Department Newletter

Students enjoy a walk on campus in the spring.
July, 2004
We want to tell you what is happening in the Chemistry Department at
Valparaiso University, and we also want to let you know about your
classmates.
Dr. Gil Cook has retired from
teaching after the Spring Semester of 2004. He, however, has been
appointed as a Senior Research Professor by Valparaiso University
President Alan Harre. So he will still have an office in Neils
Science Center doing research while using his retirement income to
support himself and his wife Nancy. He was co-author with some
former VU chemistry students of two professional papers since the last
Chemistry Newsletter was written last summer. One paper appeared
in Tetrahedron Letters with
Julie
Waddle ('03) as co-author, and the other paper appeared in
Letters in Organic Chemistry with
Karen Switek ('00),
Kenneth Cutler ('01) and
Allison Witt ('01) as
co-authors. The new organic chemistry professor is
Kevin Jantzi who obtained his
undergraduate degree from Goshen College and will receive his Ph.D.
from University of Wisconsin (Madison) this July. There are five
undergraduate students working on research this summer under the
direction of
Drs. Steve Engerer, Tom
Goyne, Jon Schoer, and Gil Cook.
Dr. Martin Erhardt developed a new
course entitled
Science, Faith &
Vocation, which is a three-week travel course to England.
The purpose of the course is to help students explore how scientists
who also are Christians reconcile faith and science, as well as the
significance of vocation in the life of Christians. The students
will tour sites of scientific and historical significance in England
such as Oxford, London and Cambridge. Using the lives of
distinguished scientists Robert Boyle, Michael Faraday and James Clerk
Maxwell as examples, students will investigate why science is a
significant vocation for Christians. The course runs from May 17
through June 7, and it is cross-listed with the chemistry and physics
departments as well as with Christ College and the Graduate
School.
Drs. Warren Kosman
and
Steve Engerer and
extensively involved in plans for the new science building.
Dr. Kosman also is continuing his
involvement in the pig farm odor abatement project that he has been
working on for the past few years.
The VU chapter (Beta Sigma) of
Phi
Lambda Upsilon, a National Honorary Chemical Society, inducted
14 new undergraduate members at the annual Chemistry Awards
Banquet. The new members are
Matt
Augustine, Brian Bock, Katie Boone, Jeff Cox, Aaron Gingrich, Kevin
Knutson, Jessie Mattmiller, Dawn Mikelionis, Kyle Miner, Laura Nader,
Eric Rindal, Tim Rogers, Greg Slavik, and
Chris Weber. The speaker this
year was
Susan Spaeth ('85)
who is Managing Partner for Operations, Townsend and Townsend and Crew,
Palo Alto, CA. The next day, Susan spoke at the Chemistry
Seminar. The title of her talk was "What the Heck is a Patent? -
and Why Should I Care?" Susan was joined during the visit to VU
by her classmate,
Kris (Kolterman)
Fox ('85).
Other awards given at the banquet were as follows:
Andrew Mutka (St. Louis, MO) and
Amanda Taticek (New Berlin, WI)
received the
CRC General Chemistry
Achievement Award;
Pauline
Campbell (Warsaw, IN) and
Alexis
Di Silvestro (New Castle, PA) received the
Undergraduate Award for Achievement in
Organic Chemistry.
Eric
Rindal (Aurora, IL) received the
Undergraduate Award in Analytical Chemistry.
Jeff Cox (Auburn, IN)and
Aaron Gingerich (Maryville, IL)
received the
Charles W. Wolf
Memorial Scholarship, awarded to the outstanding junior
premed-chemistry major.
Elizabeth
Baden (Anderson, IN) received the
American Institute of Chemists 2004 Award.
Ben Lovaasen (Minneapolis, MN)
and
Mike Sjoding (Salem, OR)
received the
Outstanding Senior
Chemist Award.
In addition to these awards, our chemistry majors received other
honors.
Matt Pappas was
inducted into
Tau Beta Pi,
the engineering honor society.
