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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
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        <p>THE DEPARTMENT OF<lb />CHEMISTRY<lb /><lb />1965-2007<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>THE DEPARTMENT OF<lb />CHEMISTRY<lb /><lb />at<lb /><lb />East Carolina University<lb /><lb />1965-2007<lb /><lb />In Celebration of<lb />East Carolina University's<lb />Centennial Year<lb /><lb />In Memorium<lb />Chia-yu Li, PhD<lb />Robert C. Lamb, PhD<lb />Grover W. Everett, PhD<lb /><lb />Edited by Keith D. Holmes, Jr., PhD<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Science and Technology Building<lb /><lb />completed in 2003.<lb /><lb />and 5th floors.<lb /><lb />J<lb /><lb />4th<lb /><lb />is located on the 3rd,<lb /><lb />Department<lb /><lb />istry<lb /><lb />The Chem<lb /></p>
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        <p>Ce<lb /><lb />OF THE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY BUILDING<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />OF THE CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT<lb /><lb />"Genesis"�<lb /><lb />The Chemistry Department had a humble beginning. It is not certain when the first chemistry<lb />class was taught at East Carolina University (ECU), but the first structured chemistry curriculum<lb />probably started around the early 1960's. During that period, there was at East Carolina College<lb />a Department of Science with Dr. Charles W. Reynolds as the Director. There were four major<lb />fields of study within the Department of Science: Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and General<lb />Science. Each field of study had a coordinator, and Dr. Grover W. Everett, who started his career<lb />at East Carolina University in 1955, was the Chemistry coordinator. Besides Dr. Everett, six<lb />other faculty members were also teaching chemistry; Mr. Jack O. Derrick, Dr. Frank W. Eller,<lb /><lb />Ms. Lucille Garmon, Dr. Joseph N. LeConte, Dr. Arthur Riley Macon, and Dr. Leland Stewart.<lb />(Mr. Derrick, who joined East Carolina University in 1946, was probably the first faculty member<lb />ever hired to specifically teach chemistry at East Carolina University.) During the 1963-64<lb /><lb />academic year, the Department of Science was reorganized as the Division of Science composed<lb /><lb />of four departments: Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Science Education. Dr. Reynolds was the<lb />overall director of the Division, and Dr. Everett became the director of the Chemistry Department.<lb />It was under Dr. Everett, that the first complete program in chemistry for the AB degree was<lb />presented in 1964, and in the mid 1960's, the department also started working on a professional<lb />degree in chemistry (BS Professional), which would eventually lead to certification by the American<lb />Chemical Society.<lb /><lb />The Chemistry Home, From Flanagan to Science &amp; Technology Building<lb /><lb />The Flanagan Building, which was built in 1939 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Public<lb />Works Administration, initially housed the Division of Science along with Industrial Arts and<lb />Home Economics. In addition, there was an Air Force ROTC shooting range on the attic floor of<lb />Flanagan. Home Economics occupied the west wing of Flanagan, and it operated a dining room<lb />facility in Room 205 facing the campus mall. It later became the departmental office for Chemistry.<lb />Industrial Arts was on the first floor, and the Science Division occupied the rest of the building.<lb />Home Economics moved out of Flanagan to a newly completed building (now known as the<lb />Rivers Building) around the mid 1960's. Biology and Physics moved to their new facilities (now<lb />known as the Howell Science Complex) in the late 1960's, leaving Chemistry, Science Education,<lb />and Industrial Arts as the only units remaining in the Flanagan Building.<lb /><lb />In the mid 1960's, a south wing was added to the Flanagan Building that provided much needed<lb />space for chemistry. From 1969-71, a major renovation was made with the installation of an<lb />HVAC system in the east, west, and the front wings of the building. By 1972, the department had<lb />a totally "new"� look with expanded space for teaching and research along with a new stockroom,<lb />a new scientific glassblowing service center, and a new electronics service center. The total square<lb />footage area for the Chemistry Department remained at 32,000 square feet from the early 1970's<lb />despite a more than three-fold increase in student enrollment. (Given the difficult conditions in the<lb />Flanagan Building, the Chemistry Department has been very conscientious in meeting guidelines<lb />and regulations for chemical safety and waste disposal. The department has been working with the<lb />Office of Environmental Health &amp; Safety to clean up teaching labs and retired faculty members'<lb />research labs from the late 1990's.) Note that room numbers cited for the Flanagan Building are no<lb />longer valid because the building underwent another major renovation after Chemistry moved out<lb />in the summer of 2003. The Flanagan Building was re-opened in the early spring of 2005.