Technikatörténeti szemle 19. (1992)

KÖNYVISMERTETÉS - Papers of the First „MINERALKONTOR” International Conference on the History of Chemistry and Chemical Industry (Veszprém, 12-16 August, 1991)

several of university buildings, among them the main budding, were severly da­maged. The chemical laboratories were saved. However, the lack of textbooks and laboratory equipments hindered significantly the age groups returning from the war in their beginning academic studies. In the early fifties the situation impro­ved considerably and the academic life was gradually more normal. The govern­ment made also big efforts to improve the situation. The instrumentation of the laboratories was gradually updated with modern spectrometers and X-ray diff­ractometers of various kinds. The sixties were a time of rapid progress and development. New chairs in ra­diochemistry and wood and polymer chemistry (1974: polymer chemistry) were formed. Courses were enlarged and updated. The academic exchange with Wes­tern countries flourished and several young Finnish scientist moved abroad. The building program of the chemical laboratory was intensively discussed but no de­finite decision was made. Instead a new building for biochemistry and radioche­mistry in the near of the old university clinics was erected. During the fifties and sixties a growing political opinion demanded enlarge­ment of the academic education to other parts of Finland than Helsinki area and Turku. New universities were founded in various parts of the country: Oulu (1958), Jyvaskyla (1966), Tampere Technical University (1965), Joensuu (1966), Kuopio (1966) and Lappeenranta Technical University (1979). Teaching and research in chemistry was started a few years after the foundation. A transfer of chairs with their whole staff and equipments was also discussed. The old universities vigo­rously resisted the transfer of resources and won partially the battle. However, in the end their resources were markedly reduced and allocated to the newly fo­unded chairs. Despite of the above politics a chair in analytical chemistry was founded in the year 1972. At present (1990) the chemistry group in Helsinki University includes over 100 teachers and research workers of various ranks. The number of students with chemistry as the main subject is 329, of them 204 women (31. 12. 1990). In the end of the sixties a student unrest sweeped over European universiti­es. Finland shared the same fate with a marked left wing character. In this con­nection to satify the students the ministry of education tried to change the academic educational system in a more centralized direction. A new ordination for humanistic and science studies was introduced. By now, 20 years later it is clear that it was a big failure. Now a more liberal system has been introduced. Another trial hampered teaching and research in the seventies. The oil cri­sis reduced the funds for academic teaching and research to a very small amo­unt. The good years in the beginning eighties restored partially the situation. The educational system has again experienced hardship through the worldwide eco­nomic crisis in the beginning nineties. It will take years to repair this damages. After all it has been possible to make valuable research. The organic che­mistry of terpenes and wood extractives was studied for a long time upto the se­venties by the schools of Niilo J. Toivonen (professor 1928—57) and of his successor Pekka Hirsjarvi (1959—82). In the end of the forties reaction kinetics was introduced by Eero Tommila (professor in physical chemistry 1944—67). Macromolecular chemistry was started by Hannes Sihtola (docent 1952—82). In the fifties lignin chemistry was started by Terje Enkvist (1951—71). In the sa-

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