EDITORS' COLUMN

Education”. (available from the Superintendent of Docu- ments, U. S. Government Printing. Office, Washington, D. C. 20402,. $0.70). The authors, Dr...
18 downloads 14 Views 366KB Size
EDITORS* COLUMN

cut-backs in federal science funding and increasing pressure for involvement of universities in current problems of society, it is inevitable that during the next few years many universities will be launching interdisciplinary programs in environmental quality. Some of the difficulties that may be anticipated in such endeavors are discussed in a recent report, “The Universities and Environmental Quality—Commitment to Problem Education” Focused (available from the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. 20402, $0.70). The authors, Dr. John S. Steinhart, of the Office of Science and Technology, and Miss Stacie Cherniak, a 1969 White House Executive Intern, visited six universities (not identified in the report) to make detailed on-site studies of existing interdisciplinary programs. They concluded that “two features are essential for such problem-focused programs to be successful (although they alone cannot guarantee suc-

in

'yy'iTH

cess)

simplified

retrieval of noise buried signals with

Ithaco’s 353 Phase-Lock amplifier tuning required gain not affected by adjustment or drift in reference frequency • adapts automatically to virtually any reference input • ultra stable, highly linear detector—no overload at 1,000 : 1 noise to signal •

no

• phase and

ratio • 1.0 Hz to 200 KHz operation

plug-in construction permits addition of new or specialized features—prevents obsolescence For further information and complete specifications contact: •



j^

607 272-7640

ITHACO

nvc-

735 WEST CLINTON STREET, ITHACA. N.Y. 14850

Circle No. 26 on Readers’ Service Card

Cabinet of a thousand faces.

:

Substantial or complete control of the faculty reward structure, and 2. Freedom to be innovative in introducing course material, educational programs, work study progress, and curriculum requirements for degrees.” The report is critical of the existing mechanism of funding through project grants to a central institute, because “each professor quickly takes his share and returns to his department for his individual research. After a certain length of time the professor may be expected to return with a neat paper of research results. This can hardly be considered as a satisfactory model for Interdisciplinary research, and there is certainly no provision for the training of qualified individuals who will deal with the environment 1.

Switch doors

to drawers, to shelves in the twist of a screwdriver ...

Blickman’s patented Conflex laboratory furniture adapts to changing lab needs in minutes. Without special tools. Nearly 1,000 door and drawer combinations. Mix and match doors and drawers turn 3V2 "-deep drawers into IVa. "-deep drawers adjust shelves in Vi increments. the Specify Conflex furniture laboratory furniture that changes with the times! Send the coupon for complete details and specs. .

..

S. Blickman, Inc. 9602 Gregory Ave. Weehawken, N J. 07087 Rush free Conflex Laboratory Furniture catalog Have a lab specialist phone us

...

"

...

Name/Title____ Institution. Address__

City/State/Zlp_

\_____________________j

Circle No. 104 on Readers’ Service Card

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 42, NO. 2, FEBRUARY 1970

139 A

Editors’ Column

for the on-going discussion of environmental problems.” The report goes on to recommend the formation of Schools of the Human Environment with federal support for continuing core funding of research and educational activities as well as “seed money” for faculty salaries and educational innovation. Work-study programs for both students and faculty are recommended. Some 10 to 20 universities are judged to have programs far enough advanced to be ready for funding, with some 200 or more potentially available for involvement, with funding of the order of or

$20,000,000 a year. Some aspects of the report are to be controversial and to sure provoke opposition. For example,

the new curricula, in cutting across the lines of traditional disciplines, will tend toward generalization rather than specialization, and questions will arise as to whether such curricula can be sufficiently penetrating to constitute a valid Problemeducational program. oriented research is under suspicion by those who maintain that basic knowledge already exists in these areas, so it is just a matter of applying known principles to the problems at hand. It seems clear, however, that the demand for environmental science programs will be so large during the next 5 to 10 years that it will not be a question of whether but how they will be organized. If the existing university structure proves too inflexible to accommodate such programs, they will tend to grow as separate entities either within or outside the universities. Both the curricula and the research projects can benefit from the involvement of those scientists who can envision basic science as supportive of problem-oriented programs. Analytical chemists in particular will find themselves much in demand for service operations, and they can readily relate both methods development and basic research to the problems at hand.

free brochure outlines 88 applications for new thermal analysis system Carle's new approach to thermal analysis provides a unique solution for characterizing high molecular weight organic mixtures. Reflecting the volatility and thermal decomposition patterns of a sample's organic constituents, this technique achieves results previously impossible with conventional mass spectrometry, absorption spectroscopy, gas chromatography, and thermogravimetry. Applications range from fundamental research in organic and polymer chemistry to routine quality control and testing. Specific data developed by this new analytical technique includes volatility patterns, quantitative determination of minor components, thermal degradation patterns in inert and reactive atmospheres, vapor pressure measurements, and thermal stability of organic materials designed for high temperature applications. A new twelve-page brochure outlines eighty-eight potential usages covering such fields of interest as: •

Electronic Components

Aerospace

·

Polymers Rubber Biomedical Solid Fuels Container & Packaging Textiles Materials Water Chemical Manufacture Petroleum Analysis The significance of actual thermograms from these fields are discussed. Also included are complete specifications on this new instrument, the Carle Model 3000 Thermal Analysis System. Write today or discuss your application at Cleveland, booth 219-221 •

Air Pollution

Explosives Food Food Chemistry Pesticides

• •

· ·

·

·



CAR

L E

INSTRUMENTS, INC. 1141 East Ash Avenue

*

Fullerton, California 92631

(714) 879-9900

Circle No. 129 on Readers’ Service Card

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 42, NO. 2, FEBRUARY 1970

·

141 A