|
Another New Face
There has been a new face at Journal
House and a new name on the masthead - that of Agnes Ma. The receipt of grant funds from
the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation (see
page 8 of the January 1998 issue) has enabled us to
bring Agnes on board. She will assist with the development,
editing, preparation, and publication of the special
Viewpoints series manuscripts. Agnes has a Ph.D. in inorganic
chemistry from Larry Dahl at UW-Madison and a bachelor's
degree from SUNY-Binghamton in chemistry and English. Her
work experience includes environmental analysis, forensic
science, and adhesives research. She has also lectured in general,
organic, and consumer chemistry classes.
75 Years with the Same Printer
Readers should by now realize that this is the
Journal's 75th year of publication. What may not be so obvious is that
Mack Printing Company in Easton, Pennsylvania has printed
the Journal since its inception. Our printer plays an
important role in the Journal's production, appearance,
and history.
Initially, the Journal was actually published out of
Easton, not from the University of Maryland where Neil Gordon
was a faculty member. At some point, probably when
Otto Reinmuth became Editor, the editorial offices were located
at the Editor's campus, and this arrangement has continued.
In 1932 there was a severe financial depression, and
the Journal was not alone in suffering financial problems.
Subsidies that it had been receiving from The Chemical
Foundation were discontinued. It was at this difficult time that
Harvey F. Mack (of Mack Printing Co.) undertook the duties of
Business Manager and assumed the financial risk involved.
Both Harvey Mack and his wife, Pauline Berry Mack, took a
personal interest in the Journal and carried its printing bill
during the worst part of the Depression until it could
become self-sustaining.
Today, the Mack Printing Group is still with us on a
daily basis. They have broadened their tools to include
computers, scanners, ftp sites, 6-color presses, aqueous coatings, and
direct-to-plate printing, but they continue to deal with
important things such as paper and ink and people.
Use the Journal in Class
Remember that many of our Journal
articles make excellent classroom materials. This is particularly true of the
special Viewpoints articles that honor our 75th year. We
know of one case where the ink was barely dry on "The
Flexible Surface" (February 1998) before copies were in the
classroom. We expect that this will continue to occur as this series
unfolds.
Another popular topic is inorganic photochemistry,
and subscribers have been using both the reprint volume
from 1983 and the update that was published in June 1997.
Copies of both are available from our Subscription and Back
Order Department.
If you are wondering about making copies of
Journal articles for your students, this is our policy: "For classroom
use by teachers, one copy per student in the class may be
made free of charge." This statement can always be found on
our masthead page. Enjoy! and get your students off to a
great start with the Journal.
Journal Exchange
A while ago (on page 1150 of the
October issue), we asked whether any of our readers had a collection of
Journal issues that was no longer needed. We were thinking
specifically of our High School Office - Emory Howell's
personal collection goes back only to 1964, and there is
not yet a collection that accompanies that job.
Since then, there have been several inquiries
from subscribers who have a personal collection that they
no longer need. Two are reprinted here to facilitate exchange.
Anyone interested in a valuation of his/her
collection should contact Richard W. Schwenz, the
Journal's Publications Coordinator, at the address on the
masthead.
1962 to Present: I wish to donate a complete set of
J. Chem. Educ. from mid-1962 to present (with a few
earlier stray copies) in mint condition and suitable for
binding, to a college or departmental library at the cost of
shipping from western Pennsylvania ASAP. Contact Curt Frank
at Beaver Area (PA) High School's Chemistry
Department; school phone: 724/774-2050, ext. 545; home phone:
724/774-0617; email cyfrank@basd.k12.pa.us.
Nearly Complete Set: I have an almost complete
set of J. Chem. Educ., lacking only 3-4 volumes from the
early 1930's. It is in pristine condition, bound each year
(except the last five years), and used gently only by myself.
I am retired and willing to part with this collection for
a reasonable offer - I cannot afford to donate them. Any
library or individual who might have a serious
interest should contact Robert Goldenberg, P. O. Box
412, Westside Station, Buffalo, NY 14213; phone:
905/871-1098; email: goldenbe@vaxxine.com.
|