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Two Special Inserts with This Issue
There are two special inserts with this month's
issue- the latest edition of our Book Buyers Guide and our
special 1999 Calendar that celebrates our 75th year. Nearly all
of the colorful demonstrations that can be seen on the
calendar are from JCE Software publications.
If you are interested
in learning more about these demonstrations, citations
to the sources of the visual information as well as to
articles about the chemistry underlying them can be found on
the last two pages of the calendar.
If you are reading your library's copy of the
Journal and therefore have not received these treats,
all is not lost. To get a copy of our
Book Buyers Guide, just contact us at the address in the
masthead. If you attend ACS meetings, you can also pick up copies
at our booths. Or you can get the same information here .
Extra copies of the calendar are available while the
supply lasts. To get one or more, use the order form on
pages 1192A-1192B, just inside the back cover. Or contact
JCE Software at the address on the masthead. This issue's
inside back cover shows the graphic from each of the 12 months.
Preparing Laboratory Experiments for Submission
If you are planning to submit a laboratory
experiment for possible publication in the
Journal, remember that new guidelines now apply, based on four fundamental ideas:
- readers who decide to use a lab should be able to
adapt it to their circumstances quickly and easily
- peer review of submitted labs should be based to a
large degree on the written and technology-based
materials used by students in the laboratory
- the Journal
should print only the information a reader needs in order to decide whether to try to use the
experiment
- more detailed information, including student
materials, should be available to adopters or an
experiment in a format that is modifiable and easily adapted
for use by students and support staff
All of the standard submission guidelines still apply,
so include an abstract and four double-spaced copies of all
written materials. Guidelines for lab experiments and regular
submissions appeared on pages 646-648 of the May 1998 issue as well as online.
Coming Attractions
At the beginning of the academic year it is customary
to describe what lies ahead, if not for the entire year at least
for the first semester. While we would not think of
burdening you with a course syllabus, there are things scheduled for
the next few months that we think you will be interested in.
Next month our Viewpoints paper is "The Art and
Science of Organic and Natural Products Synthesis" by K.
C. Nicolaou, E. J. Sorensen, and N. Winssinger. If you are
teaching organic chemistry you certainly will want to use this as
a reference. Even if you are not, it is fascinating reading.
You have heard a lot about our 75th anniversary
celebrations at this summer's meetings, the 15th BCCE and the
ACS Meeting in Boston. If you are not able to attend and
participate, you will find photos from the 15th BCCE in
October and from the Boston ACS Meeting in November.
With the December issue, subscribers
will receive a special, new insert when we introduce
an Equipment Buyers Guide. This is a comprehensive source of information about
laboratory equipment and supplies that are used by colleges and
high schools. The guide will be organized by item type and by
the name of the supplier, with appropriate cross referencing.
We intend that the Equipment Buyers Guide will be as useful
a source of information as is the Book Buyers Guide.
The December issue will also carry a special series of
articles that will close out our 75th celebrations on a
somewhat reflective note. We have posed the question "The State
of Chemical Education: Where Are We and Where Are
We Headed?" to twenty people who represent widely
different constituenciesthose with more than 50 years in
teaching and research as well as those just starting out, those who
decide on funding, write textbooks, explore the use of
technology, do science in a non-standard setting, Don't miss it.
Introducing...
Jennifer Sherrill has recently
joined our staff as an assistant editor, replacing Gail Thorson. Gail will remain in
Madison, dividing her time between Fleming Crim's research group and teaching
general chemistry. Jennifer was trained as a protein chemist by Jack Kyte at the
University of California at San Diego, where
she studied signal transduction by human epidermal
growth factor receptor. She then did postdoctoral research with
Perry Frey at the Institute for Enzyme Research at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her long-term goals involve
both teaching and science writing. She is interested in
educating the public about recent developments in science and
technology. Currently, she is trying to gain some experience
in the field of science writing as well as insight into the
makings of a scientific journal. She is an outdoors-enthusiast,
and she enjoys hiking, biking, skiing, and swimming. Her
latest goal is to learn how to fly.
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