Beloit College > Chemistry > Annual Newsletter

1995 Annual Newsletter

CONTENTS


View from the Chair

Biochemistry at Beloit

Faculty Update

Seminars

Course Enrollments

Honors

Student Research Presentations

Off-Campus Experiences

Declared Majors in Chemistry and Biochemistry

Majors - Class of 1995

Alumni News Notes


VIEW FROM THE CHAIR

Bill Brown, Chair, Department of Chemistry

What impresses me about this past year is the reach of our staff to audiences beyond the view of the Turtle Mounds that are such a central point of our campus. This is not to diminish the extent of our activities in the department in particular and on the campus in general. But there is a lot more to our story.

In September, George and Rama attended a Gordon Research Conference in Germany (as Rama points out, in a monastery in Southern Bavaria) on Visualization in Science Education. It is worth noting that George and Rama were the only attendees from non-graduate level institutions. Rama describes this conference in most enthusiastic terms. Given the stimulation from this conference, he took the initiative to acquire for Chamberlin Hall a sophisticated UNIX-based computer workstation equipped with 3D-graphics processing for use by both faculty and students in teaching and research projects.

The centerpiece of George's professional work continues to be his collaboration with Prof. Art Ellis at UW-Madison on an NSF funded grant for "Development of a Materials-Oriented General Chemistry Course." The scope and significance of curricular materials generated by this collaboration can be judged by the conferences and workshops George has been involved in to "spread the word," as he puts it. Credits include an ACS Great Lakes Regional Meeting, several NSF-sponsored conferences and workshops, Gordon Conferences, the Biennial Chemical Education Meeting, the International Conference on Chemical Education, an ACS national meeting, and a National Academy of Science Conference on Undergraduate Education in Science. Closer to home, George again presented his "Chemistry for Kids," a two-week summer program for two sections of a sixth grade class.

George, Brock, and Laura continue to "spread the word" on our General Chemistry program. The big news for Brock is that NSF has funded the ChemLinks Coalition, a five-year program for which Brock is project director, "to develop, test, and disseminate theme-based modules that emphasize active and collaborative learning strategies." As the June 1994 issue of Beloit magazine points out, this is the largest federal grant Beloit has ever received.

Roc's collaborative program with Rush University continues to grow and to benefit both Rush and Beloit. Three Beloiters are now in Rush's Ph. D. program in Biochemistry and a fourth is nearing completion of an M.D./Ph.D. program. Further, three Beloiters will be doing internships at Rush this summer. Roc's research on vitamin C and aging was given national coverage in USA Today, 22 October 1994, with the headline "Twice Daily Vitamin C May Be The Key." As is our style at Beloit, this research was done in collaboration with four students. That's part of our success, isn't it - getting student involved?

For Bill, September '94 brought publication of "Organic Chemistry," a text on which he has been working for the past four years. Whereas his previous books have been for students pointing toward careers in the allied health sciences, this one is aimed squarely at chemistry majors and those who require a full year of organic chemistry as preparation for careers in the biological and health sciences.

This Newsletter is our way to tell you what we have been doing. In return, we ask you to keep telling us what you are doing. Laura is the editor of this issue of the Newsletter. Send information to her, or to any one of us. We are anxious to hear from you.

Contents


BIOCHEMISTRY AT BELOIT


Roc Ordman, Chair, Biochemistry Program


It has been an exceptionally successful year for the College and the Biochemistry Program. The number of students expressing an interest in the Biochemistry major continues to climb since the email/gopher system began two years ago. The assistance of so many alumni interacting with present majors through email, through comments available through the gopher database, and through internships which alumni have arranged, has resulted in a level of excitment and ambition among present majors which is noted by everyone who visits - alumni and prospective students. At present, there are about 18 students per year interested in the biochemistry major. Successes of our current majors - Mark Brockman off to Harvard, Ashley Eversole to Yale, Brett Summers finally deciding on Washington University after offers and trips throughout the nation - reflect not only the quality of our students and instruction, but also the contribution of internships arranged through our alumni and networking.

Several news items may be of interest:
First, because of the success, distinction, and cohesiveness of the biochemistry majors and alumni, the Development Office decided to allow a fundraising drive for the Biochemistry Program. This is the first time in the history of the College that money was asked from majors in a particular area for a specific major. The checks are rolling in as I write this, and it is very gratifying to know that the current majors will have an easier time thanks to the generosity of so many of you reading this. To both those who have given and those who cannot afford to yet, my thanks for your thoughts and letters. Knowing the students and alumni of Beloit College is by far the greatest reward of a teaching career here.
Second, the cooperation between Rush and Beloit College continues to flourish and pay dividends for our students. Dean Aguiar, Kay Dennis, and Brian Pfister are all in the Ph.D. program there presently, and Eric Brown is nearing completion of his M.D./Ph.D. Four faculty and students from Rush came to Beloit this spring to present a workshop on in situ hybridization with sixteen participants, and three Beloit students are doing internships there this summer. A variety of agreements are presently being negotiated to provide the Biochemistry Program with a talented pool of incoming minority students from the Chicago area, and opportunities for early acceptance to graduate and medical school at Rush.
Third, wide publicity of the success of Beloit College is attracting students who come to Beloit specifically to study biochemistry. Chemistry's recognition and funding by NSF for over $2 million for the ChemLinks Coalition, Biology's Bioquest recognition, and the Biochemistry's email/gopher success, combined with our enthusiastic students and alumni, are spreading the word that Beloit is the place to be. This year a talented prospective student called me in March to complain that he had been waitlisted for admission next fall - the first time in 18 years I have had such a call! Other prospectives enter my office to report that they have been told that Beloit is "one of the best places in the Midwest to study biochemistry."

The big failure of the year was Project Enhance. In cooperation with two highly talented teachers in Chicago and with Rush University, I tried this year to raise $20,000 each from industrial foundations to sponsor an annual summer science program for talented midwestern minority high school students - a program to develop a pool of well-prepared students for Beloit and industry. Unfortunately, despite assistance from many biochemistry and chemistry alumni in approaching the industries, the first response was very poor. This summer, we will be reviewing our strategy and trying again for next summer. Project Enhance will provide 6 weeks of summer science and laboratory experience for students after 9th and 10th grades,followed by an internship at the sponsoring industry after 11th grade. It is the prospect of arranging the internships at the companies which seemed to put off many industrial foundations. If any of you reading this would be interested in helping to set up such an arrangement with your employer, that is, finding a six-week summer internship for an 11th grader in your city three years from now - please let me know so we can coordinate on getting this program going next year. With the changing demographics of our nation, attracting talented minority students to Beloit is a major goal of the entire College, and particularly of the Biochemistry Program.

Visits this year by so many of you - Brian Davis, Blaine Kloeckner, Dean Aguiar, Bill McIvor, David Virshup, and many others - pass on the excitment of science and medicine to our present students. Donations, internship opportunities, and email messages bring the sense of belonging to a Beloit tradition to today's majors. It is thanks to the efforts of all of you reading this that our College continues to prosper in money, equipment, and most of all, students and opportunities for those students. Thank you all!
Contents


FACULTY UPDATE


William H. Brown B.A. St.Lawrence University
Professor and Chair M.A. Harvard University
Ph.D. Columbia University
At Beloit since 1964

As I reflect on this past academic year, two events stand out as particularly important and satisfying; the publication of Organic Chemistry in August 1994 (described below), and the Directorship of the Beloit seminar to the University of Glasgow, fall term of 1994 (see Seminar section).

