I
was born in Alice, Texas on August 23, 1933. My father was a Methodist minister,
and my mother was what we then called a housewife. I have a sister, Mary, who
is some years my elder. In those days, Methodist ministers moved often, and
as a child I lived in a succession of mostly small towns in south Texas: Alice,
Brady, San Antonio, Kingsville, Del Rio, Brownsville, McAllen, Austin, then
back to San Antonio. During this time the church hierarchy recognized that my
father was an able administrator capable of organizing people to get things
done and gifted at resolving conflicts. From the time I was about nine my father
was no longer pastor of a church but rather a supervisor of church activities
over a district. This was a great relief to me as I was spared being the center
of judgmental attention as the "preacher's kid."
By the time I reached adulthood my father was universally revered as a fair,
kind, and gentle man with an acute mind. His most enduring monument will be
the San Antonio Medical Center as he worked hard and effectively to start the
Methodist Hospital there, which really started the center.
When I was nine years old, my parents gave me a chemistry set. Within a week,
I had decided to become a chemist and never wavered from that choice. As I grew
my interest in chemistry grew more intense, if not more sophisticated. Of course
there was no chemistry in the school program until high school.
I was not a particularly distinguished student as a child. My grades were good
but obtained more by steady work than any brilliance on my part. I vividly remember
my father telling me that one of my elementary school teachers had told him
that I was not brilliant but I was a steady hard worker. Somehow the further
I progressed in school, the easier it became to do well.
It was a great delight when I finally got to study chemistry in high school.
My teacher, Mrs. Lorena Davis, saw that I was keenly interested and did her
best to foster and nourish that interest. As only one year of chemistry was
offered then, I had no formal course in the subject to take my final year in
high school. Mrs. Davis offered me special projects to satisfy my appetite for
chemistry. I remember most constructing a Cottrell Precipitator. I was shocked
to see Mrs. Davis, who didn't smoke, light up a cigarette and blow smoke into
the precipitator to demonstrate that it worked.
When it came time to choose a college, I got interested in Rice Institute. It
had an excellent reputation as being a good school for a dedicated student.
I was also impressed by how well its football team was doing. My parents loved
my choice because at that time Rice charged no tuition, and they would have
been hard pressed to send me to a university that did. While my father held
the highest administrative office, not counting the Bishop, in the Southwest
Texas Conference, he did not make much money.
At that time there was a high failure rate at Rice. With no tuition, students
were expected to prove themselves
worthy or make way for someone else. However,
I was ready for the challenge that Rice presented and prospered academically.
Socially, my fellow students were ready for the challenge that I presented and
worked hard to convert a rather straight-laced, serious boy into someone they
could stand to be around.
By a quirk of fate, the most colorful professors I encountered in my first years
taught subjects other than chemistry. I liked my first and second year chemistry
professors (in fact I later developed a closer relation with my second year
professor, John T. Smith), but they were not particularly colorful. It was not
until my third year when I had John E. Kilpatrick for Physical Chemistry and
George Holmes Richter for Organic Chemistry that the chemistry department began
to pull ahead in the colorfulness race. John Kilpatrick came to class, sat in
the middle of the table in front, lit a cigarette, took an enormous drag, and
began to speak. No smoke came out! Richter enlivened his lectures by describing
the pharmacological effects of various organic chemicals. Richter was a fine
teacher of Organic Chemistry, but that was of little use to me since I had an
almost unnatural aversion to Organic Chemistry. Kilpatrick was the most welcoming
to students of any person I ever encountered with absolutely no regard for the
amount of time he spent with a student. This, happily for him, made the time
he devoted self-limiting, because I would think about whether I had an hour
or two to spare before dropping by to see him.
The most impressive chemistry teacher I had was Richard Turner, whom I first
encountered in a senior Natural Products course. (The curriculum was cleverly
constructed so that it was impossible to avoid a second encounter with Organic
Chemistry.) It was his enthusiastic discussion of barriers to internal rotation
and the pioneering work of Kenneth Pitzer in the area that made me resolve to
go to University of California, Berkeley, and work with Pitzer. This is a decision
I have never regretted.
While I was at Berkeley, Pitzer was the Dean of the College of Chemistry and
a very busy man. Nevertheless he was always completely accessible to his graduate
students, and always genuinely delighted to see me when I interrupted his work.
When our conversation reached its conclusion, he graciously got me out of his
office. I was grateful for this as well because at the time, as you can see
from my comments about visiting John Kilpatrick, I had trouble with leave-takings.
I think that I received an excellent education in how to do research from Pitzer.
