Beloit College > Chemistry > Annual Newsletter

2003 Annual Newsletter

CONTENTS

State of the Department

State of the Biochemistry Program

Faculty Update

Seminars and Special Events

Course Enrollments

Honors and Scholarships

Honors at Graduation
Honor Societies
Departmental Awards
Scholarships Awarded to Biochemistry and Chemistry Majors

Student Research Presentations

Beloit College 27th Annual Student Symposium, April 10, 2003
Beloit College International Symposium, November 13, 2002
The Beloit Biologist, Volume 22, 2003

Student Experiences

Declared Majors in Chemistry and Biochemistry

Majors - Class of 2003

Alumni News Notes

Email Addresses and Web Pages

Gifts to Chemistry and Biochemistry

Notes and Acknowledgements

In Memoriam

Back


STATE OF THE DEPARTMENT
Brock Spencer, Chair

You may remember that the College participated in the first National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) in 2000. Supported by grants from the Lumina Foundation for Education and the Center for Inquiry in the Liberal Arts at Wabash College, and cosponsored by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Pew Forum on Undergraduate Learning, NSSE (http://www.indiana. edu/~nsse/) surveys over 100,000 first year and senior students from more than 400 institutions around the country each year. Student responses are grouped into five clusters of activities that research has shown are linked to success in college: Level of academic challenge, enriching educational experiences, student-faculty interaction, active and collaborative learning, and a supportive campus environment. In the initial survey, Beloit was one of four colleges to score in the top 20% of each category. We recently received the results of the 2002 survey. Although NSSE no longer releases data for all participants identified by school, the summary provided to each institution is quite useful.

In each of the five categories listed above, the responses of our first year students again were significantly above the averages both for all colleges and universities and for liberal arts colleges participating in the survey. The same was true for our seniors. Most remarkably, both first year and senior scores increased between 2000 and 2002 in all five areas, sometimes dramatically. For example, “benchmark scores” for the “student-faculty interaction” category increased from 37 to 46 for first year students and from 48 to 57 for seniors, showing improvement from the initial to the final year of college, as might be expected, but also significant improvement for both groups from 2000 to 2002.

A few specific items are illustrative. Of our seniors, 56% indicted that they had participated in study abroad, vs. 36% for all liberal arts colleges and 18% overall, a strong indication that our students take advantage of “enriching educational experiences” at Beloit. Given our long-standing emphasis on interdisciplinary learning, it was perhaps not surprising that 74% responded that they “often or very often put together ideas or concepts from different courses when completing assignments or during class discussions,” compared with 58% for all liberal arts colleges and 54% overall. Our seniors reported that 51% had “worked on a research project with a faculty member outside of course or program requirements,” while the comparative numbers were 33% and 24%. Reflecting our institutional support for the advantages of a diverse campus environment, 84% reported that they “often or very often had serious conversations with students who are very different from you (religious beliefs, political opinions, or values),” compared with 64% and 53% nationally.

A recent presentation by Laura Parmentier and Ken Yasukawa (Biology) to the Pew Midstates Science and Mathematics Consortium highlighted some examples of how the sciences at Beloit have changed in the past decade to encourage and support increased student engagement. General Chemistry and several Biology courses have adopted a “studio format” that integrates class and laboratory activities in 24- student sections, replacing a larger lecture and several laboratory sections for a course. A recent Beloit seminar to Ecuador focused on rainforest ecology, and the Scotland Seminar has an environmental theme. The Chemical Equilibrium course uses a case study coupling laboratory analysis of soil ion exchange capacity with the effects of acid rain in various countries.

A grant from the W. M. Keck Foundation has enabled us to establish both a spectroscopy and molecular visualization laboratory in chemistry and an interdisciplinary geographical information system (GIS) and ecological modeling laboratory. Through a grant from the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Rama Viswanathan, George Lisensky, and several students have set up laptop computers interfaced to instruments for pairs of students to use for collecting data in our introductory courses, which can then be shared through a wireless network. The Organic Chemistry course now uses a “Chem Activities” approach of collaborative problem solving in place of most lectures in the classroom, and Laura Parmentier has been working with students to develop inquiry-based experiments for the course that use the two research-grade capillary gas chromatographs that she obtained through a grant from the National Science Foundation’s Course, Curriculum, and Laboratory Improvement Program. The levels of student engagement we are seeing in the sciences from the start are not an accident.

While we were conducting our search for a new faculty member in chemistry this past year, we were fortunate to have temporary help in the fall from Håkan Carlsson (Biochemistry) and Christy Whiddon (General Chemistry), doctoral students working at the University of Lund, Sweden, where Håkan's advisor is Ebbe Nordlander ’86. They returned to Lund to complete their theses in the spring. In addition to gaining some valuable teaching experience while at Beloit, they were also able to search successfully for permanent faculty positions for next year. They are moving to the Los Angeles area where Håkan will be at Azusa Pacific University and Christy at the University of Redlands starting next fall. We really appreciate their help this past year.

We are also very pleased to announce that Kathleen Mandell will be joining us this fall with a tenure track appointment in chemistry. Kathleen completed her undergraduate degree at Elmhurst College, has had significant industrial experience in the Chicago area, and has just successfully defended her thesis in biophysical chemistry at the University of Illinois–Chicago. After starting as a teaching assistant at UIC, she has been an NSF Graduate Fellow in the GK-12 Education Program since 2001, working closely with teachers at Robeson High School in Chicago to introduce a laboratory component into their chemistry program. She has also been involved with the Women in Science and Technology Program at Argonne National Laboratory to attract students, particularly girls and minorities, into the sciences. Her research has involved using spectroscopy and thermal methods to study the structure and thermodynamics of linear and dumbbell DNA molecules, and of drug-DNA interactions. This summer, she, along with Amada Drennan’05, is working in the photosynthesis group at Argonne National Laboratory on a project to attach titanium dioxide nanochip fluorescent probes to DNA. Kathleen and her family will are moving to Beloit in August, and we are delighted to have them joining us here.

Contents


STATE OF THE BIOCHEMISTRY PROGRAM
"People Making a Difference"
Roc Ordman, Chair

Yesterday was graduation. Here is the message I just sent to the current majors: “Once again, graduation was a lovely experience. We had an outstanding class of biochemistry majors. Of the total of 27 graduates from the Biology and Chemistry Departments, 9 were biochemistry majors! Seven graduated with both academic Honors and Honors in Biochemistry for their research efforts. And to top it all off, Muyiwa Awoniyi’03 won the Blue Skies award, honoring Beloit College alumnus Warren Miller. Hooray for all the graduating students, and for those of you who will over the years fill their fine shoes!”
Once again, there have been many kind gifts from wonderful alumni. There are boom boxes and timers and the little things that make life in the lab more fun, thanks to donations from Pete Allen’96, Brian Davis’81, Michelle Meyer’83, and others. There are internships and short courses filled with current information, thanks to gifts from people like Joe Verdi’83, Camille Fox’02, and Tara Sander’94. Rush University Department of Biochemistry–special thanks to VP Klaus Kuettner, new Chair Ted Oegema, and Drs. Cheryl and Warren Knudsen–also continues to provide internships and unique assistance and materials.

The speaker at this year’s Commencement was Daniel Barry, M.D., Ph.D., who applied 14 years in a row before being accepted as a NASA astronaut trainee. Biochemistry majors also know how to persist and succeed. Dawn Miller’96 just got accepted to medical school. Bryna Dunaway’03 set high goals and was accepted to the most highly rated Physician’s Assistant Program in the United States. Katie Stettler’02 is working on diabetes at Vanderbilt with the researcher who heads the American Diabetes Association. Clarissa Schumacher’03 has been a Kemper Fellow, a top honor that usually goes to an economics major, but she is also a biochemist, thanks in part to an internship experience at Pierce Chemicals where Kari Roettger’03 and Carrie Clothier’97 also worked.

