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and SEM and the Law are scheduled. Suggestions on topics and speakers are solicited. .... Computer Educator, is designed to foster information interch...
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graphs and UV-VIS spectrophotome­ ters will continue to contribute the largest individual dollar volume in 1982.

NIH Symposium At the Houston meeting, there will be about 60 papers presented by au­ thors from 16 nations. The following sessions are planned: Monday, Nov. 4 Morning: New Horizons; Afternoon: New Columns, Theoretical Aspects Tuesday, Nov. 5 Morning: Biochemical Gas Chroma­ tography; Afternoon: Gas Chroma­ tography—General, Biomedical and Liquid Chromatography Wednesday, Nov. 6 Morning: Environmental Problems; Afternoon: Informal panels and dis­ cussion groups Thursday, Nov. 7 Morning: Liquid Chromatography The papers to be presented at this meeting will be published by the Jour­ nal of Chromatography, and the pro­ ceedings will be available at the meet­ ing itself. Complete information on this meet­ ing is available from Albert Zlatkis, Chemistry Dept., University of Hous­ ton, Houston, Tex. 77004.

U.S. Analytical Instrument Market A new Frost & Sullivan study op­ timistically predicts that the market for analytical instrumentation will in­ crease by nearly 2% times to $1.3 bil­ lion by 1982. An all-out energy R&D program may tack on another $50 or $60 million in annual sales beginning in 1976. Other predictions in the study are that recent regulatory actions by the U.S. government agencies will spur analytical instrument sales, as will the current orientation of instru­ mentation toward applied research and industrial process applications. Analytical instrument data systems will account for an increasingly large dollar volume of sales by 1982, and systems incorporating sampling and data processing will increase their share of the market over individual in­ struments. For individual instruments, greatest growth rates are projected for liquid chromatographs, atomic absorption spectrophotometers, and wet chemical analyzers, although gas chromato­

The National Institutes of Health is holding a Symposium and Exhibit on Recent Developments in Research Methods and Instrumentation, Oct. 22-24, at the Jack Masur Auditorium, Bldg. 10, Clinical Center, NIH, Bethesda, Md. Sessions will cover Sepa­ ration Science Techniques, Modern Applications of Enzymes as Reagents, Electronic Cell Sorting, Laser Light Source Spectroscopy, Ultrasonic Diag­ nostic Imaging, and Radiation and Radioisotope Diagnostic Imaging. Ex­ hibits relating to symposium topics will be presented by Bio-Rad Labora­ tories, Electronucleonics, Inc., Miles Research Div., Pharmacia Fine Chem­ icals, Inc., Pierce Chemical Co., Beeton Dickinson Electronics Laboratory, Bio/Physics Systems, Inc., Particle Technology, Inc., Science Spectrum, Inc., and Laboratory of Technical De­ velopment, NIH. Although publication of the pro­ ceedings is not planned, a formal pro­ gram with abstracts will be available to interested persons at the end of September. For a copy, contact: Ju­ dith M. Summers, Office of Adminis­ trative Services, NIH, Bldg. 31, Rm. 1C-02, Bethesda, Md. 20014. 301-4962315

Call for Papers 8th Annual Scanning Electron Mi­ croscopy Symposium St. Louis, Mo. Apr. 7-11, 1975. 200400 word abstracts due before Nov. 11, 1974. Workshops on Teaching of SEM, and SEM and the Law are scheduled. Suggestions on topics and speakers are solicited. Contact: Om Johari, IIT Re­ search Institute, 10 W. 35th St., Chi­ cago, 111. 60616.

Short Courses ACS Courses. For more information, contact: Department of Educational Activities, American Chemical Soci­ ety, 1155 16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. 202-872-4508

Meetings Meetings through December 1974 are listed in the June issue, beginning on page 622 A m 26th Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry and Ap­ plied Spectroscopy. Mar. 3-7. Cleveland, Ohio. Contact: E. S. Hodge, Carnegie-Mellon Universi­ ty, Mellon Institute, 4400 Fifth

892 A • ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 46, NO. 11, SEPTEMBER

Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. 15213. 412621-1100,ext.212 m Expoquimia 75. Mar. 8-16. Barce­ lona, Spain. Chemical Exposition. Contact: Secretary's Office, Expoquimia-75, Avda. M.a Cristina, Palacio n.°, Barcelona(4), Spain • Assoc, for Advancement of Medi­ cal Instrumentation Annual Meeting. Mar. 16-18. Boston, Mass. Contact: AAMI, Suite 417, 1500 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, Va. 22209 • 169th American Chemical Soci­ ety Meeting. Apr. 6-11. Philadel­ phia, Pa. Includes Analytical Divi­ sion Sessions. Contact: Robert Osteryoung, Colorado State Uni­ versity, Fort Collins, Colo. 80521 m LABEX International. Apr. 14-18. Earls Court, London. Contact: UTP Exhibitions Ltd., 42-43 Gerrard St., London Wl V 7LP, England • Spring Meeting, Electrochemical Society. May 11-16. Toronto, Can­ ada. Contact: Electrochemical Soci­ ety, 30 E. 42nd St., New York, Ν. Υ. 10017.212-867-4430 • 7th Central Regional ACS Meet­ ing. May 28-30. Morgantown, W.Va. Contact: E. D. Swiger, Fair­ mont State College, Fai~mont, W. Va. 26554. 304-363-4000 • 28th Annual Symposium on Ana­ lytical Chemistry: New Horizons in Analytical Spectroscopy. June 18-20. Knoxville, Tenn. Contact: James Winefordner, University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla. 32601. 904-392-0541 m 170th American Chemical Soci­ ety Meeting. Aug. 24-29. Chicago, 111. Includes Analytical Division Sessions. Contact: Robert Os­ teryoung, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colo. 80521 • Fifth International Conference on Atomic Spectroscopy. Aug. 25-29. Melbourne, Australia. Con­ tact: J. B. Willis, CSIRO Div. of Chemical Physics, Box 160, Clay­ ton, Vic, Australia 3168

