case dedicates new building
TRANSCRIPT
NOW p r o c e s s h a z a r d o u s m a t e r i a l s
S A F E L Y E F F I C I E N T L Y
ECNOMICALLY
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«CHEMICAL BIOLOGICAL RADIOLOGICAL
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J. A. CampbeU, President ** 5 0 1 2 S. Center St., Adrian, Mich.
Representatives in Principal Cities
EDUCATION $4 Million for Teachers
NSF grants will send 7 5 0 high school science teachers to year-round institutes
S O M E 750 high school science and mathematics teachers are going back to school next year. Each teacher will take a course of study prepared especially for him arid each should return to his students with a better grasp of the new developments in his field.
Picking up the check for this advanced teacher training is the National Science Foundation, with grants totaling $4,065,000. The grants will support academic-year institutes at 16 colleges and universities in the U. S., providing $3000 each for approximately 50 teachers in each institute. Each grant carries additional allowances for travel and dependents.
NSF introduced the full-year institute this year, with experimental programs at Wisconsin and Oklahoma A&M (C&EN, F e b . 6, page 572). Both will be renewed in 1957-58.
Entrance requirements for the institutes will be set by the schools themselves. In most cases, credit earned by the teacher may apply toward a master's degree in science education or in biology, chemistry, mathematics, or physics. Institutes at the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois are open to mathematics teachers only; the others will also offer work in various fields of science.
At the new institute at Harvard, for example, teachers will take courses in four major fields—matxieinatics, chemistry, biology, and physics—as well as courses in education. Λ by-product of the program, says Alan T. Waterman, director of NSF, will b e to demonstrate l-V»<c» I c t r c v l rx( Ϊ * - » Ή - Λ Η Ι * arvl-ΛΐΜτ s\r\l I *» nri <-» ·*-.£»
courses in the sciences, thereby helping the teacher to prepare promising students for advancecd placement in college.
Other new grants will g o to Ohio State, Oregon State College, Pennsylvania State University, Stanford, Washington (St. Louis, Nio.), Colorado, Michigan, North Carolina, Texas, Utah, and Virginia. Teachers applying for admission to an institute will write directly to the school involved.
Case Dedicates New Building
$1.8 million chemistry and chemical engineering building is third b ig project in Case development plans
C > A S E INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY has dedicated its Albert W . Smith Chemistry and Chemical Eogineering Building—the third major addition in the school's $11,000,000 Diamond Jubilee Development Prograira.
The building comprises two sections, an $1.8 million north section completed
New Albert W. Smith Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Building at Case Institute of Technology is equipped for highly specialized research projects
6 0 7 4 C & E N DEC. 10, 1956
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last summer and other department of chemistry facilities constructed in 1939. Together the units give the department 88,000 square feet of floor space and one of the most modern buildings of its kind.
The new facilities serve three purposes:
• T h e training of undergraduates and graduates in the fundamentals of their faeids and in the use of modern equipment and methods.
• The provision of research tools. • T h e provision of special services to
industry.
Specialized laboratories, for work in high polymers, plastics, and rubber and paint technology, are located in the basement. On the first, second, and third floors are a general chemistry laboratory, departmental offices, organic, analytical, and physical chemistry labs, and the department library. The top floor is given over to a physical instruments lab and a radioisotopes section with a "hot lab" for research in nuclear chemistry.
Design of the building includes such features as fireproof construction, movable steel partitions on non-load-bearing walls, ceilings of removable acoustic tile, and built-in safety devices for the laboratories. Equipment in the radioisotope lab provides for shielding of specimens and remote handling control. These labs also have lead parti-Lions, stainless steel and porcelain paneling, and other accessories specified by the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission.
Throughout the building are 40 two-man research laboratories, with office and work space for faculty and graduate assistants. Each of these, along with automatic fire extinguishing systems, has an escape hatch which can be hand-controlled.
Albert W . Smith was a Case graduate and a faculty member of the institute for 40 years. In 1911 h e became professor of chemical engineering and headed the department until his death in 1927.
• The phases of radiat ion chemistry and physics, with emphasis on principles rather than applications, will be covered in a special course at Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies, March 25 to April 6. The course will treat the effects of high-energy radiation in physics and chemistry, t he nature of intermediate chemical compounds, and effects of high-energy radiation on organic molecules and polymers and on other materials of biological and industrial interest. Applications must be received by Feb. 1 and should be addressed to Ralph T. Over
man, chairman of the special training division, OiUNS, P . O. Box 117, Oak Ridge.
• The Sixth Annual Ins t rument Short Course will be he ld Jan. 31 and Feb . 1 at Los Angeles Harbor Junior College, Wilmington, Calif. T h e course will treat fundamentals of instrumentation, advanced techniques of both pneumatic and electronic instruments, and practical methods in the maintenance and calibration of instruments and control devices. Cosponsor of the course is the Southern California Meter Association.
• The new aid- to-educat ion p r o g r a m of Tfie Texas Co.^ when in full operation in four year's time, will total 160 scholarships and 140 unrestricted grants-in-aid of $1500 each to colleges and universities. Annual cost to the company at the end of the four years, says James H . Pipkin, vice president, will run over $500,000. Scholarships cover a student's tuition, fees, and textbooks. A supplementary grant is also given to each privately supported school to help meet the full cost of the student's education. The new program expands the education projects sponsored by the company for some time.
Today9 pipes come out of gas! P i p e , e lectr ical insulat ion, coatings, packag ing—they ' r e al l be ing m a d e of Polyethylene , the fastest-growing plastic i n t h e w o r l d . T h i s t o u g h , versa t i le po lymer is produced f rom Ethylene ga s—one of the chemica l indus t ry ' s basic b u i l d i n g blocks available f rom Gulf . T h e o u t s t a n d i n g leader in p r o d u c t i o n and d is t r ibu t ion of E thy lene—Gulf offers y o u a rel iable source of many other pe t rochemica l b u i l d i n g blocks
Including: Oxo Products · Propylene · Higher Olefins · Aromattcs · Sulfur
PETROCHEMICALS DEPARTMENT Gulf Oil Corporation
Gulf Building, Pittsburgh 30 , Pa.
Q U A L I T Y C H E M I C A L S fatttt P E T R O L E U M
DEC. 10, 1 9 5 6 C & E N 6 0 7 5
GULF