I want to thank Håkan Carlsson (from Lund University, Sweden) who taught biochemistry this year, and his spouse Christy Whiddon who taught general chemistry. Kathleen Mandell will be arriving from Chicago this fall as a tenure-track faculty member teaching biochemistry. I had a chance to visit with her and her family recently, and she will be a fine addition to the supportive biochemistry community here. It is the students (and alumni) who make it enjoyable to be at Beloit, and I hope you will all join me in welcoming her this fall.

Many of you have experienced my teaching methods in the laboratory, methods that I believe have been useful in helping students understand that science is not cookbook and boring, and can be challenging and fun. As my email signature says, “Don’t let it be forgot, that once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment...” I am grateful to all the alumni who have shared their stories and their experiences of walking the road of innovation and leadership. What my students and I have learned from you is that the hallmark of a true leader is the willingness to make mistakes. Lead on, alumni. It is worth the price!

Contents


FACULTY UPDATE

Kathleen Greene
Associate Professor of Education & Chemistry
B.Sc. Univ. of Lethbridge, Canada
M.S., Ph.D. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
At Beloit since 1987


I have several fields of particular interest to me. These include science education, elementary teacher education, science teacher education, the intersection of gender/ science/education, and more abstract and theoretical topics like classroom culture, what schools are for, and how educational spaces are constituted.

I have been involved in a number of projects, including a U.S. Department of Education-funded project developing bioinformatics curriculum materials for preservice teachers. Also, I have been working with Laura Parmentier on her NSF project incorporating GCs into chemistry courses, especially organic.

This past spring, I had the privilege of team teaching General chemistry (Chem 117) with Brock Spencer. Although I teach science teaching methods to preservice teachers, this was my first time teaching undergraduate chemistry in over ten years (and since completing my science education degrees). It was a stimulating, challenging and rewarding experience that I look forward to repeating some time soon!


George Lisensky
Professor
B.A. Earlham College
Ph.D. California Institute of Technology
At Beloit since 1980
https://www.beloit.edu/chemistry/Lisensky

In the fall, I taught an FYI on Garbage. Once upon a time it was taken for granted that garbage, or at least much of it, biodegraded. Archaeology of modern, anaerobic landfills has disproven this fact and provides interesting data on our consumer culture. While ancient sites can be dated by the types of pottery found, modern sites can be dated by the type and shape of the opening in soft drink cans. What does environmental science say about your choice of paper or plastic bags, cloth or disposable diapers, packaging and recycling? Are the accepted answers the same in all countries? This first year seminar went beyond the study of garbage, the environment, and human behavior to investigate where stuff comes from, and whether the ultimate fate of materials should be considered as part of their design. I also taught Inorganic Chemistry in the fall, and General Chemistry and Chemical Equilibrium in the spring. Since the latter both use ChemLinks materials, the spring was an all module semester!

Beloit College held its first annual International Student Symposium in the fall. Designed to mirror the student research symposium in the spring, this was a day when classes were cancelled and students presented educational aspects of their international experiences in simultaneous sessions. I was this year’s Symposium organizer.

An interesting web site that I maintain (on a Departmental XServer) houses the ChemConnections web materials. See http://chemistry.beloit.edu. I also continue to be associated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison Materials Science Research and Engineering Center (MRSEC) on Nanostructured Materials and Interfaces. To watch some movies made at Beloit see:
http://mrsec.wisc.edu/edetc/cineplex
http://mrsec.wisc.edu/edetc/nanolab
http://mrsec.wisc.edu/edetc/SlideShow

Beloit students participated this year in presenting to the general public at the Engineering Expo in April.

As you may be able to tell from the list below, my interests are moving more and more in the direction of nanotechnology, and I will be teaching an FYI on that subject this fall!

Presentations and Workshops

•G. C. Lisensky and C. Widstrand, “Incorporating Nanotechnology in the Curriculum,” Workshop for Physics Teachers, Cornell Center for Nanoscale Systems, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, July 2002.
•G. C. Lisensky, S. M. Condren, A. Payne, “Incorporating Nanotechnology in the Curriculum,” Workshop for Chemistry Faculty, Biennial Conference on Chemical Education, Bellingham, WA, July , 2002.
•G. C. Lisensky , “ABC’s of Nanotechnology,” National Educators Workshop for Materials Science Faculty, San Jose, September, 2002.
•K. J. Nordell and G. C. Lisensky, “Engaging Students in Science Using Topics in Nanotechnology,” PEW Conference on Undergraduate Education, Hope College, Holland, MI, March, 2003.
•G. C. Lisensky, “Materials: Building Blocks of Engineering,” Engineering Expo, Madison, WI, April, 2003.
•G. C. Lisensky and M. C. Condren, “Semiconductors and Metals,” NSF Solid State Chemistry Program for Undergraduates and College Faculty, Clemson University, June, 2003.

Publications

• S. M. Condren, J. Breitzer, A. C. Payne, A. B. Ellis, C. G. Widstrand, T. F. Kuech, and G. C. Lisensky, “Student-centered, Nanotechnology-enriched Introductory College Chemistry Courses for Engineering Students,” Int. J. Engineering Ed., 18, 550 (2002).


Alfred "Roc" Bram Ordman
Professor, Chair of Biochemistry Program
B.A. Carleton College
Ph. D. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
At Beloit since 1977
https://www.beloit.edu/biochemistry/ordman.html

Last spring, Leta Moser’02 obtained institutional review board approval of a human study of vitamin C, and a group of students began a study of the effect of vitamin C and E dosage using blood-based endpoints. We drew blood from 10 subjects over an entire semester, each subject consuming 200, 500x2, and 1,000x2mg of vitamin C daily, in addition to 400 iu of vitamin E. In consultation with national experts nationwide, we selected three major endpoints–Heinz bodies, TBARs, and protein carbonyls, which were analyzed in Beloit, Arizona, and Oregon. This summer Leta and I will be presenting one set of results at the AGE meeting in Baltimore and another at the Linus Pauling meeting in Oregon. Many thanks to so many of you who have contributed to the vitamin C/nutrition research over the years.

I have fully recovered from the accident I had in December of 1999, and the kind support of many alumni and students through the ordeal has been vital to maintaining my spirits. Thanks.

The lab courses I taught this year were thrilling. In Advanced Biochemistry, students did individual projects. Kari Roettger’03, Muyiwa Awoniyi’03, and Karl Mehta’04 beta-tested a Western blot kit for Pierce Chemicals in Rockford. Leta Moser’02 and Patrice Leahy’04 continued a vitamin C study, and Elif Alpoge’05 built an electronic model of how memory works.

I also taught a course on nutrition directed at non-science majors. Student groups each selected a question and investigated to develop a preliminary answer. Each of the groups presented a poster at a daylong nutrition minisymposium during the annual Undergraduate Research Symposium. Topics and questions discussed included the advantages of breastfeeding a child, whether it is better to eat at Subway or MacDonald’s, how philosophers have been influenced by their diets, and what the new U. S. “organic” food label means. We also began exploring producing a nutrition journal from class results to disseminate easy tips to provide better nutrition. Pictured here is Emily Polak’03 presenting her group’s poster on a study of how the perception of sweetness influences hunger and satiation.