Organic Chemistry
Although I had done some preliminary work on this text prior to 1990, serious work began during my tenure as Director of the 1990 Glasgow seminar. The time seemed right. Further, I found it stimulating to compare my concepts of presenting organic chemistry with the quite different concepts on which Glasgow's program is based. Work progressed well through the next few years. The final manuscript was submitted to Saunders College Publishing in the fall of 1993, and the text was published in August 1994. For those of you who pay attention to these kinds of things, the book has an official publication date of 1995, a fact having to do with the particular ways of the publishing industry.

It is a beautiful book, and the first organic text to incorporate fully the user-friendly graphics style of present general chemistry texts. The effect is created by over 250 pieces of full-color art work drawn by J/B Woolsey and Associates, by a wealth of photos showing organic chemistry as it occurs in everyday life, and by 50 pieces of stereoart drawn to reinforce the concept of organic chemistry as a three-dimensional science. When viewed using the stereoglasses packaged with the text, molecules literally pop out of the page. While not the first use of stereoart in an organic text, we are the first to use it in such a dramatic and effective way. The introductory chapter on Covalent Bonding, for example, includes stereoviews of chair and boat cyclohexanes, adamantane, and twistane. The chapter on Chirality has stereoviews of the enantiomers of lactic acid and 2,3-pentadiene. Included in later chapters are stereoviews of the hemicarcerand used by Don Cram to trap cyclobutadiene, the crown ether 18-crown-6, the anomeric glucopyranoses, cholesterol and cholic acid, ribonuclease A, myoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, and finally B-DNA.

By special arrangement with Cambridge Scientific, Saunders also makes available student-priced editions of ChemDraw and Chem 3D. Students find that manipulating three-dimensional models with this software is fascinating and instructive, and also addictive.

Other items in the "student support package" (as it is called in the business) are:
· Student Study Guide written by Brent and Sheila Iverson of the University of Texas-Austin.

· 1001 Ways to Pass Organic Chemistry, that number of questions in multiple-choice format by Shelton and Janet Bank of SUNY-New York.

· Pushing Electrons by Daniel Weeks of Northwestern University.

· Organic Polymer Chemistry: A Primer by Bruce Novak of the University of Massachusetts.

It is gratifying that the book is so beautiful, the support package so impressive, and market acceptance so positive. But the warm fuzzy for me has been setting my pedagogy to paper and seeing the project to completion.


George Lisensky B.A. Earlham College
Professor Ph.D. California Institute of Technology
At Beloit since 1980

George taught General Chemistry and Inorganic Chemistry in the fall and Chemical Equilibrium (a class of 40) and Instrumental Analysis in the spring. He continues to work with Arthur Ellis at UW-Madison on their National Science Foundation grant for "Development of a Materials-Oriented General Chemistry Course." While many introductory chemistry courses focus on small molecules, gases, and liquids, solids are an important part of our materials-intensive world. Virtually every topic discussed in a general chemistry course can be illustrated with examples and concepts from materials chemistry. Teaching General Chemistry: A Materials Science Companion, published by ACS books, has now gone into its second printing. Part of the project involves spreading the word as you'll notice from the list of talks and workshops below. You can find a picture of George in Chemical and Engineering News, "Chemistry Curriculum Reform Focuses on Content, Technology, and Pedagogy," August 29, 1994, page 35.

George has had a VERY busy year. He presented a half-day workshop on "Semiconductors and Laboratory Demonstrations," assisted by Laura Wright ('85), at the NSF Solid State Chemistry Program for Undergraduates and College Faculty, SUNY Binghamton. They also gave an invited paper at the ACS Great Lakes Regional Meeting. Along with Manish Patel, ('94), he organized and presented a National Science Foundation workshop for future leaders of additional Materials Science Workshops. This program brought 20 college and university chemistry teachers from around the country to Beloit for a three day workshop. These faculty are currently holding their own NSF funded workshops with the program administered through Beloit. An entire poster session at the Solid State Chemistry Gordon Research Conference was devoted to the project's work on using materials science to teach general chemistry. The team presented and defended 11 posters simultaneously. George served as a technical advisor and presenter during the filming of four half-day activities for part of the American Chemical Society satellite broadcast for National Chemistry Week last November. George presented two half-day workshops on teaching general chemistry using solids at the Biennial Chemical Education Meeting, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA. He also helped organize a session and gave a talk on the "Chemistry of Light Emitting Diodes." George presented two half-day workshops on teaching general chemistry using solids at the International Conference on Chemical Education, Inter-American University, San Juan, Puerto Rico. George attended the American Chemical Society National Meeting in Washington, DC as an invited speaker in a session on chemical demonstrations. Dale Moore, a UW-Madison graduate student, presented a joint research paper on the "Photoluminescent Properties of Cadmium Selenide Coated with a Photoactive Cobalt Coordination Complex: A Transduction-Based Dioxygen Sensor." George also presented a poster at the Gordon Research Conference on Visualization in Science Education, in Irsee, Germany that he and Rama attended. At the Gordon Conference on Innovations in the Teaching of College Chemistry in Ventura, CA, Brock and George presented a poster on "Why We Continue with Lab-First General Chemistry." George also had an invited exhibit at the National Academy of Sciences during a conference on Undergraduate Education in Science. George and Brock spent a day at North Central College telling representatives of the Associated Colleges of the Chicago Area about Beloit's introductory chemistry course. Recently, George presented a three-day NSF Chautauqua Workshop, "Superconductors, Semiconductors, and Metals: Bringing Solids into Introductory Chemistry Courses," at the University of Pittsburgh.

George's current projects include a CD of movies and animations due out this summer for use with the Materials Science Companion. David Gan ('97) and Manish Patel ('94) worked with George last summer, as will Jill Gettings ('96) this summer.

George also found time last summer to again teach science at College for Kids for two weeks (two sections of a sixth grade class) and to lead a faculty contra dance at the fall conference.


Alfred Bram Ordman B.A.Carleton College
Associate Professor Ph. D. Univ. of Wis.-Madison
Chair, Biochemistry Program At Beloit since 1977

Roc continued his standard teaching load of Biochemistry and Microbiology in the fall, and Molecular Biology and Biotechnology and Chemistry 117 in the spring. Enrollments in the Biochemistry and Molecular Biology courses have grown substantially as a result of the growing number of biochemistry majors. Between teaching, advising more than 50 students interested in the biochemistry major, arranging internships for more students than ever, and managing the gopher/email systems of the biochemistry major, daily life presents steady challenges for time management. His big thrill this year was the October 22, 1994 headline of USA Today "Twice Daily Vitamin C May Be the Key", reporting the publication in AGE of research on vitamin C which Roc performed with biochemistry majors Gavin King, Michael Beins, Brett Summers, and Jennifer Larkin. That headline led to numerous radio, newspaper, and magazine articles of their recommendation to take 500 mg of vitamin C twice daily, and 400 iu of vitamin E once daily, to reduce the risk of many age-associated diseases. Among the coverage was a feature on Roc's research in his alumni magazine in time for his 25th college reunion this summer. Roc also attended the ACS meetings in Washington, DC last summer with Rama and George where he presented two papers on the Email/Gopher system and the Curriculum of the Biochemistry Program.


