When I did chemistry at Oxford in the 80s, a notable absence from the curriculum was polymer chemistry. My first job was in polymers - for which I needed to know about not only polymer chemistry, but also engineering properties of materials, something else we chemists weren't taught. Also, although the practicals included a wide range of analytical techniques, there was no taught course on "analytical chemistry" as such, to inculcate the analytical mindset.
I don't know what it's like now, but I assume it's changed a lot and even includes some topics that scarcely existed in those days. I think it's important that curricula are regularly revised to reflect changes in the subject, and particularly to draw awareness to what's happening across traditional subject boundaries, with e.g. physics, biology, materials science. We don't want this sort of thing happening...