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Bartlett was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan and grew up in Indianapolis. He received his B.A. from Amherst College in 1928. After his graduation from Harvard with James Bryant Conant, Bartlett worked at the Rockefeller Institute and the University of Minnesota. Most of his career was spent at Harvard.
Chemistry: Costin Nenițescu: 15 July 1902 in Bucharest, Romania 28 July 1970 in Bușteni, Prahova, Romania 1969 [b] "for discovering two new syntheses for the indole nucleus, and a new method of polymerisation of ethylene. [10] Paul Doughty Bartlett (1907–1997) United States: Physiology or Medicine: Victor Babeș: 28 July 1854 in Vienna, Austria
Paul Doughty Bartlett James Cullen Martin (January 14, 1928 – April 20, 1999) was an American chemist. Known in the field as "J.C.", he specialized in physical organic chemistry with an emphasis on main group element chemistry.
Paul Bartlett's research group developed Clar's method and made the first triptycene. [3] Following Bertlett's work on triptycene, Hart et al., with acknowledgement to Professor Joel F. Liebman, proposed the trivial name iptycene for this class of molecules. [4]
Paul Bartlett (painter) (1881–1965), American landscape painter; Paul Alexander Bartlett (1909–1990), American writer and poet; Paul Doughty Bartlett (1907–1997), American chemist; Paul Wayland Bartlett (1865–1925), American sculptor
Kozlowski was born in Hamburg, and raised in Liverpool, New York. [1] She studied chemistry at Cornell University. [2] [3] She moved to California for her graduate studies, where she joined the laboratory of Paul Bartlett at the University of California, Berkeley.
Allinger then crossed the country to Harvard, where he worked with Paul Bartlett. In 1956 Allinger joined the faculty of Wayne State University , becoming a full professor of chemistry in 1960. After thirteen years in Detroit he moved to the University of Georgia as Research Professor.
Doering was an undergraduate at Harvard University, where he took courses with some of the leading organic chemists at the time, including Louis Fieser and Paul Doughty Bartlett. He stayed at Harvard for his graduate education, where he studied catalytic hydrogenation under Reginald Linstead, [3] completing his PhD in 1943.