Laura E. Parmentier B.S. Northland College
Assistant Professor and Ph.D. University of Wisconsin - Madison
Martha Peterson Junior Professor in the Sciences At Beloit since 1991

This has been an exciting year! Laura taught Organic (Chem 230) in the Fall and Scientific Literature and Pharmacology in the Spring. The Pharmacology course, really an organic-based drug design/medicinal chemistry course, took a short field trip to attend a seminar at UW-Madison this spring given by Craig Townsend, Professor at Johns Hopkins University, on the ene-diyne antibiotic calicheamicin.

Although Laura was not teaching Chem 117 this year, she still had the opportunity to talk about Beloit's lab-based introductory chemistry course. Laura traveled to Florida for a Project Kaleidoscope-sponsored consulting visit to help Florida Community College at Jacksonville redesign their chemistry and physics curricula. Early March is a lovely time to visit Florida!

This summer Laura is working with Kim White ('96) on a sociology research project studying academic women in science. Kim is a Chemistry and Sociology double major, so this is a lovely way for her to integrate the two disciplines and for Laura to try something new. After attending the 19th Annual Wisconsin Women's Studies Conference entitled "Women Shaping Science, The Environment, Society: Images, Activism, Transformation," with Margaret Moore ('96, Biochemistry major, Women's Studies minor ) this fall, Laura has been looking for more ways to combine chemistry with other disciplines.


Brock Spencer B.A. Carleton College
Kohnstamm Professor of Chemistry Ph. D. Univ. California-Berkeley
At Beloit since 1965

Brock continues to teach Chemistry 117 in its new format and was able to offer the "capstone" seminar on The Challenge of Global Change for the environmental studies minor this year. The big news is that the $2.7 million National Science Foundation grant for which Brock is the project director has been funded. Over the next five years the ChemLinks Coalition of 15 liberal arts colleges and research universities will develop, test, and disseminate theme-based modules (on chemistry and the environment, chemistry and technology in society, the molecular basis of life) that emphasize active and collaborative learning strategies. Thus, Beloit College will be in the forefront of the NSF Division of Undergraduate Education initiative for "systemic change" in the chemistry curriculum. As project director for one of four such grants that have been funded, Brock participated in a symposium on "NSF-Catalyzed Change" sponsored by the Division of Chemical Education at the American Chemical Society's National Meeting in Anaheim in April. He also organized and chaired a joint meeting of the ChemLinks Coalition with the Modular Chemistry Coalition on April 21-23 in St. Paul. Last August Brock was host site coordinator for a Project Kaleidoscope Regional Colloquium on Revitalizing Introductory Science and Mathematics Courses held at Beloit College. He has given presentations on Beloit's Chemistry 117 at that Colloquium, as a keynote speaker at the annual meeting of the Middle Atlantic Association of Liberal Arts Chemistry Teachers at Hood College in October, and with George Lisensky at the Gordon Research Conference on "Innovations in the Teaching of College Chemistry" (for which Brock was Vice-Chair) at Ventura, California, in January and at a day-long workshop for the Associated Colleges of the Chicago Area in May. Brock has served as a curriculum consultant this year at Lafayette College, Roosevelt University, and the University of Michigan-Dearborn. He published research articles on molecular orbital calculations for a [Au6Ni12(CO)24]2- cluster (Inorganica Chimica Acta, 1994, 227, 269-283) and for a series of metal-acetylide complexes (Journal of Organometallic Chemistry, 1994, 472, 247-255).

Rama Viswanathan B.S. Bombay University
Associate Professor M.S. Indian Inst.of Technology
Ph.D. University of Oregon
At Beloit since 1983

I had a quiet but productive year. Teaching Quantum Chemistry (in Fall) and Thermodynamics and Kinetics (in Spring) kept me quite busy, especially since the enrollment in both the courses was unusually large (>10 students each) by Beloit standards! Highlights of the year in terms of my professional development included a presentation at the ACS National Conference in August,1994 (held in Washington, D.C.,) on a software front-end for access to information from on-line library catalogs on the Internet (--in case you are wondering what this has to do with chemistry, it was part of a session titled "What chemists need to know about computers and computing."). George Lisensky and I also had a most interesting and productive trip to Germany in September, where both of us attended (and presented posters at) a Gordon Conference on applications of new visualization technologies in science education. The conference, held in the typical intimate style of all Gordon conferences (except for the fact that this one was held in an authentic monastery with attached brewery in Southern Bavaria), was neat in the sense that a number of prominent scientists from Europe made presentations, including Gerd Binnig (Nobel for Scanning Tunelling Microscope) and Robert Huber (Nobel for X-Ray Crystallography of Proteins). In addition, W. Kraetschmer gave a compelling first-hand account of his group's success in the first bulk synthesis of fullerenes from soot! It was also an opportunity for us to learn about and compare the (very different) cultures and practice of science education in Europe and the U.S.A. We visited and stayed overnight with Dr. Ingo Hussla (the father of Jesko Hussla, '93) in Cologne en route to the conference and enjoyed a two hour detour to the Oktoberfest in Munich at the end of our trip, with Dr. Brent Wurfel '82 serving as host and tour guide. I came away from the conference convinced of the importance of visualization (of both models and experimental data) in science education and even managed to sell the idea to my colleagues in Chamberlin Hall (Division I), with the result that we have just ordered a sophisticated UNIX-based computer workstation equipped with a high-powered 3D-graphics hardware processing card and a 20-inch color monitor. We hope that both students and faculty will be able to use the workstation effectively in research projects. The computer is due to arrive any time, and I anticipate a busy summer setting it up on our high speed ethernet network and installing the graphics software!

Contents


SEMINARS


Dr. David Virshup, '77, from the Molecular Biology Program at the University of Utah, spoke on his research on DNA replication in eucaryotes as well as about admission to graduate programs in three presentations in the department in November.

Beloit College again hosted the Girls and Women in Science Program, directed by Kathy Green, in November. Brenda Waller, '93, visited from Idaho to participate in the Women in Science Alumnae Panel.

Pharmacist Nancy Souert, 87, spoke to the Molecular Biology class this spring about her current research on protein expression.

Dr. Reed Tarwater, Eli Lilly Research Laboratories, presented a seminar entitled "A Brief Introduction to the Development of Pharmaceuticals" in April.

Dr. Wallis Calaway, from the Materials Science and Chemical Technology Division at Argonne National Laboratories visited in April and talked to the Scientific Literature class about internships at Argonne and gave a seminar on his research entitled "Trace Analysis Using Lasers and Ion Beams." Carrie Tuit, '96, worked with Dr. Calaway in the summer of '94.


Glasgow Seminar-Fall 1994 Professor Bill Brown

Carolyn and I enjoyed our 1990 stay in Glasgow so much that we were eager to return in '94 to renew acquaintances, and to learn even more about this country so rich in heritage and natural beauty. We arrived 22 August, a week ahead of the students, and arranged temporary accommodations at The White House, Clevenden Crescent, a somewhat ostentatious address near the University in a quiet, secluded part of older Glasgow. We made it our home until the end of September when we moved to the home of Kevin & Fiona Murphy in Shawlands, a suburb on the southwest side of Glasgow. Kevin, an aquatic biologist, was on sabbatical leave in Brazil to consult on projects of land reclamation and use.

Our 14 students arrived on 29 August. Our first week was introduction and acclimation. Among other things, I advised them always carry an umbrella - if it isn't raining in Glasgow, it soon will. And I told that them that if they find currency bills confusing, it is because there are four banks in Britain authorized to issue currency: The Bank of Scotland, The Royal Bank of Scotland, the Clydesdale Bank, and the Bank of England. (Trivia question: how many institutions in the US are authorized to issue currency?)

