyon Collegian - February 5, 2015" (2015). The Kenyon Collegian. 2369. https://digital.kenyon.edu/collegian/2369 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the College Archives at Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Kenyon Collegian by an authorized administrator of Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. KCDC impresses with mainstage spectacle, Bakkhai Pg. 5 Serving Kenyon College and Gambier, Ohio Since 1856 2.5.15 VOLUME CXLII NO. 16 The Collegian 16 pages Today and tomorrow, the Destigmatizing mental health issues Board of Trustees meets to discuss Kenyon’s present and future. Some topics include: » Wrapping up 2020 discussions » Revisiting the campus master plan » Panel about connections between lib- eral arts education and career opportuni- ties, roles of undergraduate research and internships » Plans to release amount of future tu- ition increases COURTESY OF THE COUNSELING CENTER AND KRISTEN HUFFMAN Lef: Counseling Center staf pose for a group photo inside the newly renovated building. Right: the Counseling Center. Djerassi, a creator 34 percent of students visited the of her freshman year, Young and prescribed an anti-de- went to see a Kenyon coun- pressant medication in the Counseling Center in 2014. selor. “I learned that going spring of 2013, during her of the Pill, dies home was an option, and I sophomore year.
    [Show full text]
  • Report No. Cs-203
    wz^ STANFORD ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE PROJECT MEMOAIM-141 COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT REPORT NO. CS-203 THE HEURISTIC DENDRAL PROGRAM FOR EXPLAINING EMPIRICAL DATA BY BRUCE G. BUCHANAN JOSHUA LEDERBERG CO-PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATORS: E. FEIGENBAUM & J. LEDERBERG FEBRUARY 1971 COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT STANFORD UNIVERSITY STANFORD ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE PROJECT FEBRUARY 1971 MEMO AIM-Ik 1 COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT REPORT NO. CS2O3 THE HEURISTIC DENDRAL PROGRAM FOR EXPLAINING EMPIRICAL DATA* Bruce G. Buchanan Joshua Lederberg Co-Principal Investigators: E. Feigenbaum & J. Lederberg ABSTRACT: The Heuristic DENDRAL program uses an information processing model of scientific reasoning to explain experimental data in organic chemistry. This report summarizes the organization and results of the program for computer scientists. The pro- gram is divided into three main parts : planning, structure generation, and evaluation. The planning phase infers constraints on the search space from the empirical data input to the system. The structure generation phase searches a tree whose termini are models of chemical molecules using pruning heuristics of various kinds. The evaluation phase tests the candidate structures against the original data. Results of the program's analyses of some test data are discussed. *This research was supported by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (SD-I83). Much of the work reported here was performed by Mrs. Georgia Sutherland and Mr. Allan Delfino. The assistance of Dr. Alan Duffield I and Professor Carl Djerassi is also gratefully acknowledged. Reproduced in the USA. Available from the Clearinghouse for Federal Scientific and Technical Information, Springfield, Virginia 22151. Price: Full size copy $3-00; microfiche copy $ .65. I The Heuristic DENDRAL Program I for Explaining Empirical Data processing model of The Heuristic DENDRAL program applies an information chemistry.
