One of the pleasures of being the new department head is communicating with you, the alumni and friends of the Department of Chemistry. The past year has been absolutely exhila- rating, because the depart- ment continues to thrive and improve. Two ex- amples: we had record enrollments in our under- graduate classes and brought in a record amount in grant dollars for re- search. These accomplish- ments are all the more impressive when one con- siders that state funding for the university was down again in 1994?95. The fac- ulty is committed to main- taining excellence in the department, but it is get- ting harder to do that as state support shrinks even more. That is why last year at this time we created the Chemistry Achievement Endowment Fund as an additional source of de- partmental revenue. As you may recall, the fund is used to support and en- hance teaching and re- search. I thank you for your generous response to help us successfully launch FROM THE DEPARTMENT HEAD CHEMISTRY NEWS PAGE 2: Award-winners James W. Bernard and Wayne C. Solomon UNIVERSITY OF OREGON ? COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES ? DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY ? FALL 1995 this fund. In an unusual move, the state of Oregon offered to match?dollar- for-dollar?the endow- ment income from contributions. The previ- ous department head, Tom Dyke, and some of his fel- low faculty members spearheaded the drive last year to establish an en- dowment that qualified for the state match. Many in- dividual chemistry faculty members put up a match, too. Thus the dollars you gave were matched 4 to 1, and that doesn?t include the corporate matches that are available to some alumni and friends! Thanks to your support, we are halfway to our goal. The fund is progress- ing, and we are still solicit- ing contributions. Another highlight from the past year is our con- tinuing celebration of suc- cessful careers with the Chemistry Alumni Achievement Awards. This annual event was initiated in 1989 as a way of identi- fying particularly success- ful alumni in the private sector, government, and academia?people who inspire future generations of students and faculty members. In 1994 we hon- ored a president and CEO of a major United States corporation and the head of a Department of Aero- nautical and Astronautical Engineering. An article in this newsletter provides more information on these awardees and on this year?s winner of the UO Alumni Association?s Out- standing Young Alumna Award, who?I am happy to say?is also a chemistry graduate. The faculty, too, is receiving recognition. Two new assistant profes- sors have won national distinction, and a senior faculty member has just won the Garvan Medal, a national American Chemi- cal Society award. Again, details are inside. Finally, let me remind you that we like to hear from you. One of the most widely read sections of the newsletter is ?News from All Over.? It contains up- dates on our alumni, in- cluding postdocs and others who have been part of our departmental com- munity. This section relies on input directly from you. Let us know what you?re doing, even if it?s just your current position, and we?ll include the information in our next newsletter. PAGE 4 Geraldine Richmond receives Garvan Medal PAGE 5: John Schellman honored for career achievements PAGE 5: Pauling Symposium held at UO 2 Chemistry Alumni Achievement Awards 2 Wayne C. Solomon On April 14, 1995, Alumni Achievement Awards in Chemistry were made to two University of Oregon chemistry alumni, James Bernard and Wayne Solomon, for their out- standing accomplishments. During the afternoon cel- ebration each of the awardees related their ac- complishments and memo- ries of their studies at Oregon. In the evening the awards were conferred at a banquet in the atrium of Willamette Hall. James Bernard received his B.S. degree in chemis- try at the University of Oregon in 1960. He then took a position as a sales trainee at Van Waters & Rogers, Inc., a subsidiary of the Univar Corpora- tion. His quick rise up the corporate ladder has been truly amazing. In 1974 he became president of Van Waters & Rogers and cor- porate vice president of Univar. Then, in 1986, he took up his present posi- tion as president and chief executive officer of Univar. Univar has many subsidiary companies that are active in the fields of chemistry and marketing, oil drilling, paint, and metal mining. Wayne Solomon is pro- fessor and head of the De- partment of Aeronautical and Astronautical Engi- neering at the University of Illinois. He received his B.S. degree in chemistry at the University of Idaho in 1956 and his Ph.D. (ad- vised by L. Klemm) in physical organic chemistry at the University of Oregon in 1963. After leaving Or- egon he was a staff scien- tist with the Air Force Rocket Propulsion Labora- tory, a visiting professor at the University of G?ttingen, and director of research at Bell Aerospace Textron, before taking his present position at Illinois. Previous award winners of the Chemistry Alumni Achievement Award are Claibourne Smith of E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., Ralph Barnhard of the University of Oregon, Chris Babcock of Bend Re- search, Lawrence Nafie of Syracuse University, and Maurice Schwarz while at Ciba-Geigy. 1995?96 ALUMNI ACHIEVEMENT AWARDEES During the 1995?96 academic year, three awards will be made. The first awardee is Marion Hill, who received his B.A. and M.A. degrees in chemistry at the Univer- sity of Oregon in 1948 and 1950 and who was direc- tor of the Chemistry Laboratory at the Stanford Research Insti- tute before his retirement. The second is Victor Snieckus, who received his B.S. in chemistry at the University of Alberta in 1959, his M.S. at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1961, and his Ph.D. at the University of Oregon in 1965 (advised by V. Boekelheide), and who is now professor at the University of Water- loo where he holds a per- sonal chair endowed by NSERC/Monsanto. The third awardee, Shin-ichiro Sakai, received his doctor- ate with Professor Eiji Ochiai and was a postdoctoral fellow with Professor Lloyd Dolby in the early 1960s. Sakai be- came a professor at Chiba University at the early age of thirty-two, quite unprecedented in Japan, and has received world- wide recognition for his research on the indole alkaloids. The award ceremonies for Marion Hill and Vic- tor Snieckus are sched- uled for March 8, 1996, with an award lecture by Victor Snieckus on Friday afternoon, March 8, and the award lecture by Marion Hill on Monday, March 11. The award cer- emony for Shin-ichiro Sakai will be held later in the spring, but a date has not been set. You are all cordially invited to attend these award ceremonies. 