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Volume 1, Number 6
The June 1924 issue began with
a paper by J. G. Dely, Chief Chemist of the Atmospheric Nitrogen
Corporation, who interrelated chemical education
and chemists' work in industry. Dely suggested that undergraduate courses
did not pay enough attention to practical application of principles, argued
that college graduates failed to apply common sense and did not use their
imagination when they took on industrial work, and listed eight important
characteristics of an industrial chemist.
In a major article, G. H.
Cartledge of the Johns Hopkins University characterized physical chemistry as "the
step-child" of the undergraduate curriculum and said that it had not received
"the same original thought, practical application, and pedagogical skill" that
had been applied to general chemistry. Nevertheless, Cartledge characterized
general chemistry as crowded with "an ever increasing mass of principles" to the
extent that it was "much larger than we can teach with any degree of
thoroughness". He argued that for beginners a foundation of facts should be laid
before an edifice of theory is constructed and that physical-chemistry
principles should be integrated within organic and inorganic courses.
The New England Association
of Chemistry Teachers reported on a meeting that commemorated its 25th
anniversary, and on availability of an unabridged version of "The Earlier
and Later Days of Chemistry in New England", which contained photographs
of many prominent New England chemists. (This current issue also contains
a report from NEACT, beginning on page 679.)
Volume 25, Number 6
The June 1948 issue was also replete with history of chemistry.
Three papers were devoted to the activities of Ernst Cohen and Charles Albert
Browne as chemical historians. Another paper was filled with chemical
caricatures, such as the one of Jean-Baptiste
Dumas (by Honoré Daumier) shown here. P. R. Ray, University College of Science
and Technology, Calcutta, provided a detailed view of chemistry in ancient
and medieval India.
N. S. MacDonald, Occidental College, described construction of a
model for the potential-energy surface for the reaction of a chlorine atom with a
hydrogen molecule. Made by cutting Lucite layers according to the
potential-energy contours, gluing them together, and then sanding the surfaces
smooth, the model occupied a cube approximately four inches on a side. A
lecture demonstration showing anodization of aluminum was presented by R.
C. Spooner and H. P. Godard of Aluminum Laboratories Ltd.,
Kingston, Ontario.
Volume 50, Number 6
The Chemical Instrumentation
feature contained a paper by E. M. Winkler and M. van Swaay, Kansas State
University, on microelectronics and miniaturization. The rapidity of developments
in this area can be seen by comparing the devices described in this article with
our March 1998 cover, which shows an eight-inch wafer that contains
more electronic components than there are people on earth.
A paper titled "Synthesis Sheets"
by W. Clark Still discussed approaches to multi-step organic syntheses,
advocating retrosynthetic analysis and 11 x 14-in. sheets like the one shown (which
appeared on the cover). W. J. le Noble and Y-S. Chang described the ranges of
rate constants needed for a transient intermediate to be visible during a
reaction and provided an example: reaction of chloracetylhydrazide hydrochloride
with concentrated aqueous base, in which a yellow intermediate could be seen
during conversion of a colorless reactant to a colorless product.
Syntheses of several
interesting compounds were available. An undergraduate preparation of
dimethylsilicone oil, from which "bouncing putty"
could be made, was provided by D. A. Armitage, M. N. Hughes, and A.
W. Sinden of Queen Elizabeth College, London. Synthesis of a
photochromic spiropyran was reported by R. Guglielmetti, R. Meyer, and C.
Dupuy, University of Occidental Britain and University of Provence-St-Jerome.
In his editorial, Tom
Lippincott described an NSF-sponsored study of innovations and innovators that
examined the development of the heart pacemaker, the Green Revolution,
electrophotography, input-output economic analysis, organophosphorus
insecticides, oral contraceptives, magnetic
ferrites, and the videotape recorder. Six of
these would not have been possible without chemical research. Knowledge,
motivation, communication, and interdisciplinary connections were important in
all of them, and an individual was instrumental in making each innovation
happen. Lippincott concluded, "the 'system' is programmed to maintain the
status quo; only individuals of unusual courage,
dedication, and ability can propel it to progress".
Would that we had more individuals like Tom
Lippincott to help propel us to progress.
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