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American Chemical Society

Division of the History of Chemistry

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BULLETIN FOR THE HISTORY OF CHEMISTRY

Volume 36, Number 2, 2011

NOTE: This issue is now open access.
If you have any problems, please email mainz@illinois.edu.

TITLE Author Page
Number
EDITOR'S LETTER 60
DO HISTORIANS OR CHEMISTS WRITE BETTER
HISTORY OF CHEMISTRY?
Seymour H. Mauskopf
Duke University
61
CHEMISTRY IN ENGLISH ACADEMIC GIRLS' SCHOOLS, 1880-1930 Marelene Rayner-Canham and Geoff Rayner-Canham
Grenfell Campus, Memorial University
Corner Brook, Newfoundland
68
HOW AN ANGLO-AMERICAN METHODOLOGY TOOK ROOT IN FRANCE Pierre Laszlo
École polytechnique, Palaiseau, France, and University of Liège
75
CELEBRATING OUR DIVERSITY. THE EDUCATION OF SOME
PIONEERING AFRICAN AMERICAN CHEMISTS IN OHIO
Sibrina N. Collins
College of Wooster
82
INTRODUCTION TO THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF
“A CONTRIBUTION TO CHEMICAL STATICS” BY LEOPOLD PFAUNDLER:
A Forgotten Classic of Chemical Kinetics
William B. Jensen and Julia Kuhlmann
University of Cincinnati
85
PRIMARY DOCUMENTS “A CONTRIBUTION TO CHEMICAL STATICS” Leopold Pfaundler
Annalen der Physik und Chemie, 1867
87
     
BOOK REVIEWS    
Nuclear Reactions Adam Ganz; 15 June 2010 99
Radioactive: Marie & Pierre Curie, A Tale of Love and Fallout Lauren Redniss; 2010 101
Nothing Less Than an Adventure: Ellen Gleditsch
and Her Life in Science
Anne-Marie Weidler Kubanek; 2010 102
The First Miracle Drugs:
How the Sulfa Drugs Transformed Medicine
John E. Lesch; 2007 103
Boyle: Between God and Science Michael Hunter; 2009 105
Atoms in Chemistry: From Dalton's Predecessors
to Complex Atoms and Beyond
Carmen J. Giunta, Ed.; 2010 106
Reaction! Chemistry in the Movies Mark Griep and Marjorie Mikasen; 2009 108
Periodic Tales: A Cultural History of the Elements
from Arsenic to Zinc
Hugh Aldersey-Williams; 2011 109