<lb /><lb />1<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"""" (Chemisty at eC<lb /><lb />After many years of overuse, the building's facilities were simply antiquated. The infrastructure<lb />of the building, including the heating and air-handling systems, was rapidly deteriorating, and<lb />the overcrowded labs, especially those in the organic area, looked rather dismal, depressing, and<lb />deplorable. Worst of all, the labs were not meeting stringent state and federal safety regulations.<lb /><lb />In the 1990-91 academic year, ECU hired a consultant firm and developed a campus master plan.<lb />Chemistry, along with the School of Industry and Technology, were identified as the most in need<lb />of a new facility. This led to the plan of a new Science &amp; Technology Building to house both units.<lb />A site bordered by the Bate Building, the Howell Science Complex, the warehouse, and 10th<lb />Street was selected for the new building.<lb /><lb />In 1997, ECU formed an executive committee to spearhead the building project. The<lb />membership included Mr. Bruce Flye, University Architect; Ms. Betty Speir, a member of<lb />the Board of Trustees; Dr. Richard D. Ringeisen, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs; Dr.<lb />Robert Thompson, Director of Planning and Institutional Research; Dr. A. Darryl Davis, Dean<lb />of the School of Industry and Technology; and Dr. Chia-yu Li, Chair of Chemistry. Dr. Keats<lb />Sparrow, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, had been a strong advocate and supporter<lb />of a new building for Chemistry. He frequently stated that the building project was the number<lb />one priority for the College. In 1998 the State Legislators provided $3 million for the design of<lb />the new building and later provided an additional $3.1 million for site preparation. The Building<lb />Executive Committee selected an architecture firm, NBBJ of Research Triangle Park headed<lb />by Philip Szostak to design the new building. NBBJ in turn hired several sub-contractors for the<lb />project. They included: Earl Walls Associates for lab planning, the Sextant Group for multi-media<lb />technology; Newcomb and Boyd for mechanical, electrical &amp; plumbing systems; HNTB for civil<lb />engineering; Lasater Hopkins for structural engineering; and, Sam Reynolds for site and landscape<lb />planning. In the next two years, Chemistry faculty spent hundreds of hours working with Earl<lb />Walls on office and lab design, one room at a time. The five-story, 250,000 square foot building<lb />was estimated to cost $60 million to build.<lb /><lb />Seeking funding for this mega-project became a major challenge for the University. Chancellor<lb />Eakin launched a campaign to lobby the legislators for the building, and he invited them to see<lb />for themselves the conditions of the Flanagan Building. He would accompany them personally<lb />when the news media and legislators were on campus. Throughout the last half of the 1990's,<lb />many editorials appeared in the Daily Reflector supporting the Chemistry Department's push for<lb />a new building. After many twists and turns, in May 2000 the House and Senate unanimously<lb />approved a $3.1 billion Bond Referendum for capital improvements of UNC system schools and<lb />community colleges across the state. The vigorous media campaign by UNC officials to convince<lb />the general public to vote for the bond resulted in its overwhelming approval in November 2000<lb />by North Carolina voters. (The approval rate was more than 60% state-wide and approximately<lb />80% in Pitt County.) Prior to the passage of the Bond, Chancellor Eakin wisely approved the<lb />use of the previously allocated $3.1 million to prepare the site, an action that saved nine months<lb />of construction time. On March 8, 2001, ECU Founders' Day, Chancellor Eakin invited UNC<lb />President Molly Broad to the campus to break the ground for the new building. The site-<lb />preparation project was put out for bids in January 2001, and D. H. Griffin Construction Co. of<lb />Raleigh was awarded the contract. Construction of the largest-ever building on the East campus<lb />started in May 2001 and was completed in the early summer of 2003. It is fair to say that without<lb />Chancellor Eakin's efforts, this building would not have been a reality.<lb /><lb />In the spring semester of 2003, Facilities Services conducted a series of meetings with Chemistry<lb />faculty and staff discussing the "Big Move." The University hired three different companies to<lb />assist with the move -- one company to move chemicals, one company to move office furniture<lb /><lb />2<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>= 7 "" fever<lb /><lb />and equipment, and one company to move precision equipment. Some equipment needed special<lb />service to move. For example, ECU hired Varian, the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)<lb />spectrometer maker, to take down (quench) the two NMR spectrometers by draining liquid<lb />nitrogen and liquid helium prior to the move. The Varian technicians recharged the NMR<lb />spectrometers and reinstalled them after they were moved to the designated NMR lab on the<lb />fifth floor of the new building. The cost of the move, including disassembling, reassembling<lb />and installation, was $30,000. In the summer of 2003, the department embarked on the great<lb />historical move from the old Flanagan Building to its new home. This was a very complex project<lb />involving an organized and orderly move of all the faculty and staff offices, research and teaching<lb />labs, chemicals and equipment. Under the simmering summer heat, with sweat running down<lb />their faces, necks, and bodies, faculty and staff worked with moving companies day and night to<lb />ensure a successful move. Miraculously, the department encountered no major incidents during the<lb />move and was able to open for business in the new building days before the new semester started.