3 Last year?s newsletter described the transition of the University of Oregon from a public university largely dependent on state support to one much more dependent on tuition and private fundraising. In order to meet department needs, such as money for seminar speakers, recruit- ing of graduate students, and match money for equipment grants, we de- cided to launch a fundraising drive. The result is the Chemistry Achievement Endowment Fund, named to honor the period between 1960 and 1970 when the depart- ment, with the help of all of you, surged from a rather low status to a place among the better known institutions. This fundraising effort was initiated by former and present staff members of the University of Or- egon Department of Chemistry, who pledged $11,000 as a challenge grant to be matched by our alumni over a five- year period. The success of the fundraising drive has been phenomenal. By the end of June 1995 we had received $27,072 in cash and $5,450 in pledges. This has been most gratifying, and we thank you all. The funds we have raised to date are being matched by the Oregon State Board of Higher Education. However, in view of the success of the Chemistry Achievement Endowment Fund Pamela Bjorkman Wins Outstanding Young Alumna Award Each year, the UO Alumni Association recog- nizes one young indi- vidual from the university?s alumni who has attained ?extraordi- nary distinction in his or her chosen professional field.? The 1995 winner is Pamela J. Bjorkman. She was presented the award by University President Dave Frohnmayer, at the spring 1995 Commence- ment in Hayward Field. Pamela, who earned a B.A. in chemistry in 1978 from Clark Honors College, did her undergraduate re- search in the Griffith group. A native Orego- nian, she went on to Harvard for her Ph.D., earned in 1984. While at Harvard, Pamela suc- ceeded in making a major breakthrough that had im- portant implications in Air Products (R. Pinschmidt), Gregory Arnold, Dale Auvil, Ralph Barnhard, Andrew Barofsky, Virgil Boekelheide, Curtis Borchers, James Bozarth, Bruce Branchaud, Bruce Broline, Ernie Bush, Richard Chadwick, Youngshin Choi, Gary Christian, Dennis Clark, Daniel Cowles, Stephen Cross, Frederick Dahlquist, Norman Diebel, David Draper, Tom Dyke, Sandra and Andrew Fedoruk, Neil Fetter, Eric Flerchinger, Fuji Silysia, James Garbe, General Electric (K. and T. Lee), General Electric (C. Spalaris), Herbert Glick, Samuel Greenschlag, Hayes Griffith, Steven Hadley, Michael Hahn, Thomas Harris, Warren Hawkins, Gary Hedden, Marion Hill, Susan Hill, Terrell Hill, William Herzog, Harry Hofrichter, Tricia Igawa, Malcolm Jacobs, Howard Johnson, Robert Johnson, Erin Johnston, Clyde Kaneshiro, Sheri Kauffman, John Keana, Ryan Kelly, Dan Koos, Herbert Kopperman, Kwok-chen Lee, Burton Litman, Jim Long, Jennifer Lu, Vicky Lyon, 3M Corporation (J. Garbe), Donald Mack, Kent Marshall, Martin Marietta (B. Morosin), Robert Mazo, Y. and R. Merrill, Dave and Heather Messenger, Chup Mok, Molecular Probes, Russell Molyneux, Bruce Morosin, Lawrence Nafie, Nagwa Naguib, Christian Nielsen, R. and T. Norton, Richard Noyes, Joseph Owens, Urlin and Barbara Page, Tom Patapoff, Warner Peticolas, Robert Pinschmidt, Gary Riddle, Rohm & Haas (J. Owens), Charlotte Schellman, John Schellman, Maurice Schwarz, M. S. Shashidhar, Joyce Shiro, William Simpson, L. and K. Smith, Wayne Solomon, C. Spalaris, Craig Stillwell, Ronald Swisher, Syntex (G. Hedden), Timothy Thomas, Henry Tobey, Mike Uhler, Ralph Vaughn, Peter von Hippel, Jun Wang, Willamette Industries, Raymond Wolfe, Pancras Wong, Joseph Zoller and anonymous chemistry department professors. CONTRIBUTORSfirst seven months of ourfundraising drive, we have reached an agree- ment with the state board that our five-year goal will be raised to $60,000, which also will be matched. If we continue to receive gifts from our alumni at the same level as we did before this chal- lenge grant was initiated, the higher goal is readily attainable. We offer our deepest thanks to you for your important contributions to the challenge grant and simply express our hope that in the future you will continue to remember us as you have in the past, perhaps with participa- tion from some who have not yet contributed. Contributors to this very successful fund- raising drive are listed to the right. Pamela Bjorkman medicine: she solved the first structure of the major histocompatibility com- plex (MHC). MHCs are protein complexes that Continued on page 4 4 appear on most cell sur- faces throughout the body. They serve as re- ceptors for antigens. Understanding the MHC structure is a major step towards winning the war against viruses, from the common cold and flu vi- ruses to HIV, and bacte- rial infections. Understanding MHCs is also the key to designing new drugs that can com- bat rejection in organ transplants and autoim- mune diseases. After two postdoctoral fellowships (Harvard, 1984?86) and Stanford (1986?89) to study immu- nology, Pamela, joined the faculty of the Division of Biology at California Insti- tute of Technology, where she continues her work on the molecular basis of the immune response. She was recently promoted to associate professor and holds the title of assistant investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Pamela Bjorkman?s many awards include the Young Investigator Award, American Society for His- tocompatibility and Im- munogenetics (1988); Cancer Research Institute Investigatory Award (1989); Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences (1989); William B. Coley Award for Distinguished Research in Fundamental Immunology (1993); James R. Klinenberg Science Award, Arthritis Founda- tion (1993), Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award (1994). Most re- cently she was honored as the youngest recipient of the Gairdner Foundation International Award for achievements in medical science (1994). In the history of the UO Alumni Association?s