Let me conclude by mentioning that many of the blood analyses in the vitamin C study were done at the Linus Pauling Institute in Oregon, where I coincidentally got to see my first grandchild, Owen Arn, the son of Beloit alumni Katrin and biology major Brandon Arn. My fortune at Christmas this year read, “he who knows that enough is enough will always have enough.” I have enough. Thank you.


Laura E. Parmentier
Martha Peterson Associate Professor
B.S. Northland College
Ph.D. University of Wisconsin - Madison
At Beloit since 1991

The predominant theme for my teaching, scholarship, and outreach this year has been “Active Learning.”

Our “Guided-Inquiry” approach to the organic chemistry sequence continues to go well. This is the second full year of our efforts at a more student-driven course, and this second year of refinement of both materials ( developed by Andrei Straumanis) and pedagogies in the classroom and laboratories has been quite successful. Students report making significant gains in areas of conceptual understanding, problem solving, laboratory skills, and group work, this on top of being a lot of fun!

I continued work this year on my NSF-CCLI project for “Enhancement of the Organic Chemistry Laboratory Curriculum Using Temperature-Programmable, Computer-Controlled, and Network-Accessible Gas Chromatographs.” Last fall we were able to incorporate three new or refined experiments using the new GCs into the organic laboratory based on last summer’s work by Nana Fenny’04, Nancy Nguyen’04, and Justin Severson’04. This summer, Jacob Horger’05 joined me on the project, and we developed two additional GC experiments for the organic sequence, one experiment based on the analysis of fats to be included in Chem 117, and another experiment based on the analysis of flavor components in candy to be used for 6th grade girls and their teachers and parents as part of the annual Girls and Women in Science program at Beloit College. We are currently in the process of preparing papers based on this work for submission to The Journal of Chemical Education.

I had opportunities this year to talk about both the curriculum development and the experimental design work I have been doing at both national and regional meetings. I presented a workshop on feminist pedagogies in the sciences at the Annual UW-System Women’s Studies Conference in Madison. Ken Yasukawa (Biology) and I were invited to give a talk on active learning in chemistry and biology at the Pew Midstates Science and Mathematics Consortium on Attracting and Retaining Majors conference in Chicago, and I also gave a presentation on active learning at the Annual UW-System Women & Science Program spring retreat in Wisconsin Dells.

Finally, I continued to engage in science education outreach projects by modifying some of our activities from Chem 117 (see picture on page 32) for elementary school students. Thus, we had kindergartners making “slime” and fourth graders learning about solar energy by experimenting with a fifty foot long black plastic bag. These are active learning experiences I recommend for anyone of any age!


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

The ChemLinks grant officially ended last October, but the modules (6 of 13 with Beloit co-authors Sharon Anthony, George Lisensky, and Heather Mernitz) continue on and will be published by W.W. Norton starting this fall. Through the end of 2002, an estimated 10,000 students in more than 100 different educational institutions had used over 22,000 modules! Our collaboration on the modules continues with the Modular Chemistry Consortium (Berkeley), and all five of the NSF Systemic Initiative projects have joined together as the Multi-Initiative Dissemination Project (MIDP) to hold workshops around the country, which will extend for a third year through the coming academic year. Since the last newsletter, I have given MIDP workshops at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, University of Richmond, Northeastern Illinois University, University of Missouri- Columbia, and ChemLinks/MC2 workshops for the Rocky Mountain Chemistry Chairs (Reno), NSF Chautauqua (Berkeley), NIH Bridges to the Future (Lake Tahoe), and NSF SENCER (San Jose).

This June, I was one of 50 participants in an ACS meeting, “Exploring the Molecular Vision,” sponsored by the ACS Society Committee on Education. The purpose of the meeting was to define the minimum skills and content for a chemistry education at a time when the interdisciplinary connections of chemistry to areas like biology, nanotechnology, and resources and environment are rapidly reshaping what it means to practice chemistry.

I have been dividing my teaching between Chem 117, which I team-taught with Kathy Greene in the spring and will revise for next year based on our experience, and environmentally related courses. In the fall, my FYI dealt with water resource issues, and in the spring I taught the capstone environmental studies seminar, The Challenge of Global Change, with a focus on climate change and issues of sustainability.

While planning for an addition and renovation for Chamberlin Hall are on hold pending the start of a new capital campaign, I am part of a task force that is starting this summer to develop a master campus plan for the College, one that will deal with space needs for the next 25 years and the relationship of the College to its environs.


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


As usual, this has been an interesting year of teaching and research. I taught a Special Topics course on Molecular Modeling and Visualization, and students were able to use state-of-the-art software (including Gaussian-98 running on both a Mac and a PC) to successfully compute and visualize properties and structures for some very interesting systems, including hydrogen-bonded complexes and biological molecules. In addition, we were also able to use a Scanning Tunneling Microscope for the first time and obtain some preliminary images of surface structures –a practical demonstration of electron tunneling.

I taught CS220-Computer Organization and in the process brought myself up to speed with the ever changing landscape in CPU design and philosophy. In spring, apart from teaching Thermodynamics and Kinetics, I taught the CS100-CS116 sequence of computer courses for non-majors. CS116 in particular has been quite popular with students majoring in the sciences, since the topic is interfacing instruments to computers. I have developed some very interesting software using a variety of languages and platforms to demonstrate interfacing concepts. In particular, I have written my own serial drivers using Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) and the Windows API for direct real time data acquisition into an Excel spreadsheet, which functions as an electronic “chart recorder” for instruments connected to a serial port on a laptop PC. I have also extended the software so that data obtained by multiple student groups in the laboratory using Excel on laptops (see cover for related story) can be transmitted (wirelessly!) to a central computer on the network and displayed in yet another Excel spreadsheet. Each column in this central Excel spreadsheet, which can be projected so that all groups in the classroom or laboratory can see the information, displays data obtained by a single student group using a laptop. The central computer spreadsheet also displays a graph where each group’s data are represented by a uniquely color coded set of points and a legend, all updated in real time as the experiments are in progress!

I will be on sabbatical leave this coming fall, working with John Jungck and the BEDROCK/BioQUEST Consortium on some interesting applications of bioinformatics in undergraduate research and education. In a sense, I have already started my sabbatical work. With the help of a Freeman Foundation grant, I visited Japan during Spring Break to study, among other things, bioinformatics research at the Kyoto Institute of Genes and Genomes (KEGG), located in Kyoto University. I also participated in the annual BioQUEST Conference held this summer at Beloit College from May 31 to June 3. The highlight of this conference was the keynote address by Alan Kay, visionary and inventor of the computer mouse and the graphical user interface (GUI).