<lb />The Chemistry Department's new home, the five-story state-of-the-art Science &amp; Technology<lb />Building, has 250,000 sq. ft. of space and cost $67 million to build. The College of Technology and<lb />Computer Science (formerly the School of Industry and Technology) occupies the first two floors.<lb />Chemistry occupies the fourth floor, and the third and fifth floors are shared with the Biology<lb />Department. The third floor houses the departmental offices, the conference room, the Learning<lb />Center, the scientific glassblowing and electronics service centers, a computer lab, a 60-seat<lb />"smart" demonstration/classroom, and teaching labs. The fourth floor houses a conference room,<lb />an advanced computer lab, faculty offices, mass spectrometry labs, and teaching labs. And, the fifth<lb />floor houses a conference room/library, faculty offices, NMR lab, shared-equipment lab, and all<lb />the research labs, including a cluster of high-performance computational chemistry research labs.<lb />The rectangle-shaped five-story main structure is joined through two bridges with the classroom<lb />building which houses two 125-seat "smart" classrooms and two 250-seat "smart"�' classrooms.<lb />Excluding the four big classrooms, Chemistry now has more than 63,000 sq. ft. of space, which is<lb />nearly double the space it had in the Flanagan Building.<lb /><lb />On Saturday, October 11, 2003, Acting Chancellor William Shelton held a ribbon-cutting and<lb />dedication ceremony for the new Science and Technology Building. Among many dignitaries<lb />and guests were: UNC President Molly Broad; Mr. Wilson, representing the UNC Board of<lb />Governors; Mr. Talton, Chair of the ECU Board of Trustees; Representative Edith Warren;<lb />Representative Marian McLawhorn; former Chancellor Eakin, Acting Vice Chancellor James<lb />Smith; Dean Keats Sparrow; Dean Ralph Rogers; and, many others. It was indeed a joyful event.<lb />Chemistry will probably spend the next few decades in the new building.<lb /><lb />Dr. Chia-yu Li was honored with the naming of the Conference Room in the Chemistry<lb />Department Office suite in his name. His years of dedicated service to ECU and the Department of<lb />Chemistry will not be forgotten.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />THE DEPARTMENT IN THE FORMATIVE YEARS<lb /><lb />The mid to late 1960's saw a major departmental expansion that coincided with the transition<lb /><lb />of East Carolina College to a university. Dr. Donald F. Clemens joined the department in 1965.<lb />His arrival was followed by Dr. Robert A. Klein, Dr. Jang Kuo, and Dr. Ivie Lee Smith a year<lb />later. Because of his research reputation, Dr. Robert C. Lamb, then a chemistry professor at the<lb />University of Georgia, was recruited by East Carolina College to chair the department in 1966.<lb /><lb />Dr. Clemens was chosen by Dr. Lamb as the Assistant Chair. In 1967, seven more faculty members<lb />were hired: Dr. Caroline L. Ayers, Dr. Paul Wayne Ayers, Dr. Myron L. Caspar, Dr. Edgar<lb />Heckel, Dr. Warren A. McAllister, Dr. Fred M. Parham, and Dr. Susan T. Smith. By August 1967,<lb />the department had fifteen faculty members. All except Dr. Everett, Mr. Derrick, and Dr. LeConte<lb />were not tenured. During the academic year 1966-67, with a few exceptions, the normal teaching<lb />load was 18 contact hours per week on a quarter system. During this period, two faculty members,<lb />Dr. Macon and Dr. Eller, resigned from the department.<lb /><lb />The department lost three faculty members in 1967-68. Dr. Ivie Lee Smith resigned, Dr. Susan T.<lb />Smith moved to Medical Technology, and Dr. Jang Kuo took his own life. The tragic death of Dr.<lb />Kuo was a real blow to the department as everyone had anticipated a bright and promising career<lb />for him. In their places, three new faculty were hired in 1968: Dr. David C. Lunney, Dr. James E.<lb />Hix, Jr. and Dr. Wilham K. H. Hu.<lb /><lb />Student Recollections (1965-1968)<lb /><lb />Recollections from Keith Holmes<lb /><lb />Ms. Lucille Garmon: Ms. Garmon was an excellent laboratory instructor. She made you think that<lb />every experiment you conducted in general chemistry was important to the advancement of science, and you<lb />took great pride in your work. Her attitude stimulated students to pursue chemistry.<lb /><lb />Dr. Ivie Lee Smith: Dr. Smith came from industry and taught Chemistry 413 (advanced analytical<lb />chemistry). She taught students how to conduct quantitative laboratory experiments using UV/ Visible<lb />spectroscopy, IR. spectroscopy and other techniques. But probably even more important was that Dr. Smith<lb />taught a student how to properly write up an experiment and keep a hard bound laboratory notebook.