The Monday following students' arrival I am sure will stand out as a highlight of their early impressions of Scotland. Not only was the coach trip that day a striking introduction to the Wars of Independence and reigns of James IV-VI, but the weather was as clear and as fine a day as I have ever seen in Scotland. The trip began at the Bannochburn Historic Centre with a fine 15 minute video and time to visit the site of Robert The Bruce's defeat of the English in 1314. From there it was a short bus ride into Stirling, a guided tour of the Castle and time to wander its grounds. What I wouldn't give to return in 2000 to see the Great Hall with its hammerbeam ceiling restored to the times of James IV-V. We ended the day at the Wallace Monument on the outskirts of Stirling. The "Talking Head" audio-visual presentation of Wallace telling his story and his confrontation with Edward II, the Hammer of Scotland, is stunning! To finish the trip in style, we climbed the 246 narrow steps of the spiral staircase (a left-handed spiral, as is common in Britain) to the top of the cathedral-spired tower for a spectacular view. Trivia question: why are fortress and castle staircases designed to spiral in a left-handed manner?

A. Scottish Studies
The fall term at Glasgow University begins 6 October, and to keep our students busy and occupied through the month of September, the University created for us a special four-week preterm program of Scottish history, literature, and archaeology. The archaeology component included an orientation lecture from Prof. Alex Morrison, Chair of Archaeology, and then two full-day coach trips, the first to selected sites along the Antonine Wall, the second to a group of sites important in the prehistory and early history of Western Scotland.

Our walks along the Antonine Wall were led by Prof. Hanson, an author of a definitive work on the origins and function of the Wall. To give you some background on the Wall, we go back to AD 43. It was then that the Romans invaded Britain and quickly conquered Lowland England. Then, in a series of campaigns in the 70s and early 80s, Wales, North England, and Scotland up to the Highland Line were overrun. By about 100, however, Scotland had been abandoned, and in the early 120s the Romans constructed Hadrian's Wall across the Tyne-Solway isthmus in northern England. Over 15 years later, while modifications to Hadrian's Wall were still taking place, the new emperor, Antoninus Pius, decided to reconquer Scotland. He abandoned Hadrian's Wall and built a new one across the Forth-Clyde line. Some 37 miles long, the Antonine Wall was just under half the length Hadrian's Wall, but unlike the latter, which was mainly built of stone, this one was wholly of turf. Why build this Wall? Reasons are uncertain. Prof. Hanson suggested that perhaps Antoninus Pius needed military prestige, so that the advance may have been undertaken for propaganda purposes. There is also evidence of native unrest in North Britain at the time, which might have stimulated renewed military action.

We ended the trip in Bearsden at a Roman fort and adjoining bath house. The existence of a fort has been known since the mid-18th century, but detailed knowledge results from extensive excavations between 1973-1978. In an annex attached to the east side of the fort was found a well-preserved bath house, the drains from which served to flush the sewer channels inside the adjacent communal latrine. In discussing the latrine, Prof. Hanson instructed us in some of the techniques used by archaeologists in deciphering the patterns of diet of the soldiers of this fort, which seems to have been predominantly vegetarian. Think about the latrine itself, Prof. Hanson suggested. No toilet paper. Rather, each soldier had a handled-sponge. At this point he made a frame shift to the crucifixion of Jesus. To Jesus on the cross, a Roman centurion offered a sponge dipped in vinegar. Was it an act of kindness, as we are given to believe, or was it an ultimate insult?

The Scottish history and literature component of our preterm program went into orbit under the combined leadership of Douglas Gifford and Ted Cowan. Ted is the newly-appointed Head of Scottish History and Douglas is Head of Scottish Literature. Each is one of those remarkable persons whose grasp of time and place, whose power to create vivid images through the spoken word, and whose range of knowledge is staggering. The focus of Scottish Literature is the great trilogy "A Scots Quair" by Lewis Grassic Gibbon. That of Scottish History was on prehistory and formation of the nation, the Reformation, and the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution.

A highlight of our studies with Douglas and Ted was a 3-day reading party in Edzell, a small village near the east coast of Scotland. Reading parties are something unique to the Scottish or perhaps British manner of education. A group goes to an off-campus site and becomes fully involved in reading-discussing for periods of a few days to as much as a week. The site chosen for our reading party was at small hotel in Edzell. Days were long and crammed with visits to sites that made more meaningful to us our readings in both history and literature, from ancient hill forts and carved Pictish stones to 12th century castles now in ruins to Glamis Castle, the birthplace of the Queen Mother. Evenings consisted of videos and then follow-up group discussions with Ted and Douglas feeding off each other and the group. Sunset Song and the Gibbon trilogy came alive through Douglas' words and insights. And the perspective of other peoples and other times came alive to us through Ted's words at places like the Circle of Standing Stones and the fortress castle of Kildrummy. A truly memorable experience.

B. Science and the Environment in Scotland
During the 10-week Martinmas term of the University, our students took three courses, two of their choosing. The third was Science and the Environment in Scotland, designed for us by Ian Pulford of the Department of Chemistry, Division of Agricultural, Food & Environmental Chemistry. Ian's research interests include a project in Egypt in the vicinity of the Aswan Dam investigating irrigation and soil management as a means to reclaim land for sustainable agriculture. A second project, in conjunction with the Scottish Universities Research and Reactor Centre, is a study of the distribution of radionuclides in coastal areas of Scotland due to discharge into sea waters by the Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing Plant in Sellafield on the west coast of England. Still a third project is the uptake of heavy metal ions by plants and trees and the possibility of using such means to reclaim derelict land now contaminated with heavy metal industrial wastes. Ian was recently interviewed on BBC-1, complete with a laboratory demonstration, on preliminary results and potential implications of this study.

Our program consisted of eight field visits and discussions, each intended to highlight specific issues of concern to the environment of Scotland and the United Kingdom.
7 October Introduction and overview of environmental issues in Scotland
12 October Clyde River Purification Board, East Kilbride
19 October Carbans Sewage Treatment Works, Wishaw
26 October Scottish Agricultural College, Auchincruive
9 November The Museum of Lead Mining, Wanlockhead
16 November Loch Lomond: University Field Station, Rowardennan
23 November Hunterston Nuclear Power Station, Ayrshire
30 November Scottish Universities Research and Reactor Center, East Kilbride

As written work, each students was required to (1) prepare a brief summary of the environmental issues dealt with on each visit, (2) construct a diary record of the visits, and (3) write a 10-15 page paper discussing any aspects of one of the following issues with reference to the Scottish and UK environment: Land Use, Water Quality, Energy Production, Industry.

C. My Teaching Responsibilities in Chemistry
The Chemistry program at University of Glasgow is organized around a curricular plan quite different from the American model. It is characterized by a different packaging of material, far greater concentration on chemistry, and far less study in areas other than chemistry. Given this curricular organization, it is unlikely that any person visiting Glasgow for less than the full year would be given anything other than auxiliary duties, which was exactly what happened to me in 1990, to George in 1992, and to me again in 1994.

I met early on with Professor Joe. Connoly, head of 3rd year organic, and arranged duties as a Demonstrator in the organic laboratory. What is a Demonstrator, I wondered? It goes like this. For the laboratory of 60 students, there are normally two members of staff present, along with four or five graduate students. I was in addition to the two members of staff, which meant, as far as I could tell, that I was to watch and contribute where and when I could.