Ryan
Williams won the concerto competition held in the spring by the
Department of Music. He played a piano concerto by
Shostakovich. Eight junior chemistry juniors received
2003 Lumina Scholars Awards (for
juniors who have a GPA of 3.6 or higher). They are
Katie Boone, Jeff Cox, Eleanor Goetsch,
Adrian Harvey, Kevin Knutson, Dawn Mikelionis, Tim Rogers, and
Greg Slavik. Fourteen
chemistry majors were honored at the 2003 Student Athletes' Academic
Honors Banquet for athletes who have a GPA of 3.25 or higher after at
least three semesters at Valparaiso University. The students were
Matt Augustine (baseball),
Laura Bingham (track/cross country),
Katie Boone (basketball),
Christopher Butler (soccer),
Sean Conrin (swimming),
Joseph Dwyer (track),
Kevin Knutson (football),
Mark Landmeier (cross country and
track),
Lindsey Moore
(volleyball),
Lauren Nettenstrom
(swimming),
Kelly Owens
(track),
Evan Roller (tennis),
Lynnae Skogerboe (soccer and
track) and
Jenna Stangler
(basketball). At this banquet, the
Laurel
Award is given to the graduating senior student-athlete who
achieved the highest cumulative grade point average. This year
chemistry major
Mark Landmeier
received the award. In the 13 years that his award has been given
(1992 through 2004) there have been 7 chemistry majors who have won the
award. They are
Ann (Stein)
Schwartz ('92), Debbie (Edmondson) Kinnamon ('93), Marc Riedl ('94),
Brad Peters ('98), Mark Kerins ('00), Kristin Nissen ('01) and
now
Mark Landmeier ('04).
The
Finishing at the Top
award was begun in 1997 to honor graduating senior student-athletes who
earned a cumulative grade point average above 3.9. Three
additional chemistry majors have won this award. Namely,
Matt Dalhgren ('97), Laura Kulans ('97)
and
Alison Eicher ('99).
This year a
Phi Beta Kappa
chapter was established at Valparaiso University. Four chemistry
majors were inducted into the Eta of Indiana Chapter. These
students were
Mark Landmeier
(St. Charles, IL),
Brian Linert
(Valparaiso, IN),
Lauren Nettenstrom
(Hartland, WI) and
Chris Weber
(Waukesha, WI). Three chemistry majors were among eleven seniors
selected for the
Alumni Association
Distinguished Student Awards. They were
Liz Baden, Samantha Rudzinski,
and
Mike Sjoding.
Liz Baden was also one of the
five students (out of 120 student entries) selected as having performed
the most outstanding undergraduate research in VU's
Celebration of Undergraduate Scholarship
event.
Liz Baden
graduated with
Honors in
Chemistry. The following twelve seniors graduated
Summa Cum Laude (GPA of at least
3.8/4.0):
Liz Baden, Pat Butcher,
Julie Fisher, Kasey Hammond, Lisa Holmes, Emily Hoovey, Milena Jani,
Mark Landmeier, Brian Linert, Benjamin Lovaasen, Matt Pappas and
Mike Sjoding.
The Chemistry Department at VU remains in the scholarship program of
the Dow Chemical Company foundation. The program provides four
annual $3,000 merit scholarships that are renewable for four
years. Current scholarship holders for 2003-2004 are
Greg Slavik (senior),
Erin Arndt (junior),
Deborah Steffen (sophomore), and
Tyler Nusbaum (freshman).
There were 14 chemistry alumni who came to the
25th Annual "Standup" Luncheon.
Be sure to stop by for the
26th
Annual "Standup" Luncheon, which will be held in the lobby of
Neils Science Center on Homecoming Saturday, October 9, 2004 from 11:00
AM through 1:00 PM. Be sure to stop in and chat with us and with
your former classmates. On the preceding day, Friday, October 8
we will be having the
8th Annual
Premedical Lecture. This year,
Dr. Michael Williams ('81) will be
the speaker. Mike is with Johns Hopkins Hospital Ethics Service
and Johns Hopkins Hospital Adult Hydrocephalus Program. Last
year's speaker was
Dr. Paul
Wischmeyer ('92).