Out- standing Young Alumnus- Alumna Award, there have been only two recipi- ents from the sciences: Pamela Bjorkman and Rudy Dam, Ph.D. ?77. Both awardees are from the De- partment of Chemistry. Richmond Awarded Garvan Medal FOCUS ON FACULTY Geraldine Richmond is being awarded the prestigious 1995 Francis P. Garvan-John M. Olin Medal. This national American Chemical Society (ACS) award is made each year to recognize distinguished service to chemistry by a woman chemist who is a United States citizen. The award was established in 1936 through a donation from Francis P. Garvan and is sponsored by the Olin Corporation. The award consists of $5,000, a suitably inscribed gold medal, and a bronze replica of the medal. It also includes travel to the March 1996 national ACS meeting in New Orleans, where she will receive the award and give her award address. Richmond received her B.S. degree in chemistry in 1976 at Kansas State University and earned her Ph.D. in physical chemis- try at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1980. As an assistant professor at Bryn Mawr College, she initiated her research in the use of laser techniques to study the structure and reactivity of surfaces and interfaces. In 1985 she joined the faculty of the University of Oregon, where she is a chemistry professor and the director of the Chemi- cal Physics Institute. Her teaching efforts are focused on undergraduates with a particular interest in teaching science to nonsci- entists. She is active on many national boards and committees that focus on scientific teaching and research in the United States. Her current research effort is in the use of pulsed lasers to investigate physical and chemical processes that occur at semiconductor, metal, polymer and liquid surfaces. As a colleague in her field puts it: ?Geri Richmond is a deep and rigorous physical chemist who investigates important chemical systems. She does challenging laser experi- ments that are right at the cutting edge of technology, and she is very productive.? Geri Richmond is also the recipient of an NSF Presidential Award, a Camille and Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, the 1989 Coblentz Spectros- copy Award, an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, an NSF Faculty Award for Women Scientists and Engineers, and the Iota Sigma Pi Agnes Faye Morgan Research Award. She was recently selected as one of the American Physical Society Distinguished Lecturers for the Laser Science Topical Group. Continued from page 3 Geraldine ?Geri? Richmond 5 John Schellman Celebration After much discussion and persuasion, John Schellman was convinced to use the (approximate) occasion of his seventieth birthday to honor his many contributions to the department, to the univer- sity, and to science in gen- eral. A celebration and reunion was held on Octo- ber 6 and 7, 1995, and was a rousing success! Festivities began Friday evening with an informal buffet dinner and reunion at the University Club in Collier House. More than sixty friends and students from every era of John?s long career were present. Participants thoroughly enjoyed getting together to trade stories and memories with John and Charlotte and with one another. On Saturday morning, October 7, everyone con- vened in 110 Willamette Hall for an invited all-day symposium. After an offi- cial greeting and welcome from Academic Vice Presi- dent and Provost John Moseley, scientific talks were presented by invited speakers in some of the areas to which John made research contributions over the years. Here is a glimpse of the program. The morning session, titled ?Macromo- lecular Conformations, Interactions, and Mecha- nisms,? included Robert (Buzz) Baldwin, Pete von Hippel, Carlos Bustamante, and Jim Hofrichter. The afternoon session, titled ?Spectros- copy: Waves and Par- ticles,? included Bengt Norden, Vince Madison, and Heidi Schellman. The evening session of the symposium, ?History and Perspectives,? featured talks by Peter Jensen and John Schellman. The high point of the symposium was the final talk, in which John managed to amuse, inform, and reawaken (as needed) the audience with his wonderful multimedia presentation of a ?Way- ward History of Thermo- dynamics.? Participants reconvened at 7:00 p.m. in the Willamette Atrium for a formal banquet, after which several of John?s old friends and colleagues, as well as his wife Charlotte, took turns regaling the au- dience with stories of sig- nificant events in John?s scientific and personal life. The official program ended at about 11:00 p.m., but many stayed on to talk and enjoy one another?s company into the wee hours. Gathering at the John Schellman Celebration. From left: Howard Reese, John Schellman, Charlotte Schellman, Pete von Hippel, and Hong Qian Pauling Symposium The Pauling Medal, recognizing outstanding achievement in chemistry, is named after and inspired by Linus Pauling (1901?94), a native of the Pacific Northwest. The presentation rotates among the three North- west Sections of the ACS: Oregon, Portland, and Puget Sound. This year the presentation of the award, a gold medal and a plaque, was made at the Univer- sity of Oregon to Alexander Rich from the biology department at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The sympo- sium program was organized by Kenneth M. Doxsee and the local arrangements were made by James W. Long, both of the UO Department of Chemistry. Speakers for the October 28, 1995, event included Jack D. Dunitz of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Leslie E. Orgel of the Salk Institute of Biological Studies, and our own Peter H. von Hippel. The last time a Pauling Symposium was hosted by the UO chemistry depart- ment was in 1987. Harden McConnell was the recipient, Linus Pauling attended and gave a talk, and the event was orga- nized by Hayes Griffith and Polly Habliston. Pauling Symposium Banquet. From left: Jim Long, symposium chair; awardee Alexander Rich; Verner Schomaker of the Puget Sound Section; and Ken Doxsee, award chair. 