<lb />This direction helped her students immensely when they graduated and went into an industrial setting.<lb /><lb />Dr. Joseph N. LeConte (Mentor and Advisor): Dr. LeConte was a classical organic chemist who<lb />was one of the last of the true "~southern gentlemen'. He was soft spoken and polite, and he didn't push<lb />you to "~do it his way.' Rather, he encouraged and let you seek your own course of work. When Dr.<lb />LeConte died in 1972, I was honored to have his work with me at Emory University, and I completed<lb />that work for my Ph. D. Dissertation.<lb /><lb />"Pipeline to Emory University"�: Dr. LeConte also provided mentoring in another way. Because of<lb />his undergraduate ties to Emory (as well as being an alumnus and having Chemistry Department ties),<lb />Dr. LeConte enabled many East Carolina chemistry graduates to be able to attend graduate school on<lb />scholarships and fellowships. The Chemistry Department Library at Emory University contains many<lb />dissertations from former East Carolina University graduates.<lb /><lb />5<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />~"" Chenery at Eo<lb /><lb />"Visit to Texas Gulf Sulfur" (Now PCS Phosphate): In 1968, the Eastern North Carolina<lb />Section of the American Chemical Society met in Aurora, NC, and toured the TGS site. In addition to<lb />great hospitality, the TGS personnel showed us around all of the chemical works. This tour included all<lb />of the ACS section (and the Student Affiliates) standing inside the bucket of one of the world's largest<lb />excavators. That was a pretty impressive day for technology!<lb /><lb />"Chi Beta Phi Float"�: In fall of 1967, the honorary science fraternity (including many chemistry<lb />students) decided to enter a float in the Homecoming Parade. What better than a beaker with blue water<lb />and carbon dioxide being vented out the top of the beaker. Great concept on paper. However, as the<lb /><lb />float was completed, the supply of aqua colored napkins in all of Greenville's stores was totally depleted!<lb />Fortunately, during the parade, the fire extinguishers were put to good use because one of the floats caught<lb />fire in the business district and the fire had to be put out immediately.<lb /><lb />Dr. Donald F. Clemens: It was Dr. Clemens' first year teaching and three students (Anne Brinkley,<lb />John (Eddie) Neal, and Keith Holmes) really wanted to impress Dr. Clemens with their study skills.<lb />They studied very hard that quarter, but were surprised to find that at the end of the quarter that we had<lb />received three B+ grades. No A's were given. Dr. Clemens was a tough professor!<lb /><lb />Recollections from Mr. Len Farias<lb /><lb />Remembered Instructors: I will never forget Mr. Derrick and his picayune ways. He was a good<lb />laboratory instructor. Grover Everett also comes to mind. Our professors tried to be mentors for us as well<lb />as friends. They did not let the "~friends' part get in the way of still being our instructors. We were truly<lb />blessed having instructors who were concerned about our success and encouraged us to put forth our best<lb />effort. When we didn't, they knew it and let us know that we could do better. Warren McAllister and _Jim<lb />Hix come to mind right away."�<lb /><lb />Recollections from Dr. Clemens' Family Memoirs<lb /><lb />"Dr. Joe LeConte had spent a couple of summers working in the chemistry grad school at UF. He had<lb />met Don and had been impressed with him. He had encouraged Don to interview at East Carolina for a<lb />teaching job. So, with the car packed to the hilt with kids, all the winter clothes we could fit in, Christmas<lb />presents, and oranges, we pulled into Greenville on a beautiful December afternoon. We left all the kids in<lb />the car while we met Dr. Grover Everett, department chairman, and toured the Chemistry Department.<lb /><lb />The Chemistry Department was in the Flanagan Building and shared the second and third floors of the<lb />building with Science Education, Biology, and the Physics departments." "Chemistry was planning to<lb />expand by hiring more professors. Dr. Everett offered Don a starting salary of $8,000. This was the best<lb />offer yet and we were really impressed with the prospect of future expansion." "The school was small,<lb />about 8,000 students, but showed much more potential than the others we were considering. There was<lb />talk that someday a medical school would be attached to it. This seemed like a big dream, yet, Dr. Jenkins,<lb />the college president, was saying it as though he believed someday it would happen. There were already<lb />chemistry classes for the new School of Nursing."�<lb /><lb />"However, talk of a med school was growing stronger. People in Raleigh and west thought Dr. Jenkins<lb />was crazy to talk about a med school when we weren't even a university. So guess what happened in<lb />1968? We became a university! Raleigh still wasn't ready for this. There was much bitterness and<lb />political bickering, but Jenkins was determined and we got it!"