Contents


SEMINARS AND SPECIAL EVENTS

“The Structures of Weakly-Bound Complexes Using Molecular Beam Electric Resonance Spectroscopy (MBER): The Stereochemistry of the Hydrogen Bond.” Rama Viswanathan, Department of Chemistry, Beloit College

“Molecular Visualization: Computational Geometric Approaches Using Voronoi Polygons and Polyhedra as Well as Their Topological Duals, Delaunay Triangulations, to Understand Protein Structure, Function, and Evolution.” John Jungck, Department of Biology, Beloit College

“Bone Morphogenetic Proteins and Their Role in Cartilage Integrity and Repair.” Susan Chubinskaya, Rush Medical College

“Long Range Sequence Dependent Reactions in Short Duplex DNA.” Kathleen Mandell, University of Illinois-Chicago

“Building and Evaluating Chemical and Biological Architectures.” Albena Ivanisevic, Departments of Chemistry & Chemical Engineering, Purdue University

“Using Mass Spectrometry and Yeast Genetics to Understand Transcriptional Regulation via Histone Acetylation.” Christine Smith, Reed College

“Thermodynamic Analysis of Enzyme Action: Case Studies of Cytidine Deaminase and Creatine Kinase.” Mark Snider, College of Wooster (Ohio)

The twelfth annual Girls and Women in Science (GWS) Conference, supported by Beloit College, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and private donations, was held at Beloit College March 28-29, 2003 and as usual was a great success. GWS is a minds-on, hands-on science workshop weekend for sixth grade girls, along with their teachers and parents, and is designed to ignite enthusiasm for science in sixth grade girls. Once again, Jennifer Rumppe’03 was the student director. Jason Marmon’06, Amanda Drennan’05, Jennifer Rumppe’03, Jacob Horger’04, Ru Yi Teow’03, Ezra Eibergen’03, and Stephanie Gage’05 helped present science to the general public at the annual Engineering Exposition held at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in April, 2003.

Muyiwa Awoniyi’03 was the lead in the Theater Department’s superb fall 2002 production of “Jesus Christ, Superstar.” Emily Good’03 acted as one of the Apostles. Emily and Bryna Dunaway’03 were also members of the production staff, while Justin Severson ’04 played trumpet for the orchestra.

Contents


COURSE ENROLLMENTS

2002-2003

FALL

 117 General Chemistry

43

 230 Organic Chemistry I

38

 250 Inorganic Chemistry

2

 300 Biochemistry

16

 370 Advanced Topics (Molecular Visualization)

10

 380 Senior Seminar

5

 385 Senior Thesis

1

 395 Teaching Assistant

3

  Total

118


SPRING
 117 General Chemistry

38

 186 Chemical Issues: Nutrition

12

 220 Chemical Equilibrium

23

 235 Organic Chemistry II

19

 240 Thermodynamics and Kinetics

3

 275 Molecular Biology and Biotechnology

11

 280 Professional Tools for Chemists

15

 380 Senior Seminar

4

 385 Senior Thesis

2

 390 Special Projects

1

 395 Teaching Assistant

2

  Total

130

Contents


HONORS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Honors at Graduation

SUMMA CUM LAUDE Kari Roettger
MAGNA CUM LAUDE Muyiwa Awoniyi
Vu Nguyen
Jennifer Rumppe
Clarissa Schumacher
CUM LAUDE Bryna Dunaway
Ezra Eibergen
Ru Yi Teow
DEPARTMENTAL HONORS Muyiwa Awoniyi
Bryna Dunaway
Ezra Eibergen
Vu Nguyen
Kari Roettger
Jennifer Rumppe
Clarissa Schumacher
Ru Yi Teow


Honor Societies

Phi Beta Kappa Nana Fenny’04
Nancy Nguyen’04
Vu Nguyen’03
Kari Roettger’03
Jennifer Rumppe’03
Clarissa Schumacher’03
Ru Yi Teow’04
Mortar Board Maylene Corpuz’04
Nana Fenny’04
Danijela Maric’04
John Miura’04
Nancy Nguyen’04


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.
Ezra Eibergen’03
Jennifer Rumppe’03

WILLIAM J. TRAUTMAN AWARD in PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
(Professor at Beloit 1921-1947) given to a student doing outstanding work in physical chemistry.
Jennifer Rumppe’03
Ru Yi Teow’04

EDWARD C. FULLER AWARD in CHEMICAL EDUCATION
was established by the majors of 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.
John Miura’04
Nancy Nguyen’04

CRC PRESS FIRST YEAR CHEMISTRY ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
recognizes outstanding work by a first-year student and consists of a copy of the Handbook of Chemistry and Physics .
Daniell Kelly’06

AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY AWARD FOR ACHIEVEMENT IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
sponsored by the Division of Polymer Chemistry recognizes outstanding work in the introductory organic chemistry course.
Kristin Block’06

DAVID A. NORRIS '92 STUDENT RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP
was established by David's friends and family in his memory and provides endowed support for chemistry-related undergraduate research.
Muyiwa Awoniyi’03
Karl Mehta’04
Kari Roettger’03

Other Awards

Anne M. Verville Scholar’s Award (Biology Department)
given to an upperclass biology major chosen by department faculty as the outstanding student of the year.
Kari Roettger’03

Gertrude E. Sweet Award (Biology Department)
presented to a biology student who is committed to serving others and demonstrates leadership in confronting societal issues related to the life sciences.
Nancy Nguyen’04

Warren Miller “Blue Skies” Award
presented every year to a member of the senior class who has not only been an outstanding student and campus citizen, but who has also “fostered good cheer, a good-humored perspective, and saving grace in the conduct of our daily lives together.”
Muyiwa Awoniyi’03

Thomas N. Mathers Award (Economics and Management Department)
awarded to an outstanding major.
Clarissa Schumacher’03

William & Eudora Shepherd Award (Music Department)
presented to upperclass music majors who have studied voice seriously and have been active performers of classical music.
Muyiwa Awoniyi’03



Scholarships Awarded to Biochemistry and Chemistry Majors

Muyiwa Awoniyi '03 Ferwerda Science Scholarship
Maylene Corpuz '04 Eaton Scholarship, Eldridge Scholarship,
Ericsson Scholarship, Ferwerda Science Scholarship, A & M Wilson Scholarship
Emily Davis '04 Eaton Scholarship, Eldridge Scholarship
Jonathan Demick '03 Ericsson Scholarship, Trustee Scholarship
Bryna Dunaway '03 Ferwerda Science Scholarship, Presidential Scholarship
Ezra Eibergen '03 Ericsson Scholarship, Ferwerda Science Scholarship, Ousley Scholarship, Porter Scholarship, Presidential Scholarship
Nana Sarkoah Fenny '04 World Affairs Center Scholarship
Emily Good '03 Presidential Scholarship
Margaret Hulse '04 Presidential Scholarship
Daniell Kelly '06 Eaton Scholarship
Patrice Leahy '04 Bullock Scholarship, Margaret Hotelling Wedel Scholarship
Karla Lightfield '04 Presidential Scholarship
Danijela Maric '04 World Affairs Center Scholarship
John Miura '04 Eaton Scholarship
Nancy Nguyen '03 Neese Scholarship, Ericsson Scholarship
Vu Nguyen '03 Presidential Scholarship, Sanger Scholarship, Charles Winter Wood Scholarship, Eugene & Susan Zeltman Scholarship
Alexandra Nicholson '05 Eaton Scholarship
Gregory Peck '04 Nancy Logan Hill Scholarship, Eaton Scholarship
William Ringland '04 Presidential Scholarship
Kari Roettger ’03 Ellen Pepe Koch Scholarship
Jennifer Rumppe '03 Paul Boutwell Scholarship
Clarissa Schumacher '03 Judge William Hooker Scholarship,
Ray Koenig Scholarship, Kohler Company Scholarship, Porter Scholarship
Ru Yi Teow’03 Phee Boon Kang Scholarship

Contents


STUDENT RESEARCH PRESENTATIONS

Beloit College 27th Annual Student Symposium, April 10, 2003

Muyiwa Awoniyi’03
“Breathe Easy: Regulating Asthma.” Based on research with Dr. Jonathan Arm at Harvard University. Mentored by Professor George Lisensky.

Ezra Eibergen’03
“Interfacing Instruments to Computers: Visualizing Data.” Work done with Professor George Lisensky at Beloit College.

