Synthetic methods of organic chemistry. volume 7 - ACS Publications

W. A. Schroeder describes his chromat- ographic experiments on different hydrolyzates and considers the various theories of collagen structure in the ...
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JOURNAL O F CHEMICAL EDUCATION

ing hydraxyl groups in serine and threonine is considered in a paper by D. F. Elliott. This approach is most valuable in that it offers a potentially reliable method for controlling the breakdown of Longer peptide chains, thereby reducing the sequential analysis of larger proteins to problems of the magnitude of insulin. Initial experiments in the formidable task of fractionating the pepsin hydrolyzate of crystdine albumin are outlined by P . Boulanger and G. Biserte. The conlposition and analysis of the highly basic proteins located in cell nuclei, the protamines, and nucleoprotamines are desorihed by K. Felix. E. L. Smith discusses the use of specific peptidases in snalysingpeptide struoture. Two papers discuss the difficult and controvemid problem of collagen structure. W. A. Schroeder describes hi chromstographic experiments on different hydrolyzittes and considers the various theories of collagen structure in the light of his results. Electron microscopy and chemical analysis of various oollagen peptides are disoussed by W. Grassmann. This is a very useful book which summarizes some of the progress in a field of chemistry that is growing very rapidly. I t irr unfortunate, however, that there was a 16-month delay between the symposium and the publication date. Nonetheless, the hook can he maommended for the advanced student and the research

be of use to the one seeking information outside of his own field. In college, the emphasis must be on the technical asspeots of the chemical engineering profession. Because so many of the graduates become more and more engaged in the business aspects of the chemical industry, we must make avdable to our students and introduce to them this "Chemical Business Handhook" so they will know where to turn for informfition as they encounter businem rather than technical problems. KENNETA A. KOBE U ~ m e a s z rO F~ T E X * ~

AUSTIN,T a u 8

SYNTHETIC METHODS OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. VOLUME 7

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W. Theilheimer. Interscience Publishers, Inc., New York, 450 pp. 16 X 23.5 om. $15. 1953. d

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THIS is the seventh volume of this series, which now has become a n annual puhlication. Reviews of the other volumes 2.3, have appeared in the following numbers of THIS JOTRNAL: of thc questions he may raise himself. 310 (1946); 26, 53 (1949); 27, 234 (1950); 30, 214 (1953); to ALEXANDER RICH which the reader is referred for a more extensive description of CALIFORNIA ~ N B T ~ D Tor E TECRNOLORI the symbolism employed to arrange the syntheses according to P~a~nsm CALZPORNI* . the types of honds made and broken. The present volume li8ts 919 abstracts of organio syntheses that appeared for the moat part bctwecn 1950 and 1952. The ahstraets consist of an average of about five lines. Of 250 ahstracts examined, only two exceeded tenlines. The origins of 0 CHEMICAL BUSINESS HANDBOOK the abstracts are 60 per cent American (J.Am. Chem. Soc., Org. Edited by John H. Perry, E. I. du Pont d e Nemours & Company. Syntheses, and J. Org. Chem.); 17 per cent British; 9 per cent MeGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., New York, 1954. xiii 1354 German; 5 per cent Swiss; 4 per &nt French; 2 per cent Seandinavian; 2 per cent Russian; and 1 per cent. others (Italian, pp. Many figs. and tables. 19 X 2 6 em. $17. Indirtqetc.). SINCE1934 the name of John H. Perry has been synonymous and obher American scienPrevious reviews in THIS JOURNAL with data, for the chemical engineering profession. The popu- tific journals as to the value of Theilheimer's work vary from larity and utility of the "Chemical Engineers' Hmdhook" are enthusiasm for "the wealth of practical informstion placed a t shown by the fact that the book now is in its third edition, with the disposal of the hboratory worker" to ~keptiriamsince "such major changes and expansion in each edition. an ambitious enterprise falls short of satisfartory accomplishNow another phase of the chemical industry has been brought ment." The symbolism used to arrange thp s>-ntheseshas been together in m e volume which will serve ss ready reference to both described as all the way from "simple" and "easy" to "mystir," the young engineer who wants to learn and the older business man "difficult," and of "doubtful value." who wants to refer to current practice in business phases of the Without alienina - - himself with either favorable or unfavomhlc chemical industry. critics the present reviewer merely registers his own experience The young engineer in industry finds that he must expand be- with this and previous volumes of the series. It is difficult to yond his sphere of technical knowledge. Possibly he first finds become accustomed to thinking in the symbolism employed to that he is in contact with the patent department and his patent arrange chemical reartions. This is true not only of older perapplication; possibly i t is the accounting department and in- sons who have been conditioned but of younger students as well. ventories; certainly he must prepare reports. As he continuos For tho practicing organic chemist this work has a definite value, in the company other phases of business operations are supcr- whether or not he learns the symbolism, because there is an adeimposed on the technical background: personnel management, quate index. For the student in preparative organic chemistry, production, public relations, commerical chemical development, whether undergraduate or graduate, abstracts of syntheses and the like. All of these are discussed in the twenty sections consistine of about 50 words have been found insufficient excent of the book. ae a reference to the original puhliration. Each section is preceded by 8. detailed outline of the contents. NICHOL9S D CHERONIS This is in addition to a complete final index of the handbook. BROOKLYN C O ~ Q E The sections and pages devoted to each are: Business Finance B"ooxL'N, NEW (51 pages), Management and Control by Cost Amounting and Planning (go), Commerical Chemical Development (48), Resesrrh (4.1). Market Research (59). Market-research Data. and ...-~ourcedifinforms,tion(282), 1nd"strial Purohasing (36), Produotion (82),Traffic and Transportation (72), Sales (71), InELEMENTARY INTRODUCTION TO MOLECULAR d u r k i d Advertising (21), Credits and Collections (33), Personnel 0 SPECTRA Management (35), Public Relations (14), Business Law (42), Patents and Patent Law (20), Industrial Toxicology (16), In- B@ge Bak. Interscience Publishers, Inc., New Yark, 1954. surance and Loss Prevention (46), Reports and Report Writing x 125 pp. 3 5 figs. 17 tables. 14 X 21.5 cm. $2.90. (62), Business Mathematics (200), and Index (31). The list of 124 contributors t o this handbook shows men who are widely known as experts in the chemical business field. So many "voices of experience" must have much to relate that will

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