    [Show full text]
  • Clarkson University's Shipley Distinguished Lectureship Series
    Updated April 2018 Clarkson University’s Shipley Distinguished Lectureship Series 1995 Jean-Marie Lehn, Nobel Laureate Universitè Louis Pasteur Strasbourg; College de France, Paris, France 1. From Matter to Life: Chemistry?! 2. Perspectives in Supra molecular Chemistry: From Molecular Recognition towards Self-Organization 1996 Sir John Meurig Thomas, FRS University of Cambridge, Department of Materials Science & Metallurgy, Cambridge, England 1. Davy and Faraday: A Tale of Contrasting Geniuses 2. Designed Solid Catalysts 1997 Paul Josef Crutzen, Nobel Laureate Max-Planck Institute, Mainz, Germany 1. The Antarctic Ozone Hole: A Human Caused Chemical Instability of the Stratosphere 2. The Importance of the Tropics in Atmospheric Chemistry 1998 Helmut Ringdorf Institut für Organische Chemie, Mainz, Germany 1. Death of a Tumor Cell: Can We Mimic the Process? 2. Multicompartmentation: A Concept for the Molecular Architecture of Life 1999 Carl Djerassi Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA 1. Sex in an Age of Mechanical Reproduction 2. Noble Science and Nobel Lust: Disclosing Tribal Secrets 2000 Cherry A. Murray Lucent Technologies, Bell Labs Innovation, Murray Hill, New Jersey, USA 1. The Future of Communications 2. Video Microscopy of Colloidal Crystals 2001 Richard R. Ernst, Nobel Laureate ETH Hönggerberg CHI, Zurich, Switzerland 1. Tibetan Painting Art Seen Through the Eyes of a Western Scientist 2. Fascinating NMR Insights with Applications to Chemistry, Biology and Medicine 2002 Gabor A. Somorjai University of California, Berkeley, California, USA 1 Updated April 2018 1. Surfaces: Favorite Media of Evolution and New Technologies 2. The Evolution of Surface Chemistry and Catalysis from the Time of Langmuir and Taylor to the 21st Century 2003 Ivar Giaever, Nobel Laureate Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York, USA 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Chemical Bond-Apr03
    Chemical Bond Volume 55 Number 6 September 2004 St. Louis Section, American Chemical Society Welcome Back! If you want to build a ship... don’t herd people together to collect wood and don’t assign them tasks and work, but rather... teach them to long for the endless immensity of the sea. -Antoine de Saint-Exupery The Gustavus John Esselen Award Awarded by the Northeastern Section of the American Chemical Society CALL FOR NOMINATIONS The Northeastern Section of the American Chemical Society is pleased to invite nominations of worthy candidates for the Gustavus John Esselen Award for Chemistry in the Public Interest. This award recognizes a chemists for outstand- ing achievement in scientific and technical work that contributes to the public well-being and has thereby communicated positive values of the chemical profes- sion. The Awardee should be a living resident of the United States or Canada at the time of nomination, and the significance of this work should have become apparent within the five years preceding nomination. The Awardee will deliver an address on the subject of the work for which the honor is being conferred, or for work in progress which is also directed to chemistry in the public interest. The award was established in 1987 to honor the memory of Gustavus John Esselen, a distinguished member of the Northeastern Section. The first awardees were F. Sherwood Rowland and Mario J. Molina, who subsequently received the Nobel Prize. TO NOMINATE a candidate, please provide statements from two co-spon- sors as well as a brief biography of the candidate, a description of the work which has been recognized as communicating the positive values of the chemistry pro- fession and copies of selected, pertinent articles.
    [Show full text]
  • Carl Djerassi 1923‐2015
    SenD#7009 MEMORIAL RESOLUTION CARL DJERASSI 1923‐2015 Carl Djerassi, Professor Emeritus of Chemistry, novelist, playwright, patron of the arts and pioneer in the production of the oral contraceptive pill, died in his home in San Francisco on January 30. He was 91 years old. Djerassi was born in Vienna in 1923 to Samuel Djerassi and Alice Friedmann. He lived for periods in Sofia, Bulgaria and Vienna but with the rising Nazi threat, moved with his mother to the United States, arriving nearly penniless in 1939. Djerassi graduated at the age of 18 from Kenyon College where in his own words, he “became a chemist”. He earned a Ph.D. in chemistry from Wisconsin in 1945 and subsequently worked at CIBA, developing one of the first commercial antihistamines (Pyribenzamine). In 1949, Djerassi became associate director of research at Syntex in Mexico City. His research on steroids led to the synthesis of norethisterone and the first birth‐control pill, studies that have since transformed science and society. Djerassi joined the faculty at Wayne State University in 1952. In 1959, he joined the faculty at Stanford while for a time serving also as president of Syntex Research. In 1968, he founded Zoecon, a company directed at hormonal control of insect pests. Djerassi published over 1200 scientific manuscripts, encompassing seminal contributions to tools for structure elucidation including mass spectrometry, magnetic circular dichroism and optical rotatory dispersion. He also made pioneering contributions to our understanding of the biosynthesis of marine natural products. With Nobel Laureate Joshua Lederberg and computer scientist Edward Feigenbaum, he also devised a computer program called DENDRAL, one of the earliest uses of artificial intelligence for structure elucidation.
