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Time to Renew
If you follow the pattern of most subscribers, your
subscription is for one year, expiring at the end of the
calendar year. This means that by the time this issue arrives you
should have received at least one renewal notice. There is happy
news for individual subscribers-no increase in prices!
Some readers have asked for guidance with the
options that are now available. Our recommendation is, "Get all
3: print, JCE Online+, and the annual CD." A one-year
print subscription provides 12 issues of the traditional print
Journal by mail. A JCE Online+ subscription gives you a year
of access to everything that is in the print issue
plus considerably more, via the WWW and as soon as the issue is released;
the amount of material that is available only on the WWW
is increasing. The annual CD comes at the end of the year. It
is a CD-ROM for both Mac OS and Windows that gives
you instant access to everything in the current and several
previous volumes of the Journal. (JCE CD 1998 will contain
issues from 1998, 1997, and September-December
1996.) While not everyone will choose to "get all 3", this is the
way to get quick and convenient access to the whole
Journal.
There are changes in subscription options, too.
Notice that it is now possible for libraries to subscribe to
JCE Online+. Individuals, if they choose, may now subscribe
to the online version only, getting full access during the year
of their subscription.
Save Your Carrier Sheet
The sheet containing your address label that comes
with your Journal issue has valuable information-keep it! The
first (5-digit) number on the second line of the address label
is your subscriber number. It is important because:
- If you subscribe to
JCE Online+, this 5-digit number is your password to
complete online access via JCE
Online+.
- If you subscribe to print only, this number is your
password to limited online access (supplementary materials.
- All subscribers should use this number when
corresponding with us about any subscription.
The date, also on the second line of the label, tells
you when your subscription expires. Your name should be
entered exactly as it appears on the third line (copy the
punctuation used on the label) for JCE
Online+ access.
Fast Access for non-U.S. Subscribers
If you are a subscriber from outside the U.S., you
may be frustrated by the slowness of international mail
delivery. To eliminate the waiting, we recommend adding to (or
upgrading) your subscription to include JCE
Online+. Since each Journal issue goes online at the same time it is
mailed, non-U.S. subscribers can get access to the most recent
issue in the middle of the month prior to the issue date (the
December issue will go online in mid-November). This
usually saves at least several weeks of waiting.
Coming in the January Issue
The schedule for publishing the Equipment Buyers
Guide has been changed. It will appear with the
January 1999 issue, not with this one, so that it can include as
wide as possible a range of equipment and supplies. Expect it
as part of the January issue, scheduled to be mailed in
mid-December.
The Equipment Buyers Guide will be a
comprehensive source of information about laboratory equipment and
supplies, organized by item type
and by the name of the supplier, with appropriate cross -referencing.
We hope you find the Equipment Buyers
Guide as useful as the Book Buyers Guide. And as is the case
with the Book Buyers Guide, it will be online as well as in print.
Looking for Journal History?
It seems fitting to wind up this year of celebrations
with information about our history. A collection of articles
titled "Journal History: A Synopsis of Our Past" can be found
on pages 1542 through 1550. On these pages you can read
first-hand accounts written by three former editors-Bill
Kieffer, Tom Lippincott, and Joe Lagowski. Jerry Bell gives some
insights into the choices and challenges that the Board of
Publication faces as a body. Emory Howell describes
interactions of the Journal with the high school community and
Tamar (Uni) Susskind describes interactions with two-year colleges.
If you want to dig deeper, there is a reading list at
the end of this section (p 1550). The information in it has
been accumulated by the staff in the course of carrying out
the 75th year celebrations. Because many of you have
expressed an interest in Journal history and there exists no single
source of information, we have compiled it and included it here.
To be sure, there exist valuable pieces of history-Neil
Gordon wrote an admirable retrospect in 1943, Otto Reinmuth
provided some valuable insights in 1933, several historical
reflections were included in the special Journal
issues marking Volume 50. But the history remains to be written. Until
then, here are leads to some fascinating reading.
If there is a problem with this reading list, it is that
some readers will not have access to articles written in the
1920s and 1930s, perhaps even the 1960s. If so, contact the
Journal, preferably by sending an email message
to jce@chem.wisc.edu with Journal History in the subject
line. You can arrange to get copies of articles as inexpensively
as we can provide them.
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