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08/09/2002
- Stony Brook and Brookhaven
National Lab will sponsor a Workshop
on Electron-Phonon Effects in Nanostructures on Sept 23 - 25
- The Department of Chemistry
congratulates Professors Fowler, Lauher
and Chu for having been awarded Special
Creativity Extension Awards by NSF. the National Science Foundation makes
such awards to offer the most creative investigators an extended opportunity
to attack adventurous, 'high risk' opportunities in the same general research
area, but not necessarily covered by their original/current proposals.
08/08/2002
07/16/2002
05/28/2002
- Posted Dr.
John Piwinski's inspiring
address
to graduates at the 2002 Departmental Commencement. It should make
all of us proud to be chemists.
05/24/2002
-
Two students
working in the Chemistry Department received research awards at the May
1 Celebration of Undergraduate Achievements. The Sigma Xi Award in the Physical
Sciences went to Sheila Shokrian, a
junior Pharmacology major working with Prof.
Stan Wong. Her project was entitled "The Encapsulation of
Silver Sulfadiazine with a Silica Shell." Brookhaven Science Associates
Awards in the Physical Sciences went to Sheila
and to Patrick Schreiber, whose work,
with Prof. Scott Sieburth
(now at Temple University), was entitled "Pyridone [4 + 4] Photochemistry."
Patrick, a BCH major, graduated on May
17 and will attend Stony Brook School of Medicine in the Fall.
05/20/2002
-
- Ten undergraduates
will participate in the Department's REU program this summer. They come from
such diverse places as the State of Washington, Ohio, Minnesota, California,
New Jersey, Georgia, New Jersey and New York. They will begin their summer
program during the first week in June.
05/13/2002
The following
are the recipients of Sigma Xi Awards:
05/10/2002
The
2002 Commencement Ceremony will take place next Friday, May 17 at 9:00 AM.
The following individuals will be honored at the ceremony:
-
Xudong
Geng (Iwao
Ojima) - Maria Tzamarioudaki Memorial Award
for Outstanding Doctoral Student
-
Yuguo
Feng (Peter
Tonge) - Lee Myers Award for Outstanding Doctoral
Chemistry Student
-
Xiang
He (Peter
Tonge) - Chemistry Award for Outstanding Doctoral
Student
-
Yin
Ye (Nicole
Sampson) - Chemistry Award for Outstanding
Doctoral Student
-
Jiaquan
Wu (Peter
Tonge) - Chemistry Award for Excellence in
Doctoral Research
-
Sharada
Sivaraman (Peter
Tonge) - Chemistry Award for Excellence in
Doctoral Research
-
Brian
Foster (Peter
Tonge) - Chemistry First-Year Teaching Assistant
Award
In addition,
two of our graduate students were selected as recipients of the prestigious
President's Award to Distinguished Doctoral Students
which will be presented at the Distinguished Doctoral Awards Colloquium on
May 15.
04/25/2002
-
In
recognition of his outstanding contributions as an educator and scholar,
Bob
Kerber has been appointed Distinguished
Teaching Professor
04/23/2002
-
SUNY
Chancellor King will honor Iwao
Ojima and other Stony Brook faculty at a ceremony celebrating
SUNY's inventors and enterpreneurs. Prof. Ojima joins four other
USB faculty in the category Premier Inventor.
04/03/2002
-
We
note with sadness the passing of Prof. Ted Goldfarb.
Ted joined the Chemistry Department in 1959 and lost a courageous battle
with leukemia. (Provst
Robert McGrath's announcement)
03/29/2002
-
The Chemistry
department has been selected to receive a Presidential Mini-Grant Award
for Innovative Teaching Projects in the amount of $2,500.00. Marge
Kandel put great effort into the preparation of this proposal
and her efforts are greatly appreciated. These funds will augment funds
on hand for the undergraduate program, specifically, Senior Laboratory Projects
in Chemistry (CHE 482).
03/25/2002
03/02/2002
- Bob
Schneider has been selected to receive a President's
and Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching, joining seven
of his colleagues who have received that distinction.
02/28/2002
- Alexei
Khokhlov (Professor, Moscow State University
and Adjunct Professor at Stony Brook) was awarded the Wolfgang
Paul Award by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in Berlin last
November.
02/26/2002
-
Kwadwo
Bonsu, a biochemistry major undergraduate student at SUNYSB,
has just become the ACS Scholar 2001-2002. The news has been published
in the Feb 18, 2002 issue of C&E News. Mr. Bonsu has been working in
the Chu/Hsiao
group on a biodegradable polymer project for biomedical applications.
02/13/2002
This
year's Service Awards Ceremony honored four Chemistry Department members:
02/12/2002
-
James
Lightstone, a graduate student working with Professor
Michael White, has been chosen by the Department of Energy as one
of twenty two graduate students nationwide to participate in the 52nd Meeting
of Nobel laureates to held in Lindau, Germany this coming July. This meeting
provides an opportunity for outstanding students to interact with former
Nobel Prize winners and other students from around the world in an informal
setting. This year's meeting highlights research in chemistry and will
involve the participation of more than twenty Nobel laureates and approximately
400 students world-wide. Jim is a recent graduate of Southampton
College (LIU) where he received his B.S. degree in Chemistry in 1999
and where he developed and interest in physical chemistry through his interactions
with Southampton's Prof. Susan Oatis (Ph.D,
USB - Philip Johnson, 1990),
a longtime BNL collaborator. From the summer of his sophomore year, until
the start of graduate studies at Stony brook in the Fall of 2000,
01/30/2002
-
Congratulations
to Yeon-Hee Lim, of the Sieburth
group, whose poster was awarded ‘Best of Show’ at the Second Annual Graduate
Student Poster Session, held January 24th at Drexel University and sponsored
by the Philadelphia Section of the American Chemical Society. The competition
included graduate students from Drexel University, Fox Chase Cancer Research
Institute, Temple University, Rutgers University, University of Pennsylvania,
Widener University. The title of her poster was "Progress Toward Total
Synthesis of Fusicoccin A via [4+4] Photocycloaddition"
01/25/2002
- Arthur
Suits of the Department of Chemistry and Brookhaven National Laboratory
has announced the development of a novel imaging method, known as "ion pair
imaging spectroscopy," that may help better understand the properties of previously
hard-to-study molecules. The new method, featured in the December
21 issue of Science, is comparable to photoelectron spectroscopy, according
to Prof. Suits, but instead of ejecting an electron and looking at its energy
to determine the energy levels of the ion left behind, it involves ejecting
a negatively charged ion and using its energy to determine the energy levels
of the positively charged ion left behind.
- A note from Intel
Semifinalist, Sherman Jia
Dear Professor Chu and
Mr. Wan,Thank you so much for letting me research at SUNY Stonybrook this summer
and last summer. The experience was amazing and i really learned a lot. I'm
very happy to also tell you that I've just been named an Intel Semifinalist,
and I am very grateful for your help. Mr. Wan, you have been an
incredible guide for
me and i hope we keep in touch in the future. Professor Chu, I would never have
acheived so much if you hadn't helped me in the first place. Thank you both
so much!!Sincerely,
Sherman Jia