Perhaps you could translate and annotate it, then send it to the CCP4BB?
JPK
ps seriously, why do you say no need for review--is it boring, not well
written, obsolete, or what? James is still pretty useful, I think, and that
was put out only two years later....
*******************************************
Jacob Pearson Keller
Northwestern University
Medical Scientist Training Program
Dallos Laboratory
F. Searle 1-240
2240 Campus Drive
Evanston IL 60208
lab: 847.491.2438
cel: 773.608.9185
email: [log in to unmask]
*******************************************
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marius Schmidt" <[log in to unmask]>
To: "Jacob Keller" <[log in to unmask]>; <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Monday, September 22, 2008 8:42 PM
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] Crystallogrphy today
>i have a suggestion for a nice book for you,
> you will love it. it is in German, great!, has over
> 400 pages and it IS THE SOURCE.
>
> M. von Laue
> Roentgenstrahlinterferenzen
> Physik und Chemie und Ihre Anwendungen, Band VI
> 2. Auflage (1st edition burnt down by cannonizing at WWII)
> 1948
> Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft, Geest & Portig K.-G., Leipzig
>
>
> everything is covered, even protein crystallography,
> however in a very skeptic way, no need for a review ever.
>
> Cheers
> Marius
>
>> To understand the fundamentals of any discipline, I have always found
>> it
>> completely worthwhile to go back to the original source, where the
>> idea was
>> first discovered or presented. This is really, really valuable,
>> although not
>> always possible. I wonder whether others agree with me about
>> this...but I
>> feel pretty strongly about this matter. Often one can read many
>> reviews on
>> some subject, which never really get to the gist of the matter, but
>> when one
>> reads the original source, the subject is usually laid out clearly
>> because
>> guess what: nobody knew it yet, so it had to be explained clearly.
>> Furthermore, one gets a sense of the excitement of discovery, and the
>> unsurety about some new proposed hypothesis which has not yet become
>> cannonized into fact. For this reason, it is sometimes even
>> worthwhile to
>> saunter down to the...library!
>>
>> Jacob Keller
>>
>> *******************************************
>> Jacob Pearson Keller
>> Northwestern University
>> Medical Scientist Training Program
>> Dallos Laboratory
>> F. Searle 1-240
>> 2240 Campus Drive
>> Evanston IL 60208
>> lab: 847.491.2438
>> cel: 773.608.9185
>> email: [log in to unmask]
>> *******************************************
>
>
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