I felt useless the first weeks because I knew nothing about the operation of their storeroom, or their safety procedures, their system for storage and dispensing of reagents, the extended projects in which students were engaged, etc. Students caught on pretty quickly that I did not know much about these things and didn't ask about what I didn't know. They realized pretty quickly, however, that I could help in discussing the relevant organic chemistry, the interpretation of spectral unknowns, reaction mechanisms, library resources, etc. As the term progressed, it became common for students to approach me in both the laboratory and the library with questions.

I also did some work with Professor John Carnduff, head of 1st year chemistry. First year chemistry at Glasgow is divided into two courses. Chemistry 1 is the core course for chemistry and science majors. General Chemistry is a remedial course for students with poor preparation. I chose to work with this latter group in what are called "workshops". The 50 or so students in a workshop are given a set of problems and put to work. The three or four members of staff present then respond to raised hands with individual help. Then at 5-10 minute intervals throughout the period, solutions are put on the board. For problems not completed in class, students could find solutions posted within a few days following the workshop. I did enjoy this work, but often came away with the feelings of being able to do so little for students who needed so much.

D. Will we return to Scotland?
If not as Director of a future seminar, then certainly at least as tourists. We have now seen Scotland twice in late summer, fall, and early winter. We would like to visit next in the spring when the rhododendron and rape seed are in full bloom, or in mid summer when the days are longer for visits to the off-coast islands of Skye and Mull and Islay. But then, if you have ever been to Scotland, you will know why we want to return. And if you haven't been there, do consider it.

Contents


COURSE ENROLLMENTS

1994-1995

FALL

117 General Chemistry.................................................................70
230 Organic Chemistry I...............................................................43
245 Quantum Chemistry.................................................................9
250 Inorganic Chemistry.................................................................7
300 Biochemistry..........................................................................21
380 Senior Seminar........................................................................9
385 Senior Thesis...........................................................................1
394 Research.................................................................................5
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Total 165

SPRING

117 General Chemistry.................................................................62
220 Chemical Equilibrium.............................................................40
235 Organic Chemistry II..............................................................29
240 Thermodynamics and Kinetics...............................................12
275 Biotechnology and Molecular Biology....................................31
280 Scientific Literature.................................................................25
360 Instrumental Methods of Analysis............................................5
375 Advanced Topics: Pharmacology............................................6
380 Senior Seminar........................................................................7
385 Senior Thesis...........................................................................6
394 Research.................................................................................5
_______
Total 228

Contents


HONORS


Departmental Awards


JOHN H. NAIR AWARD honors an alumnus (Class of 1915) and provides membership in the American Chemical Society for one or more seniors who plan careers in chemistry.
Ann Miller '95 Megan Reich '95

WILLIAM J. TRAUTMAN AWARD in PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY (Professor at Beloit 1921-1947) given to a senior doing outstanding work in physical chemistry.
Timothy Korter '95

EDWARD C. FULLER AWARD in CHEMICAL EDUCATION was established by the majors in the Class of 1982 in honor of Professor Fuller and is given to a junior or senior who has done outstanding work as a teaching assistant.
Ashley Eversole '95

MERCK INDEX AWARD is given to an outstanding senior and consists of a copy of the Merck Index from the publisher.
Mary E. Riley '95

CRC PRESS FRESHMAN CHEMISTRY AWARD recognizes outstanding work by a first-year student and consists of a copy of the Handbook of Chemistry and Physics from its publisher, the CRC Press.
Vanja Klepac '98

WALTER S. HAVEN FELLOWSHIP supports a student research project.
Timothy Korter '95 Ann Miller '95
Eleanora Reber '95

AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY AWARD FOR ACHIEVEMENT IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY sponsored by the Division of Polymer Chemistryrecognizes outstanding work in introductory organic chemistry course by providing a subscription to Organic Chemistry and a video tape about polymers.
Christopher Maeda '97

AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY JUNIOR ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY AWARD recognizes a junior who demonstrates promise in the area of analytical chemistry by providing a year's membership in the ACS Division of Analytical Chemistry and a subscription to the journal Analytical Chemistry.
Caroline Tuit '96

J. CARL WELTY AWARD is awarded by the biology faculty to an outstanding student who contributed most to the department.
Mary E. Riley '95

Honors at Graduation


SUMMA CUM LAUDE Bryony Melville

MAGNA CUM LAUDE Ashley Eversole
Eleanora Reber

CUM LAUDE Ann Miller
Megan Reich
Erica Severson

DEPARTMENTAL HONORS Mark Brockman - Biochemistry
Ashley Eversole - Biochemistry
Wenyi Feng - Biochemistry
Timothy Korter - Chemistry
Bryony Melville - Biochemistry
Ann Miller - Chemistry
Eleanora Reber - Chemistry
- Anthropology
Mary E. Riley - Biochemistry
Bretton Summers - Biochemistry

Honor Societies


Phi Beta Kappa Ashley Eversole '95
Bryony Melville '95
Megan Reich '95
Michael Beins '96
Dawn Miller '96
Caroline Tuit '96

Mortar Board Mark Brockman '95
Megan Reich '95

Contents


Undergraduate Research Presentations


This year our students again had great opportunities to gain professional experience by presenting their research at various programs and publishing their papers in the school magazine "The Beloit Biologist". Their topics give an indication of the outstanding research performed by our undergraduates. Following are the papers printed and presentations given:

The Beloit Biologist, Volume 13, 1995

Mark A. Brockman - Biochemistry '95
Ribozymes and Anti-Sense RNA: The Future in Aids Vaccines (work done at Beloit College, Department of Biology)

Mary E. Riley - Biochemistry '95
Anticipation in Parkinson's Disease Kindred: A Case Study (work done at the Johns Hopkins University, Department of Neurology)

Ashley Eversole - Biochemistry '95
Deoxyspergualin Weakens the Humoral Immune System by Inhibiting HSP70 Chaperoning of NF-KB (work done at Bristol-MeyerSquibb PRI, Seattle, WA)

Bretton Summers - Biochemistry '95 & Janet Strong-Gunderson
Biosurfactant Production: Stimulation through Contaminant Exposure (work done at Environmental Sciences Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN)

Wenyi Feng - Biochemistry '95
Chronic Infection of Hepatitis B Virus (work done at Beloit College, Department of Biology)

Erica Severson - Biochemistry '95
The Impact of Estrogen on the Environment: Are We Over-Feminizing the World? (work done at Beloit College, Department of Biology)

Gaoussou Diarra - Biochemistry '95
A Chemotherapeutic Strategy for Trypanosomiasis: Inhibition of Glutathione (work done at Beloit College, Department of Biology and CNRS Section Paris V in France)

Beloit College 19th Annual Student Symposium, April 1995

Peter Allen - Biochemistry '96
Optimal Conditions for Activity of N-Acetylglucosaminyltransferase I from Cultured Lepidoteran Insect Cells (work done at Beloit College, Department of Biology)

Mark Brockman - Biochemistry/Philosophy '95
Development of a Novel Retrovirus Vector for the Human Gene Therapy of Malignant Brain Tumors (work done at the Human Gene Therapy Research Institute, Des Moines, IA)