This past spring we had 25 students go on a short-term mission trip to
Costa Rica and Nicaragua during their two-week spring break for the
second year. These trips are under the auspices of
International Service Learning, an
organization founded in 1993 by Rev. Michael Birnbaum who is now its
Executive Director. The particular program that these students
took part in was the Pre-Health Professions Program which gives an
opportunity for premedical, predental and nursing students to
"experience field clinical work first hand in the challenging context
of both 'outback' and urban international settings". The students
raised their own monetary support necessary for the trip. But
Christ College helped a great deal in this regard by providing the
Schweitzer Healthcare Travel Fellowships
to Christ College students who took part in the program. These
fellowships paid for two-thirds of the program expenses. Fifteen
of these students were premedical arts students and chemistry
majors. These students were
Tim
Hadley (Wausau, WI),
Dana
Hommel (Midland, MI),
Emily
Hoovey (Yorkville, IL),
Ying
Jin (Valparaiso, IN),
Kathleen
Madden (Arlington Heights, IL),
Steve
McGreal (Louisville, KY),
Kyle
Miner (Waukesha, WI),
Kerri
Nanney (Hutchinson, KS),
Melanie
Ravinera (Chicago, IL),
Eric
Rindal (Aurora, IL),
Karrissa
Schmaling (Delavan, WI),
Kristi
Von Trebra (Cedarburg, WI),
Chris
Weber (Waukesha, WI),
Paul
Willis (Gresham, OR) and
Cory
Wood (Randolph, NH). A professor from the Chemistry
Department,
Tom Goyne, and his
wife, Cheryl, went along on the trip and enjoyed it immensely.
Two premedical arts students and chemistry majors joined a team making
a medical missions trip to Papua, New Guinea over the Christmas
break. They were
Chris Weber
and
Mike Sjoding. They
worked there at Immanuel Lutheran Hospital with Dr. Steve Lutz.
We have two regularly scheduled opportunities for students to hear
guest speakers, or to give professional talks themselves. The
Chemistry Department Seminar meets weekly, and we have had some of our
alumni as speakers this past year. These alumni speakers were:
Chris Schering ('99), graduate
student at Northwestern Univ.;
Jim
Bohning ('56) Visiting Research Scientist at Lehigh University;
Randy Miller ('73), Dermal Systems
International;
Susan Spaeth ('85),
patent attorney with Townsend, Townsend and Crew. The second
opportunity is the Premedical Arts Colloquium, which meets
biweekly. One of our speakers for this colloquium this past year
was
Nicole Beauvais ('99) who
is Organ Procurement Coordinator for Northwestern Memorial Hospital in
Chicago.
The
ISIS Program
(Initiative for Schools, Industries and the Sciences) is continuing on
with providing modern instrumentation to the middle and high schools in
northwest Indiana. The instruments that are being delivered to
the schools are IR spectrometer, UV/visible spectrometer, gel
electrophoresis, atomic absorption spectrometer, and gas chromatography
with either a thermal conductivity detector or a mass spectrometer
detector.
We now have a series of plaques on the wall of Neils Science Center
just off the lobby with a listing of the VU alumni who have received
M.D. or D.O. degrees. The plaques have the names, years of
graduation from VU, and medical schools attended. The alumni
listed are 1935 through 1997 VU graduates. There are a total of
391 names listed with 366 of them graduating since 1960. There
are 24 post-1997 VU alumni who have received their medical degree who
will be added to a new plaque later as will 36 more who are in the
"pipeline". Be sure to stop in Neils Science Center to see the
plaques with the names of this impressive number of VU graduates who
have obtained medical degrees. We have previously recognized
those VU graduates who have obtained Ph.D.'s in chemistry with
pictorial displays on the Neils Science Center walls near the general
chemistry laboratories. Be sure to stop in to look at those
also. If you have a chemistry Ph.D. and have not sent in a
photograph of yourself, be sure to send your picture to me.
A generous chemistry alumnus has established a chemistry endowment
fund, which is to be used at the discretion of the Chair of the
Department of Chemistry.