�<lb /><lb />6<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />i Sey "" feerxy _<lb /><lb />Dr. Clemens- On "House Hunting" in Greenville<lb /><lb />"We met a realtor the next day. There were no four-bedroom houses for rent in Greenville. We had<lb />thought of renting until we got the feel of the town. We saw right away, we would have to buy, and<lb /><lb />our budget was very low. Everything we looked at was too expensive or too small. We hated to make<lb /><lb />the 650-mile trip back to Gainesville empty handed. And, we could hardly afford another trip to look.<lb />Reluctantly, we were about to leave town the next morning when Don said, "Let's drive through this last<lb />neighborhood (Stratford Subdivision- across from the football stadium) and see if there might be a For Sale<lb />sign we missed." They had found their home, for $23,000 with a small den with fireplace, a dishwasher,<lb />and air conditioning!<lb /><lb />During the period between 1968 and 1970, the department had a faculty of fifteen strong with five<lb />tenured (Clemens, Derrick, Everett, Lamb and LeConte) and ten not tenured (C. Ayers, W. Ayers,<lb />Caspar, Heckel, Hix, Hu, Klein, Lunney, McAllister, and Parham) members. In addition, Dr. Sam<lb />N. Pennington was given a joint appointment between the Chemistry Department and the Basic<lb />Medical Science Program of the School of Allied Health Professions. New staff positions were also<lb />added to the department. In 1970, the department hired Mr. Owen J. Kingsbury as its first scientific<lb />glassblower, Mr. Leland Bruce Whitaker as the stockroom manager (Lab Manager I), and Mr.<lb />Michael C. Griffins as Electronics Technician II. The department had also expanded its secretarial<lb />positions from two full-time to three full-time staff members.<lb /><lb />At the close of the decade of the sixties, with the hiring of so many young faculty, there was<lb /><lb />4 major push in research in the department. Using a combination of state and grant funds, the<lb />department acquired two pieces of major research equipment, a Hitachi-Perkin-Elmer Model<lb /><lb />R-20 60 MHz Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectrometer (approximately $44,900) and<lb /><lb />a Varian-MAT Model CH-4 Mass Spectrometer (approximately $31,000). Both were housed in<lb /><lb />the basement of the west wing of Flanagan and became the workhorses of faculty research for<lb /><lb />many years to come. Using the NSF-COSIP (National Science Foundation's College Science<lb />Improvement Program) funds from Dr. J. W. Byrd, then Chair of the Physics Department, Dr.<lb />Lunney assembled an Electron Spin Resonance spectrometer (approximately $33,000) for chemistry<lb />and physics faculty to use. The ESR spectrometer was housed in the Physics Department. At about<lb />the same time, Dr. McAllister also started a project to assemble a laser Raman spectrometer from<lb />commercial components (approximately $20,000) and completed the project a year later. The<lb />department formed an ad hoc committee on equipment acquisition co-chaired by Drs. Lunney<lb /><lb />and McAllister to acquire equipment from various sources including the Federal Surplus Property<lb />Agency in Raleigh. The Committee was able to get some spectacular bargains for the department,<lb />from oscilloscopes to infrared and atomic absorption spectrometers. In 1968, the local Union<lb />Carbide Company started providing a $2,000 annual gift to support the department's seminar<lb />program. Using the money, the department was able to invite outstanding speakers from major<lb />PhD schools to give research seminars to faculty and students on campus. With major equipment in<lb />place, the stage was set for chemistry faculty to launch significant research projects.<lb /><lb />Recollections from Dr. Warren McAllister<lb /><lb />"T started in 1967 as it became ECU. The Chemistry Department had been created the previous year<lb />with the hiring of Bob Lamb. Don Clemens, Grover Everett, Joe LeConte, and Jack Derrick were the<lb />primary interviewers when I came over from Nashville, Tennessee that spring. I have a lot of memories<lb />from that time forward. Getting Jim Hix and David Lunney to come for an interview in 1968 was a good<lb /><lb />7<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />=~ Chemistry at ECU<lb /><lb />stroke of timing and, of course, the sad time of losing Jang Kuo. Bob Lamb was able to get great support<lb />from the administration. Setting up a Masters Program and working on many curriculum changes with so<lb />many great colleagues for a successful ACS accreditation bid was truly a high-point for all of us in the early<lb />years. The successes of our students at ECU and beyond were a continuous source of satisfaction, reward<lb />and rejuvenation. We got to know so many of our students (Chemistry majors, pre-Meds, pre-Dents,<lb /><lb />and more) outside the classroom with cookouts and ACS Student Affiliate "parties" several times a year.<lb />Renovating the Flanagan Building and getting more space was a great experience for many of us. Then<lb />there were lawsuits and threatened lawsuits and depositions that wasted everyone's time and energy, frayed<lb />the nerves and divided our colleagues."�<lb /></p>
