Recent Developments in the Chemistry of Nonmetals - C&EN Global

evening provided opportunities for conversation and "bull sessions" among old and new friends against a background of informal music and refreshme...
0 downloads 0 Views 162KB Size
try in this country through his experiences. Few who heard his story will ever forget it. Attendance at the symposium was sur­ prisingly high. Members came from 29 states, the District of Columbia, Canada, Argentina, and Brazil- Attendance com­ pared with previous symposia follows : YEAR

PLACE

R Ε GI STRATI Ο Ν

1925 1927 1929 1931 1933 1935 1937 1939 1941

Rochester Columbus Princeton New Haven Ithaca Rochester Richmond St. Louis Ann Arbor

175 355 394 356 274 447 466 468 488

Classsification of yielded t h e following:

the

registrations

REGISTRATION

University Industrial Research institutions Graduate students Unclassified TOTAL

1941

1939

166 213 18 86 5

178 173 29 83 5

488

468

T h e Division of Organic Chemistry has received invitations from several local sec­ tions of the AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY

to become their guests for t h e next sym­ posium, scheduled for December 1943. N o decision has been made concerning the place of t h e next symposium, and the Executive Committee of t h e Division of Organic Chemistry will appreciate addi­ tional suggestions. T h e University of Michigan Section of the AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY and the

Local Symposium Committee of M . Gomberg, W. E . Bachmann, C. S. Schoepfle, F. F . Blicke, J. O. Halford, J. M. Chemerda, E . C. Horning, and L. C . Anderson made every effort t o see that the meeting ran smoothly, and their efforts are appreci­ ated b y the members of t h e symposium. ARTHUR C. C O P E ,

Division of Organic

Recent Developments in the Chemistry of Nonmetals RECENT Developments in the Chemistry of the Nonmetals, the topic of the Sixth Annual Symposium of the AMERI­ CAN

CHEMICAL

N O .

of

Graduate Fellowships at Johns Hopkins

before February 15, 1942, to A. H. Corwin, T h e Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.

H P H E Johns Hopkins University under its National Fellowship Plan offers gradu­ ate fellowships in chemistry. The Remsen Teaching Fellowships, named in honor of Ira Remsen, are designed for men in­ terested in either industrial or academic research. T h e Chemical Foundation Teaching Fellowship is supported by funds donated by the Chemical Founda­ tion, Inc. T h e York Ice Machinery Corp. is providing a fellowship for the graduate study of physical chemistry. The stipend in each case is $1,000 annually. Applications must be sent '""iZT' " r -

]

.

.

.

.

^



"

-

_





-

New Courses at Brooklyn Polytechnic X ^ L E V B N new courses in chemistry and chemical engineering subjects will be offered during the second semester of the Graduate School at Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, which opens January 29. Courses are given one evening per week with registration starting January 22. Detailed descriptions of each subject m a y be obtained from the Dean of Graduate Study, 85 Livingston St., Brooklyn, Ν . Υ. •

"

tv

j

'

'!

I

Secretary

Chemistry

Π Ρ Κ Ε National Association of Fan Manufacturera, Detroit, Mich., will celebrate its 25th anniversary at its annual meeting to b e held in Detroit, February 12. I t s activities have been gradually enlarged t o include research, engineering standards, educational work in the proper uses of air moving machinery, improved working conditions, etc. I t s p u b l i c a t i o n include standard methods for centrifugal fans and blowers, standard test code for centrifugal and axial fans, comparison charts for plan­ ing mill exhausters and cast iron volume fans, field test of fans, and abrasion. 2 0,

Division

Physical and Inorganic Chemistry, brought 120 chemists t o Columbus, Ohio, over the period December 29 t o 30, 1941. Although the competition of other meet­ ings and the "seven-day-week" undoubt­ edly kept many from attending, there was no diminution in interest and in par­ ticipation by those present. The pro­ gram, comprising five half-day sessions, was made up of 18 papers originating about equally from university and indus­ trial laboratories. T h e meetings success­ fully accomplished the correlation of in­ vestigations in the pure and applied as­ pects of several of the common nonmetals. The social gathering Monday evening provided opportunities for conversation and "bull sessions" among old and new

\

National Association of Fan Manufacturers

V O L U M E

SOCIETY'S

friends against a background of informal music and refreshments. Vocal talent among visiting chemists added to the evening's enjoyment. Many took ad­ vantage of the opportunity to visit the laboratories of the Battelle Memorial In­ stitute and of T h e Ohio State University. Felix E. Held, College of Commerce and Administration, Ohio State University, addressed the group at the dinner Tues­ day evening. T h e gathering was honored by the presence of President William Lloyd Evans and Past President William McPherson. The symposium was arranged b y a national committee under the chairman­ ship of W. C. Fernelius. Local arrange­ ments were admirably cared for by A. B. Garrett, J. P. McReynolds, and L. L. Quill of The Ohio State University and R. O. Stith of the Battelle Memorial Insti­ tute.

2 »

,*

j



\

.

"x

;

τ

'-•

\

\

iy

'~- -; » -^ .

%_ /



ο

^

\

!

" c s.

V)

\ /"•