Some Aspects of the Chemistry and Toxic Action of Organic

Some Aspects of the Chemistry and Toxic Action of Organic Compounds Containing Phosphorus and Fluorine. Rudolph Macy. J. Am. Chem. Soc. , 1958, 80 (1)...
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T h e Physical and Thermodynamic Properties of Helium. Technical Report D-9027. By JESSE T SIMMOXS, Engineering and Research Division, TVm. R . LT'hittaker Co., Ltd. LVm. R. Whittaker Co., Ltd., 915 Korth Citrus Avenue, Los Angeles 38, California. 1957. 79 pp. 23.5 X 28.5 cm. Price, 810.00. The following properties of helium, expressed in engineering units, are listed over the pressure range 14.7 t o 6,000 pounds per square inch absolute and from -440" t o f600" F.: density, specific volume, compressibility factor, entropy, enthalpy, specific heats at constant pressure a n d a t constant volume, the ratio C,/ Cy, viscosity, thermal conductivity, sonic properties and diffusion. Graphs of these properties are given. There is also included a liniited amount of d a t a on air.I In general the properties of helium given in earlier treatises Lire converted into engineering units and smoothed t o even values of the arguments. One would have greater confidence in the tables if he did not read t h e introduction in which some strange thermodynamic statements appear. ( I ) Taken from

"Tables

of Thermal Properties of

Gases" b y

J . Hilsenrath, C. W. Beckett, W. S. Benedict, I,. Fans, €1. J. Hoge, J . I'. Masi, R. L. Nuttall, Y. S. Touloukian and H. W. Woollep,

l-01.

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sound or defective. Sectiolls 4.1% and 4 2 7 a give the methods of analysis with d a t a of this type for completely randomized block designs. These sections fill a gap in the first edition, which gave methods of analysis onl>-for continuous data. Sections 4.61a t o 4.66a contain a discussion of the use of latin squares in adjusting for residual effects which m a y be present when the treatments are applied in sequence t o the same subject. Topics t h a t are presented more briefly arc sequential experimentation (section 2.23a), the testing of effects suggested by the d a t a (section 3.53), the problem of making several tests of significance in the same experiineiit (section 3.54a), Yates' automatic method of coinputing factorial effect totals (section 5.24a), additional st:iiid3rd error formulas for split-plot experiments (section 7 . 2 2 ) , the effects of errors in the weights on thc recox-cry of inter-block information (section l O . l 2 d , a n d the uw of balanced incomplete block dcqigiis i n tustc ;inti prcfcrence testing (section 11.1a). DEPARTMEST OF RADIATIOX l3101,uc~ LXIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER I,EE CRr'alI. ROCHESTER, N E WYORK

National Bureau of Standards Circular 564 (1955).

I~EPARTMEST OF CHEMISTRY TAMES NASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF T E C H S O L ~ G Y CAMBRIDGE, ~~ASSACHUSETTS

A . BEATTIE Heterocyclic Compounds. Volume 5 . Five-membered Heterocycles Containing Two Hetero Atoms and their Benzo Derivatives. Edited by ROBERTC. ELDERFIELD, University of hlichigan. Jwhn LViley and Solis, IXIC., 440 _ _ _ _ . _ ~ Fourth Avenue, New York 16, Kew York. 1037. vi i 4 4 pp. 16 33.5 em. Price, $20.00. Experimental Designs. By L~ILLIAM G. COCHRAS,Profcssur of Biostatistics, The Johns Hopkins UniversitJ-, and This volume maintains the same high standards which GERTRUDE11. Cox, Director, Institute of Statistics, Lvcre set b?; the preceding volumes. -is t h e title indicates I'xiiversity of S o r t h Carolina. John TS'iley and Sons, volume 5 is devoted t o five-mernbercd heterocycles conIiic., 4-10 Fourth Avenue, S e w York 16, S. T. 1957. taining t\ro hetcro atoms and their benzo derivatives. siv 617 pp. 15.5 X 24 cm. Price, 510.25. ;\ccordingly, the eight chapters are devoted t o (1) 1,8Dioxolme and Derivatives (44 pages), (2) Pyrazoles a t l d This book is directed a t experimenters with a fair knowlRelated Compounds (116 pages), (3) Iiidazoles (31 pages), edge of statistical methodology through Analysis of T'arim c e techniques. if'hen the first edition appeared in 1950 ( 4 ) Imidazoles and Condensed Imidazoles (103 pages), (5j Oxazole and its Deriyatives (120 pages), (6) Benzoxazolcs it was b y far the best treatment of the statistical aspects of experimental design for such a n audience. This was still and Related Systems (33 pugesj, (7) Isosazoles (31 pages), and (8) Thiazoles ailti Benzothidzoies (238 pages). These true just prior t o the appearance of the edition reviewed chapters were contributed bh- Robert Elderfield and Frankhere and t h e case is reinforced by its appearance. lin Short, Thomas L . Jacobs, Robert Elderfield, Edgar S. The framework of the book remains the same. The first tliree chapters treat the relation of statistics t o experimen- Schipper and Allan K . Ih! , J . \\-. Cornforth (chaptcrs 3 ;tnd Sj, Roderick .I. Barnes, and j:iiiies 31. Spraguc a i ~ ( l tation and, briefly, the statistical notions and techniques -1.1%. Land, respectively. requisite for the balance of t h e book. T h e wealth of exA table of contcnts for each chapter greatly facilitates tlic perience and good sense which the authors bring t o the location of a particular topic and extensive literature citadiscussion is particularly evident in this section. I n the tions including patcnt literature are found throughout eacli remainder of t h e book the several different classes of exchapter. These citations are up-to-date and they include perimental designs are treated one-by-one. For each there references to some rather uncotmnon literature sources. is presented t h e computational technique, standard error Dr. Elderfield and his eo-workers are t o be coniplimciitcd ~ i i d missing value formulas, and numerical examples. for making the literature dealing wit11 Iieterocyclic comOf special value are the authors' general recommendations pounds more convenientl>- available t o organic chemists. about each of the designs and the comparisons of various undertaking of considerable magnitu