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          <lb />CHEMISTRY ON THE MOVE<lb /><lb />This decade started with the department on the move. The faculty members were young, upbeat,<lb />energetic, and full of enthusiasm. Using the equipment acquired in the late sixties, they were<lb />actively engaged in research. Twelve of the department's fifteen-member faculty had active external<lb />grants totaling over $105,000 in 1970. Most were funded by the NCBST (North Carolina Board<lb />of Science and Technology) and the NSF-COSIP. Several faculty members were also collaborating<lb />with colleagues off-campus. Dr. Lamb and Dr. Heckel spent the summer of 1973 working as<lb />Visiting Professors at the Technical University of Berlin, Germany. Dr. McAllister worked as a<lb />research associate at Brown University (Rhode Island) in the summers of 1972 and 1973. Dr.<lb />Morrison collaborated with a quantum chemist at the University of Georgia in the summer of<lb />1972. The department's first major purchase at the start of the new decade was a Varian Model<lb />EM-300, 30 MHz NMR spectrometer (approximately $6,000) for instructional use. However, due<lb />to lack of funds, no major equipment purchases were made in the subsequent years.<lb /><lb />Dr. Caroline Ayers was the first to serve as the faculty advisor to a newly established Student<lb />Affiliates Chapter of the American Chemical Society (ACS-SA) during the1969-70 academic year.<lb />This ECU group became one of the fifty chapters throughout the nation to receive honors and<lb />commendation by the ACS Council Committee on Chemical Education.<lb /><lb />In 1970, Dr. Parham launched the seminar series for the department. The seminar series, which had<lb />been funded by the Union Carbide's annual gift of $2,000 for many years, is the most successful<lb />and longest running event in the department. Outside speakers are invited to give research talks<lb /><lb />on Friday afternoons, and to this date, this format is still being followed. In the early 1970's,<lb />department faculty were also very active on university committees and in the Eastern North<lb />Carolina Section of the ACS. Dr. Clemens was the first faculty member from the department<lb />elected to chair the local section, ACS-ENC. The section was, up to that time, populated by PhD<lb />chemists and chemical engineers from the Du Pont's Dacron Research Laboratory in Kinston.<lb /><lb />In the 1970-71 academic year, Dr. Heckel, Dr. Klein, and Dr. McAllister were tenured and<lb />promoted to associate professorship. In the summer of 1972, Dr. LeConte and Mr. Derrick retired.<lb />After stepping down in 1966 as Director of the Department, Dr. Everett remained on the faculty<lb /><lb />as a full professor until he retired in 1978 after twenty-three years of service. Dr. Everett passed<lb />away one year later. He was 66 years old at the time of his death. The department added one new<lb />assistant professor, Dr. Robert C. Morrison, in the fall of 1972. Prior to joining the department,<lb />Dr. Morrison, a theoretical chemist, had been working for two years as Systems Analyst in the<lb />ECU Computer Center.<lb /><lb />The academic year 1972-73 was not a good year for the department. Dr. K. H. Hu, who was<lb />denied tenure, filed a lawsuit against Dr. Lamb and ECU, charging discrimination. Although the<lb />lawsuit ended in District Judge's ruling that the plaintiffs motion for an injunction be denied, it had<lb />inflicted a heavy toll on the department. Upon the release of Dr. Hu, Dr. Chia-yu Li, an analytical<lb />chemist, was hired to join the department in the fall of 1973. In 1979, Dr. Heckel resigned from<lb />the department and returned to Germany, his native land, to take a position in the environmental<lb />science area. Also, Mr. William H. Dawson III was hired in June 1973 to replace Mr. Griffins in<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"""" Chemistry at BCU """"<lb /><lb />the position of Electronics Technician II. In the subsequent year, four faculty members, Drs. C.<lb />Ayers, W. Ayers, Hix, and Lunney, were granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professors.<lb /><lb />The scholarly activities (as measured by the number of publications and the amount of external<lb />grant funding) in the department declined from the early 1970's to around the mid 1970's because<lb />of three factors. First, there was an increase in class sizes and teaching loads without a corresponding<lb />increase in faculty positions and operating budgets. (A dramatic 30% jump in service course<lb />enrollments was observed between the fall quarter of 1973 and the fall quarter of 1974.). Second,<lb /><lb />it became increasingly more difficult to obtain external funding, especially federal grants. The days<lb />of abundant post-Sputnik era federal funding were gone. Third, there was a decline in graduate<lb />student enrollment due to cut backs in the number of teaching assistantships. (There were six MS<lb />theses completed in 1971-72 , four in 1974-75, but none in 1975-76, and there were only two<lb />each in the remaining years of the decade.) Furthermore, the department's funding had been eroded<lb />by the worsening economy in the state coupled with inflation and the energy crisis.