Colorful Issues
You have probably noticed that we are using more
color in Journal issues. We enjoy being able to put color into
our issues, and many readers are very enthusiastic about
this, too. Some of you are submitting color material with
manuscripts, others are inquiring about possibilities, a few
want a guarantee that we will use their material in color.
What we need is a policy! We have taken a stab at that here.
JCE publishes a few pages in color each month,
usually the first 16 pages. This has been done for many
years because these have been the pages on which
advertisements appear, and many advertisers want to use color and are
willing to pay for it. Since these pages are in color anyway,
we have recently made more extensive use of the
possibilitiesadding photos, color versions of graphics from the back
of the book, dust covers of books, molecular structures,
etc. Occasionally we have run additional color pages at the
front in order that articles whose graphics needed color to
convey their meaning could be accommodated; this was true
in both the June and July issues. However, for reasons of
cost, almost all papers have to be printed in monochrome.

There may now seem a contradictiondo we print
in color or don't we? Well, we first consider whether a
color image is essential to the content of a paper. If it is, we
make a strong effort to arrange to print it in color. We may do
this by enlarging the color section at the front; or we may
simply use the color image in In This Issue or the Table of
Contents and the monochrome version with the paper
farther back in an issue. However, if a color image could be
printed in monochrome with no loss of information, we may use
only monochrome.

We hope you will submit color images, because
they have the potential to liven our pages considerably.
Color images are sent to our reviewers when they are
available but their presence or absence is not a criterion for
selection of manuscripts for publication. Since we can and do
publish color material on the World Wide Web via JCE
Online and on our annual CD-ROM, we encourage you to
submit both monochrome and color versions of graphics. A
couple of good examples of the use of color images appear on
this page and the next.
Our Reviewers and the Missing Pencils
We have just switched to a new, faster, more
powerful database of reviewers. In concert with that move, we
are sending letters to those currently in the reviewer
database asking them to update all the information in their
filefrom address and preferred mode of communication to
specific scientific categories. Each letter was to have
included a JCE pencil as a token of our appreciation, but the
U.S. Postal Service, grinches all, intervened! Therefore we
will be sending the pencils along with manuscripts for
review, so you will still get one eventually. If you are not a
Journal reviewer but would like to be, just get in touch with us.
We will be happy to send you the appropriate forms and
then add you to the list. (The reviewer forms can also be
found on JCE Online.) Reviewing is an extremely important
part of the Journal operation, one that we hope all readers
will take part in.
New Face at Journal House
This issue is being put together with help from a
new person on board at Journal House: Randall J.
Wildman. Randy is our newest assistant editor, replacing
Amanda Reinert, who has moved to Rochester, New York with
her fiancé. Randy will be the first to handle manuscripts
after their acceptance, trying to read into our computer
systems the many word processing and computer graphic
programs that are used by our authors from around the world.
As Mandy certainly knew, this is the Tower of Babel job.
Randy brings to the position a master's degree in chemistry,
experience in the chemistry classroom, adeptness with
computer graphics and HTML documents, and a great willingness
to learn and explore. Welcome Randy!
Stop by Booth 149
Remember to stop by the
Journal booth if you are attending the Fall ACS Meeting in Las Vegas: Booth 149.
You know you will find the Journal staff as well as copies of
and information about our printed publications and
software, but there will be other treats as well. While supplies
last, those who renew their subscription or subscribe for the
first time will receive a complimentary copy of JCE CD 1996.
In addition, we will have extra copies of the refrigerator
magnets shown on page 1038, and some spare copies of
JCE Classroom Activities #1 (see pages 1032A and 1032B).
We look forward to seeing you.
Book Buyers Guide
This September 1997 issue of the
Journal has as a supplement the most recent
Book Buyers Guide. We now publish the Book Buyers
Guide twice each year. It is again a separate publication so that it can be used
separatelyloaned to a colleague, taken to a department meeting,
read on the bus, used at the bookstore. If you know someone
who needs a copy, there will be extras at our booth at the
Las Vegas ACS Meeting (see above).
The Journal has information about textbooks and
other media available every day, 24 hours a day, not just twice
a year; it is updated regularly. It is called the Chemical
Education Resource Shelf and is edited by Hal Harris. It is
one of the many useful things to be found on JCE Online.
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