News from the classes is as follows: I recently heard from
Theodore Makovsky ('40) who
graduated from Indiana University School of Medicine in 1943;
Lowell Wiese ('48) is a retired
physician and U.S. Air Force colonel. He was awarded the Legion
of Merit. He also served as the state health director for New
Hampshire and Kansas;
Roger Riehl
('49) is a consultant after having worked at American Cyanamide;
Bob Horvat ('62) is retired
from Buffalo State College after 27 years of college teaching. He
received a Ph.D. in curriculum and instruction from Univ. of Wisconsin
(Madison) in 1973. At Buffalo he taught environmental science
classes and trained secondary science teachers. He now resides in
Columbus, Ohio;
Bill Frank ('62)
received a Ph.D. degree from Univ. of Colorado in 1965. He
retired as a chemist from 3M in 1996 where he worked with
Tom Geisler ('67) in the Imaging
Products Lab. Bill then returned to college at Univ. of Minnesota
and Concordia, St. Paul, to study music composition and
performance. He is teaching private lessons for woodwinds;
Lara (Avery) Gundel ('67) is a staff
scientist in the Environmental Energy Technologies Division of the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. She does research in
monitoring air quality;
Roland Otto
('68) is Head of the Center for Science and Engineering
Education (which he helped to create in 1988) at the Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory. He has been at the Berkeley Lab since
January, 1974, when he came from Purdue as a postdoc to work with Glenn
Seaborg on the new element program;
Dick
Lessner, Jr. ('68) died in 2002;
Marilyn Engelken ('69) retired after
teaching for 30 years, and she has spent two summers as an Earthwatch
volunteer, digging at the Mammoth Site in Hot Springs, S.D. This
is a site where many Columbian mammoths were trapped and died 20,000
years ago. The site was discovered in 1974 when a man in Hot
Springs was clearing a hill to make a housing development.
From the 1970's comes the following news:
Randy Miller ('73) is President and
CEO of Dermal Systems International in San Francisco, CA. Randy
has had 24 years of domestic and international experience in product
development and business development in the biopharmaceutical and
diagnostic industries. He spoke at our Chemistry Seminar in
April;
Roger Schmidt ('73) was
awarded the American Society for Testing and Materials Award of Merit
and the title of fellow, the highest ASTM honor for individual
contributions to standards activities. He is a technical service
manager for RBX Industries in Roanoke, VA;
Dave Felgenhauer ('74) has been in
private dentistry practice for 15 years in Woodridge, IL. He is
currently an Attending Surgeon at Cook County Hospital in Chicago;
Linda Roettger ('74) underwent two
surgeries last summer, but she is fully recovered now and back at
work. She has left the corporate office of Thermo and is now
working in the Water Analysis group of Thermo in Beverly, MA. She
is "having lots of fun being the teacher again as most of my product
managers are bright chemists but inexperienced in many aspects of
business";
Suzanne (Klucher) Kasang
('75) went to Univ. of Illinois Dental School after graduating
from VU. She was offered a teaching position upon graduation from
U of I Dental School, so she has taught there part time for 24 years
and also has a private practice;
Matt
Bohde ('75) passed away last October. He was working as a
consultant in polyurethane chemistry in Battle Creek, MI;
Pat (Thompson) Morris ('75) is a
USEPA environmental scientist living in Portage, IN;
Ingeborg Bossert ('76) is a visiting
professor at Rutgers in the department of biochemistry and
microbiology. Her recent book, along with colleague Max Haggblom,
"
Dehalogenation: Microbial Processes
and Environmental Applications," was published by Kluwer
Academic Publishers in 2003;
Grant
Krafft ('76) is Chairman and Chief Science Officer of Acumen
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a company he co-founded in 1996 with William
Klein of Northwestern Univ. and Caleb Finch of Univ. of Southern
California. Acumen's founders discovered ADDLs (amyloid-derived
diffusible ligands, soluble oligomeric assemblies of amyloid beta 1-42
protein), and they have worked for the past seven years to elucidate
the ADDL mechanism and the direct involvement of ADDLs in Alzheimer's
