PROCESS & INSTRUMENTS

born in. Greenville, Tex.,and took two degreesat Southwestern. University in that state, but mi- grated northward to achieve a. Ph.D. at the State Uni...
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THE AUTHORS

Potentiometric Titrations

Chromatography and Electrochromatography

Charles Norwood Reilley was a Merck fellow at Princeton, where he took a P h . D . in 1952 before returning to his under­ graduate school, the University of N o r t h Carolina, t o teach chemistry. Already he has produced a laboratory manual in general chemistry and has published 20 technical articles. His specialties are precision colorimetry, high-frequency titrimetry, coulometric meth­ ods, eomplexomctric titrimetry, chronopotentiometry, and related transient electrode processes.

Harold H. Strain, senior chemist at Argonne National Labora­ tory, was formerly a staff member in the department of plant biology of the Carnegie Insti­ tution of Washington at Stan­ ford, Calif., for 22 years. He received his P h . D . a t Stanford in 1927 and was a Rockefeller Foundation fellow at Carlsberg Laboratory in Copen­ hagen, Denmark, 1937-38. His fields of interest include nu­ clear chemistry, inorganic chemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry, photosynthesis, and plant pigments.

Acid-Base Titrations in Nonaqueous Solvents John A. Riddick was born in Greenville, Tex., and took two degrees a t Southwestern University in t h a t state, but mi­ grated northward to achieve a Ph.D. at the State University of Iowa in 1929. Southward again, he became assistant professor of chemistry a t Mississippi, then instructor at Southern Methodist. H e joined Commercial Solvents Corp. in 1936 and is now chief of the company's analytical divi­ sion in Terre Haute, Ind. He has published about 30 papers and is coauthor of a book on organic solvents.

Takuya Richard Sato, who was born in Kanoi, Hawaii, received his undergraduate education at Sacramento Junior College, University of Cali­ fornia, and Illinois Institute of Technology. H e is now a candidate for a P h . D . a t I T T , and has been assistant scientist in the biomedical division of Argonne National Labora­ tory. During the war he was supervisor of the food preser­ vation unit at the war reloca­ tion centers in Tule Lake, Calif., and later a t Minidoka, Idaho.

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