1974

Carbon-13 NMR Spectroscopy Atlantic City, N.J. Sept. 6-8. G. C. Levy, I. R. Peat. S160; nonmembers, $185 Thermal Methods of Analysis Atlantic City, N.J. Sept. 7-8. W. W. Wendlandt, I. M. Sarasohn. $125; nonmembers, $145

The SP 1100 IR:

News and Views

Maintaining and Troubleshooting Chromatographic Systems St. Louis, Mo. Oct. 11-12. J. Q. Walker, M. T. Jackson, Jr., M. P. T. Bradley. $135; nonmembers, $155 Modern Liquid Chromatography Washington, D.C. Oct. 12-13. L. R. Snyder, J. J. Kirkland. $140; nonmembers, $160 Chemical Microscopy Atlantic City, N.J. Nov. 15-17. J. A. Refiner. $135; nonmembers, $155 Gas Chromatography Atlantic City, N.J. Nov. 16-17. R. A. Keller, M. F. Burke. $125; nonmembers, $145 Solving Problems with Modern Liquid Chromatography Atlantic City, N.J. Nov. 16-17. J. J. Kirkland, L. R. Snyder. $145; nonmembers, $165

Basic Specifications

Wavenumber Range

4 0 O 4 0 0 0 c n r ' (25-2.5/im)

Expansion factor 1X, 5X Scan times Transmission Scale

3, 6, 25, 55 minutes 0-100%

Flameless AA Spectrophotometry Seminars Seminars are being held throughout the U.S. and Canada through Sept. and Oct. For details on time and location, contact: Instrumentation Laboratory, Inc., Lexington, Mass. 02173. 617-861-0710

Expansion

0.8-10X, continuously variable

Presentation

Integral strip chart recorder with 50 charts, ruled with a 15X52cm grid or continuous 15cm wide grid.

Performance Resolution Normal slit program

Practice of Gas Chromatography Chicago, 111. Oct. 7-11. Contact: Al Palmby, Hewlett-Packard, 5500 W. Howard St., Skokie, 111. 60076. 312677-0400

4cnrr' at 3000crrr' 2.5cm-' at 1000cm- 1

Narrow slit program

2.5crrr' at 3000cm" 1.5cm-' at 1000cm"

Source Sampling for Particulate Pollutants Research Triangle Park, N.C. Oct. 14-17. Contact: Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, N.C. 27711

Photometric accuracy

± 1 %T

Photometric repeatability

0.75%T overall

Beam balance

±2%T

Stray light

Less than 1 % over the range 4 1 5 - 4 0 0 0 c n r '

Detector

Solid state pneumatictype with KRS-5 window.

What you get it for: $7995

PHILIPS ELECTRONIC INSTRUMENTS A North American Philips Company 750 South Fulton Avenue Mt. Vernon, NY 10550

Atomic Absorption Rosemont, 111. Oct. 16-18. Contact: Varian Instruments, 205 W. Touhy Ave., Park Ridge, 111. 60068 Toxicology Workshop New Orleans, La. Oct. 21-22. Contact: Perkin-Elmer Corp., Maine Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 06856. 203-762-1000 Gas Chromatography Boston, Mass. Oct. 30-Nov. 1. Contact: Varian Instruments, 400 Totten Pond Rd., Bldg. 1, Waltham, Mass. 02154

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Atlanta, Ga. Oct. 30-Nov. 1. Contact: Varian Instruments, 6650 Powers Ferry Rd., Suite 100, Atlanta, Ga. 30339

For Your Information A new monthly newspaper tabloid, Computer Educator, is designed to foster information interchange between users of computers, vendors, and educators in all areas of computer-related education and training. Publishing offices are at 520 N. Michigan, Chicago. Subscription rates are $6/year. General Activation Analysis, Inc., 11575 Sorrento Valley Rd., San Diego, Calif. 92121, 714-755-5121, offers multielement survey analysis for $250/ sample. Samples are scanned for up to 74 elements; one or two dozen elements are usually detected with firm "upper limits" established for the remaining 50-60 elements. Typical sensitivities range from the ppm to ppb levels. A possible merger is in the works between Perkin-Elmer and Interdata. Perkin-Elmer is a major manufacturer of scientific instrumentation, especially analytical instruments; Interdata produces small computers and related equipment. Biomedical Mass Spectrometry is a new international journal of mass spectrometry in the biological, environmental, and medical sciences. It will be published bimonthly by Heyden & Son in London and is jointly edited by Brian Millard of the School of Pharmacy, London, and Catherine Fenselau of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. The editors will be assisted by an Advisory Board of well-known practicing spectroscopists. Vol 1, 6 issues, is available at a subscription of £25.00, $65, DM 175.00 from Heyden & Son, Ltd., Spectrum House, Alderton Crescent, London NW4 3XX, England. U.S. inquiries should go to Donovan/Burke Inc., 225 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. 212-679-5188 Analytical Development Assoc. Corp., 10300 Bubb Rd., Cupertino, Calif. 95014, 408-255-6353, offers a computational service for radioimmunoassay procedures. This service, "MED~NET," brings automated data collection and computational capability to medical laboratories eliminating capital expenditures and special computer training.

CIRCLE 1 9 2 O N READER SERVICE CARD

A N A L Y T I C A L CHEMISTRY. VOL. 46, N O . 1 1 , SEPTEMBER 1974 • 895 A