8th IUPAC Symposium on Organometallic Chemistry (OMCOS), Santa Barbara, California, USA, 6–10 August 1995
This conference is part of the Organometallic Chemistry Directed Toward Organic Synthesis series.
  Transition metal complexes as bifunctional carriers of polar organometallics: Their application to large molecule modifications and to hydrocarbon activation
        
        Palladium catalyzed hydrocarbonation of olefins
        
        Stereoselective synthesis with and without organometallics
        
        New vistas in organoelement chemistry
        
        Towards new ferrocenyl ligands for asymmetric catalysis
        
        Asymmetric catalytic routes to chiral building blocks of medicinal interest
        
        New palladium-catalyzed reactions of unsaturated triflates with alkenes and alkyenes
        
        Cu-catalyzed alkylation and Fe catalyzed alkenylation of organomanganese reagents
        
        β-Aminosubstituted α,β-unsaturated Fischer carbene complexes as chemical multitalents
        
        New perspectives in the cross-coupling reactions of organostannanes
        
        Enantioselective syntheses of organosulfur compounds via [2,3] sigmatropic rearrangements of ylides derived from di(allyl), di(propargyl), and di(benzyl) sulfide complexes; Control of carbon configuration by an easily resolved and recycled rhenium auxiliary
        
        Lewis acids in diastereoselective processes involving acyclic radicals
        
        Chiral CO-emulating ligands: From arene chromium chemistry to enantioselective catalysis
        
        Dithioacetals as geminal dication synthons
        
        Catalytic, enantioselective, inverse electron-demand Diels-Alder reactions of 2-pyrone derivatives
        
        Selectivities in carbometalation of olefins. Experimental and theoretical studies
        
        New developments in enantioselective hydrogenation
        
        Regio-controlled intramolecular reductive cyclization of diynes
        
        Synthesis of well-defined conjugated oligomers for molecular electronics
        
        