<lb /><lb />Starting around 1973, a new initiative was launched in the department. The initiative called for<lb />developing a broad spectrum of expertise in the interfacing of minicomputers with chemical<lb />instruments. In 1974, a core of five faculty members (Drs. Hix, Li, Lunney, McAllister, and<lb />Morrison) was sent to Virginia Tech to attend Professor Raymond Dessy's short course on<lb />computer interfacing. To support the new endeavor, the department purchased a Hewlett Packard<lb />2100A minicomputer along with a HP 7901 Disc Drive (with a 1.2 million 16-bit word storage<lb />capacity). The purchase of HP 2100A started a long tradition in the department for being at the<lb />forefront of computer technology at East Carolina University.<lb /><lb />Drs. Hix, Lunney, McAllister, and Morrison were a four-member team of ECU Chemistry Faculty<lb />who computer-automated a margarine-making process for a margarine factory in Cincinnati, OH<lb />in 1974. Dr. Hix programmed an Altair microcomputer to simulate the factory while software was<lb />being developed and debugged on the Hewlett-Packard minicomputer.<lb /><lb />Recollections from Dr. Hix<lb /><lb />"One fall day (a Friday, I believe) in the very early 1970's, several graduate students and upper-class<lb />majors decided to pull a prank on Dr. David Lunney. Dr. Lunney was very well known for his little blue<lb />sports car that he drove at the time. On this particular Friday afternoon, the students found that the vent<lb />window was open on his sports car, and someone got the idea that it would be neat to stuff his car full with<lb />wadded up newspapers. I have no idea just where they found so much newspaper, but a "paper brigade"�<lb />soon formed and after about a half hour the car was packed to the brim. Unfortunately, the timing of this<lb />prank was not the best, for earlier in the day, a civil rights group had held a rally in the football stadium.<lb />This had brought numerous "out of town" law officers including state police, SBI, etc into town, and they<lb />had been discretely out of sight scattered about town along with ECU's, Greenville's, and Pitt County's<lb />finest. Needless to say, they were all on a rather high level of alert.<lb /><lb />About the time the students were inserting the last piece of paper, all hell broke loose! Sirens went off<lb />everywhere, and law enforcement like you wouldn't believe descended on the parking lot behind Flanagan<lb />Building. Needless to say, the students beat a hasty retreat into the Flanagan Building and were not<lb />apprehended. A number of us, students and faculty alike, were alerted by all the commotion and took up<lb />observation posts on the balconies of Flanagan, where we watched the law carefully open Dave's car and,<lb /><lb />10<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />oS et 3 _ eer _<lb /><lb />piece by piece, remove every single sheet of wadded up paper that had been inserted so carefully through the<lb />window. After emptying the car, and finding no bombs or incendiary devices, "The Law" carefully packed<lb />up all the paper and disappeared with it. In one way the timing had been correct, for Dr. Lunney was<lb />teaching a lab that afternoon, and knew absolutely nothing about what was going on in the parking lot. In<lb />fact we had great difficulty convincing him until he noticed that some of the clutter that he had left in the car<lb />was gone as well. A number of us tried to talk Dr. Lunney into calling Campus Security, and reporting<lb />the theft of "papers" from his car, but he was intelligent enough to let well enough alone, and just enjoy<lb />having his car "cleaned" for free.<lb /><lb />Another story from our early days involves the resourcefulness of some of our faculty in providing laboratory<lb />supplies considering our very meager budget. With the renovation of the Flanagan Building in the late 60's<lb />and early 70's, we had some major "stocking" problems since our usable teaching lab space had almost<lb />tripled. We needed desiccators for the Freshman Labs, and looking in the Sergeant or Fisher catalogs was<lb />out of the question. Dr. Caroline Ayers, Dr. Warren McAllister and Dr. Donald Clemens came up with<lb />the idea that short/fat quart peanut butter jars could be fabricated into desiccators by simply inserting a piece<lb />or wire gauze (which for some reason we had plenty of) with appropriate holes cut for crucibles. I think Dr.<lb />Ayers was the one who contacted one of the "Peanut Butter" companies to see where they got their jars,<lb />and as fate would have it, they liked the idea and as a matter of PR they offered to provide us with the<lb />necessary jars. Dr. Ayers told them that we needed about 500 jars and they said that would be no problem<lb />and that they would ship them to us shortly. Well, somewhere in the train of communications, the "order"�<lb />got scrambled, and when the trucks arrived about a week or two later, 500 cases of "Peanut Butter Jars"�<lb />were unloaded instead of 500 jars. We put cases in the halls, in offices, in labs, anywhere there was space<lb />to be found. As I recall, when I retired approximately 30 years later, I think we were still using those jars,<lb />not just for desiccators, but to hold all kinds of nuts &amp; bolts and small items in the stockroom. (And they<lb />are still being used today!)