6 News from the Department Dreyfus Foundation for the introduction of lasers into the physical chemis- try laboratory, provides lasers from Russia and Ukraine. Bruce, a frequent traveler to countries of the former USSR, most re- cently attended the Fifth International Conference on Laser Applications in the Life Sciences held in Minsk, Belarus, in 1994. FACULTY COMINGS AND GOINGS David Tyler became head of the Department of Chemistry in July 1995. The traditional Changing of the Guard party was held in September at Hayes and Karen Griffith?s home to wel- come David and to say thank you to Tom Dyke. Tom Dyke was promoted to associate dean of the College of Arts and Sci- ences in June 1995. Jeffrey A. Cina joined the department as associate professor fall term 1995. He came to us from the University of Chicago, where he was assistant professor of chemistry. Jeff, a theoretician, re- ceived his Ph.D. from University of California, Berkeley, with R. Harris and held a postdoctoral position at Massachusetts Institute of Technology before going to Chicago. His research interests lie in the area of understand- ing the chemical processes set in motion and mea- sured by ultra short light pulses in nonlinear optics experiments?a new area of theoretical expertise for the department. FACULTY ACHIEVEMENTS Two assistant professors received national recogni- tion: Michael M. Haley received a 1995 National Science foundation CA- REER Award. This pro- gram is designed to encourage the early de- velopment of academic faculty as both educators and researchers. Fewer than thirty of these awards are given nation- ally in all areas of chemis- try. James E. Hutchison was awarded a Camille and Henry Dreyfus New Faculty Award in 1994. Only ten of these awards were made. The $25,000 Dreyfus award is de- signed to support the de- velopment of chemical educators. Geraldine ?Geri? Rich- mond won a prestigious national ACS award?the Francis P. Garvan-John M. Olin Medal sponsored by Olin Corp. (see related article). Bruce Hudson was awarded a NATO Col- laborative Research Grant Award to participate in a project involving the tran- sient photophysics of pro- teins. The research will be performed at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory near Oxford in England. A grant from the Camille and Henry Robert M. Mazo is retir- ing at the end of fall term 1995, after thirty-three years of service to the uni- versity. He served as de- partment head from 1978 to 1981. Bob Mazo is a theoretical physical chem- ist who specializes in sta- tistical mechanics. During his retirement, Bob hopes to have more time for re- search and travel. He plans to continue to teach one term a year for the next five years. David Herrick is spend- ing his sabbatical leave in Beijing, China. LeRoy Klemm submitted more information about alumni for the ?News from All Over? section than any- one else. Thanks, LeRoy! Minor memos: John Keana, Hayes Griffith, and Ralph Barnhard, who joined the chemistry department in 1965 or 1966, have been teaching here for thirty years. STAFF NEWS Jerry O?Bannon, formerly in charge of the NMR fa- cility, resigned in 1995 to take a job with Borden Chemical Company in Springfield. Michael Strain is in charge of the NMR facility for the present. David Senkovich left Chem Stores to take charge of the Student Shop. Ralph Barnhard (left) presents plaques to David Tyler (center) and Tom Dyke (right) inscribed, ?Noli Carborundum Illegitimati? (Don?t let the bastards grind you down). Carlos Bustamante enjoying the fun (background). Photo taken at the Changing of the Guard party at Hayes and Karen Griffith?s home, September 7, 1995. 7 This column is a new addition to Chemistry News?a look back at the ?way it was.? Future contributions are encour- aged. The following is an excerpt from memoirs of Marion Hill. In January 1946 I registered in the College of Liberal Arts planning to major in chemistry. I was one of many returning veterans, 1,200 in the winter quarter alone. With few exceptions all were taking advantage of the famous GI Bill, which provided for tuition, books, and a living allowance. Veterans with families received an added allowance over the base rate?about $96 per month?raised to $105 if there was a child. Three full-time profes- sors joined the faculty at the time I arrived: Donald F. Swinehart, Frank J. Reithel, and Hans Heymann. Robert B. Dean arrived in 1947; Pierre Van Rysselberghe had arrived in 1941. The department head, Adolph H. Kunz, had been on the faculty since 1934. These men carried the bulk of the teaching load for both lower- and upper- division, and graduate- level courses. Hans Heymann, Ph.D., Harvard (1941), was at Oregon until 1949, when he returned to teach at Harvard. Later he joined Ciba-Geigy, working up to a management position. Hans taught almost all the organic chemistry courses and conducted personal research in bio-oriented compounds. He was an outstanding teacher and was principally respon- sible for inspiring me to continue in organic chemistry as a career Frank J. Reithel, Ph.D., Oregon (1942), taught all the biochemistry courses. He and Hans Heymann were my advisers on my master?s degree research problem. Reithel im- pressed me as a hard pressing, very active, excellent scientist and teacher. Donald F. Swinehart, Ph.D., Ohio State (1943), also was with the depart- ment until he retired in 1983. He taught us qualitative and quantita- tive analytical chemistry, inorganic chemistry at the undergraduate level, and advanced physical chemistry. We always had either a verbal pat on the back or kick in the pants when such was required.? I received both his pats on the back and deserved kicks in the pants. Don was inclined to give those of us who were pulling good grades tough ?unknowns? for analysis. Upon hearing our groans, he assured us that he was being easy on us, that he was given an unknown in Karo syrup for analysis when he was in school. Pierre Van Rysselberghe, Ph.D., Stanford (1929), taught upper-division and graduate courses in physical chemistry and thermodynamics. He is remembered not only for his hard exams, but for his tolerance of us organic majors who were more inclined to be intuitive and less quantitative in our thinking. One of my personal triumphs was getting an ?A? in his physical chemistry course. Reflections good rapport, developed a friendship, and stayed in touch until after his wife Ruth died. His status as a teacher and scientist was admira- bly stated in the fall 1994 Chemistry News, after his death in 1993: ?. . . [He] always ranked high among the department?s teachers. He was often cited for his enthusiasm, his didactic ability, his interest in his students, and?as one student put it?his willingness to give Recaptured memories from Marion Hill include this photo from Oregana 1947 revealing quonset huts University officials erected to accommodate the post war overflow of students. Upon hearing our groans, he assured us that he was being easy on us, that he was given an unknown in Karo syrup for analysis when he was in school. Strolling on the boardwalk at the 1959 ACS Annual Meeting, alumnus Marion Hill (left) and Don Swinehart (right). 