Jimmy Franco’03
“Alt-711 Reversing Crosslinkage and Unlocking Aging.” Poster presentation mentored by Professor Roc Ordman.

Jimmy Franco’03
“Visualizing Complexity in Biology: From Biochemistry to Ecology.” Work mentored by Professors John Jungck and Rama Viswanathan.

John Miura’04
“Crystal Structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Malate Synthase Complexed with Pyruvate and Acetyl-CoA.” Research carried out at the University of Oregon with Dr. James Remington. Metored by Professor Laura Parmentier.

Nancy Nguyen’04
“Asthma Nurse Education Intervention and Lower-Income Asthmatic Children in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.” Research undertaken at the Medical College of Wisconsin with Drs. John Meurer and Jennifer Cohn. Mentored by Professor Marion Fass.

Vu Nguyen’03
“Biofilms: A General Overview and Case Study.” Work carried out with Drs. Beth Lazazzera and Nicola Stanley at UCLA.

Clarissa Schumacher’03
“Controlling Disease Activity in Rheumatoid Arthritis through Coping Efficacy.” Mentored by Professor Roc Ordman.

Ru Yi Teow’03
“Preliminary Model of Transmembrane Electron Transfer in Photosynthetic Bacteria.” Research carried out at Northwestern University with Professor Paul Loach. Mentored by Professor Roc Ordman.

Beloit College International Symposium, November 13, 2002

Clarissa Schumacher’03
“International Education: Lessons for Learning Abroad (Ireland).” Mentored by Professor Laura Parmentier.

Nana Fenny’04 and Maylene Corpuz’04
“Outreach in the Colonias.” Mentored by Professor Marion Fass.

The Beloit Biologist, Volume 22, 2003

Muyiwa Awoniyi’03
The Modulation of Basophil Function by LIRS

Jonathan Demick’03
Circumsporozoite Protein and the Development of a Vaccine for Plasmodium Falciparum

Bryna Dunaway’03
A New Weapon in the Fight Against AIDS: Directly Observed Therapy

Emily Good’03

Going to Extremes: Methods to Control the Spread of Invasive Plant Species

Lauren Matzuka’03
West Nile Virus: The Advantages and Disadvantages of Potential Vaccines

Vu Nguyen’03
Identification of the Suppressor Mutation that Restores Biofilm Formation to a sipW Mutant of Bacillus Subtilis

Kari Roettger’03
Plate-Based Immunoprecipitations and Coimmunoprecipitations

Clarissa Schumacher’03
Controlling Disease Activity in Rheumatoid Arthritis through Coping Efficacy

Ru Yi Teow’03
Preliminary Research to Develop a Model of Transmembrane Electron Transfer in Photosynthetic Bacteria

Contents


STUDENT EXPERIENCES


Elif Alpoge’05 has an internship at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, She is working with Dr. Jerry Yin on a project in molecular neurobiology, continuing in fall with a clinical study in psychology mentored by him at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. She reports that the laboratory she is working in at Cold Spring Harbor is just down the hallway from Dr. James Watson’s office!

Muyiwa Awoniyi’03
is spending the summer performing research at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. In fall, he will begin a fellowship at Mayo that will enable him to take graduate classes and undertake more research, at the end of which he will decide whether to pursue a clinical or research career in medicine.

Maylene Corpuz’04 was awarded a Schweppe Scholarship and will be performing research at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

Amanda Drennan’05 is performing research in photosynthesis, working with Professor Kathleen Mandell at Argonne National Laboratory.

Nana Fenny’04 is interning in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Texas A & M University at College Station.

Jacob Horger’05 is working with Professor Laura Parmentier at Beloit College, developing new experiments for the GCs acquired through an NSF-CCLI grant.

Patrice Leahy’04 has been accepted in the Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) Summer Program at SUNY, Stony Brook and is performing research in computational structural biology with Professor Carlos Simmerling.

Karla Lightfield’05 is taking summer classes at the University of Hawaii-Manoa.

Danijela Maric’04 may be interning at Rush University or at Chicago Medical School. Alternatively, she may spend the summer working for a biotechnology company in Serbia.

Lauren Matzuka’03 is working at a veterinary hospital in North Carolina.

John Miura’04 is attending the Summer Undergraduate Research Program at New York University Medical School, conducting biomedical research.

Nancy Nguyen’04 is spending the summer as a research assistant in the Summer Program for Undergraduate Research (SPUR) at the Medical College of Wisconsin, where she is working with the Fight Asthma Milwaukee Allies coalition.

Alexandra Nicholson’05
is working in the arthritis laboratory at Rush University, Chicago, as a Schweppe Fellow.

Nayani Pramanik’04 has been awarded a Schweppe Fellowship and is performing research at Northwestern University.

Kari Roettger’03 is working (for the fourth summer) in Research and Development at Pierce Biotechnology in Rockford, Illinois.

Jennifer Rumppe’03 is spending the summer helping her mother get a small business up and running.

Nozomi Yamaoka’06 is spending the summer researching religion in Japan with the help of a Venture Grant from Beloit College.

Contents


DECLARED MAJORS IN CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY

Spring 2003

Elif Alpoge
2005
Biochemistry Istanbul, Turkey
Muyiwa Awoniyi
2003
Biochemistry Chicago, IL
Davianne Cartwright
2006
Biochemistry Nassau, Bahamas
Maylene Corpuz
2004
Biochemistry Ewa Beach, HI
Emily Davis
2004
Biochemistry Wooster, OH
Jonathan Demick
2003
Biochemistry Beloit, WI
Amanda Drennan
2005
Biochemistry Franklin Park, IL
Bryna Dunaway
2003
Biochemistry Toledo, OR
Ezra Eibergen
2003
Chemistry South Beloit, IL
Nana Fenny
2004
Biochemistry Accra, Ghana
Emily Good
2003
Biochemistry St. Albans, VT
Jacob Horger
2005
Chemistry Morrison, CO
Margaret Hulse
2004
Chemistry Clayton, MO
Daniell Kelly
2006
Chemistry Deerfield, IL
Patrice Leahy
2004
Chemistry Bedminster, NJ
Karla Lightfield
2005
Biochemistry Burlington, WI
Rachel Linz
2005
Biochemistry Okemos, MI
Danijela Maric
2004
Biochemistry Belgrade, Yugoslavia
Lauren Matzuka
2003
Biochemistry Kailua Kona, HI
Karl Mehta
2004
Biochemistry Bangalore, India
John Miura
2004
Biochemistry Hilo, HI
Nancy Nguyen
2004
Biochemistry Beloit, WI
Vu Nguyen
2003
Biochemistry Ontario, CA
Alexandra Nicholson
2005
Biochemistry Wausau, WI
Gregory Peck
2004
Biochemistry Belvidere, IL
Nayani Pramanik
2004
Biochemistry Bangalore, India
Chiemi Riedel
2005
Biochemistry Denver, CO
William Ringland
2004
Chemistry Villa Park, IL
Kari Roettger
2003
Biochemistry Winnebago, IL
Jennifer Rumppe
2003
Chemistry Clinton, WI
Clarissa Schumacher
2003
Biochemistry Belvidere, IL
Justin Severson
2004
Chemistry Poplar Grove, IL
Dina Simkin
2005
Biochemistry Northbrook, IL
Matthew Sonnenberg
2006
Biochemistry Barrington, IL
Amanda Splan
2005
Biochemistry Clinton, WI
Ru Ti Teow
2003
Biochemistry Penang, Malaysia
Zachary Walker
2005
Chemistry Wilmette, IL
Nozomi Yamaoka
2006
Biochemistry Tajimi-shi, Japan
Rebecca Zeni
2004
Chemistry LaGrange Park, IL

Contents


MAJORS - CLASS OF 2003


Muyiwa Awoniyi – Chicago, Illinois. Biochemistry and Music.
Muyiwa has enjoyed Beloit’s unique opportunities for a liberal arts education. With support from faculty and friends, he acted in campus productions of “A Dry Place” and “Jesus Christ Superstar.” While he liked the research projects offered at Beloit, he also wanted to explore different research opportunities off-campus. Encouraged by Professors Roc Ordman and Bill Brown, Muyiwa spent summers interning at Rush University, Johns Hopkins, and Harvard Medical School. Muyiwa values and treasures his interactions with the chemistry and biology faculty and staff and the guidance that he received from them. When he first joined the College as a freshman, his sole goal was to become a physician. However, his experiences at Beloit College have resulted in a passionate interest in research, which he will be pursuing through a graduate fellowship at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. At the end of the fellowship, Muyiwa will decide between a career in clinical medicine and an academic career in research.

