Abstract

DEPENDING upon the mood or the point of view, it is equally easy to be surprised at the large, or concerned at the small, impression which a single laboratory can make on the pile of industrial—even national—chemical problems awaiting solution. To read the report of the Chemistry Research Board and the report of the Director of Chemical Research for the triennial period 1935–1938* is to learn with what vigour and success the study of a great variety of these problems is being undertaken in the Chemical Research Laboratory at Teddington. At the same

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