    [Show full text]
  • View Full Statement
    EDITOR’S NOTE On the scale he year begins with the “Doomsday Clock” being set a little closer to midnight. Cheers! And Happy New Year to you, too. Between 1947 and Editor . Mike Moore 1990, the clock’s minute hand waggled back and forth 13 times, ranging Managing Editor . Linda Rothstein from two minutes to midnight to 12 minutes to midnight. But, in De- Assistant Editor . Lauren Spain T Assistant Editor. Danielle Gordon cember 1991—to memorialize the death of the East-West nuclear arms race and the apparent birth of democracy in Russia—the hand was moved off its Advertising Manager . Amanda Johnson Circulation Manager . Andrew Ludington 15-minute scale and set at 17 minutes to—its farthest point ever. Columnist: William Arkin. That represented eye-popping optimism, given that one of the aims of the Bulletin, in the words of founding editor Eugene Rabinowitch, was to “fright- Contributing Editors: Len Ackland, David Albright, William Arkin, John Isaacs, Michael en men into rationality.” Unfortunately, world leaders did not take full advan- Krepon, Jane M.O. Sharp, Leonid Zagalsky. tage of the opportunities; there has been no new world order, to revive a phrase that already seems antiquated. Last month, the Bulletin’s Board of Di- Editorial Board: Anne H. Cahn, Michael Klare, George A. Lopez, Gerald Marsh, rectors once again moved the minute hand toward midnight. Stephen Walt. The reasons for that are as many as today’s headlines. The post–Cold War world is still surprisingly brutish and dangerous, and many ambitious U.N. Sponsors: John Simpson, president; Samuel Allison, Edoardo Amaldi, Robert peacekeeping efforts have failed, partly because the major powers have not Bacher, David Baltimore, Paul Berg, Hans backed the United Nations.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Group Occasional Paper 10
    The Royal Society of Chemistry Historical Group (RSCHG) Introduction Occasional Paper No. 10 I happily begin my Wheeler Lecture by thanking the Historical Group of The Royal Society of Chemistry for their kindness and generosity in presenting The Ninth Wheeler Lecture me this, the Ninth Edgar Philip Wheeler Lectureship. As I look around this Burlington House, London room in the glorious Burlington House, I feel the same warm glow as when I Presented on May 10, 2017 entered Burlington House for the first time just a few minutes ago. It is the glow of scholarship, tradition, achievement, and the gathering of scholarship at its best. This has been the meeting place of over 150 years of scientific Woodward’s Unpublished Letters: and artistic output. Being here on this special day, with many of my friends †,# Revealing, Commanding and Elegant. Part 2 and heroes, I am truly filled with joy and will leave today with a reinforced, even supererogatory commitment to my own scholarship. Thank you. Jeffrey I. Seeman I must also mention that, as I was preparing for my two lectures this Department of Chemistry afternoon – one on Woodward’s Unpublished Letters, the subject of this University of Richmond, Richmond, Virginia 23173 (USA) paper, and the second on the Development of the Woodward-Hoffmann Rules, a topic on which I have already published9 and will publish more in E-mail: [email protected] the coming several years – I was reminded of a wonderful photograph of R. ––––––––––––––– B. Woodward that I saw recently for the first time. I emphasize “for the first time” because I’ve been collecting photographs, anecdotes, and historical Abstract: A collection of excerpts from letters written by R.
    [Show full text]