Ashley Eversole - Biochemistry '95
Deoxyspergualin Weakens the Humoral Immune System by Inhibiting HSP70 Chaperoning of NF-KB (work done at Bristol-MeyerSquibb PRI, Seattle, WA)

Nora Reber - Chemistry/Anthropology '95
Analysis of Production of Gottschall Anthroseds: A Chemical Hypothesis (work done at Beloit College, Department of Chemistry)

Megan Reich - Chemistry '95
Organic Carbon Preservation: Evidence for the Oxygen Effect (Work done at Beloit College, Department of Chemistry)

Mary E. Riley - Biochemistry '95
Anticipation in Parkinson's Disease Kindred: A Case Study (work done at the Johns Hopkins University, Department of Neurology)

Bretton Summers - Biochemistry '95
Biosurfactant Production: Stimulation through Contaminant Exposure (work done at Environmental Sciences Division of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN)


The Pew Undergraduate Research Symposium at Washington University at St. Louis, Oct. 29-31:

Carrie Clothier - Biochemistry '97
"Estrus Termination in Female Guinea Pigs"

David Gan - Biochemistry '97
"The Evolution of t-RNA"

Kristie Mather - Biochemistry '97
"Some Preliminary Studies of Protein Expression in E. coli"

Contents


Off-Campus Experiences


Nate Allen '97 is spending the summer at UC-Berkeley doing kinetics and computational chemistry, and hopes to participate in the Department of Energy's Science and Engineering Research Semester program at Lawrence Berkley Laboratory next fall.

Mike Beins '96, will be at Texas A&M University in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics working on telomerase, particularly on the directed mutagenesis of the RNA subunit of the telomerase.

Yun (Nina) Chen '96, will be at Tufts University researching Lymes Disease with Dr. John Leong.

David Gan '97, is doing research in cell biology at a cosmetic company on Long Island this summer. He will study antioxidants and their effects on skin, gap junctions and apotosis.

Yutan Getzler '98, is going to spend some time completely disconnected from science. He will be working as a counselor at a summer camp in Northern Pennsylvania.

David Gordon '98, is working at a veterinary clinic this summer.

Vanja Klepac '98, will be doing research on antibiotics at the pharmaceutical company PLIVA in Zagreb, Croatia.

Kelly Knudson '97, is traveling to Chile this summer to do archaeological research.

Katie Lager '98, is employed at a souvenir shop at the Brookfield Zoo.

Chris Maeda '97, is going to Rush University this semester, continuing the successfull cooperation between Beloit and Rush University in Chicago.

Kristie Mather '97, has received an NSEP Undergraduate Scholarship for a year of study in Ecuador this spring. She is the first Beloit student to be selected for this highly competitive scholarship. This summer she will be at the University of Chicago.

Dawn Miller '96, spent the spring semester doing environmental research in Costa Rica and will be getting married in August.

Margaret Moore '96, has a summer research position at the Nassau County Research Department Microbiology Laboratory.

Srebrenka (Koko) Robic '97, will be doing research on the transcription factor rho and its function as a DNA/RNA helicase at the Institute of Molecular Biology of the University of Oregon in Eugene.

Kamesh Surendran '96, will spend next semester doing research at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Carrie Tuit '96, was selected for a Keck Geology Consortium summer research project in Montana.

Stacy Turner '95, will be married in August and is waiting to see which graduate school her fiance will attend before deciding where to look for a job.

Lina Tze '96, is doing research in molecular biology at the University of Alabama in Birmingham this summer. She will be participating in the Oak Ridge science semester next fall.

Kevin Welch '96, will spend this summer at the Iowa State University studying the brain development of the south american opposum, using stereoimmunochemistry.

Melanie Whalen '98, will be working as a summer technician at G.E. Plastics in Ottawa, IL.

Contents


Declared Majors in Chemistry and Biochemistry

Spring 1995

Nicole Adderley '96 Biochemistry Nassau, Bahamas
Nathan Allen '97 Chemistry Milwaukee, WI
Peter Allen '96 Biochemistry Briggsville, WI
Michael Beins '96 Biochemistry Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Kelley Bradley '96 Biochemistry Lakewood, CA
Jesse Burch '97 Chemistry Petersham, MA
Mark Burleigh '95 Chemistry Oneida, NY
Jennifer Calcaterra '96 Biochemistry Scottsdale, AZ
Yun "Nina" Chen '96 Biochemistry Arlington, VA
Gary Chiu '97 Biochemistry Stafford, TX
Jason Collier '96 Biochemistry Boulder, CO
Tanya Danner '97 Biochemistry Chicago, IL
Gregory Ehrendreich '97 Biochemistry Ashland, WI
Wenyi Feng '96 Biochemistry Shanghai, China
David Gan '97 Biochemistry Penang, Malaysia
Alison Green '96 Biochemistry Madison, WI
David Gordon '97 Chemistry Decatur, IL
Bartram Gottschalk '97 Biochemistry Minneapolis, MN
Sarah Keiser '96 Biochemistry Cedar Rapids, IA
Gavin King '96 Biochemistry Brodhead, WI
Vanja Klepac '98 Chemistry Zagreb, Croatia
Kelly Knudson '97 Chemistry Council Bluffs, IA
Kham Lee '96 Chemistry Milwaukee, WI
Amy Jo Litscher '96 Chemistry Lake Mills, WI
Christopher Maeda '97 Biochemistry Hilo, HI
Kristie Mather '97 Biochemistry Richland, MI
Andrew Matzen '96 Biochemistry Dallas, OR
Dawn Miller '96 Chemistry Suisun City, CA
Margaret Moore '96 Biochemistry Garden City, NY
Bianca Mothe '96 Biochemistry Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Nathaniel Olsen '98 Chemistry St. Paul, MN
Srebrenka Robic '97 Biochemistry Zagreb, Croatia
Laura Sasse '98 Biochemistry Waukegan, IL
Michelle Semple '96 Biochemistry Spokane, WA
Kamesh Surendran '96 Biochemistry Kitwe, Zambia
Caroline Tuit '96 Chemistry Kansas City, MO
Lina Tze '96 Biochemistry Petaling Jaya, Malaysia
Robert VanOrder '98 Chemistry Mandeville, LA
Gregg Ward '98 Biochemistry Nassau, Bahamas
Kevin Welch '96 Biochemistry Adel, IA
Kimberly White '96 Chemistry West Allis, WI
Matthew Whiting '96 Chemistry Rockville, MD
Kristine Zimmerman '96 Biochemistry Wheaton, IL

Contents


Majors - Class of 1995



Mark Brockman - Des Moines, IA. Biochemistry (departmental honors) and Philosophy.
During the summer of 1993, Mark completed a summer internship in the Animal Virology Department at the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) in Rockville, Maryland. While at the ATCC, he assayed viral stocks for mycoplasma contamination using PCR and began DNA sequencing of several mycoplasma strains. During the summer of 1994, he obtained an internship at the Human Gene Therapy Research Institute in Des Moines, Iowa, where he helped develop a novel retrovirus vector system for use in the human gene therapy of brain cancer. This project, under the direction of Dr. Ken Culver, utilized the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene to transfer gancyclovir resistance to cancer tumors in vivo. Mark will be attending graduate school next year, studying Virology at Harvard University. He plans to complete his Ph.D. and eventually research gene transfer techniques in gene therapy and vaccine strategies for infectious disease. While at Beloit, Mark was Senior Class Treasurer, a member of Mortar Board honor society, and a four year letter winner on the Varsity Soccer team.

