The Problem of International Congresses of Applied Chemistry
The book The Problem of International Congresses of Applied Chemistry was written by author Bernhard Conrad Hesse Here you can read free online of The Problem of International Congresses of Applied Chemistry book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Problem of International Congresses of Applied Chemistry a good or bad book?
What reading level is The Problem of International Congresses of Applied Chemistry book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
3 membership fees or 11. 3 in addition to its own; the number of papers was 18. 8 per cent of the membership. It is clear that if the individual papers of the future are to be of the same average length, that for each paper submitted there will have to be not less than thirteen members of the Congress if these Congresses are to pay their own legitimate expenses and not be dependent upon the bounty of their hosts to provide them with the naked neces- sities for transacting their business. Mainta...ining the present membership fee, there are only two ways of avoiding this situa- tion: increase the membership or cut down the number and length of papers. Judging from the experience of the Eighth Congress the latter is the only way feasible; 4, 000 or thereabouts seems to be the limit of membership. 21 4. If the papers are to be printed in advance, then ninety days before the Congress meets, no further papers should be received and no further memberships nor delegateships accepted. At the Eighth Congress 560 papers were received in time so they could be printed before the Congress met; 229 papers were received too late for such publication; there is no reason at all why all but a very, very few of these papers could not have been presented at the time the other 560 were; this procrastination of authors has caused a delay and an injustice to members and authors who have complied with the reasonable requirements entirely out of all proportion to any gain therefrom; memberships and delegateships can be determined upon and concluded ninety days before the meeting as well as at any other later time ; last-minute members are rarely desirable or welcome.
User Reviews: