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Volume 1, Number 8
As mentioned last month there were no issues in July or August
1924. After the Journal 's first six issues,
Neil Gordon and his colleagues took a well-deserved rest in the seventh and
eighth months of publicationsummer months, when many readers would
be on vacation. Volume 1, Number 8 is the September issue, and we will report
on it next month.
Volume 25, Number 8
This issue began with a paper
on the history of phosphorus chemistry by Wilhelm Prandtl of the University
of Munich. Phosphorus was isolated from urine in Hamburg in 1765 by
Henning Brand. The figure shows a page from a book by Johann Sigismund Elsholtz
that describes the wondrous phosphorescent properties of this element. Prandtl
related that the earliest truly scientific observations of phosphorus were
carried out by Robert Boyle, who published his results in 1682. According to Elsholtz,
phosphorus "not only lit up itself as do the
glowworms that fly through the air on summer nights, but
to the astonishment of the onlookers it also transferred
the same whitish shimmer to the finger with which it had been rubbed."
Protective gloves would certainly be recommended today,
given the poisonous character of white phosphorus.
William J. Wiswesser, Wilson
Products, Inc., argued strongly against continuing to include the Bohr theory
in teaching atomic structure, concluding that "none but a dualistic
particle-wave theory has any sound teaching value." In a paper titled "An Introduction
to Electrophoresis", Robert A. Alberty, University of Wisconsin, described
the electrophoretic cell pictured here and pointed out that application of this
technique to biological and physical problems was growing rapidly.
Henry M. Leicester, College
of Physicians and Surgeons, San Francisco, described the circumstances
attending the fact that Dmitrii Ivanovich Mendeleev, the greatest Russian
scientist of his day, was never elected to membership in the St. Petersburg
Academy of Sciences the highest honor Russia could give to a scientist. That
scientists are not immune to lapses of objectivity and fairness is clearly documented. A
paper titled "Guinea Pigs in the Classroom" by Horace G. Deming,
University of Hawaii, reported, perhaps more apologetically than necessary, a series
of pedagogical experiments carried out in his classroom. Deming's point of
view is exemplified by two statements from his paper: "the sole difference
between a good teacher and a poor one is that the former makes students work and
the latter lets them loaf" and "Students
can be made to enjoy effort, if they see that effort pays out."
An article titled "Women as
Professional Chemists" by Cornelia T. Snell, Foster D. Snell, Inc., described the
education requirements for entering the profession and observed that in
chemistry "you are largely in a man's
world." In addition Snell recommended that students get "an education as well
as preparation for a particular type of job."
Volume 50, Number 8
One of the books reviewed in August 1948 was
The Chemistry of Organic Compounds by Conant and Blatt.
The August 1973 issue reported that Melvin Greenstadt of Fairfax High School
in Los Angeles had been awarded ACS's James Bryant Conant Award in
High School Chemistry Teaching at the Dallas ACS meeting. This year's June
issue reported on awards presented at the Dallas ACS meeting 25 years later,
including Conant awardee Maria Walsh.
Phosphorus chemistry was featured in August 1973 as well as August 1948.
Rivers Singleton, Jr., Ames Research Center, NASA, described the
bioorganic chemistry of phosphorus. General
reactivity and bonding, hydrolysis of phosphate esters, and mechanisms of
phosphate ester hydrolysis, including enzyme catalysis (see figure), were discussed.
Two papers described computer simulations. Cummings and Wartell
of Metropolitan State College reported a minicomputer simulation of
chemical kinetics that is based on the same idea as the much more
sophisticated KinWORKS by Richard Ramette that has been published by
JCE Software. "Computer-Simulated Qualitative
Inorganic Chemistry" was the title of a paper by Larry D. Francis of the
University of Illinois. Delivered via the PLATO system, this interactive lesson
simulated part of the inorganic qualitative analysis scheme.
In a Provocative Opinion, Edward K. Mellon of Florida State argued
strongly that lectures should not be
replaced by instructional systems such as the then-popular Keller Plan, or
by computer-based lessons. Mellon concluded that "No single system will
serve the needs of all students" and
suggested that courses should include Keller-plan or computer-based training but
ought not dispense with lectures or other pedagogical tools. Instructors could then
determine the relative importance to be assigned each mode of instruction.
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