disease. They are increasingly implicated as the molecular
structures that cause Alzheimer's disease and trigger early
memory-related disorders. ADDLs are a validated target, and
antibodies targeting ADDLs have prevented and even reversed memory
deficits in animal models. In January it an R & D partnership
between Acumen and Merck & Co. was announced to develop antibody
therapeutics and vaccines for Alzheimer's disease. Grant's work
was written-up in the October 13, 2003 issue of
Chicago Tribune Magazine and in the
Spring 2004 issue of
Valpo: The
Magazine of Valparaiso University;
Bob Keller ('77) spent 20 years in
the technical leadership roles in the elastomeric seal industry at CR
Industries in Elgin, IL, Wynn's-Precision in Lebanon, TN and at
Parker-Hannifin in Lexington, KY. Until very recently he was
President of Zotefoams, Inc. in Walton, KY. He is now consulting
for several firms in the rubber and plastics processing
industries. He also teaches Statistical Experimental Design, Root
Cause Analysis, and Applied Economics. He is an instrument rated
commercial pilot and flies a Mooney M20J which he owns;
Jim Wichmann ('77) works with AC
Products in Placentia, CA. They do chemical milling of aluminum
for the aircraft industry;
Rudolf
Beese ('79) is a partner in Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal
law firm in Kansas City. The firm has 600 attorneys in offices
across the country, including Chicago and Kansas City. Rudy is
working in large projects for the pharmaceutical and life sciences
industries.
From the 1980's:
Rich Trubey ('80)
works for Hamilton Sundstrand, a United Technologies Company, in
Pomona, CA. They develop highly specialized sensors and
instruments for various government contracts including the Dept. of
Homeland Security;
Art Thompson ('81)
works for USDA in Peoria, IL;
Craig
Griebel ('81) lives in Peoria, IL, and teaches in the Univ. of
Illinois College of Medicine Family Practice Residency Program;
Todd Carlson ('81) was recently
promoted to full professor and Chair of the Chemistry Department at
Grand Valley State university where he teaches biochemistry and general
chemistry;
Doug Lehmann ('83)
lives with his wife in Rapid City, S.D. where Doug works on the Rosebud
Reservation in general practice of rural medicine and childhood obesity
management;
Carol (Hess) Winters ('84)
works in the emergency room at Lutheran Hospital in Fort Wayne, IN;
Nancy Reeder ('84) is practicing in
the Whitefish Bay Medical Clinic in Whitefish Bay, WI;
Mike McMahon ('85) passed away last
August;
Mark Sutton ('85) is
Director of Environmental Affairs with Handy & Harman Electronic
Materials in Indianapolis, IN. He is also a Board member of the
Indiana Clean Manufacturing Technology and Safe Materials Institute;
Carey Gear ('85) graduated from
Indiana Univ. Medical School in 1989, had a family practice residency
in South Bend, was in private practice for 7 years, and he is now
Director of Emergency Medicine/Occupational Medicine for Community
Hospital of Bremen, IN. He has done short term medical missions
work in Nicaragua;
Susan Spaeth ('85),
as mentioned above, spoke twice at VU this spring. She has
specialized in patent litigation since 1989. She was honored in
2003 by the
San Francisco Business
Times with its award for "100 Most Influential Women in
Business" and by the
San
Jose/Silicon Valley Business Journal with its award for "Top 50
Women in Business." She has recently been selected as one of the
2004 YWCA Santa Clara Valley Tribute to Women and Industry (TWIN)
Honorees;
Steve Becker ('87),
as the "ink chemist" for the U.S. Government Printing Office, has been
working on developing domestic ink companies to enter the security ink
market, as for years all the security inks in U.S. passports are made
by foreign ink companies;
Sandy
(Rosenthal) List ('87) was granted tenure last year at
Vanderbilt University Chemistry Department. Sandy is arranging
for VU to obtain an atomic force microscope;
Eric Bittner ('88) is an associate
professor of chemistry at the University of Houston. He lives in
Houston with wife Sarah and twin sons;
Andy
Flewwelling ('88) obtained a M.D. from Wayne State Medical
School in 1992, and he did a residency at Univ. of North Carolina
Medical School. He and his wife Selena live in Peterborough, NH,
where he practices internal medicine with a group of 5 internists.
