Guilty As Charged! - Chemical & Engineering News Archive (ACS

An avid and mightily annoyed C&EN reader chided me for my Editor's Page of March 15, titled "Chemists—and Proud of It," as well ... He fumed: "There...
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CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS 1155—16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 (202) 872-4600 Letters to Editor: [email protected] C&EN Online: http://pubs.acs.org/cen EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Madeleine Jacobs MANAGING EDITOR: Rudy M. Baum ART DIRECTOR: Robin L. Braverman SENIOR CORRESPONDENT: Lois R. Ember NEWS EDITOR: Janice R. Long ONLINE EDITION EDITOR: Melody Voith EDITOR-AT-LARGE: Michael Heylin CONTRIBUTING EDITOR: Wilbert C. Lepkowski ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT: Patricia Oates PROGRAM ASSISTANT: Stephanie Wahl BUSINESS William J. Storck, Assistant Managing Editor Northeast: (732) 906-8300. Michael McCoy (Senior Editor), Marc S. Reisch (Senior Editor), Ronald S. Rogers (Associate Editor), Rachel Eskenazi (Administrative Assistant). Houston: (281) 486-3900, Ann M. Thayer (Bureau Head), (281) 496-6382, Paige Marie Morse (Associate Editor). Hong Kong: 852-2984-9072. Jean-François Tremblay (Bureau Head). London: 44 1818706884. Patricia Layman (Senior Editor) GOVERNMENT & POLICY David J. Hanson, Assistant Managing Editor Washington: (202) 872-4495. Julie L. Grisham (Associate Editor), Bette Hileman (Senior Editor), Jeffrey W. Johnson (Senior Editor), William G. Schulz (Associate Editor) SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY/EDUCAnON Pamela S. Zurer, Assistant Managing Editor Washington: (202) 8724411. Stuart A Borman (Senior Correspondent), Mairin B. Brennan (Senior Editor), Doron Dagani (Senior Correspondent), Rebecca L Rawls (Senior Correspondent), A Maureen Rouhi (Senior Editor), Sophie L Wilkinson (Associate Editor). Northeast (732) 906-8301. Stephen C. Stinson (Senior Editor). Chicago: (773) 463-2371. Mitch Jacoby (Associate Editor). West Coast (510) 849-0575. Elizabeth Κ Wilson (Associate Editor). London: 44 1256-811052. Michael Freemantle (Senior Editor) ACS NEWS Linda R. Raber (ACS News Editor), Kevin R. MacDermott (Program Assistant) E D n i N G & PRODUCTION Ernest L Carpenter, Assistant Managing Editor JanetS. Dodd (Associate Editor), Robin M. Giroux (Senior Editor), Arlene Goldberg-Gist (Associate Editor), Rita E. Johnson (Assistant Editor), Stephen Κ Ritter (Associate Editor), Diana L Slade (Assistant Editor)

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•EDITOR'S PAGE

Guilty As Charged!

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In another story, Jeff Johnson re­ n avid and mightily annoyed C&EN reader chided me for my Editor's ports on the challenges of storing highPage of March 15, titled "Chem­ level radioactive and hazardous waste in ists—and Proud of It," as well as for other the government's first underground editorials in which I've praised the accom­ waste repository. Bette Hileman looks at plishments of chemists. He wrote, "One the latest efforts to evaluate the effective­ expects individuals to defend their profes­ ness of the Commerce Department's Ad­ vanced Technology Program, which sion. However, enough is enough." In case you breezed past that partic­ over the course of its existence has in­ ular Editor's Page, the offending words volved numerous cooperative programs pointed out a continuing challenge for among chemical professionals in indus­ our profession: That too often other dis­ try, academia, and government. ciplines get credit for the work of chem­ Chemists work at the most funda­ ists. "As the central science," I wrote, mental levels in understanding life. In her "chemistry has long been involved in story 'Taking a Clue from Biology," Re­ work at the interface of many disciplines, becca Rawls describes work in the hot especially biology. But chemists risk the field of molecular recognition—"a tantaliz­ danger of becoming invisible unless they ing target for chemists trying to develop actively tell their success stories to a synthetic materials that capture some of broader audience." the exquisite sensitivity that some biologi­ These statements sent my reader cal systems have to recognize specific over the edge! He fumed: 'There is this molecules." Mitch Jacoby reports on the business of chemistry, the central sci­ cooperation of heavy-element theoreti­ ence. Who came up with this misleading cians and experimentalists to address en­ and empty statement? Thousands of sci­ vironmental cleanup of nuclear wastes. entists don't use any chemistry in their And for the ultimate in centrality, Sophie work. . . . What is the central science? I Wilkinson reports on the latest research on the health-related benefits of coffee don't care." It is, however, our business to care. and chocolate. (Imagine life without cof­ As the newsmagazine of the chemical fee and chocolate!) The ACS meeting briefs present a world, Chemical & Engineering News has the responsibility to capture those sto­ cornucopia of examples of chemistry's ries that illustrate just how central chem­ usefulness, from the development of a istry is to our daily lives and livelihoods. breathable, shirtweight fabric that can To do this, we write about all the areas protect agricultural workers by detoxify­ that chemistry touches—agriculture, ing pesticides to which they're exposed, electronics, biology, medicine, environ­ to the synthesis of a folic acid derivative mental science, computer science, engi­ that could be used as an imaging agent neering, geology, physics, metallurgy, for a wide variety of tumors. mineralogy—the list goes on. Elsewhere in this issue, Stephen This week's issue is a good example Stinson describes a unique course at of the centrality—and breadth—of chem­ Cornell University that exposes chemis­ istry. The News of the Week features, try and other science majors to the nuts among others, stories by Lois Ember, and bolts of entrepreneurship. I am tempted to say to my aggrieved Pamela Zurer, and Michael Freemantle on, respectively, Baxter Labs' commit­ reader, "I rest my case." But in fact, we ment to develop alternatives to PVC intra­ never do rest here at C&EN. Our job is venous bags; an efficient, cost-effective to continually report on the impact— method of removing trichlorethylene from both positive and negative—of chemis­ clay soils; and the incorporation of a try in our daily lives. This takes nothing fullerene derivative into a photovoltaic cell. away from the important work of other Marc Reisch explores chemistry's disciplines. If I'm an advocate on occa­ role in providing personal care products sion for the positive cause of chemistry for the growing ethnic market, Paige and chemists, well, all I can say is, Morse writes about the effect on consum­ "Guilty as charged!" ers and the industry of California's phaseout of MTBE as a gasoline oxygenate, and Ronald Rogers details the impact on small chemical makers of the requirements to Editor-in-chief test high-production-volume chemicals.

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