Gaoussou Diarra - Bamako, Mali. Biochemistry. Gaoussou spent last summer working with John Jungck on the application of fuzzy logic as a classification tool to the physico-chemical properties of the codon coding for the amino acids. He will be spending the next five years in graduate school in Milwaukee. Gaoussou was an avid soccer player. He was absolutely convinced that two good hours of soccer was much better then midterms or finals. Gaoussou plans to be a teacher and researcher in the molecular sciences. He loves to discuss ideas with people, but is not too excited about following rules. His favorite pick up word is: "We don't need no stinky rules."

Ashley Eversole - Boulder, CO. Biochemistry (departmental honors), Magna Cum Laude, self designed minor titled Individualism and Collectivism. Last summer Ashley went to Seattle to work at Bristol-Myers Squibb with Jeff Cleaveland, class of '84. At Beloit she has been a teaching assistant for General Chemistry, Chemical Equilibrium, Genetics and Biometrics. Ashley's honors include 8 semesters of Dean's List, Bushnell Award for Creativity in Mathematics, Ferwerda Science Scholarship and Fuller Award for Excellence in Chemical Education. She plans to take a year off school and go to Sweden to work with Ebbe Nordlander '86. At the University of Lund, Ashley will be working on a project to synthesize metalloproteins in conjunction with the University of Agriculture in Copenhagen. She has been accepted to the Ph.D. program in the Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale University for the fall 1996.

Wenyi Feng - Shanghai, China. Biochemistry (departmental honors). Wenyi was a transfer student from Fudan University in Shanghai where she was studying management science. After she came to Beloit in 1993, she became strongly interested in the biological and chemical sciences, and she finished her B.S. in biochemistry in two years. Last summer she was at Carlsbad Environmental Monitoring and Research Center in New Mexico, working on a solid sampling project with Beloit alum Thomas Tisue ('61). She attended the annual local Nuclear Society meeting and was exposed to many fields of environmental science. Wenyi also helped the center develop their immunology program. She is determined to pursue her study of immunology, and in the coming year she will be working at the Department of Immunology at Northwestern University Children's Memorial Hospital. She is also planning to enroll in a Ph.D. program in immunology.

Timothy Korter - Oglesby, IL. Chemistry (departmental honors) and Literary Studies. Tim will be starting a Ph.D. program in physical chemistry at the University of Pittsburgh in the fall, although he will begin his research in July. His research group is working with ultra high resolution laser spectroscopy, and one of his first research projects will be the design and construction of a new Ti-Saphire laser system. After completing his Ph.D., Tim plans to work in industry. Tim received the 1995 William Trautman award in physical chemistry.

Bryony Melville - Madison, WI. Biochemistry (departmental honors), Summa Cum Laude. Bryony spent last year on exchange at Glasgow University in Scotland. She did research on the development of a new potential antibiotic while overseas. She hopes to return next year and enter a 3 year Ph.D. program in Britain. Eventually she hopes to return to complete an M.D. in the US. Her future goals include teaching at medical school, research and most definitely clinical work. While at Beloit, she participated in Chelonia one year and placed at conference in both swimming and cross-country. She received a NAASCP award and was elected Phi Beta Kappa upon graduation.

Ann Miller - Kalona, IA. Chemistry (departmental honors) and Anthropology, Cum Laude. Ann spent the last two summers doing chemistry research at Grinnell College. At Beloit she was a teaching assistant for General Chemistry. She was the recipient of the 1994 American Chemical Society Junior Analytical Chemistry Award and 1995 John H. Nair Award for seniors planning careers in chemistry. For her research Ann was also awarded Walter S. Haven fellowship. Ann was accepted into the graduate program in chemistry at the University of Virginia but is deferring for one year. After Beloit she will spend a year at home, hopefully at a job in chemistry. She will spend that time gaining experience and hopefully money. Ann plans to attend graduate school in chemical archeology or forensic science.

Eleanora Reber - Indiana, PA. Chemistry (departmental honors) and Anthropology (departmental honors), Magna Cum Laude. Nora was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in her junior year. In a research project that combined both of her majors, Nora used the chemistry department's GC/MS to analyze artifacts from the Anthropology Museum's collection. She also was the Laboratory Director for Professor Bob Salzer's Gottschall site dig in southwestern Wisconsin. Nora received a prestigious and highly competitive National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship for graduate work in archaeological chemistry at Cornell University, which she plans to take up after a year's break to explore other things.

Megan Reich - Waterford, WI. Chemistry, Cum Laude. Megan spent the summer of her sophomore year doing research at Notre Dame University. After her junior year she did research in chemical oceanography at the University of Washington in Seattle. Megan was a teaching assistant for general, organic and analytical chemistry, a resident assistant, and secretary of the graduating class. She was awarded the 1992 CRC Freshmen Chemistry Award and the Susan Fulton Welty Award for environmental science. Megan was elected Phi Beta Kappa and Mortar Board . She had offers from several graduate schools in oceanography , but is deferring for a year.

Mary ElizaBeth Riley -Champaign, IL. Biochemistry (departmental honors). Beth spent the last summer doing research on Parkinson's disease at the John Hopkins Medical School. She was captain of the Division III Cross Country team in 1994 as well as Academic All-American and Academic All-Conference in 1994. She was captain of the Track team in 1995. Beth was secretary, alumni contact and house manager of the Theta Pi Gamma sorority and IFPC Vice-President in 1993. She was awarded the1995 Merck Index Award in Biochemistry and J. Carl Welty Award for significant contributions to the biology department.

Anthony Runkle - Lena, IL. Biochemistry. Tony came to Beloit from Northern Illinois University and Highland Community College. During the summer of 1994, he worked for a plastics
manufacturing company and was offered a position there upon graduation.
His senior seminar, "MAKING MOUNTAINS OUT OF MOLECULES: CREATION OF
POLYURETHANE FOAM BY A POLYMER REACTION", described some of his experiences which led to his interest in working in the plastics industry for a career.

Erica Severson - Winnebago, IL. Biochemistry, Cum Laude. Erica spent last summer working as a lifeguard at a camp for inner city children. Next fall she plans to get a job in a research position. Erica chose to diversify her career at Beloit by participating in Chelonia for three years and being active in Gold Key. Erica plans to further her career in research and may choose to attend graduate school.

Bretton Summers - Washington, DC. Biochemistry (departmental honors). Brett participated in a special project under the direction of his major advisor Alfred Ordman involving metabolic studies of vitamin C. An article from this study was published in AGE magazine with Brett as a co-author. He spent last summer and the fall 94 semester performing original in situ bioremediation research under the direction of Dr. Janet Strong-Gunderson at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. He was accepted and plans to attend the Washington University Ph.D. program in molecular microbiology and microbial pathogenesis after which he would like to work in industry. During his undergraduate career he participated in a number of intramural sports and the Jazz Ensemble. He was a staff writer for the campus newspaper and a member and officer in the national fraternity Tau Kappa Epsilon.

Contents


Alumni News Notes


In this year's news notes, we have information from many sources: word of mouth, email, and responses from last year's newsletter response page. Please do keep us informed of what you are doing. It's great to discover the many adventures that we all are having.


