Activity Listings
- LP writes cheque to: Beatrice J. Wulf: amount: $100.00 [Filed under LP Biographical: Box #4.022, Folder #1]
- Letter from A. H. Walter to the Office of Naval Research (ONR), cc: LP RE: submits copies of the September 16, 1952 proposal for a two-year extension of a contract with the ONR. Goes into legality issues. [Filed under LP Science: Box 14.032, Folder 32.2]
- Letter from Henry Allen Moe, Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, to LP RE: A form letter with personal handwritten notes at the end. Details why the amount of Guggenheim grants is initially low compared to other grants. [Filed under LP Science: Box 14.015, Folder 15.1].
- Letter from LP to Dr. J. Jennen of Gevaert Photo-Production. [Letter from Dr. J. Jennen to LP September 7, 1953] [Filed under J: Correspondence 1953, Box #192, Folder #19]
23 September 1953
Dr. J. Jennen
Gevaert Photo-Producten
Mortsel, Antwerp
Belgium
Dear Dr. Jennen:
I am sorry to say, in answer to your letter of 7 September, that I do not have any reprints left of my 1939 article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
I doubt that the conclusion reached by Bates and Hobbs, in their 1951 paper in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, is justified. I may point out that their own conclusion, as stated in italics, is not unambiguous! they say "either because of its absence or of contributions from a compensating polar structure, the usual polar resonance form written for the amides makes a very small or negligible contribution to the structure of the amide group." I judge that their use of the words "or of contributions from a compensating polar structure" means that they are discussing in fact only the electric dipole moment of the amide group, and not the structure, and that the foregoing statement made by them means that the observed dipole moment agrees with a moment calculated by them with neglect of the usual polar resonance form either because the usual polar resonance form does not make a contribution to the dipole moment or because there is some compensating effect that accidentally causes them to find agreement. In any case, I am sure that their work does not justify one to say that the usual polar resonance form is unimportant. Other evidence, far more reliable, indicates clearly that this structure makes a large contribution, and, in fact, that the contribution can be estimated to be about 40 percent in case that the amide group is forming hydrogen bonds, and somewhat smaller, perhaps 30 percent, if it is not forming hydrogen bonds.
Sincerely yours,
Linus Pauling:W
- Letter from Theodore T. Puck to LP RE: writes that he was interested in LP's article in The Review of Scientific Instruments. Requests a set of the mentioned models for their use in teaching and thinking about problems. [Letter of response from LP to Prof. Theodore T. Puck October 7, 1953]. [Filed under LP Correspondence: Box #313, Folder #1]
- Note from H. Corliere to LP RE: Asks that LP do him the favor of answering to his "whole world inquiry: "Homage to Einstein." Goes on to list all of the others who have obliged him in his inquiry. [Filed under C: Correspondence 1953, Box #74, Folder #21]
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