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Benefits of Travel
This issue benefits from our recent travelsmany of
the editorial staff attended the recent Spring ACS Meeting
in Dallas and Emory Howell and Caren Daniel of the
High School Office were also able to attend the NSTA Meeting
in Las Vegas. For instance, Nancy Gettys attended the
special Presidential Event, Challenges for Chemistry in the 21st
Century, which began at 8 a.m. on Sunday morning. Six
outstanding scientists presented their predictions for their
chosen field. It was standing room only, but Nancy was in
the first row. In her four-page report starting on page 665
she gives a synopsis of each talk, trying to convey the
intensity and enthusiasm of these men and women as well.
Some of the staff also presented papers. We were
particularly well represented in the symposium on Methods
of Using Technology in Teaching; see page 670 and
JCE Online for fuller reports.
Our large booth in the Exposition drew a
larger-than-ever crowd, so many people that other exhibitors were
envious. Many of you stopped by just to say hello and to give
us feedback and suggestions. We had the opportunity of
introducing the Journal to many others. We continuously
demonstrated both our annual CD-ROM and our online
index, showed much of our video footage on a VCR, gave away
several hundred JCE pencils, and answered lots of questions.
Suggestions, Suggestions
One suggestion was to make more teachers aware of
the Open Review section of JCE Internet. As one visitor to
our booth said, having students review articles in open
review makes a great learning experience. We agree. Check out
http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCEWWW/InReview/index.html.
Another idea is that our annual CD-ROM and
JCE Online+ would be great items to demonstrate at a
workshop, short course, ACS Local Section meeting, or similar
outreach activity. We can lend you an annual CD to demonstrate
and give you (and the participants) a temporary password to
JCE Online+ that will be good for a up to a month. If you would like to try these ideas, just let us know.
Award Season
The end of the academic year brings to mind
awards and parting gifts. The Journal that you are reading makes
a wonderful and lasting gift. We will be happy to help you
introduce the Journal to someone else. We can send you
a sample issue to hand out at a presentation, and we can
provide copies of our new Gift Subscription Award
Certificate, each signed by the editor. And you get all of this service
at the special discount rate for new/gift subscriptions.
Choosing a Textbook?
If you are choosing a textbook and need help, such as
a list of current texts from which to choose or the price
and ISBN number of your selection, the Journal
has two aids. Our Book Buyers Guide in print (the most recent edition
appeared with the February 1998 issue of the
Journal) and the Chemical Education Resource Shelf (continuously
updated because it is online at
http://www.umsl.edu/divisions/artscience/chemistry/books/).
Looking Ahead
Next month look for another in the series "Logic,
History, and the Chemistry Textbook" by William Jensen, a
special supplement on Summer Reading put together by
book review editor Ed Walsh and his crew, and more detailed
information about Journal celebrations this summer: at the
15th BCCE in Waterloo and at the Fall ACS Meeting in Boston.
A Tribute to Benjamin Gould
Benjamin F. Gould, advertising manager of the
Journal for 34 years, died recently at the age of 94. He joined
the Journal staff in 1933, early in its lifetime. He changed
and expanded his own role throughout his many years of
service, doing the obvious things such as increasing the number
of advertising pages and creating the Editor's Basket. But he
also arranged for the publication of "Tested Demonstrations"
and "Chemical Instrumentation" and started the annual
book exhibit and the book listwhich have become the
Book Buyers Guide.
A stellar tribute to Ben Gould upon his retirement
in 1967 appears as Tom Lippincott's editorial in December
of that year (J. Chem. Educ. 1967,
44, 703); his photograph appears on the cover and is reproduced at the left. He
was obviously a remarkable mannot to mention an
important part of our growth and history.
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