Meetings


Meetingspubs.acs.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1021/ac50034a763Feb 15, 1979 - Villanova University. Inhalation Toxicology Res. Inst...

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News carry out various phases of on-going research or applied programs in analytical areas. Industrial, academic, or governmental laboratories that participate agree to employ one or more undergraduates during the summer. The Professional Status Committee of the Division screens and evaluates applicants and serves as a broker in bringing students and prospective employers together. Participating laboratories are supplied with information on two or three students and are asked to select those most suited, with salary and employment details up to the individual employers. Student qualifications for the program include completion of at least the second year of college, preferably including an instrumental analysis course or its equivalent and a demonstrable interest in analytical chemistry; only in rare instances will graduating seniors be considered. This past summer 13 students were placed in 11 organizations. This compares with the same number of students in 9 organizations during the summer of 1977. The Division is inviting applications from interested students and earnestly seeking increased industrial, governmental, and academic laboratory participation in 1979. Deadline for receipt of applications is February 15, 1979. Application forms and information about the program may be obtained by writing to R/ A. Osteryoung, Chairman, Professional Status Committee, Division of Analytical Chemistry, ACS, c/o Dept. of Chemistry, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colo. 80523. The 11 organizations and 13 students who participated in the program this past summer are listed below: Ames Laboratory Ames, Iowa Annalee Rohrscheib Butler University Brookhaven National Laboratory Upton, N.Y. Ernest MacMlllan Farmington State College E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. Wilmington, Del. Elizabeth McCord Swarthmore College Karen Squire Immaculate College Eastman Kodak Rochester, N.Y. Robert Hamers University of Wisconsin B. F. Goodrich Brecksville, Ohio Kurt Wollenberg John Carroll University

Hoffman-La Roche, Inc. Nutley, N.J. David Masso Villanova University Inhalation Toxicology Res. Inst. Lovelace Foundation for Medical Education and Research Albuquerque, N.M. Carl Harris Tennessee Technical University Eileen Pape Mount Mary College Phillips Petroleum Co. Bartlesville, Okla. David Steffens Oklahoma State University Stauffer Chemical Co. Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. Albert Profy Bates College Tennessee Valley Authority Knoxville, Tenn. Richard Roberts Hendrix College Wyoming Mineral Corp. Boulder, Colo. Vlcki Kraft Montana State University

In addition, the following laboratories were willing to participate but were unable to secure students in time for their summer programs: BattelleColumbus Laboratory, Columbus, Ohio; Clarkson College, Potsdam, N.Y.; Exxon Research and Engineering Co., Linden, N.J.; Arthur D. Little, Cambridge, Mass.; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn.; and NBS, Washington, D.C.

Call for Papers 2nd European Conference on Surface Science Cambridge, England. March 26-29, 1979. The conference will deal with the physics and chemistry of surfaces from both a fundamental and an applied point of view. Topics will include synchrotron studies and EXAFS, surface kinetics and adsorption, ion and molecular beam effects, and semiconductor and polymer surfaces. Invited papers and some contributed papers will be presented orally. The remainder of the contributed papers will be presented in poster sessions. Prospective contributors should submit abstracts of about 200 words, not later than December 1, 1978, to: Conference Chairman, 2nd European Conference on Surface Science, c/o VG Scientific Ltd., The Birches Industrial Estate, East Grinstead, Sussex, England. The proceedings will form one issue of Surface Science and are therefore subject to the normal review standards of that journal.

1114 A · ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 50, NO. 12, OCTOBER 1978

Meetings The following 1979 meetings are newly scheduled in ANALYTICAL C H E M I S T R Y . The 1978 and

1979

meetings listed earlier appear in the September issue • Scanning Electron Microscopy/ 1979. Apr. 16-20. Sheraton Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. Contact: Om Johari, P.O. Box 66507, AMF O'Hare, III. 60666. 312-843-0862 • 3rd International Symposium on Capillary Chromatography. Apr. 30-May 4. Hindelang, FRG. Contact: R. E. Kaiser, Inst, for Chromatography, P.O. Box 1308, D-6702 Bad Durkheim-1, Federal Republic of Germany • 72nd Annual Meeting of the Air Pollution Control Association. June 24-28. Cincinnati Convention Center, Cincinnati. Contact: Air Pollution Control Assoc, P.O. Box 2661, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15230. 412621-1090

Short Courses ACS Courses. For more information, contact: Department of Educational Activities, American Chemical Society, 1155 Sixteenth St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. 202-872-4508 Statistics for Experimental Design Houston, Oct. 4-5; Boston, Nov. 3-4. John Hromi. $200, ACS members; $240, nonmembers High-Pressure Liquid Chromatography Workshop Houston, Oct. 4-5; Atlanta, Oct. 2627. David H. Freeman. $250, ACS members; $300, nonmembers Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry Houston, Oct. 4-5; San Francisco, Nov. 29-30. J. Throck Watson and O. David Sparkman. $230, ACS members; $280, nonmembers Maintaining and Troubleshooting Chromatographic Systems Workshop Houston, Oct. 6-7; Atlanta, Oct. 2 1 22. John Q. Walker, Minor T. Jackson, Jr., and M.P.T. Bradley. $250, ACS members; $300, nonmembers Laboratory Automation: Micro-, Mini-, or Midicomputers Washington, D.C. Oct. 14-15. Raymond E. Dessy. $215, ACS members; $255, nonmembers