Fassel Receives Chemical Instrumentation Award - American

plaque, $2500, and travel expenses to the 1983 ACS National Meeting in. Seattle, Wash. ... Write tor literature. Box 544. Borough Hall Station. Jamaic...
0 downloads 0 Views 1MB Size
News was named an honorary member of the society. He has served on the advi­

4:20 GC-MS-DS Analysis of Or­ ganic Pollutants Produced during the Disposal of Missiles by Burning. D. C. Lane, E. D. Erickson, H. F. Cordes 4:45 Importance of Identifying Or­ ganic Pollutants in Air. G· A. Holton, F. O. Hoffman 5:05 Concluding Remarks.

sory board of ANALYTICAL C H E M I S ­

TRY and for 13 years was coeditor of Spectrochimica Acta.

Awards at FACSS

Fassel Receives Chemical Instrumentation Award Velmer A. Fassel, deputy director of Ames Laboratory and professor of chemistry at Iowa State University, has been named 1983 recipient of the Chemical Instrumentation Award. Sponsored by the Dow Chemical Com­ pany and administered by the Divi­ sion of Analytical Chemistry of the American Chemical Society, the award is given annually to recognize and en­ courage achievement in the origina­ tion or improvement of analytical in­ strumentation. Fassel will receive a plaque, $2500, and travel expenses to the 1983 ACS National Meeting in Seattle, Wash., where the award will

Velmer Fassel be presented during a symposium held in the recipient's honor. Fassel's research focuses on atomic emission, absorption, and fluorescence spectrometry, X-ray excited optical luminescence, and other analytical techniques for ultratrace analysis. He has been the recipient of several major awards, including the ACS Award in Analytical Chemistry in 1979 and the Anachem Award in 1971. Fassel re­ cently was awarded the Japan Society of Analytical Chemistry Medal and

Anachem Award—James N. Shoolery of Varian Associates, Palo Alto, Calif., will be presented with this year's Anachem Award at the upcom­ ing September meeting of the Federa­ tion of Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy Societies. The award, sponsored by the Detroit Association of Analytical Chemists, is given annu­ ally in recognition of service to analyt­ ical chemistry through research, ad­ ministration, teaching, and other ac­ tivities. Shoolery joined the Varian staff in 1952, and since that time has devoted considerable effort to developing chemical applications of high-resolu­ tion nuclear magnetic resonance spec­ trometry. His current research inter­ ests focus on quantitative aspects of Fourier transform NMR, 13 C NMR of petroleum oils and edible oils of plant

Temperature

HELLMA

Programming Gas Chromatograph

. . . tomorrow's designs today!

IFair^L Τ t W y ï w î T M

OS® QH® QS® OF® QU® Q l * Hellma—the largest assortment of highest precision glass a n d quartz cells. Standard · Flow-through · Constant-temperature Anaerobic · Special Designs Also a v a i l a b l e - U L T R A V I O L E T LIGHT SOURCES Deuterium Lamps · Mercury V a p o r Lamps Hollow Cathode Lamps · Power Supplies

HELLMA CELLS, INC.

Write for literature Box 544 Borough Hall Station Jamaica, New York 11424 Phone (212) 544-9534

CIRCLE 97 ON READER SERVICE CARD

Accurate microprocessor control with excellent reproducibility.

GOW-MAC

INSTRUMENT CO. P.O. Box 3 2 , Bound Brook, N J 08805 (201) 560-0600. See us at t h e A C S S h o w , B o o t h # 1 5 1 CIRCLE 90 ON READER SERVICE CARD ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 54, NO. 9, AUGUST 1982 · 1045 A