Charles D. Coryell - Key Participants (original) (raw)
George W. Beadle
George E. Burch
Dan H. Campbell
William B. Castle
Robert B. Corey
Charles D. Coryell
Lee A. DuBridge
Vernon M. Ingram
Harvey A. Itano
Karl Landsteiner
Alfred E. Mirsky
Robert M. Nalbandian
James V. Neel
A. A. Noyes
Ava Helen Pauling
Linus Pauling
Walter A. Schroeder
S. Jonathan Singer
Stanley M. Swingle
Arne Tiselius
Warren Weaver
Ibert C. Wells
Paul L. Wolf
Emile Zuckerkandl
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1912-1971
Charles D. Coryell Papers, 1945-1959
Location: University of Chicago Library, Special Collections Research Center
Address: 1100 East 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637
Size: 2 linear feet
Finding Aid: http://ead.lib.uchicago.edu/view.xqy?id=ICU.SPCL.CORYELL
Phone: 773-702-8705 Fax: 773-702-3728
Email: specialcollections@lib.uchicago.edu Web: http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/spcl/
Correspondence
- Letter from Linus Pauling to Alfred E. Mirsky. May 25, 1937.
- Letter from Charles Coryell to Linus Pauling. November 16, 1937.
- Letter from Charles Coryell to Linus Pauling. November 25, 1937.
- Letter from Linus Pauling to C. Lockard Conley. August 1, 1978.
Pictures and Illustrations
Published Papers and Official Documents
- "The magnetic properties and structure of the hemochromogens and related substances." March 1936.
- "The magnetic properties and structure of hemoglobin, oxyhemoglobin and carbonmonoxyhemoglobin." April 1936.
- "Report on Research in Chemistry at the California Institute of Technology Done with the Support of the Rockefeller Foundation, 1939-1940." April 6, 1940.
- "Application for Research Grant: Investigations of the Chemistry of Blood." 1954 - 1959.
Manuscript Notes and Typescripts
- "Outline of Experiments on Hemochromagen." June 25, 1935.
- "Proteins." April 22 - May 17, 1938.
- Notes re: "Abnormality of Hemoglobin Molecules in Hereditary Hemolytic Anemias." April 29, 1954.
- "The Genesis of the Concept of Molecular Disease." 1973.
Quotes
"The meetings at Stanford...were very interesting. There were lots of times when people wanted to know what Pauling would say about different things, so [John] Edsall and I had to speak for you, taking of course, a fair amount of the credit."
Charles Coryell. Letter to Linus Pauling. July 4, 1941.
"Dr. Charles Coryell, who has worked on the metallurgy project at the University of Chicago for a couple of years, received his training here, and then became Assistant Professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, is an extremely able young inorganic and physical chemist, with a great amount of energy. I recommend him most highly."
Linus Pauling. Letter to George T. Felbeck. November 17, 1943.
"Life is too complicated to permit a complete understanding through the study of whole organisms. Only by simplifying a biological problem -- breaking it down into a multitude of individual problems -- can you get the answers. In 1935, for example, Charles Coryell and I made our discovery about how oxygen molecules are attached to the iron atoms of hemoglobin, not by getting a cow and putting it into our magnetic apparatus, but by getting some blood from the cow and studying this blood."
Linus Pauling. Interview with Neil A. Campbell, Bioscience, v. 36, no. 11. December 1986.