8 mercial property and assists one son with an automobile repair and towing business. Anthony N. Federici ?58 is a member of the Oregon House of Representatives, District 1, State Capitol, Salem, Oregon. Neil Fetter, Ph.D. ?57 teaches chemistry and physics at a private high school in San Francisco. Anthony J. Golden ?59 works as a collection station atten- dant for Goodwill Industries. Beng-Thong Ho, M.A. ?59, and wife, Dah-Hsi, a former graduate student in biology at UO, conduct biochemical re- search in Houston, Texas. Beng received a Ph.D. in phar- maceutical chemistry from the University of Washington. Cyril K. Kim ?57 is a psychia- trist in private practice. 1960s Friedhelm Baitis ?68 is a pilot for United Airlines after retir- ing from the U.S. Air Force. Barbara Bellin ?64 is a Ger- man-English translator spe- cializing in physical sciences. Recovering successfully from cancer therapy. Tom Boring ?65 is president and chief executive officer of Dynametric Corporation. Dennis Clark ?66 is vice presi- dent and a partner in Analyti- cal Solutions, Sunnyvale, California, a contract analyti- cal laboratory for the pharma- ceutical industry. Tom Dooley, M.S. ?64, Ph.D. from University of Rhode Island; has been teaching part time at Ramapo College in New Jersey and Yeshiva Uni- versity in New York. Gary L. Hedden ?67 manages a process development pilot plant for Syntex Pharmaceuti- cals in Palo Alto, California. Wayne Johnson, Ph.D. ?69, has been involved in various aspects of agricultural chem- istry at Rohm and Haas Com- pany in Philadelphia. He and his wife are frequent travel- lers for business and pleasure. George C. Karaboyas, M.S. ?62, Ph.D. from University of Pennsylvania, and his wife operated a clinical biochemis- try laboratory in Miami, Florida, for many years. They are retired. Richard A. Klemm (summers ?67 and ?68, NSF undergradu- ate research participant) B.S., Stanford University; Ph.D., Harvard University. Develops theory of high Tc supercon- ductivity at Argonne National Labs, Argonne, Illinois. He was elected a fellow of the American Physical Society in 1994. He and his wife, a food scientist, have two sons. Alexandre Kohlik (postdoctoral fellow ?59??62). Twenty-nine years at CIBA Ltd. Basle Scientific as litera- ture and search specialist. Began early retirement three years ago. Chup Yew Mok, Ph.D. ?68, is associate professor, Depart- ment of Chemistry, National University of Singapore. Russell J. Molyneux (postdoctoral fellow ?63??65) works at Western Regional Research Center, 800 Buchanan St., Albany CA 94710. Willem J. Muizebelt (postdoctoral fellow ?67??68) Akzo Nobel Central Research, Arnhem, Netherlands, is in- volved in developing environ- mentally friendly coatings that contain fewer volatiles. David D. Reed, Ph.D. ?61, is retired from Texaco Corp., where he served several years as vice president for Japanese 1920s Malcolm (Monty) Jacobs, undergraduate studies 1927? 29 at UO; received degree from University of Nebraska in 1931. Founder and owner of Beauty Products, Portland, Oregon, from 1933 to 1976, he retired and plays golf and travels throughout the world. 1930s J. Howard Johnson ?31; M.D., UO Medical School ?35. ?Pro- fessor Stafford offered, and I almost accepted, a graduate teaching position, but I ended up in medical school. Now retired, I concentrate on golf.? 1940s Marion E. Hill ?48; M.A. ?50 (awarded in absentia) post- graduate work with R. Taft, Pennsylvania State Univer- sity. Consulting, international travel, volunteer with Interna- tional Executive Service Corps, family history research (genealogy), and writing fam- ily histories. Marthe Smith ?48. Retired physician (pathology and nuclear medicine.) 1950s Emil Antoniades (postdoctoral fellow, ?57??60) is retired from a career in the petroleum industry in Califor- nia. Robert Diebel ?50, M.S. ?54, retired from Westinghouse Hanford in 1988 after work- ing thirty-four years with ra- dio and analytical chemistry. Now maintains some com- NEWS FROM ALL OVER operations in Tokyo. He and his wife have returned to their native Idaho. P. S. Santhanam (postdoctoral fellow ?66??67) is senior vice president, Technology Man- agement Division, Ushta-te Biotech Industries, Ltd., Ma- dras, India. The company manufactures starch deriva- tives and sweeteners using enzyme technology. His wife teaches high school history and their son recently mar- ried. Maurice Schwarz ?62, Ph.D. ?65, received the 1993 Achievement Alumni Award. He works with a new start up pharmaceutical company, Cell Therapeutics Inc., 201 Elliott Avenue West, Suite 400, Se- attle WA 98119. He is respon- sible for product development. Wayne C. Solomon, Ph.D. ?63, received a UO chemistry alumni award in April 1995. Ellen Wedum, M.S. ?69, graduated in 1994 with Ph.D. in chemistry from Purdue University. 1970s Will Bloch Ph.D. ?70, with Sidney Bernhard, formerly a professor at Reed College, is now a research scientist with Applied Biosystems. He pre- sented a seminar at the UO in November, 1995 entitled: ?PCR Analysis of the Fragile X Syndrome: An Interface be- tween Science and Technol- ogy.? After his seminar, he made some informal com- ments and held a question- and-answer session on ?Life as a Research Scientist in the Biotech Industry.? Scott Dahlberg ?77, an electri- cal engineer for Aerospace Company, works with poly- mer coatings and composites for aircraft antennas. 