International Union of Crystallography Newsletter
Volume 7, Number 2
Page 3
| Editorial | |||
| This issue contains the last of the reports filed by the session chairs at ECM-18. These reports were submitted in a timely fashion, but could not be included in the last issue due to space limitation. Also included in this issue is a description of the martensitic effect. A microsymposium was devoted to this topic at the ECM 18 in Prague. Jaume Pons kindly agreed to prepare a one page article on the effect in terms that could be easily understood by the average crystallographer. I found the phenomenon fascinating and his description to be lucid and informative. I welcome similar brief articles on other aspects of crystallographic theory, techniques or applications for inclusion in future issues. Sidney Abrahams in a letter to the editor (page 2) expresses concern that the meeting reports in the IUCr Newsletter are incomplete and notes that in the age of www, it should be possible to place all abstracts and all meeting reports on the web in a timely fashion. In an aside in his remarkable chapter in Reviews of Crystallography, Vol. 7, 1998, entitled "The Crystal Packing of Organic Molecules: Challenge and Fascination Below 1000Da" Angelo Gavazotti expresses the same concerns that meeting reports in the newsletter are incomplete. Gavazotti goes further and suggests that there is a bias in reporting, favoring macromolecular crystallography. Gavazotti's entertaining, thought provoking, and provocative chapter is well worth reading, with something to offend almost everyone (or so he hopes). Gavazotti chides the IUCr Newsletter editor for relegating non-macromolecular reports to "future issues of the newsletter" that never reach Italy. Gavazotti seems to call for a holy war against macromolecular crystallography. I don't believe the promotion of discord between different parts of the crystallographic community is in the best interest of the discipline. The beauty of crystallography is that it provides reliable information about all kinds of materials. It is often the most reliable and detailed information that can be obtained. Editing material for the newsletter challenges me to think about many of those applications and I never fail to be enlightened and informed by the wide range of applications of crystallography and to see areas of cross disciplinary overlap among them. |
I like to think I gain from considering crystallographic applications
outside of my own research field. |
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