Constance Bailey’s ’10 Enduring Fascination with Polyenes

Connie checked in by email from the Keatinge-Clay lab at the University of Texas-Austin graduate school today. She says, “I very much enjoy reading your news blog to see what my classmates are up to!”

She also asked a question about “non-enzyme mediated pericyclic rearangements” that might be a little too technical for readers who haven’t taken Chemistry 324, so I’ll just skip to the bottom line. Connie closes, “PS – I probably wouldn’t be so fascinated by these polyene natural products
if it weren’t for taking your class my junior year, so thank you.”

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Jesse Tobin ’09 Plans to Make Her Mark at New Mexico Tech

After graduating from Reed two years ago, Jesse (formerly Look) has interned at the Washington State Patrol crime lab in Seattle and discovered an interest in explosives. Or, maybe the interest was already there when she arrived at Reed? The last time I attended a Chem 101 lecture, the profs were busy blowing up hydrogen-filled balloons and the students were cheering like mad.

Jesse has decided to go “professional” with her interests. She has applied and been accepted into the engineering program at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology or NMT for fall 2012. “Should be awesome fun!” she writes.

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Jessica Hacker ’06 to Begin Training as Dentist

Jessica has acquired some interesting experiences since her graduation from Reed. She has conducted laboratory research at OHSU, volunteered as a courtroom mentor-advocate for foster children in the Portland area and teamed up with US dentists in third-world clinics. Along with all this, she has also taken courses at PSU to support her application to dental school. Today we received news that all of Ica’s hard work has paid off!

Jessica writes, “I have been accepted at the University of Minnesota School of Dentistry and awarded the Dean’s Scholarship to do research this summer.” Congratulations.

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Paul Whittredge ’12 Sets Record for 2 Mile Journey

I just picked this news up from the Reed Magazine blog:

Chem major Paul Whittredge ’12 shattered a
longstanding Reed track record on Saturday, running two miles in 10:21.7
seconds, and demolishing the previous time, which had stood since 1956,
by almost 17 seconds. His training partner, Jack Flowers ’15, also beat the old record, finishing just four seconds behind Paul. (for rest of story and photo see “Chem Major Shatters Track Record”)

The fact that the old record has been around nearly as long as I have (b. 1955), and that Paul and Jack had to travel off-campus for their run, makes me wonder: would more Reedies take up running if we had a better track? The Reed magazine also mentions that Paul’s thesis project involves ‘zinc fingers’. Here’s a Wikipedia link that will help the curious get started on this topic.

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Alumni News from Reed Magazine, June ’11

The summer issue of the Reed magazine illustrated once again why reading about Reedies is a never-ending source of fascination and entertainment. Featured articles described the (then) upcoming centennial and investigations of the paranormal alongside the traditional nod to ancient Greek philosophers. And on top of all that one learned some of the surprising ways in which chemistry has percolated into the lives of students, alumni, faculty, and friends of the College.

“Nuclear Scrounge” (p. 8) described what is “easily the most significant event in the history of [Reed’s nuclear] reactor,” namely, its refueling with 91 uranium fuel rods obtained from the University of Arizona. The fuel had originally been destined for a federal storage depository, but will now live a new half-life powering the Reed reactor for decades to come. “Force Majeure” (p. 27) a profile of Prof. Darius Rejali [political science, 1989-present], revealed that Darius’ father spent 11 years studying chemistry in the United States and earned a doctorate in chemistry from Temple University.

The Class Notes section mentioned at least four Reed chemists … The Oregonian featured Luke Kanies ’96 (Puppet Labs) in an article about Portland’s open software industry … The Union-Bulletin of Walla Walla, Washington described the homecoming of Alison Madsen ’00 and her new medical practice at the Family Medical Center in Walla Walla … and a whole slew of Reed science alums, including Becky Phillips ’10 and Megan Brophy ’10, squeezed together for a photo from the wedding of biologist Molly Schumer ’09 and mathematician Josh O-Rourke ’09.