From the 1990's comes the following news:
Tim Gatz ('90) obtained an M.D. from
Univ. of South Florida College of Medicine in 1995, did a residency in
family practice at Univ. of Pittsburgh Medical School, and is now a
family physician in Kalamazoo, MI;
Peter
Dull ('90) is an infectious disease physician at Emory
University School of Medicine;
Ismo
Karrianinen ('91) is a nephrologist on the staff of Piedmont
Nephrology and Hypertension Associates in Hickory, NC, and is on the
medical staffs of Frye Regional Medical Center and Catawba Memorial
Hospital;
Ann (Stien) Schwarz ('92)
is a board certified psychiatrist and staff member at Emory University
in Atlanta, where she resides with husband Steve. She had an
article published in 2001 in the
American
Journal of Psychiatry entitled "Treatment of Conversion Disorder
in an African-American Christian Woman: Cultural and Social
Considerations";
Brad Johnson ('92)
graduated from the Medical College of Wisconsin (
Ann Stien and he were classmates
there), did a radiology residency in Peoria and a fellowship in
abdominal imaging at the Univ. of Wisconsin (Madison) where he received
a Cum Laude Award from the society of Computed Body Tomography and
Magnetic Resonance. He received a Research Trainee Prize from the
Radiological Society of North America for his project on the effects of
percutaneous radiofrequency ablation and cryoablation on the renal
collecting system. He was able to attend the medical school graduation
ceremony of his sister-in-law,
Mari
Baker ('98), last year. Brad is currently a radiologist
with Central Illinois Radiological Associates and an assistant
professor of radiology at Univ. of Illinois College of Medicine at
Peoria;
Rebecca (May) Jones
('93) is an internal medicine and pediatrics physician with
Fairview Lakes Medical Center, Wyoming, MN;
Frank Willmore ('93) is pursuing
his doctorate in the department of engineering at the University of
Texas (Austin);
Sara Huegli ('94)
has received an M.D. degree from Creighton University School of
Medicine this spring, and she will be going to the University of
Cincinnati/Cincinnati Children/s Hospital for a 4 year residency in the
combined Internal Medicine/Pediatric program. She and
fiancée Jeff plan to get married in June 2005. Sara spent
6 weeks last June and July 2003 in the Dominican Republic as a part of
a 60 member interdisciplinary team that provided basic medical and
dental care in rural Dominican villages;
Chad Brink ('94) works at the
Indiana University Medical Center in the anesthesia department;
Kristi Pampel ('94) received her
D.V.M. degree from the Univ. of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine
in 1998. She was in private practice in Chicago for two
years. Now she resides in Urbana, IL, and is a resident in
radiology at the Univ. Of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine;
Corinne Fribley ('95) graduated from
Indiana Univ. School of Medicine in 1999 and has completed a residency
in psychiatry at University of Texas-Southwestern in Dallas, TX.
Her main goal was to work with children and their families, so she
moved to Boston to begin a two-year fellowship in child and adolescent
psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital;
Mary Ellen Cavalier ('95) received
an M.D. degree from Indiana Univ. School of Medicine in 1999, finished
her pediatrics residency in 2002, and is doing a fellowship at Indiana
Univ. School of Medicine in the department of pediatric
hematology/oncology;
Virginia
(Bowden) Lehmann ('95) is working in the faculty development
office at the Univ. of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign) and teaching
chemistry at Parkland College in Champaign;
Stephanie Moeller ('95) is finishing
up her Ph.D. in cancer biology at the Univ. of Minnesota. She
co-authored a paper which appeared last June in the journal
Molecular and Cellular Biology in
which the role of a tumor suppressor protein is redefined. She
has been teaching microbiology part-time at Augsburg College;
Heather Duchow ('96) has obtained a
Ph.D. in molecular biology from Princeton Univ. and will be doing a
post-doctorate in microbiology at Univ. of Oregon in Eugene;
Natalie Coyne ('96) received an M.D.