9 Caroline A. Enns, Ph.D. ?76, is an associate professor in cell biology and anatomy at Oregon Health Science Uni- versity, Portland, Oregon. Michael G. Hahn ?74 is an associate professor in the Complex Carbohydrate Re- search Center and the Depart- ment of Botany at the University of Georgia (165 Sandstone Dr., Athens GA 30605). Thomas Harris (postdoctoral fellow ?75??76) is a senior re- search scientist with the Imag- ine Agents Group of Dupont Merck Pharmaceutical in Billerica, Massachusetts. Virgil C. Hebert ?70 is a mem- ber of the technical staff of Hewlett Packard Company, 1000 NE Circle Blvd., Corval- lis OR 97330. Virgil is working on the HP line of Deskjet Printers. Arthur E. Johnson, Ph.D. ?73, accepted the E. L. Wehner- Welch Foundation Chair in Chemistry in the College of Medicine at Texas A&M Uni- versity (Wehner-Welch Profes- sor, College of Medicine, Texas A&M University. Health Science Center., 116 Reynolds Medical Bldg., Col- lege Station TX 77843-1114). Neil Johnson ?70 has a re- search position with National Center of Scientific Research in Toulouse, France (Labora- toire de Pharmacologie et de Toxicologie Fondomentales, Centre National de la Recher- che Scientifique, 205 Route de Narbonne 31077, Toulouse Cedex France). Neil fre- quently visits the UO, in par- ticular the von Hippel group, and recently gave a seminar here. Francis H. Lee ?71 is vice president, Supergen (an Icl- Israel Chemicals Co.), since 1992. He was founding re- search and development director for Fujisawa Pharma- ceutical Co. in 1988; head, clinical cancer research, Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis in 1987; associate medical director, DuPont, in 1983; and assistant director, cancer re- search, Bristol-Myers in 1976. John Lemmer ?74, Keana laboratory. After graduation John attended medical school in Portland followed by resi- dencies in general and cardiothoracic surgery at the University of Michigan. He was a member of the faculty of the Department of Surgery at the University of Iowa for four years. In 1991 he re- turned to Portland, where he practices cardiac surgery at Good Samaritan Hospital. Ronald Merrill, Ph.D. ?73, operates Green Chem Tech- nologies, specializing in ca- talysis, chirality, and computation in Torrance, California. Recently he has had major consulting jobs in Switzerland. Yoon Merrill, M.S. ?73, con- ducts organic synthesis at Bachem Chemical Company. Ron and Yoon have two chil- dren. Joseph M. Owens, Ph.D. ?76, works for Rohm & Haass and lives in Pennsylvania. John T. Roe ?70 is an environ- mental health sanitarian trainee for Tillamook County Health Department. Prapon Wilairat, Ph.D. ?74, is an associate professor, De- partment of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, Rama 6 Road, Bangkok, 10400 Thailand, and was chair, 1988?92. 1980s P. Bradley Anderson ?82 is a physician in Chatanooga, Ten- nessee. Gregory Arnold ?84 received a Ph.D. in 1989 at University of Washington and is senior research scientist at DOE Pa- cific Northwest Labs. Isaac H. Babbs ?83 is regional manager, West Corporation. Richard Brudzynski (post- doctoral fellow ?86??89) is with Maxtek, a company formed from a division of Tektronix that is involved in hybrid circuit fabrication. During winter term 1995 he taught a course, Fundamen- tals of Plasma Processing, for the Semiconductor Industry at Oregon Graduate Institute in Beaverton. He reports that teaching is a lot of work! Richard Chadwick, Ph.D. ?86, is a scientist in analytical chemistry development at Allergan Optical, the eye-care division of Allergan, Inc., Irvine, California. Francis Y. Chen ?82 is a medi- cal doctor. Youngshin Lee Choi, Ph.D. ?90, is senior scientist at Hanhyo Institutes of Technol- ogy, South Korea. Kori Clement ?86 completed an M.S. in chemistry from the University of Michigan before studying law. She works as an attorney. Yuri Clingerman (Hiraiwa) ?82 is working in research and development of Nature Made Vitamins in Los Angeles. Debra Duval ?85 is a chemist with Reynolds Metals Company. Thomas Hallquist ?89 is the department manager of chem- istry at Braun Intertec N.W. (an independent testing labo- ratory). He is married with three boys (ages one, three, and seven). Pete Kelly (postdoctoral fellow ?83??86) (kelly@nomad.rice.edu) re- turned to the University of California, Davis, after a sab- batical year in Jim Kinsey?s laboratory at Rice University. Tim Laue ?88 is city councillor in Eugene. Tim founded and sold two firms, one forestry and one general contracting company. Tim continues as a consultant to these and a third firm. Jennifer J. Lu, Ph.D. ?86, and her engineer husband live in La Mirada, California, where she supervises various chemi- cal testing and manufacturing projects at IMS Company. They have two children. Rick Ludescher, Ph.D. ?84, (RICK@al.caftlvax.rutgers.edu) has received tenure at Rutgers University. Leland Mayne, Ph.D. ?88, (leland@hxiris.med.upenn.edu) of the University of Pennsyl- vania Medical Center was pictured in the August 21, 1995, issue of the Scientist because his recent paper ?The Barriers in Protein Folding,? Nature Structural Biology 1, 149 (1994) with T. R. Sosnick, R. Hiller, and S. W. Englander, is one of the most widely cited papers in this field this year. His recent coauthored paper in Science 269, 192 (1995) ?Pro- tein Folding Intermediates: Native-State Hydrogen Ex- change,? is also a must read! Sandra L. Moran ?80 is a part- ner in Pathology Consultants, Inc., 722 E. 11th Ave., Eugene. Sandy should be a contender for ?Best Educated Alumna.? She received her first B.S. in 1972 in finance and business economics; a second B.S. in 1980 in general science; an M.D. in 1985 from Oregon Health Sciences University followed by a five-year resi- dency in Medical College of Virginia, 1985?90; a one-year fellowship in dermatho- pathology (also at Medical College of Virginia), and is a practicing pathologist. 