In Memoriam also notified us of the passing of several Reed chemists and friends of the college. Alan Loren Dean ’41, emeritus trustee, came to Reed “fascinated with inorganic chemistry” and had hoped to become a chemical engineer some day, but graduated in political science instead. As he told an interviewer in 2004, “After taking a year of chemistry at Reed, and getting into a fair amount of organic chemistry, I said, ‘I’m not going to spend my life brooding over these complicated carbon rings.” Well said. Classmate Louis George Stang ’41 apparently found “carbon rings” to his liking because, even though a devotee of the Eliot chapel’s pipe organ, he stayed on course to graduate Phi Beta Kappa in chemistry. From Reed he migrated to Caltech for additional studies before joining the Manhattan Project in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Robert Oppenheimer, the Project’s director, assigned Louis the job of producing 50 curies of “barium-lanthanum-140” and Oppenheimer’s team then had the hubris to bet “one nickel” that Louis would not succeed. Undeterred, Stang and his team constructed a special laboratory and invented new equipment for preparing and handling the radioactive isotopes. Not surprisingly, the nickel became the Stang family’s most prized possession. The Reed college career of David Petri Pearson ’49 was interrupted by military service in World War II, but he returned to Reed to complete his BA in chemistry and marry his classmate, Patricia M. Cowan ’49. After earning a PhD in physical chemistry from the University of Southern California, Dave had a multifaceted career that included stints as a research chemist at Phillips Petroleum, the Oregon Graduate Center, and Portland General Electric, as well as teaching chemistry at Portland State University and Southern Oregon College.

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Good News Finds Luc Boisvert

There have been a number of new faces in the Chemistry building this year and last. One of the first arrivals was visiting assistant professor, Luc Boisvert. Luc started at Reed in Fall 2010 as a two-year sabbatical replacement for Pat McDougal and Alan Shusterman. Prior to that, Luc had been a postdoctoral researcher in the organometallic research group of Prof. Karen Goldberg in the U. Washington Chemistry department.

During his time at Reed, Luc has been heavily involved in the teaching of several organic chemistry courses (201, 202, 343). Luc has also created an active research program (three thesis students in 2010-11) that is focused on the development of new homogeneous catalysts for organic synthesis.

So what was the “good news”? Last month Luc and a few of his Reed colleagues gathered to celebrate his birthday and his acceptance of a tenure-track appointment as chemistry professor at the University of Puget Sound. Congratulations, Luc, and bon voyage!

LucBoisvert2010_small.jpg
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Alan Shusterman and Dan Gamelin ’90 Elected AAAS Fellows

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world’s largest general scientific society, recently announced the election of 76 chemists to be Fellows of the Society. These fellows, who are recognized by their peers for their “efforts on behalf of the advancement of science or its applications” that “are scientifically or socially distinguished,” include University of Washington chemistry professor, Dan Gamelin ’90 and Reed College chemistry professor Alan Shusterman, 1989-present. (A complete list of the 2011 Fellows can be found in the “AAAS News & Notes” section of Science, Dec. 23, 2011.)

Dan’s thesis at Reed was titled, “I’m picking up good vibrations, they’re giving me excitations: resonance raman spectroscopic studies of group 6 transition metal carbonyls.” That early interest in the spectroscopy of metal-containing compounds has stuck. Dan currently leads a research team that employs an assortment of spectroscopic methods to investigate “new multifunctional inorganic materials” such as magnetic semiconductor quantum dots.

The AAAS elected Alan for his efforts at “introducing computational chemistry into undergraduate organic chemistry courses and for the use of quantum chemical calculations for quantitative structure activity relationships.” These activities, particularly the use of molecular modeling tools in teaching, have been a consistent theme throughout Alan’s teaching career. He is currently working on the design and development of computational chemistry apps for the iPad in conjunction with his long-time collaborator, Prof. Warren Hehre, founder and president of Wavefunction (Irvine, CA).

