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General Motors of Knowledge. There will be so many physicists that the research centers will advertise for philosophers." The Journal is so spiced with his personal opinions or private philosophy that the reader will absorb many of them for himself.
APPLIFD MATHEMATICS IN CHEMICAL ENGINEERING H a m l d S. Mickley, Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering, and Thomas K. Sherwood, Professor of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Charles E. Reed, Engineering Manager, Chemical Department, General Electric Ca. Second edition. McGraw. Hill Book Co.. New York, 1957. xii + 413 pp. 9 9 figs. 16 X 23.5 cm. $9. THE first edition of "Sherwood and Reed" which appeared in 1939 has been entirely rearranged and rewritten by Prcfessor Mickley. Experience in using the text with students, and the many new mathematical techniques which are being used in chemical engineering, have called for new treatment of old material and the addition of new topics in the second edition.
Now Chapter I on Treatment of Engineering Data and Chapter I1 an Interpretation of Engineering Data deal withmate rial previously in Chapters I , VII, VIII, and I X on graphical representation, differentiation and integration, interpolation, and theory of errors. Chapter I1 now discusses variance and design of experiments. Chapter I11 on the Mathematical Formulation of the Physioal Problem discusses the method of setting up the differential equation for a procesp. This naturally is followed by Chapter IV on the Solution of Ordinary Differential Equations in which the usual methods of solution are given. Because the usual methods are not always applicable, Chapter V discusses Series and Numerical Solutions of Ordinary Differential Equations. Chemical and physical prooesses f r e quently involve more than two variables, so Chapter VI deals with the Formulation of Partial Differential Equations and Chapter VII with the Solution of Partial Differential Equations. Vector notation is introduced in the formulation of partial differential equations and used for flaw equations. A completely new section contains Chapter VIII on the Laplace Transform, Chapter I X on Analysis of Stagewise Processes by the Calculus of Finite Differences, and Chapter X an the Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations. The second edition appears to have a more uniform level of treatment of all subjects than did the first edition. I t has much excellent material and has fulfilled
its "purpose of this hook is to consolidate the advanced methods of mathematics into a form that can be applied readily by both the student and the professional engineer." The man who desires to use advanced mathematics must know and be able to use his basic mathematics. He may need to review some of it before he can apply the advanced methods of mathematics given here. KENNETH A. KOBE THEUNIVEBBLTT OI. TEXAS
an an^. TEXAS
ADVANCES IN CARBOHYDRATE CHEMISTRY. VOLUME 11 Edited by Melville L. Wolfrom and R. Stuart Tipson. Academic Press Inc., 464 pp. 12 New York, 1956. viii tables. 16 X 23.5 om. $11.
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THElatest volume of "Advances in Carbohydrate Chemistry," published in 1956, maintains the same able and comprehensive treatment of subject matter and international scope of authorship that distinguished the preceding volumes of this series. The topics presented are: Periodate Oxidation of Cmhohydrates, which is discussed by J. M. Bohbitt; The Osones, by S. Bayne and J. A. Fewster; Reactions af the Monosaccharides, with beta-Ketonic Esters and Related Substances, by F. Garcia Gonzilez; Kojic Acid, by Andrew Bedik; The Biosyntheeis of the Mono-
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION.