Activity Listings
- Letter from Dr. J. L. Amorós to LP RE: inquires if he received his previous letter and asks LP to send him a letter stating that he can work with him, so he can get a visa. [Letter from Amorós to LP June 28, 1947] [Letter from LP to Amorós August 19, 1947] [Filed under LP Biographical: Academia: Box 1.017, Folder 17.3]
- Letter from J. David Chalfant to LP RE: Reminds LP of his original letter of May 27th and asks if he has yet had time to look over the manuscript. (Note in pencil: “This probably crossed your letter.” [Letters from Chalfant to LP May 27, 1947, from LP to Chalfant August 5, 1947] [Filed under LP Correspondence Box: #74.15, file:(C: Correspondence, 1946)]
- Letter from LP to Dr. H. A. Morgan, Director, Tennessee Valley Authority, RE: Thanks Morgan for the invitation to meet and discuss TVA's chemical research problems but declines because of his upcoming trip to England. States he will consider and respond to any problems that Morgan may write to him about. [Letters from Dr. H. A. Morgan to LP July 2, 1947, from J. H. Walthall August 14, 1947] [Filed under LP Correspondence: #410.12]
- Letter from LP to Dr. Thomas Addis. [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box #2.2, file:(Addis, Thomas 1946-1947)]
August 6, 1947
Dr. T. Addis, M.D.
Department of Medicine
Stanford University School of Medicine
2398 Sacramento Street
San Francisco, California
Dear Tom:
I am glad to say that Ava Helen and I got safely back from our trip of two months to England and Sweden. We had a fine time, and we thought about you often.
I hope that you are now in good shape, and that Mrs. Addis is also well.
I haven't very much to report about the matter of your visit to England. I talked with Sir Edward Mellanby, who said that it would be fine to have you come, and that he would make whatever arrangements were needed. He said to let him know as soon as the trip was definitely scheduled.
I also talked a good bit with people at the English universities about using the funds under the Fulbright Amendment for support of professors and advanced research men instead of exclusively for undergraduate students. They are enthusiastic about the idea, and it is, of course, permitted under the law. However, I am not at all sure what decision will be made by the new Presidential board. I am not a member of this board, and I do not yet know who the members are. I received a telegram from the State Department saying that the President had decided not to appoint me a member of the board because I was going to be out of the country during the major part of the coming year.
Our trip was a very interesting one. We spent three days at the northern end of Long Island, at a conference of twenty-five people on the foundations of quantum mechanics. Then we flew to England, stayed for a week in Cambridge, a week in Oxford, and ten days in London. The Cambridge and Oxford visits were full of social affairs, which kept us very busy, but the first ten days in London were quiet ones, which we devoted exclusively to resting and sightseeing. We then flew to Stockholm, and had ten days of very pleasant vacation, including a three-day visit to Visby, on the island of Gottland in the Baltic. We attended the first three days of the International Congress of Experimental Cytology in Stockholm, a very pleasant affair, and then went back to London. Here for about two weeks we were kept busy with the Centenary Celebration of The Chemical Society, the International Union of Chemistry, and the International Congress of Pure and Applied Chemistry. We then flew to New York, and took the train home. I shall tell you all about conditions in England when we visit you next.
Are you going to be in San Francisco about a month from now? Ava Helen and I are thinking that it would be good to drive up, and to call on you, along about the first of September. Our plans are very flexible, however, and we could adjust the time of our visit to suit your convenience.
My textbook of freshman chemistry has just appeared, and I have been looking through it for mistakes. We seem to have been fortunate, however, for I have found only one so far.
With best regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
[Linus Pauling]
Linus Pauling:par
- Letter from LP to Edward Murrow, Vice-President, CBS, RE: Requests a transcript of the documentary, “The Sunny Side of the Atom,” aired on June 30th. Explains that he was overseas at the time, and recalls discussing the project with Ruth Ashton and John Pfeiffer earlier in the year. [Letter from Murrow to LP June 24, 1947] [Filed under LP Correspondence Box: #70, file:(Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., 1947, 1957, 1964-1965, 1975, 1981)]
- Letter from LP to Francis M. Pottenger, Jr., M.D., American Academy of Applied Nutrition RE: Declines the invitation to speak at AAAN's annual meeting because he will be out of town. [Letter from Francis M. Pottenger, Jr., M. D. to LP July 25, 1947] [Filed under LP Correspondence: #312.12]
- Letter from LP to Prof. Neil E. Gordon, Chemistry Department, Wayne University, RE: Replies that he will be unable to stop by Detroit for the symposium on his return trip from Europe next year, as he will not be coming back until midsummer. [Note from Gordon to LP June 20, 1947] [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box #140.11, file:(G: Correspondence, 1947)]
- Letter from LP to Robert Gould, Managing Editor, Chemical and Engineering News RE: Informs him that no further changes will be made to the speech, other than those already sent on May 16th. [Letter from Gould to LP June 20, 1947, Letter from Wulf to Gould July 1, 1947] [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box #70.3, file:(Chemical and Engineering News, 1947-1958, 1968-1969, 1975, 1979-1980, 1988)]
- Letter from Mary E. Ray, Secretary, Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists, to Dr. Daniel Longaker. Thanks him on the behalf of Dr. Albert Einstein for his donation and support. Writes that unfortunately the article "Only Then Shall We Find Courage" by Dr. Albert Einstein is currently out of print, but when copies are made available, she will send him 25 copies, as requested. [Letter from Longaker to Einstein, August 4, 1947]. LP Peace: Box 3.005, Folder 5.3
- Progress Report No. 9-15, ‘The Increase in Performance Resulting from the Addition of Hydrogen to a Hydrazine-Liquid Oxygen Propellant System.' By D. Altman, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, CIT. [Filed under LP Science: Scientific War Work Materials re: the development of Rocket Propellants, 1942-1944, 1947: Box #13.005 Folder #5.5]
- Writes cheque to “Gug Fn. Trav checks” $302.25 [LP Biographical: Business and Financial 4.073, folder 73.6]
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