Description | Much of this correspondence involves David Christie Martin who acted as Assistant Secretary of the Royal Society.
Includes applications for vivisection licenses; description of Robinson's career by D C Martin; travel arrangements; invitations to celebrations, dinners and anniversaries; possibility of an international congress of analytical chemistry in Great Britain in 1950; imprisonment of Karl Stoerk, an Austro-Palestinian electrical engineer, in Iraq; call for interested persons to apply for three professorships and a post of Vice-Chancellor at the new University of Engineering at Roorkee; offer of Bourne Park Estate for use by the Royal Society. |