Brief college chemistry. Laboratory manual for brief college chemistry

Shreveport, Louisiana. •. NUTRITION AND CHEMICAL GROWTH IN. CHILDHOOD. VOLUME III. Icie G. Macy, Research Laboratory, Children's Fund of Michigan ...
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AUGUST, 1951

The book is attractivelv "minted . and bound. The nictures are modern and the line drawings are clear and informative. ,reon B, ~ ~ ~ heritus h ~professor ~ ofd chemistrl, ~ ~ and ~ , accompany the text. Andrew I. S ~ a r l e t t ,Professor of Chemisty, Dartmouth college. The 1aborator~manual was written Revised edition. Henry Halt and Co., New Yo&, 1951. jx + The proposed exercises are quite simple and would not require 470 pp. 56 photos. 104 figs. 58 tables. 16 X 24 cm. much time to perform. The instructor is expected to provide most of the directions for laboratbry techniques. Each section of directions for experimentation is followed by a report section LABORATORY MANUAL FOR BRIEF COLLEGE CHEMISTRY in which the student is expected to record his observations and to answer the questions. he manual is wire-bound. The report Richardson and Scarlett. Revised edition. Hdt and sheets may be torn out if desired. Co.,New York, 1951. viii $- 229 pp. 18 figs. 28 cm. BRIEF COLLEGE CHEMISTRY

JOHN B. ENTRIKIN

THISis a thoroughly revised edition of a text that has been well received since 1942. "This book is designed for introductory college courses in general chemistry where there is a restrictive limitation in the time assigned to the work." Anyone who is teaching such a course should seriously consider this text. The 0 NUTRITION AND CHEMlCAL GROWTH IN textual material is neither highly elementary nor so extensive CHILDHOOD. VOLUME m that a. large proportion of the book must be omitted or hurried over superficially in a course of less than six semester hours' lec- Icie G.Macy, Research Laboratory, Children's Fund of Michigan. ture credit. Despite its limited length the book's 35 chapters Charles C Thomas, Springfield, 111. 1951. div-lr 1461-2174 cover the essential nrincinles and the conventional subiects of up. .. 842 tables. 16 X 24 cm. $8. general chemistry ih a very efficient manner. Each chapter USERSof the fist two volumes of this work will find the third ends with a list of thought-provoking exercises. Where they are pertinent, adequate problems are given. The text is well bal- volume of considerable interest. It contains the calculated anced as regards the relative amounts of space given to different data for 41 individual children during some lMHl balance periods types of subject matter. The explanations of chemical theory representing all together more than 6000 experimental days. are modem and clearly stated. The industrial processes are usu- Tables give average daily values for intake, sbsorption, and retention of nutrients referred to k i l o g r m of body weight, centially quiteup to date. Atomic structure and the periodic classification of the elements meters of recumbent body length, and square meters of body are introduced early in the course. A full chapter, Chapter 5, is surface. A section is devoted to each of the followine: Nitrodevoted to nuclear fission. The types of valence are clearly dis- g e l . , ,.n,tcinl, eurl.ohydrxtt~,fat, laat of comhustion, energy rx, rldorinc, iulfur, cussed and are explained on the basis of atomic structure. The pmditurc, phy&Ioglr f w l V ~ Wpho~phoru~, Brgnsted terminology is used for s. thorough discussion of acids, vnlriun~,rruignesium, prrt~wium,tirdiurn, a d rrrr.,s of pmiriw ur bases, and ionic reactions. Both ionic and molecular equations negative minerals. A supplement by J. 01 Halmes includes tabulated means of are used liberally throughout the text. Emphasis is placed on the balancing of equations, including oxidation-reduction reae- data collected under her direction and presented in Volume 11. An appendix contains interpretations and tabulated data of ti"". ~h~ text does not include historical ~h~~~ are no roetgenograms of 17 children intended to make possible an aas references to guide the student to further reading. Only three SeSSment Of maturation. chapters are devoted to carbon and its compounds; hence the PHILIP H. MITCHELL book is not adequate for a course that attempts to cover the whole Bmwr* U N I V E ~ ~ I T Y fiald of chemistry in asingle cours~. ~ n o r r o m c ~~ x . o o ISLAND s

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