from Health Sciences in Antigua, and she is now doing a family medicine
residency at Ohio State University Medical Center;
Yari Campbell ('96) is doing a
residency in internal medicine/pediatrics at Detroit Medical
Center/Wayne State University;
Jukka
Kaariainen ('96) will soon be getting married in Finland;
Vaughn deGuzman ('97) received his
D.M.D. from Southern Illinois University School of Dental Medicine in
2002, and he now practices in Belleville, IL;
Joshua Eskonen ('97) received D.O.
from Des Moines University-Osteopathic Medical Center, and he is now
doing residency in family medicine with Summa Health System in Cuyahoga
Falls, OH;
Amy (Mullner) Wiesch ('97)
received degree in podiatric medicine from Scholl College of Podiatric
Medicine in Chicago in 2001, and she is doing a residency at the
Veterans Hospital in Madison, WI;
Bethany
Karlin ('97) received a Ph.D. in cell biology from Rice
University, and she is continuing on with post doctoral studies there;
Jeff Bzdusek ('97) received a D.O.
degree from Midwestern University and is now in emergency medicine;
Jennifer (Latham) Starke ('98) has
gone back to school at Indiana Univ. Northwest for a masters degree in
education;
Sally (Galen) Wilson ('98)
is pursuing a master's degree in curriculum and instruction at the
Univ. of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign). She teaches chemistry and
coaches girls' soccer at Central High School in Champaign;
Steve and
Jenni (Wellhoefer) Boskovich ('98)
live in Schererville, IN, and Steve graduated from Midwestern
University with a D.O. degree, and he is a resident in emergency
medicine at St. James in Olympia Fields, IL;
Nick Matzke ('98) received a M.A. in
geography from Univ. of California (Santa Barbara), and he lives in
Corvallis, OR;
Karie Dahlgren ('99)
will be entering her 3rd year of medical school at the Univ. of
Wisconsin (Madison);
Nicole Beauvais
('99), as mentioned above, is working in the Division of
Transplant Surgery as Organ Procurement Coordinator at northwestern
Memorial Hospital in downtown Chicago;
Mandy
(Pencek) Dornfeld ('99) is doing a family practice residency at
Ball Memorial Hospital;
Tanya Smutka
('99) spent two months in Costa Rica studying tropical biology
with the Organization for Tropical Research Institute's Barro Colorado
Island in Panama;
Grant Olsen ('99)
received a M.D. from Indiana University School of Medicine this spring
graduating in the top one-third of his class. He will be doing a
residency in combined internal medicine/pediatrics at Indiana
University.
From the 2000's comes the following: Mark
and Jessica (Amrozowicz) Kerins ('00)
reside in St. Louis where Jessica is pursuing Ph.D. in genetics at
Washington University. Heidi
(Hedstrom) Tuthill ('00) graduated from the Univ. of Southern
California Medical School and she is going into radiology; Karen Switek ('00), along with the
publication with me mentioned above, has three other papers either
published or soon to be published. One of the papers is based on
her summer work with Dr. Gibson at Virginia Tech. In addition,
Karen recently got engaged to a graduate student (in
aerospace/mechanical engineering) at the Univ. of Florida. They
met the summer after she graduated at NASA in Virginia; Heather Kerr ('00) is pursuing a
master's degree in biblical studies at the Lutheran School of Theology
at Chicago and she will be married this summer; Sarah Olson ('00) is attending
University of Wisconsin Medical School (Madison), and she ran the
Washington, D.C., marathon in 2002; Veronica
Marquez ('00) is pursuing an associate's degree in dental
hygiene at Indiana University Northwest; Nate Bowling ('00) is continuing his
graduate studies in physical organic chemistry at University of
Wisconsin (Madison); Kelly Nofs ('00)
is a territory sales manager for Schering; Melissa Neumann ('01) has finished
her third year in Pharmacy School at Univ. of Wisconsin (Madison) and
has started her rotations. She will be graduating in May, 2005; Marlowe Djuric ('01) has completed
her third year at Univ. of Illinois at Chicago College of
Pharmacy. She is also working in quality assurance for UIC
Medical Center Inpatient Pharmacy; Allison
Witt ('01) received her master's degree in limnology from Univ.
