Ricardo Rojas (writer)

Ricardo Rojas (16 September 1882 in Tucumán – 29 July 1957 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine journalist and writer. He came from one of the most influential families of the Santiago del Estero Province; his father was Absalón Rojas, who was governor of the province. He moved to Buenos Aires to further his education, later becoming rector of the University of Buenos Aires from 1926 to 1930. He was also the director of the Institute of Petroleum (see Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales).

Ricardo Rojas in 1926
Ricardo Rojas cell, Ushuaia Prison, Museo Maritimo y del Presidio de Ushuaia

Works

  • Victoria del Hombre (1903)
  • El país de la Selva (1907)
  • Cartas de Europa (1908)
  • El Alma Española (1908)
  • Cosmópolis (1908)
  • La Restauración Nacionalista (1909)
  • Bibliografía de Sarmiento (1911)
  • Los Lises del Blasón (1911)
  • Blasón de Plata (1912)
  • Archivo Capitular de Jujuy (1913/1944)
  • La Universidad de Tucumán (1915)
  • La Argentinidad (1916)
  • Poesías de Cervantes (1916)
  • Historia de la literatura argentina, 8 tomos.
  • Los Arquetipos (1922)
  • Poesías (1923)
  • Facultad de Filosofía y Letras (1924)
  • Discursos (1924)
  • Eurindia (1924)
  • La Guerra de las Naciones (1924)
  • Las Provincias (1927)
  • El Cristo Invisible (1927)
  • Elelín (1929)
  • Discursos del Rector (1930)
  • Silabario de la Decoración Americana (1930)
  • La Historia de las Escuelas (1930)
  • Memoria del Rector (1930)
  • El Radicalismo de Mañana (1932)
  • El Santo de la Espada (1933)
  • Cervantes (1935)
  • Retablo Español (1938)
  • Un Titán de los Andes (1939)
  • Ollantay (1939)
  • El Pensamiento vivo de Sarmiento (1941)
  • Archipiélago (1942)
  • La Salamanca (1943)
  • El Profeta de la Pampa (1945)
  • La Entrevista de Guayaquil (1947)
  • La Victoria del Hombre y otros cantos (1951)
  • Ensayo de crítica histórica sobre Episodios de la vida internacional Argentina (1951)
  • Oda Latina (1954)
gollark: The equation is 4FeS2 + 11O2 --> 2Fe2O3 + 8SO2. You want to know how many moles O2 are needed per mole FeS2, so that's 11/4 = 2.75. Then, since the question asks for how many moles O2 are needed with *3* moles FeS2, multiply by 3, and you get 8.25.
gollark: The answer is just (3/4)*11 then, which is 8.25.
gollark: Oh, FeS2, not Fe2O3.
gollark: <@288035900980461579> Could you photograph the question or something? It does definitely look like you need 16.5 moles O2 for 3 moles Fe2O3, so the question is probably asking something else?
gollark: 2Fe2O3 is 2 moles Fe2O3, 11O2 is 11 moles O2.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.