The most important work I did at Berkeley was on Pitzer's extension of the Theory
of Corresponding States. Over the years, I have remained Jr. F. free Curl Robert movies beast in Robert weddings rape Curl Jr. F. real incest F. pictures Curl Robert Jr. free ТСЗПБ прогрева F. для Jr. Curl бетона Robert Трансформатор Jr. Curl KIA подиумы Rio накладки F. на Robert бампер contact free F. Jr. Robert pantyhose women Curl in with Curl Jr. F. movies free beast Robert Ken
and Jean Pitzer. Indeed, we were able to collaborate again in research some
years later when he was president of Rice University.
My years at Berkeley were some of the happiest of my life primarily because
it was during this time that I met and married my wife, Jonel. Our union seemed
pre-ordained when we discovered that our ancestors came from the tiny town of
Center Point, Texas (pop. 300).
At that time, there seemed to be an unwritten rule that Pitzer's students should
do experiment as well as theory. This suited me, because I had always been interested
in experiments. Pitzer suggested that I investigate the matrix isolation infrared
spectrum of disiloxane in order to establish whether the SiO-Si bond was linear
or bent. If I had tried to do these experiments involving liquid hydrogen without
help, I believe there is a good chance an explosion would have resulted. However,
a fellow student, Dolphus Milligan, helped me tremendously with these experiments
and with his aid I was able to collect the necessary data, which indicated that
Si-O-Si is somewhat bent from linearty.
Pitzer was able to help me get a post-doctoral position with E. Bright Wilson
at Harvard. At that time, Wilson had
developed a method for measuring barriers
to internal rotation using microwave spectroscopy and I was still interested
in internal rotation barriers. It seemed a perfect situation. I enjoyed Harvard
scientifically. Wilson's personality was very different from Pitzer's. Although
he was born in Tennessee, he personified the New England virtues of upright
integrity and serious concern about all aspects of life. His disapproval of
superstition in all forms was well-known; none of us would dare mention in his
presence the gremlins we all suspected inhabited his microwave spectrometer.
Wilson above all was a fine, decent, caring person who wanted the best for his
students.
The atmosphere in Mallinkrodt Laboratory at Harvard was somewhat different from
that of Lewis Hall at Berkeley. Perhaps it was because the graduate system and
expectations for graduate students were different. At that time, a student was
expected to complete his Ph.D. at Berkeley in three years while at Harvard it
took many students five or even more years. Compared with the laid-back Berkeley
graduate students of my day, Harvard students seemed intense and often eccentric.
The big exception was Dudley Herschbach, who was modest, relaxed, and friendly,
and the most brilliant intellect I had encountered in someone my own age.
In those days faculty hiring was done with few formalities. Somewhat out-of-
the-blue, I got an offer to come back to Rice as an Assistant Professor. The
prospect of returning to a warm climate and familiar surroundings full of many
happy memories was delightful and with no negotiations I happily accepted.
I inherited George Bird's graduate students and his microwave spectrometer,
which was more sensitive than Wilson's. Of these two strokes of good luck, Bird's
students proved the greater treasure. My very first student was Jim Kinsey.
He accomplished so much in the first year that I was at Rice that he graduated.
The work we did together on the microwave spectrum of ClO2 and the
treatment of fine and hyperfine structure set me up for a productive period
of studying the spectra of stable free radicals.
I have remained at Rice from 1958 until today. In my professional and research
career, I have played a variety of roles and worked in several areas of Physical
Chemistry, too varied to describe further. A great deal of my research has been
collaborative involving other principals both at Rice and elsewhere. I have
enjoyed quite a few very pleasant research associations over the years. Outside
Rice I have collaborated with C.A. Coulson, Roger Kewley, Takeshi Oka, Ken Evenson,
John Brown, Eizi Hirota, Shuji Saito, Anthony Merer, Wolfgang Urban, Harry Kroto
and Leon Phillips. Among the Rice Faculty, I have enjoyed collaborations with
John Kilpatrick, Frank Tittel (for the last 25 years), Phil Brooks, Rick Smalley,
Graham Glass and Bruce Weisman. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to
Rick Smalley, Harry Kroto, and myself for the fruits of one of these collaborations,
the discovery of the fullerenes.
I must point out that we do not claim this discovery is ours alone. James Heath
and Sean O'Brien, who were graduate students at the time, have equal claim to
this discovery. Both Jim and Sean were equal participants in the scientific
discussions that directed the course of this work and actually did most of the
experiments. The early experiments that Sean and Jim did not do were carried
out by Yuan Liu and Qing-Ling Zhang. At an early stage, Frank Tittel became
involved in this work. At a later stage, F.D. Weiss and J.L. Elkind did the
shrink wrap experiments, which were among the strongest evidence for the fullerene
hypothesis.
From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1996, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1997
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.
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