of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign). She is engaged to be married this
August to Andrew, a third year mechanical engineering graduate student
at the Univ. of Illinois; Cynthia
Zdanczyk ('01) is attending graduate school in psychology at
Purdue University; Melissa Vegter ('01)
graduated from Valparaiso University School of Law; Tim Nush ('01) is a second year
student at Indiana Univ. Medical School who plans to specialize in
anesthesiology. He has joined an amateur hockey team as a goalie;
Kenny Cutler ('01) has passed
his comprehensive exam in chemistry at University of Pittsburgh
Graduate School and is continuing on with his work; Corey Schuler ('02) has been
Director of Men's Health with Sigma Phi Epsilon, Inc., and now he is
attending chiropractic school in Minnesota. He will be getting
married this August; Nina Bijedic
('02) lives in Evanston and is a radiation safety consultant in
the Chicagoland area; Aaron Miller
('02) is continuing on with his graduate research in chemistry
at Northwestern University; Leah
Keehr ('02) is married and has finished her 2nd year at Mayo
Medical School. She wants to go into rural family practice; Sarah Mutch ('02) has finished her
2nd year at Iowa Physical Therapy School and is engaged to be married; Allison (Broadstone) Bergdoll ('03)
is attending Indiana Univ. Dental School; Mike Lindow ('03) spent the month of
June, 2003, in Australia working at a golf course. Last winter he
was a "ski-bum" in Utah working at a resort there. He is now
applying for admission into medical school; Julie Waddle ('03) is at the
Lafayette Center of Indiana Univ. Medical School where she has been
taking a class called the Caregiver Companion. The class
"emphasizes the importance of doctors' developing respectful
relationships with their patients so they can treat patients
holistically. Julie is quoted in the Inside Purdue publication saying:
"They want us to think of patients as people and not as bed numbers and
conditions. Medical schools are doing a better job of developing
people who will be good doctors instead of just scientists with good
grades." The instructor of the course wrote to us about Julie
stating: "Thanks for sending this outstanding student our way.
She is going to make a fine physician!"
The future plans for some of the 2004 graduates are as follows: Nicole Kenyon will be continuing her
work at Midwestern Univ. Pharmacy School. She received her B.S.
degree from VU after attending VU for 3 years and finishing her
first year of pharmacy school. Val
Martinsen likewise received a B.S. degree from VU after her
first year at Indiana Univ. Dental School following 3 years of
undergraduate work. Attending graduate school in chemistry are Liz Baden (Mayo), Kasey Hammond (Colorado) and Ben Lovaasen (Chicago). The
following will be attending graduate school in areas other than
chemistry: Andy Lauber
(Tennessee, biomedical ethics), Christina
Marasco (Vanderbilt, biomedical engineering) and Lauren Nettenstrom (Wisconsin,
cancer research). Steve Smith
will be working for a pharmaceutical company in South Bend. Christina Gnadt will be teaching in
Bulgaria. Attending medical school next school year are Sean Conrin (Illinois), Julie Fisher (Ohio Osteopathic), Emily Hoovey (Loyola), Milena Jani (Indiana), Michael Khouli (Indiana), Mark Landmeier (Loyola), Brian Linert (Indiana), Laura Nader (Indiana), Matt Pappas (MD/PhD program,
Michigan or Duke), Michael Sjoding
(Oregon) and Chris Weber
(Medical College of Wisconsin). Lisa
Holmes has been admitted to Iowa College of Medicine but is
postponing attendance for one year. She was married in May.
Jami Bangert will be attending
Indiana Dental School. Kristi
von Trebra has been admitted into Washington Univ. Physical
Therapy School.
We have enclosed a self-addressed post card. We would appreciate
your completing and return it to us. If you gave us your E-mail
address in the past, please check the VU Chemistry Alumni website to
see if the E-mail address is correct.
Again we encourage all of you to stop in to see us when you come
through (or near) Valparaiso. At least drop us a note either
written or by E-mail so that we know what you are up to these days.