Activity Listings
- Check from LP to AAAS Publications for $10.75. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Bank Statements and Canceled Checks, January 1960-December 1961), Box #4.026, Folder #26.1] [Also filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Check Registers, 1957-1962), Box #4.076, Folder #76.3]
- Dividend Statements from W.H. Freeman and Company to LP for $0.50 dividend per share. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Assorted Bills, Receipts and Invoices, 1951-1962), Box #4.060, Folder #60.5]
- Document: '"World Law" Mail Survey Reveals Support' by Who's Who Listees for UN Charter Revision. [Filed under LP Correspondence: (C: Correspondence, 1960) #75.3]
- Letter from David Rabuck, to LP. RE: Asks for a list of top schools. Asks him to recommend a smaller school. [Letter from LP April 8, 1960] [Filed under LP Correspondence: (R: Correspondence, 1960) # 342.1]
- Letter from Hy Ruchlis, Science Materials Center, to LP. RE: Expresses his appreciation for his talk at the NSTA convention. Enclosing a copy of the new science record about space. Encloses his catalogue. Offers to send him a sample. [Letter from LP April 14, 1960] [Filed under LP Speeches: (Speeches by LP, 1960) Box # 1960s, Folder # 1960s.12]
- Letter from Janet Vaughan to LP, RE: Vaughan does not repudiate the statement that was made in the New Statesman. Vaughan stands by her opinion and statements about Strontium-90 and fallout. [LP's letter April 1, 1960] [LP's reply April 11, 1960] [Filed under LP Peace: (Materials re: Strontium-90, June 1959-November 1959), Box #7.012, Folder #12.17]
- Letter from Joseph Kanig to LP, RE: Kanig is asking LP to send him any references or reprints on the topic of Strontium-90 absorption. [LP's reply April 13, 1960] [Filed under LP Peace: (Materials re: Strontium-90, 1960), Box #7.013, Folder #13.19]
- Letter from LP to Peter Pauling. [Filed under LP Biographical: Family Correspondence: Peter Jeffress Pauling, 1960-1974: Box #5.044, Folder #44.1]
4 April 1960
Dear Peter,
I am writing to ask about your opinion on a matter that my be of importance to us.
In 1932 I started to write a high school textbook of chemistry from the chemical bond and molecular structure approach. I didn't work very much on it, and shortly gave up - the notes were of some use to me in writing General Chemistry for college use.
I enclose a clipping from Chemical and Engineering News saying that 4,000 students in 50 U.S. high schools will be studying the Chemical Bond Approach course in their chemistry classes next year. I don't have the copy of Chemical and Engineering News for 30 November 1959 la which something is said about this course, but I have heard something about it. It is, of course, in my opinion the right way to teach high school chemistry. The main thing that bothers me about this activity is that the textbook is not being written by one author or two authors, but by a committee, and the experience of the physicists in having a committee write a textbook for physics for use in high schools has made me skeptical. I think that usually a better textbook can be written by one or two authors.
Now, to get down to business, I am writing to ask if you think that it would be worthwhile to get out a high school textbook in chemistry - that is, for you and me to get out such a textbook. It probably should not be much different from high school textbooks as they exist at present, except that it should be better, and to be based more upon molecular structure. Writing such a book might be a fine way for you to add to your income, during the whole of your life. I would be glad to help, and we might be able to divide the labor in a satisfactory way. Perhaps you could write to Kent Wilson or to somebody else and get some information about the chemical bond approach, or perhaps it would be better to wait until later before doing that.
This matter was brought to my attention a couple of days ago in Kansas City, when two young men who work for Addison-Wesley approached me, asking if there was any chance that I would write a high school chemistry textbook, perhaps with a collaborator. They said that Addison-Wesley would like to publish one.
Much love from
[Linus Pauling]
- Letter from N. B. Vaughan, Institute of Metals, to LP. RE: Has made arrangements for LP's lecture on July 25 at the Royal Institution. [Letter from LP April 9, 1960] [Filed under LP Speeches: (Speeches by LP 1960) Folder #1960s2 Box #1960s2.10]
- Letter from Peter Pauling to Linda and Barclay Kamb. [Filed under LP Biographical: Family Correspondence: Peter Jeffress Pauling, 1960-1974: Box #5.044, Folder #44.1]
4 April, 1960
Dear Linda and Barclay,
I hope you had a pleasant trip and have arrived safely and are enjoying the good life by Lac Leman. It is quite nice there, and I think Copenhagen is quite nice. I hope you stopped long enough and were able to see something there.
You must come to Cambridge and bring the boys. I am negotiating for 19, Portugal place, furnished and with French girl. The house next door has been incorporated and there will be enough room I think. I am planning to take Julia and Thos. and Sarah. We can have one long superb party, though perhaps the parents should not be told yet. Cambridge has been very dull since we left according to my informants and it needs a bit of oomph.
God I would like to see you. Bloody country this. Still it is getting warm and the trees and flo[wers?] are coming out and my sinuses don't hurt any more and Julia is feeling much better so things are not so bad. The flat is still in need of some shelves and things. There is a lot of work to do.
What kind of cooked cereals are there in Switzerland? I am getting tired of porridge.
There is a lecturship in mineralogy and petrology for a crystallographic min. and pet. its advertised in Cambridge in case you want to stay there the rest of your lives. Might be quite nice. £1100 - £1800 plus possible £120 plus children (£50).
See you sometime
Love from
[Peter Pauling]
- Newspaper Clipping: "'Sanity Not Legion Characteristic' - Dr. Linus Pauling", Arcadia (California) Tribune, April 4, 1960. [Filed under LP Biographical: (LP Scrapbooks, 1956-1960), Box #6.007, Folder #7.589]
- Summary Report: "Conference on Hartnup Disease and on Chemistry of Hemoglobin", Pacific State Hospital, Pomona, California, April 4, 1960. [Filed under LP Science: (Orthomolecular Medicine and Mental Health: Conference Reports re: Mental Disease, 1958-1960), Box #11.084, Folder #84.11]
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