Jonathan Demick – Beloit, Wisconsin.
Jonathan intends to attend medical school either this fall or next fall. Eventually, he hopes to become a family practitioner in a rural setting.

Bryna Dunaway – Toledo, Oregon. Biochemistry.
Bryna will be joining the Physician Assistant Program at George Washington School of Medicine in Washington, D.C., next year. While at Beloit, she was an active volunteer in programs such as the Rape Victim’s Advocacy of Rock County. What she really liked about Beloit was being surrounded by all the kind and interesting people there.

Ezra Eibergen – South Beloit, Illinois. Chemistry.
Ezra has won a number of departmental awards while at Beloit College, including the William J.Trautmann Award in Physical Chemistry and the ACS Junior Analytical Chemistry Award in his junior year, and the John H. Nair Award for being an outstanding student in his senior year. Ezra has contributed significantly to the computer interfacing initiatives of the Department, working on a number of projects, most recently with Professor George Lisensky.

Emily Good – St. Albans, Vermont. Biochemistry and Theater.
Emily Good will begin an apprenticeship at the University of Vermont Morgan Horse
Farm Breeding and Training Program this upcoming year. She hopes to attend veterinary college the following year.

Lauren Matzuka – Kailua Kona, Hawaii. Biochemistry.
This summer she will be working at a veterinary hospital in North Carolina. In the fall, she will join Western University School of Veterinary Medicine. .

Vu Nguyen – Ontario, California. Biochemistry
Major and Environmental Studies Minor. While at Beloit, he was an active member of the flute choir, international club, an advocate for rape victims, and a mentor at a local church. He was also a T.A. for General Chemistry. He was inducted into the Mortar
Board Honor Society and Phi Beta Kappa during his senior year. Vu spent summer 2002 researching biofilms and their genetic engineering in the Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics Department at UCLA. He spent fall 2002 on a sailing ship–SSV Corwith Cramer. On board ship, he conducted research on the ecology of marine bacteriophage distribution along the Atlantic continental shelf-break region while learning how to sail and earning the honorary title of “most sea-sick” crew member! He might spend the next two years as a Peace Corps volunteer, or as a tutor at Lingnan University in Hong Kong, or may simply get his feet wet in industry. Eventually he plans on becoming a physician.

Jennifer Rumppe – Clinton, Wisconsin. Chemistry.
In her three years as a Beloit College student, Jen has participated in three undergraduate research programs. She has worked at Mississippi State University (summer 2001), Cornell University (summer 2002), and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (fall 2002, Chemical Separations Group). Her projects have involved a variety of topics, including organometallic synthesis, bioorganic synthesis, and the evaluation of ligands using radiotracers. In the fall of 2003, she will enter graduate school at the University of Texas-Austin, where she plans to focus on organic chemistry. Jen was the student director of
the Girls and Women in Science Program at Beloit College two years in a row, and
her volunteer efforts were featured in a recent article in the Beloit Daily News.

Kari Roettger – Winnebago, Illinois. Biochemistry.
Kari has spent the last four summers performing research as an intern in various laboratories. For three summers she worked in the Research and Development Department at Pierce Biotechnology in Rockford, Illinois. The fourth summer was spent at Loyola University Medical Center doing research in virology. Kari will be attending graduate school in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Loyola University in Chicago. While at Beloit, Kari was also actively involved in music, winning the 2001 annual Beloit Janesville Symphony Orchestra Concerto competition. She participated in the Beloit College Orchestra, the Baroque Ensemble and a woodwind quintet, as well as gave a number of solo performances including a senior flute recital. Kari’s academic awards and honors include the ACS Organic Chemistry Award (2001), the Keck and LaVaughn Kunny Biology award (2001), and the James E. Duffy internship in community service (2002). She was also inducted into Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kappa. Eventually, Kari wants to teach, either as a professor or as a health educator.

Clarissa Schumacher – Belvidere, Illinois. Biochemistry and Economics & Mgmt.
Clarissa spent three summers working for Kemper Insurance Companies as a Kemper Scholar. Summer 2002 was spent in the Chicago area, where she worked in environmental litigation. While at Beloit College, Clarissa worked on research projects for Pierce Chemical Company and the Medical College of Wisconsin. Clarissa also participated in Girls and Women in Science, Mortar Board, cheerleading, softball, and student athletic training. After graduating from Beloit College, Clarissa will be performing biomedical research and working towards her Ph.D. at Northwestern University.

Ru Yi Teow – Penang, Malaysia. Biochemistry.
Ru Yi performed two summers of research on the membrane chemistry of photosynthetic bacteria at Northwestern University. As a Schweppe Scholar, he worked under the mentorship of Prof. Paul Loach. Ru Yi was a radio host on WBCR and tutored at the Outreach Center in his first year at Beloit College. Throughout his years at Beloit College, he was a member of International Club, and worked as a lab aide at the Language Lab in WAC. With encouragement and support from friends, family and faculty members, Ru Yi spent fall semester of his senior year in Scotland with the Glasgow Seminar. He enjoyed the experience and liked traveling in Europe. Ru Yi was a member of Mortar Board, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. His aim in life, quoting Douglas Foard, the executive secretary of Phi Beta Kappa, is to “learn how to live a life, rather than simply have the skill to earn a living.” After graduation, Ru Yi plans to attend graduate school in the U.S.A. Finally, he wants to point out an interesting fact–Trustee Phee Boon Kang’73, Chiatzun Goh’01, and he all came to Beloit College from the same high school in Penang!

Contents


ALUMNI NEWS NOTES

Keep sending us your news and views and pictures!

1935 William “Bill” Swisher became a student again when he returned to Beloit to participate in Alumni College, June 11-13, 2003.

1946 J. Carolyn “Lynn” Prouty Lawson was a presenter at the Second Environmental Writers Conference in honor of Rachel Carson, held in Boothbay Harbor, Maine, in June 2002. She read the Afterward from her book Staying Well in a Toxic World: Understanding Environmental Illness, Multiple Chemical Sensitivities, Chemical Injuries, and Sick Building Syndrome.

1962 Paul Stitt. After graduating from Beloit, Mr. Stitt went on to earn a master’s degree in biochemistry and took a position with a large food company before starting his own health-food baking business, Natural Ovens Bakery, in 1976. Now, the Manitowoc, Wis.-based regional bakery employs 250 people, and daily places its products on the shelves of more than 1,200 grocery stores throughout the Midwest. The success of the business is founded on the idea that fresh, satisfying food without chemical additives is the key to vibrant health, a principle that Paul and his wife, Barbara, have taken far beyond the confines of their bakery. Their tireless work to raise awareness about nutrition and to promote healthy eating–– especially among elementary school children–led to their founding of a nutrient research venture and a non-profit foundation. Mr. Stitt received the highest honor from the Alumni Association when he was one of three accomplished alumni to receive a 2002 Distinguished Service Citation during Homecoming festivities.