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News from Reed Magazine, March ’11

The Spring issue of Reed Magazine delivered all kinds of
chemical tidbits to its readers …

p. 4. Terry Steinborn ’68 wrote a letter challenging the
integrity of Reed’s new geosciences-free environmental studies program. The
magazine’s editor replied by pointing out that Reed has no geology
department, a situation that cannot be rectified without major new financial
support. The editor then extended an invitation to its readers to “remedy the
situation.”

p. 7. A description of the retirement party for long-time assistant
to Reed presidents and friend to Reed chemists, Kathy Rose. Kathy was already a
fixture in the president’s office when most of the current Reed chemistry faculty
were hired and we wish her well.

archers_ReedMag_March11.gif
p. 11. Meg Turney Fried ’79 supplied a chemistry-themed caption for the above photo to
win the Reed Magazine’s caption contest. Her entry, “Professor Cronyn, we
respectfully request that the chem exam be postponed until next week!”
and the fact that Meg was not a chemistry major, attest to the legendary difficulty of Marsh Cronyn’s (chemistry professor 1952-89) organic chemistry exams.

p. 45. A synopsis of the newly published, “Encyclopedia of
Weather and Climate Change: A Complete Visual Guide
” (University of California Press, 2010). The encyclopedia was created by a five author team that included Reed’s environmental chemistry professor, Juliane
Fry
. The encyclopedia’s many and varied entries evoke the global reach of our
planet’s weather systems and help readers learn to think critically about the
notion of a “local” weather forecast.

The Class Notes section reported on Terry Steinborn ’68 (see p. 4) activities. Currently semi-retired, Terry lives in Prescott, Arizona and keeps “very busy” teaching at Yavapai College, playing competitive bridge, and helping his artist wife. An “alumna profile” of Beverly Karplus Hartline ’71 revealed that she is Associate Provost for Research and Dean of Graduate Studies at the University of the District of Columbia. Her long career has seen her in various posts, including stints as project director for construction of DOE’s Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility, and as assistant director of the White House Office of Science Technology Policy where she once had to respond to a citizen letter asking, “wouldn’t it make more sense if the element sodium, now known by the symbol Na, was instead listed as SOD?” (I wonder what she makes of Marsh Cronyn’s ’40 (chemistry professor 1952-89) famous suggestion to slide hydrogen into the center of the periodic table?) Beverly is currently working on what is arguably a more important problem than the labeling of sodium or the placement of hydrogen, why are there so few women and minorities in science? Finally, we learned that recent graduate, Lindsay Deis ’09, has enrolled in a biochemistry doctoral program at Duke University.

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Monitoring Rocky Mountain Aerosols with Julie Fry

Most chemists look for a high-class lab to conduct experiments in, but not Julie Fry, Reed’s roving environmental chemist. She takes a more DIY approach, setting up her camp (and a lab of sorts) wherever her research program takes her. This past summer that zest for measurement led her and her assistants, Danielle Draper ’13 and Kyle Zarzana, to set up shop high in the Rocky Mountains (elev. 8465 feet) where they dodged daily afternoon thunderstorm and lightning strikes, swatted mosquitoes, and trapped tiny bits of sticky stuff called “aerosols.”

If you are interested in learning more about Julie’s brand of ‘outdoor’ chemistry, visit her research web page. Julie has just posted a photo montage of last summer’s field campaign, BEACHON-RoMBAS 2011, and slides of her presentation summarizing her team’s measurements on the role of organic nitrates in secondary aerosol formation. (Most Reedies will not be mystified by the flag that Julie is holding in one photo, but do you realize how it connects with her research program?)

Julie is currently on sabbatical at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Science (NOAA-CIRES) in Boulder, Colorado.

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Jeremy Kua ’96 Named Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar

The Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation is well known among chemists for its many years of generous support for chemistry education and research. The Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Awards program, in particular, is designed to support “the research
and teaching careers of talented young faculty in the chemical sciences” by making an unrestricted research grant of $60,000 to faculty who have demonstrated
“accomplishment in scholarly
research with undergraduates, as well as a compelling commitment to
teaching.”

Almost needless to say, knowing all of this just adds to the immense pleasure of reporting that Jeremy Kua, an associate professor of chemistry at University of San Diego, is one of just 6 award recipients for 2011. Congratulations!

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