1937 Barbara Roth of Chapel Hill, N.C., is busy with historical research and writing.

1946 Lynn Lawson published a book "STAYING WELL IN A TOXIC WORLD: Understanding Environmental Illness, Multiple Chemical Sensitivities and Injuries, Sick Building Syndrome", issued by Noble Press. She edits the Canary News, a newsletter of the Chicago-area support group for environmental illnesses. Before publishing the book she was an editor in Northwestern's university relations department and public relations chair of Human Ecology Action League.

1969 Richard Gilbertsen conducts pharmaceutical research for Parke-Davis in Ann Arbor, specializing in arthritis, autoimmunity and inflammation.

1969 James W. Kirchner of River Forest, IL, has spent 15 years in marketting and strategic planning for Baxter Healthcare.

1971 Jim Zega, Ft. Washington, PA, is married and has two children and is a research fellow at Merck Research Laboratories.

1974 Dennis Ole Wik spent the summer on Little Diomede Island between Alaska and Siberia, building a heliport to serve the Eskimo village of Inalik.

1977 Hank Seifert is head of the Immunology and Microbial Pathogenesis tract of the Integrated Graduate Program at the Medical School at Northwestern University.

1977 Dr. David Virshup MD, from the Molecular Biology Program at the University of Utah, gave three presentations including chemistry seminar and a workshop on admission to graduate programs in November, 1994. His research is on kinases and phosphotases of T-antigen in $V40, and regulation of DNA replication in eucaryotes.

1978 Stephen Hulme has relocated to Paris to work in the economic and strategic planning department of Elf Atochem. He is responsible for strategic planning for four central divisions. Hulme was also mentioned as a "rising star" in the Aug.3 edition of Chemical Week.

1982 Brian Davis spoke in Brock's environmental course, visiting from the Forestry Program at UW-Madison, where he is a post-doc.

1982 Elizabeth Dietmeyer is still working with the Army Crime Lab, although she is currently on maternity leave to celebrate the March 18 birth of her daughter, Sean Carrie Johnson.

1983 Ken Katzen is on the teaching faculty at North Texas Health Science Center. He has been active in healthcare reform having been to Washington D.C. and met with most of the legislators from Texas. He and his wife have three sons, ages 5, 3, and 4 weeks.

1983 Blaine Kloeckner visited in April laden with fruit from his home in Florida, where he runs his own business, Star Brite Service Center. He spoke with classes about life in the "real world."

1983 Bill McIvor is living in Beloit once again ; he is a cardiac anesthesiologist at Mercy Hospital In Janesville.

1983 Joseph Verdi welcomes new daughter, Laura Jane. Mom and baby are doing great and he is "higher than a kite."

1985 Michael Wirt has decided to remain at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine to complete a degree in medicine, after completing a postdoctoral fellowship in molecular pharmacology. He has also accepted a second post-doctoral research position conducting functional magnetic resonance imaging with the department of radiology. "What does this really mean?...four more years in beautiful Bronx, New York!"

1986 James Lacock spent 3 years in the Peace Corps in Cameroon, West Africa, at a rainforest project, and travelling around the world. He is now enjoying medical school at Michigan State University where he is a National Health Service Corps Fellow.

1986 Bryan Mehlhaff has completed his residency training in Urological Surgery at the Albany Medical Center Hospital, and plans to remain at this site while his wife completes her fellowship training in Infectious Disease. They have a 15 month old daughter Grace and are expecting a second child in October.

1986 Paschal Sciarra Jr.,Sheboygan,WI, has been awarded a patent for his unique method for the rapid manufacture of truck brake blocks and disk brake pads, resulting in friction and wear properties superior to materials produced traditionally. He was also the Pine Hills 1994 First Flight Champion and "player of the year" runner-up at the Sheboygan Country Club.

1987 Won Sok Lee is attending the Trinity Evangelical Divinity School getting a master's degree in divinity. Ultimately he plans to get a Ph.D. in The New Testament.

1987 Krista Van Vleet is a graduate student in anthropology at the University of Michigan. She is currently in Bolivia doing her field work for her thesis.

1988 Having received his doctor of podiatric medicine degree from Scholl College of Podiatric Medicine in Chicago, Peter Tsang is a resident at the North Chicago Veterans Administration Hospital.

1989 Barry D. Elswick reports that he finished medical school ranked 17th in a class of 170 at the University of Health Sciences/The Chicago Medical School. In the same time he also obtained a Master's degree in Nutrition. He is currently in the emergency medicine residency program at Harbor UCLA Medical Center.

1989 William Hipple is a product specialist with Silvon Software, Inc., in Westmont, IL.

1989 Shao Chyi Lee says that medical school was like a dream, she is just waking up... She has an M.D. attached to her name, no biggy! Shao is moving to St. John's, Newfoundland and will be a resident in Family Medicine there for the next two years.

1989 David Mitchell dropped by for a visit in September 1994 after completing his Ph.D. in Biochemistry at UT-Austin, where he mastered X-ray crystallography of proteins, working with many variants of hemoglobin and decarboxylases. He is now in Minneapolis doing post-doctoral research at U. of Minnesota on the structure of toxic shock syndrome-associated proteins.

1990 Christopher Smith, New Haven, is still pursuing a Ph.D. in applied math at SUNY-Stony Brook and an M.Div. at Yale Divinity School. He is an adjunct assistant professor in chemistry and mathematics at College of New Rochelle.

1990 Jill Covert has received her Master's degree in molecular and cellular immunology from the veterinary science program at UW-Madison.

1990 Linda Zuckerman expects to finish her Ph.D. at the University of Chicago by the first of the year and has accepted a post-doctoral position at UCSF.

1991 Yoon Hang Kim began working in Dr. Ross' lab on Gz, a G protein that is relatively unknown. Their goal is to find an effector for Gz and try to elucidate the function of the protein. Vena and Yoon got married in January in a small family wedding. They will be in Texas doing research for one year and then head back to Wisconsin to complete his M.D.

1991 Caroline Schauer, a chemistry graduate student at SUNY-Stony Brook, has received a departmental Outstanding Student Teacher award for her work as a teaching assistant in organic chemistry.

1991 Christy Plummer Slye is now working for Nalco in Napa Valley. She and her husband have bought a house and are experiencing the "pains" as well as the pleasures of home ownership.

1992 Anthony Chi is working at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office as a patent examiner and is attending law school part time.

1992 Aline Schimmel has a new job as a laboratory technician in molecular biology at Princeton University.

1993 Steve Chan is employed at Enviropace Ltd. in Hong Kong, a chemical waste treatment plant. He plans to begin work on his Master's degree in Environmental Management this fall.

1993 Anna Applebaum Sigworth completed her Master's degree in Chemistry at Bowling Green State University and is currentl working at Spectra Group Limited, a photoscience company in Maumee, OH.

1993 Brenda Waller completed her cumulative exams in Analytical Chemistry at the University of Idaho and is ready to be nominated as a Ph.D.candidate.

1994 Ranil Abeysinge is doing graduate work at the University of Rochester.

1994 Peggy LaBarge of St.Louis has been in Switzerland for four months working at Ciba Geigy research laboratory in Basel.

1994 Amina Mirza works for RMT Inc., a testing laboratory in Madison, WI.

1994 Sudha Pavuluri is finishing her Master's degree in biochemistry and genetics at Newcastle University and will begin medical school in September at the University of Nottingham "and hopefully that will be all the degrees I end up getting!!"

News of Former Faculty


Nancy Devino has accepted the position of Director of the Committee on Undergraduate Science Education at the National Research Council.

Liz Gron has joined the faculty at Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas.

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