1964 Bruce Dunlap will begin as the new Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Florida International University, Miami. Prior to taking this position, Dr. Dunlap was the Fred M. Weissman Professor of Chemical Ecology at the University of South Carolina, where he also served as associate director for administration of the USC Nanocenter.

1967 Eric Gordon writes to say that he enjoyed reading last year’s newsletter, and that it seems like a few lifetimes since 1966 when he spent the summer in Beloit. After two decades in “Big Pharma” and after just finishing a third decade in the world of Silicon Valley startups (three in ten years), he has recently decided to diversify his lifestyle, spending two days a week as a venture capitalist in Palo Alto (www. skylineventures.com), one day a week helping to advise an antibiotics company starting up at Stanford, and consulting at various biotechs. He reports that it has been a very good ride professionally and that he still thinks fondly of his time at Beloit.

1977 David Virshup will be moving to Washington University in St. Louis this summer. He was lured away from the mountains and his position as Professor of Pediatrics and Oncological Sciences at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City with the offer of an endowed professorship in a world-class research institution.

1981 Brian Davis has moved to Texas so that he can be closer to his family (and warmth). He is still working in Business Development for Incyte.

1983 Joe Verdi is helping Beloit students with internships this summer in Portland, Maine, where he is Director of the Maine Medical Center Research Institute. Here is what he wrote: “I never thought running a research institute was such a 24-hour-a-day job. If I did I probably would have been nicer to my previous bosses. All I do from the time I awake till the time I sleep is HUSTLE and MOVE. Kids, family, science, it just doesn’t stop. It’s kind of cool having a hectic yet totally balanced life.......We have a big chunk of land and I love getting dirty in the flower beds, and veggie gardens, I love coaching soccer for Joey and Laura. I totally enjoy bringing little David to work to play with the mice, frogs and bunnies. I am enjoying working with students again. I have a terrific set of students and postdocs now who only want to be the best, willing to sacrifice and are totally altruistic in the lab and their life. It’s real neat seeing people share ideas and reagents just to solve problems and create knowledge. Life is GREAT.”

1984 Deming “Eddie” Tang emailed recently from Shanghai to say that he decided to leave Intel Corporation last year with several of his colleagues and go back to his home city to join SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Inc.), the largest China-based foundry start-up in China. He is Senior Technical Manager of the Yield and Transfer Department at SMIC. It was a hard decision for him to make after living 20+ years in the U.S.A. but he thinks it will bring him returns both professionally and financially. His family has joined him in Shanghai as well.

1986 Amy Knowlton is active in AIDS research at Johns Hopkins, reports Professor Roc Ordman after meeting her in Baltimore recently. Professor Knowlton has had three Beloit College students intern with her–Bryna Dunaway’03 during summer 2002, and Ashley Neils’04 and Lisa Rossi’04 during the current summer.

1986 Paschal Sciarra received “double excellent” honors for a presentation made at the 48th Annual Thermoset Molding Conference at the University of Wisconsin- Madison.

1988 Vivette Brown-Ritchie visited Beloit College recently Dr. Brown-Ritchie is a post-doctoral fellow at the Ontario Cancer Institute in Toronto, Canada.

1988 Kevin Glaeske also visited Beloit College recently. Kevin obtained his Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Utah and is an Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Wisconsin Lutheran College in Milwaukee. He has cordially invited all of us to come and visit their brand new Science Building and facilities.

1989 Bill Hipple lives in Oakville, Ontario, and wrote to announce that spouse Cindy and he just added a girl, Jessica (born on July 5) to their family. Jessica has two brothers, Matthew, 2 , and Tyler, 6, and all of them think that she is adorable. Professionally, Bill is now an independent computer consultant and contracts with the local regional police and a large insurance company. During the past two summers, the family has travelled to New York City but is now thinking of visiting Chicago. They would love to come to Beloit and chat with the students. Bill concludes by saying that he has always had a great place in his heart for Beloit and its Chemistry Department. Thanks, Bill, and congratulations and best wishes to you and your family!

1989 Trudy Hartmann Malone reports that she still practices as an OB/GYN specialist in Menomonee Falls, and lives in Pewaukee, Wisconsin.

1989 Christie Strope-Veale visited Beloit College recently. When she mentioned that she teaches high school chemistry and physics in Plainfield, Illinois, the Department promptly provided her with a number of surplus instructor’s copies of chemistry textbooks (donated by Laura Parmentier) to add to her collection.

1991 Yoon-Hang Kim graduated from the UCSD-SDSU General Preventive Medicine Residency Program and obtained his M.P.H. from San Diego State University last year. Since then, he has a fellowship with Dr. Andrew Weil, guru of alternative medicine and founder of the first Integrative Medicine program in the country at the University of Arizona Medical School in Tucson (http://integrativemedicine.arizona.edu/about2.html). He reports: “Five months already have flown. I made a significant departure from my original ambition of wanting to learn everything in the two years of the fellowship. During my quarterly review, it occurred to me that the best way I can benefit from this fellowship is not through knowledge. As Gandhi once said ‘Become the change you desire.’ I am devoting significant time and energy to my own wellness including physical activity, nutrition, and other regenerating and recreating activities.”

1993 Brenda Waller is an applications instructor and course developer in the Educational Services Department of MDL Information Systems in San Leandro, California.

1994 Sudha Pavuluri has written to say that after eight wonderful years in England, she will be moving to Freeport, Bahamas, this coming fall.

1995 Ashley Eversole Hesslein finished her Ph.D. at Yale in November 2000, then switched laboratories and did a postdoctoral fellowship working on the mechanism of peptide bond formation in the ribosome. While at Yale, she met and married David Hesslein, an immunologist who will postdoc at UCSF while she looks for a job in biotech in the Bay area. Congratulations and best wishes!

1995 Ann Miller is a forensic chemist with U.S. Customs in Chicago and is also working with the Department of Homeland Security.

1996 Dawn Miller has accepted an Army commission in the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences and will be starting medical school there in the fall.

1996 Carrie Tuit is a post-doctoral fellow at Princeton University, working with Professor Bess Ward on a project studying marine nitrogen cycle microbiology.

1996 Lina Tze will be graduating with a Ph.D. from the Molecular, Cellular, Developmental Biology and Genetics Graduate program at the University of Minnesota in July. After that, she will undertake postdoctoral research in immunology at the Australian National University in Canberra.

1997 Gregory Ehrendreich reports that he just passed his prelims for a Ph.D. at Rush University. His thesis committee liked his research proposal, and he is now busy looking at secondary structure predictions before trying to make an antibody from a synthetic peptide.

1997 David Gan wrote in August 2002 to inform us that a new member–Jordan David Gan–has been added to the Gan clan. Our best wishes to the family!

1998 Amy Cone is working as the Public Health Emergency Response Coordinator in Wichita Falls, Texas.

1998 Lakmini Weerakoon is a research assistant in synthetic organic chemistry at the University of New South Wales in Australia. She writes that the open country is just fantastic, and that life is lovely.

