NEWS-SCRIPTS
Transcript of NEWS-SCRIPTS
NCH 2
CH3(CH2)n C ^ | NCH 2
high molecular
weight imidazolines
APPLICATIONS
Detergents: Acid radiator flush and boiler scale solven», drycleaning detergent, metcal cleaning emulsions, floor οΓ 1.
Flotations Phosphate rocks, potash, feldspar, barite, low* grade iron ore.
De-emulsifying: Crude o i l and water gas tar emulsions; antibiotic extraction.
Metal processing: Rust preventative oils, pickling inhibitors, solvent degreaser, cue-ting oils, water displacers.
Anti-static treatment: Textile processing; rugs, hospitcal floors, automobile upholstery; polishes.
Building materials: Water repellent treatment for plaster and asphalt products; air ene-trainment.
Paints: Pigment flushing, dispersing; anti-feathering inks; formulation of primers, marine paints.
P e t r o l e u m : F l o o d w a t e r treatment; fuel and lube o-il additives; anti-strip asphalt c u t b a c k a n d e m u l s i o n s ; grease.
Miscellaneous: Agricultural sprays; rodent repellents; bem-tonite complexes for oil thickening; intermediate for quaternaries, f u n g i c i d a l corra-pounds, metal - amine complexes.
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_NEWS-SCRIPTS_ I n t h e Foots teps o f L e o n a r d o
Two honeymooners from Montreal, snapping pictures in New York's Washington Square last August, found just the Bohemian touch they sought: four shirtsleeved artists, one complete with beret, painting the Washington Square Arch. The bride took a picture, then learned to her surprise that the artists were chemists posing for a Saturday Evening Post illustration of an article on amateur art.
The article—Jerome Ellison's "Anyone Can Paint a Picture"—appeared Dec. 19 with shorts of Dwight Eisenhower, Winston Churchill, and other amateurs, including chemists Blythe Reynolds of Merck, Dmitry A. Shiraeff of General Dyestuffs, Bernard Jaffe of Schering, and William F . Brucksch, Jr. of U. S. Rubber's Naugatuck Chemicals Division. T h e chemists were shown painting in Washington Square Mews, picturesque bystreet near the Square. How they got there is a good example of the behind-the-scenes aid often given to magazines by the ACS News Service. (
When photographer Larry Keighley and his wife set out to illustrate the Ellison piece, they noted its statement that ACS members sponsor exhibits of their art work, as at the Diamond Jubilee meeting. At the Keighleys' request, the News Service arranged to have four Jubilee prize winners meet them at luncheon in the Chemists' Club, then journey to Washington Square with easels, paint, and brushes.
Three pictures were taken, two there and the last in Washington Square Mews. When Mr. Keighley had finished, three of the chemist-artists packed their equipment and headed back to work. But Reynolds ( the man with the bere t ) hurried back to the Square to finish his painting of the Washington Square Arch.
H e r e ' s O n e D e a d End
We sat next to a sulfur prospector at a luncheon the other day. He told us the postal guide contains many a place called "Sulphur Springs" but the names are misnomers. His and other companies have explored most of these locations for commercial sulfur possibilities. Never—not once—has this element been discovered in commercial quantities around these spots.
" W e a k l y " T h o u g h t on C h e m i s t r y
This one we picked up from the "Candid Comments" in the Wall Street Journal: "Chemistry probably will never develop anything more dangerous than a blonde." Well, maybe.
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Steam Traps 71 for Every Plant Use
Drain completely when cold. Widely used outdoors, and in spaces which need not be kept heated. Effect faster heat-up because of their 2 to 6 times average drainage capacity. 4 types for every process, heat, power use; size VA" to 2*/ press, to 250 lbs. Bulletin 853.
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