10 Christian Nielsen ?85 is inor- ganic chemist for WFR Labo- ratories in Tigard. Michael R. Paddy, Ph.D. ?84, is an assistant professor, De- partment of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Box 100235 JHMHC, University of Florida, Gainesville FL 32610- 0235. Tom Patapoff, Ph.D. ?84, works busily at Genentech in the San Francisco Bay area. Sovitj Pou, Ph.D. ?87, is fac- ulty member at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, De- partment of Pharmacology. Michael Rhodes (summer ?87?spring ?88) is a research chemist at Molecular Probes in Eugene. Ronald L. Rich (visiting fac- ulty member ?84) and is pub- lishing in J. Chem. Educ., two articles are in press. Klaus Rudolp, Ph.D. ?86, is research chemist with Thomae Pharmaceuticals in Bibesach, Germany (Thomae Chemisch-pharmazeutische- Fabrik, Postfach 1755, D-7950 Biberach an der Riss; Ger- many). Michael W. Scherz, Ph.D. ?89, thesis: ?Synthesis and Struc- ture-Activity Relationships of Compounds Useful in the Isolation and Pharmacological Characterization of the Haloperiodol-Sensitive Sigma Receptor and the Nmethyl-D- Aspartate/PCP Receptor Complex.? He is a research scientist at Proctor & Gamble Pharmaceuticals, Miami Val- ley Laboratories, Cincinnati OH 45239-8707. Roseanne Sension (post- doctoral fellow ?86??89) (rsension@umich.edu) is an assistant professor, Depart- ment of Chemistry, University of Michigan. Two of her fed- eral grant applications have been funded. She recently Julie Arras ?93 received master?s degree in forensic science from George Washing- ton University. Bluegrass Biggs ?95 is in graduate school at University of California, Irvine. Pilar Bradshaw (Benda) ?91 received her M.D. degree from the Oregon Health Sciences University in June 1995. David Brinkley ?94 (honors) is a graduate student in sur- face science at the University of Washington. Sui Xiong Cai, Ph.D. ?90, the- sis title: ?Development of Novel Photolabeling and Crosslinking Reagents for Biological and Lithographic Applications,? is group leader of research chemists at CoCensys/Acea, Irvine, California. Valerie De Lamer, M.S. ?92, is senior research chemist at Finorga, Lyon, France. Christian M. Dinsmore (sum- mer ?92?spring ?94, Oregon Heart Association Fellow, Keana laboratory) is accepted to medical school for fall 1996. Anne Glenn (postdoctoral fellow ?90??92) is assistant professor of chemistry at Guilford College in Pennsylvania. Denis Glenn (fall ?90?spring ?92, Keana laboratory) is in the M.D.-Ph.D. program at Oregon Health Sciences University. John Grunkemeier ?91 is working on a Ph.D. in bioengineering at the Univer- sity of Washington. John Hagadorn ?93 is carrying out graduate work with John Arnold at University of Cali- fornia, Berkeley, Department of Chemistry. Laura Harper ?95 (honors) (laharper@students.wisc.edu) is a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Darren Holmes (fall ?88?sum- mer ?90, Keana laboratory) (holmes@carbon.ps.uci.edu) obtained his Ph.D. at Univer- sity of Nevada, Reno in 1994 and is completing a post- doctoral year at University of California, Irvine, with Pro- fessor James Novick. Takaaki Horaguchi, professor of chemistry and chairman of the department, Niigata Uni- versity, Japan, spent two months during summer 1994 conducting heterogeneous catalytic research in LeRoy Klemm?s laboratory. He con- tinues this research in Japan. Yong Hyong, Ph.D. ?95, holds a postdoctoral position at Na- tional Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. Tricia Igawa ?92 is working temporarily as a coordinator for international relations on the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program in Japan. Barry Johnson, M.S. ?93, is a research chemist at DuPont Merck. Erin Johnston ?91 is research scientist at Molecular Probes. Now works for Industrial Adhesives as an organic chemist. Jerrick Juliette, Ph.D. ?93, holds a postdoctoral position with John Gladysz at Univer- sity of Utah, Department of Chemistry. Josh Kehoe ?95 entered medi- cal school at Oregon Health Sciences University. Daniel Koos, Ph.D. ?91, is a member of technical staff, semiconductor products sec- tor, Motorola, Mesa, Arizona. Wai Leung Lau ?95 entered the biophysics program at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania as a returned from Montpellier, France, where she attended the International Congress on Photosynthesis. Upon her return she taught freshman chemistry for the second time. Vicky Shannon (postdoctoral fellow ?85??88) is a senior pro- cess support engineer with Novellus Systems and has applied for a NASA mission specialist position. Consult your newspaper about the latest astronaut! M.S. Shashidhar (post- doctoral fellow ?87??90). Shashi is a scientist, Division of Or- ganic Chemistry (Synthesis), National Chemical Laboratory, Pune 411 008, India. Jun Wang ?89 is a post- doctoral fellow at Harvard Medical School, Department of Biology, Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, 240 Longwood Ave., Boston MA 02155. Ronald Wassom ?86 (under- graduate minor; graduate studies ?90; teaching assistant ?85??86) is a chemistry and calculus teacher at Burns High School and 21st-Century Site Council chair. Scott Wong (B.S.), a graduate student in the Department of Pharmacology at the Univer- sity of Washington, working with Professor Dan Storm, got married this August. Paul Yoger, Ph.D. ?85, was just promoted to full professor of chemistry at the University of Washington. 1990s Mark Anderson ?90 com- pleted a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from Arizona State University and is employed in polymer chemistry by Neste in Springfield. 11 graduate student in fall 1995. Alistair J. Leigh (postdoctoral fellow ?91??92) is a process chemist at Cell Therapeutics Inc., 201 Elliott Ave. West, Suite 400, Seattle WA 98119. Eric Mah ?95 (honors) is in Taiwan refining his Chinese (?The classes are easy?!, he reports) and enjoying the con- trast between Taipai and Eu- gene. Jeff Manus ?95 works at Borden Chemical in Spring- field. Laura Markham, Ph.D. ?95, (markham@cemvax.cem.msu.edu) has finished her thesis and is now at the Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University. She recently sub- mitted a paper to the Journal of Physical Chemistry. Pamela Oldfield Mouser ?92 (Oregon Heart Association Fellow) is in the M.D.-Ph.D. program at University of Cali- fornia, Los Angeles. James A. Navratil, M.S. ?95, rejoined Amgen as a research chemist. Jonathan D. Ngo ?91 is a graduate pharmacy student at University of the Pacific. Sarah ?Betty? Philip ?94 en- tered the master of science program at Oregon Health Sciences University in fall ?95. Thomas Rush III, Ph.D. ?95, holds a postdoctoral position in Spiro?s laboratory at Princeton University. Bryon Severns ?90 completed an M.S. degree in chemistry at New Mexico State University and is synthesizing potential antiglaucoma agents at Alcon Labs, Fort Worth, Texas. He has three children. Tommy Thompson ?95 is the starting punter for the San Francisco 49ers! Maureen Wang, M.S. ?92, is chemist-computer specialist at Neste Resins Corp., Spring- field. Yong Wang, Ph.D. ?90, active postdoctoral fellow at Massa- chusetts Institute of Technol- ogy in the chemistry and physics departments. Paul Wash ?91 is in the chem- istry Ph.D. program at the University of Nevada, Reno. Scott Wong (summer ?88? spring ?91, 1990 American Heart Association Fellow, Keana laboratory) (scotydog@u.washington.edu) is in the M.D.