1999 Kevin Braun. Now in his fourth year at the University of Arizona, Kevin is completing a Ph.D. in physical chemistry, with a minor in organic chemistry. His lab is working to design molecules with new and interesting nonlinear optical properties that can be used in numerous applications, including data storage, biological imaging, three dimensional micro-fabrication, and optical limiting. More specifically, Kevin studies dyes that can be applied in the devices in three dimensions; some of his previous research is already being used commercially. He says, “Once I complete my Ph.D., I would like to finish my master’s in archaeology, so that one day I might develop my research around the applications of spectroscopic techniques for the non-destructive analysis of archaeological artifacts.” (Editor’s Note: Kevin was profiled in Beloit Magazine recently. See http//www.beloit.edu/belmag/03spring/03spr_profiles.htm#chemist for the full story. Kevin wrote to point out a small error in the 2002 edition of the Newsletter, where his research was also described. While Kevin’s group does collaborate with Dr. Seth Marder, his official advisor is Dr. Joseph Perry.)

1999 Derek Divine is a naval flight officer (1st Lieutenant) for the U.S. Marine Corps, stationed in Beaufort, S.C. He was awarded his “Wings of Gold” in 2001. In October 2002, he reported that “...as a Weapons Systems Officer (WSO), it is my job to effectively utilize the sensors, communications, and weapons systems in order to effectively carry out the mission. Sensors include FLIR (Forward Looking Infrared), Radar, and others. ... I did a lot of work in college that utilize the same principles as the sensors on the F/A-18.”

1999 George Rogge has been accepted into the Pharmacology Program at Emory University and will be pursuing his Ph.D. there.

2000 Scott Barry is a graduate student in the Chemistry Department at Northwestern University. He visited Beloit during fall 2002 and gave a talk to the CHEM380 Senior Seminar class about his research work on designing “better” high-density batteries. While at Northwestern, Scott has twice received the Chemistry Department’s award for exemplary work as a Teaching Assistant.

2000 Catherine McClure writes to say that she has finished her M.P.H. at the University of Illinois-Chicago and has enrolled in a one-year B.S.N. (nursing) program at Rush University.

2001 Antoire Christie has been accepted into the graduate program in Biochemistry at the University of Pennsylvania.

2001 Bashar Qumseya is a medical student at St. George’s University School of Medicine in Grenada. 2001 Stephanie Williams is now a Peace Corps volunteer stationed in Nkroful, Ghana. Williams is teaching chemistry and math at a rural high school. She coordinated regional educational outreach activities in commemoration of World AIDS Day, and is organizing an AIDS bike ride in Ghana. Her work is featured in a story in the summer 2003 issue of Beloit Magazine.

2001 Tori Ziemann stopped by in January on her way from Nebraska back to Massachusetts. She had just finished working as a T.A. for the Environmental Semester program at Woods Hole again and said that she will be continuing her research at the Marine Biology Laboratory until May (including a month-long sampling cruise from San Diego up to Oregon). Tori starts graduate school in Geology this fall at the University of Notre Dame, working with Dr. Peter Burns on characterizing uranium minerals.

2002 Johnny Franco is in the M.D./Ph.D. program at the University of Texas Medical School in Galveston.

2002 Matt Heming wrote in August 2002: “Right now I am attending a summer program at Cambridge University in Cambridge, England. It is hosted by the University of New Hampshire and Gonville and Caius College (Cambridge University). I am taking a break from the sciences to study Tudor and Stuart history and twentieth century British Literature. It has been a tremendous experience. I am living in Gonville Court, which is the oldest court in the College, dating back to the 14th century. There really is no experience like this. King’s College and its magnificent chapel are on one side, Trinity College is on the other, and the river Cam is right behind us. I have had the opportunity to look through and touch a Bible used by Queen Elizabeth I (among other manuscripts and books dating as early as the 12th century), see the register where Charles Darwin signed when he matriculated at Christ’s College, learn to row with the Caius crew several evenings a week, and take in sights of this beautiful city. The program hosts excursions on the weekends where I have attended a performance of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Globe Theatre in London, and seen Shakespeare’s birthplace in Stratford- Upon-Avon. I have also taken time to visit cousins and aunts and my grandmother while I’m here. Although it has been an academic summer, and quite rigorous at that, I have thoroughly enjoyed my experience.” Matt added that he planned to attend the University of Wales in Cardiff, working on a M.Phil. in Connective Tissue Biology.

2002 Leta Moser. After finishing up at Beloit this past December, Leta Moser is spending 8 months as a research assistant in Mohsen Meydani’s Vascular Biology Laboratory at Tufts University. This fall she will enter the Ph.D. program in Interdisciplinary Medical Biology at Vanderbilt University (following in the footsteps of Kathryn Stetler’02), where she thinks she may go into pharmacology.

IN MEMORIAM

Cyril M. Carney '31

Weldon R. Crawford '50

Gerald L. Geison '6 5

John P. Kaltenbach'44

Kenneth S. Kemmerer '30

Laurna Ellis Merriell '48

Charles H. Sperry '37

John F. Steinmann '29

Contents


EMAIL ADDRESSES

Our alumni email network is growing steadily. It has been tremendously helpful to our present students for finding mentors, summer research positions, and post-graduate opportunities. The Beloit College Alumni office now maintains an email directory that can be accessed by registered users at http://alumni.beloit.edu/ . If you are not registered, we encourage you to do so. Please send email addresses and changes to alumni@beloit.edu .

Chemistry faculty
brownwh@beloit.edu
greene@beloit.edu
lisensky@beloit.edu
mandellc@beloit.edu
ordman@beloit.edu
parmentr@beloit.edu
spencer@beloit.edu
ramav@beloit.edu

Departmental web pages
https://www.beloit.edu/chemistry (Previous issues of the Annual Newsletter dating back to 1993 are available on-line via the home page!)
https://www.beloit.edu/biochemistry
https://www.beloit.edu/biology

ALUMNI, PLEASE KEEP IN TOUCH!! Please send your news and notes to any of the Chemistry faculty­this is what keeps the newsletter going!

Contents


GIFTS TO CHEMISTRY AND BIOCHEMISTRY


Gifts have been received from Peter Allen’96, Christopher Bailey’82, Katherine Bailey’81, Jeffrey Cleaveland’83, Brian Davis’81, Joseph Donofrio’74, William Hipple’89, William McIvor’85, Michelle Meyer’83, Reno Novak’83, and John Sokatch’56.

The David A. Norris’92 Student Research Fellowship, established by David’s friends and family in his memory, continues to provide endowed support (see page 18 ) for chemistry-related undergraduate research by providing funds for research expenses and/or travel to present research results. Research that draws connections between chemistry and other fields and the sciences and beyond is encouraged.

Thank you for your support, and thank you to all those not listed here who continue to give generously to Beloit College and the Chemistry Department. Your support is crucial for nurturing and enhancing the strength of our programs and infrastructure.

Contents


NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks to Arno Damerow, Instructional Technologist in Information Technology Services at Beloit College, for his expert help and invaluable advice in producing the printed copy. Thanks also to N. Marie Dries’92, Assistant Editor, Beloit Magazine, who provided us with digests of news received from alumni–many of the news items have been reprinted in the Alumni News and Notes section. A special note of thanks to Sandy Schley and the staff of the Beloit College Print Shop for the quality work produced. Finally, we would like to acknowledge the efforts of Gillian Condell’05, who compiled the weekly newsletters that were emailed by the Department during the academic year and used as one of the sources of news for this annual edition.

Contents


IN MEMORIAM

Richard L. Besore’52
Cyril M. Carney’31
William A. Cureton’31
Stewart W. Gloyer’32
Peter A. Lagocki’73
Vella Root’39

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