-Ph.D. program at the University of Washing- ton. Yexin Wu, Ph.D. ?90, thesis title: ?Synthesis and Modifica- tion of Electron Opaque La- bels for High Resolution Electron Microscopy. New Reagents for Electron Spin Resonance, Spin Labeling and Spin Trapping Applications,? is a research chemist at Mo- lecular Probes, Inc. in Eugene. Mingdi Yan, Ph.D. ?94, thesis title: ?Functionalized Perfluorophenyl Azides for Solid Surface Modification and Bioconjugation, and Functionalization of C60. Fab- rication of Submicron-Size Gold and Biomolecular Pat- terns Using Electron Beam Lithography.? Hua Zheng, M.S. ?95, is a research chemist at Eli Lilly in Indianapolis, Indiana. IN MEMORIAM Eric Todd Buechler, a gradu- ate student who had just completed his first year with David Tyler?s research group, died September 7, 1995, in an automobile accident. Todd was on his way to becoming an accomplished chemist, and he is missed. Friends and colleagues organized a me- morial in his honor. A Japa- nese flowering cherry tree was planted in the front lawn of Oregon Hall in November 1995. Accompanying the tree is an inscribed bronze plaque, ?In Loving Memory of our Friend, Eric Todd Buechler, 1969?1995?. John M. Macauley ?55 died on October 26, 1995. He wrote to the department from his home in Salem, Oregon, as recently as January 1995. In his letter John mentioned how much he?d enjoyed his chemistry courses over the years, from general chemistry through advanced analytical and theoretical chemistry. One of his professors was Adolph Heineman, a world- class chemist knowledgeable in alcohol chemistry, who had served as a fuels expert with Werner Von Braun in Germany during World War II. After the Korean War, John returned to the UO and graduated in 1955. Carolyn E. Ritter ?51, M.Ed. ?66, died in June 1991. LeRoy E. Smith ?33 died Oc- tober 26, 1994, of Alzheimer?s disease at age eighty-three. He received a degree in chemistry from the Univer- sity of Oregon in 1933 and a master?s degree in chemistry from Oregon State College in 1937. He was employed by Rayonier Inc. for sixteen years at Hoquiam, Washing- ton, and by Weyerhaeuser Inc. for twenty-one years at Everett, Washington. At Weyerhaeuser he was respon- sible for environmental pro- tection activities. He retired in 1974. His wife, Pauline Smith, gave us a glimpse of the UO in the 1930s in her December 1994 letter. ?I was attending Cor- vallis in 1932 when their School of Education was ex- changed for Science. The next summer, therefore, I trans- ferred to the U of O?met LeRoy swimming in the mill race and we were married two years later. He received a fellowship to O.S.C. in 1935. LeRoy was to receive a half fellowship for $27 a month. However, he was given an- other section and then an- other plus some work in the stock room, making between $75 and $100 a month. We ended the two years with a baby ($100) a car ($100) and $100. He worked as an assayer (his minor was metal- lurgy for both fire and chemi- cal at Champion Mine out of Cottage Grove, and when the mine went down at the end of the summer we went job hunting and got on at Rayonier. Back to Oregon. . . . I took first year chemistry from Mr. Stafford. He had written his own text that con- sisted of two large mimeo- graphed books. The University enrollment was about 3,000. The previous year I believe Dr. Roger Will- iams taught organic and Dr. Shinn taught physical chem- istry. Mr. Kuntz and Mr. Strong worked in the depart- ment. Dr. Shinn helped my husband find the speed of a bullet in various aspects of its flight. I remember the large replica of a meteorite on the porch of the chemistry build- ing. LeRoy tended two wood furnaces for two sororities and mowed their lawns. His R.O.T.C. stipend helped pay for tuition. He received a three stripe Oregon sweater for being on the rifle team and was a major in the final R.O.T.C. parade. We were married 59 years, 57 of them wonderful until Alzheimers. However, four years is shorter than many have to endure, and he died very quietly.? John Zepp ?83 died of mela- noma in 1993. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Department of Chemistry 1253 University of Oregon Eugene OR 97403-1253 Nonprofit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Eugene OR Permit No. 63 12 ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTED Visit us on the World Wide Web The Chemistry Department now has a Home Page on the World Wide Web. The URL is http:// oregon.uoregon.edu/~chem/index.html. This page may be accessed from the University of Oregon Home Page by starting with http://www.uoregon.edu/ and choosing ?Campus, Administrative, and Departmental Informa- tion? then ?College of Arts and Sciences? and then ?Chemistry Department?. Our home page includes a complete list of our faculty and descriptions of their research and pictures. Undergraduates and graduate degree requirements are posted as well as hyperlinks to other interesting chemistry sites. We will update our home page regularly, so stop by and take a look. CHEMISTRY NEWS An annual publication distributed to Chemistry alumni, postdoctoral fellows and friends of the department Editor O. Hayes Griffith Coordinating Editor Polly Habliston Alumni Relations Committee Virgil Boekelheide Hayes Griffith Bob Mazo Design and Production Office of University Publications Printing UO Printing Services The University of Oregon affirms and actively promotes the right of all individuals to equal opportunity in educa- tion and employment at this institution without regard to race, color, sex, national origin, age, religion, marital status, disability, veteran status, sexual orientation, or any other extraneous consideration not directly and substantively related to effective perfor- mance. This policy imple- ments all applicable federal, state, and local laws, regula- tions, and executive orders. Direct related inquiries to the Office of Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity, 474 Oregon Hall, 5221 University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403- 5221; telephone (541) 346-3123, TDD (541) 346-1021. This publication will be made available in accessible formats upon request. P1295B1876