<lb /><lb />By the end of the 1974-75 academic year, the faculty had approved a first-ever departmental code<lb />and under the new code Dr. P. Wayne Ayers was elected Chair of the Executive Committee. In<lb />the previous year, he was elected to chair the campus-wide Pre-medical and Pre-dental Advisory<lb />Committee. Also, he was instrumental in getting a new chapter of Alpha Epsilon Delta, the pre-<lb />medical honor society established at ECU. In 1975-76, faculty spent uncountable hours revising<lb />courses and curricula for a change over to the semester system starting the fall of 1977.<lb /><lb />Dr. Robert Lamb took a leave of absence from the chairmanship at the end of 1975. Dr. Donald<lb />F. Clemens, who had been for many years as Assistant Chair to Dr. Lamb, was chosen by the<lb />university administration to lead the department as Acting Chair starting in January 1976. The<lb />initial and rapid growth of the department in the 60's can be attributed to Dr. Lamb's efforts and<lb />dedication. Certainly, he had laid a solid foundation for the department to continue to build on.<lb /><lb />In the mid seventies, the State was still experiencing financial difficulties. This had impacted<lb />negatively on the department's ability to acquire new equipment and needed resources for teaching<lb />and research, but with continued growth in undergraduate enrollment at ECU, the situation started<lb />to turn around after the mid seventies. The growth in chemistry enrollment was probably due,<lb /><lb />in part, to the establishment of a new four-year medical school at ECU. More graduate teaching<lb />assistantship money also became available resulting in an increase in the number of graduate<lb />students. A Chair Search committee was in action during the 1976-77 academic year. Dr. Angelo<lb />A. Volpe, then a professor and polymer chemist at Stevens Institute of Technology, was appointed<lb /><lb />11<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />="""" (hemusary at hu<lb /><lb />to Chair the department starting in August 1977. Dr. Volpe skillfully and quickly built a good<lb />rapport with faculty in the department and with various organizations 1n the university, and this<lb />harmonious relationship helped the department to move forward.<lb /><lb />The level of scholarly activity continued to pick up under Dr. Volpe from 1977-80. Examples<lb />include: Dr. Heckel's research grant award from the UNC Sea Grant College program; $19,150,<lb />Dr. Clemens' grant award by Texasgulf of $2,757; Drs. Morrison and Lunney's research<lb /><lb />grant of over $110,000 by the Bureau of Education for the Handicapped (HEW) to develop<lb />microcomputer-assisted laboratory instrumentation for visually handicapped chemistry students;<lb />and, Drs. Volpe and Byrd's (Physics) NSF-CAUSE grant of over $235,000. On the teaching front,<lb />Dr. Caroline Ayers successfully applied the Personalized System of Instruction (PSI) method to<lb />General Chemistry 64, 65, and 66. In 1978-79, she was the recipient of a research grant ($5,967)<lb />from the Exxon Education Foundation "" Impact program to develop a Guided Design Program in<lb />Physical Chemistry.<lb /><lb />In 1978-79, Dr. McAllister resigned from the department to take a managerial/research position<lb /><lb />at Burroughs Wellcome Co., then located in Greenville. In his place, Dr. Evans, an inorganic<lb />chemist who was teaching at State University of New York "" College at Fredonia, was hired in<lb />1979. In the same year, a new staff member, Ms. Kathryn Kittrell was hired as Office Assistant<lb /><lb />III. By the end of 1979, the department had seven full professors, Drs. Caspar, Clemens, Heckel,<lb />Lamb, Lunney, Parham, and Volpe; seven associate professors, Drs. C. Ayers, W. Ayers, Evans,<lb />Hix, Klein, Li, and Morrison; one Visiting Assistant Professor, Dr. Betty E. Marie Moyers; and<lb />two lecturers, Ms. Barbara Andrews, and Ms. Edith Rand. Ms. Rand, who was hired in 1976, later<lb />became the founder of the Chemistry Learning Center.<lb /><lb />12<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />Dr. Volpe's administrative ability and talents were quickly recognized by the Administration, and<lb />he was selected to become the Dean of College of Arts and Sciences in 1980 after less than three<lb />years as the department chair. Dr. Fred M. Parham was appointed as Acting Chair to succeed Dr.<lb />Volpe and stayed in this position until 1981. Under Dr. Parham, there was a dramatic increase<lb />in external funding, from over $309,000 in the previous year to nearly $500,000 in 1980-81.<lb />Among many accomplishments, Dr. Parham was the first person to introduce word-processing to<lb />the department office by borrowing a computer from the research group of Dr. Lunney and Dr.<lb /><lb />. Morrison. Since then, the heyday of typewriters was forever gone.<lb /><lb />There were relatively few changes in the faculty makeup during the decade of the 80's. The<lb />department maintained fourteen to fifteen tenure-track positions in the 80's. Faculty members who<lb />were hired in the 60's continued to make significant contributions to the department in the 80's.<lb />In this decade, there were four new hires, Dr. Frank Etzler in 1980, Dr. Phillip A. Zoretic in 1981,<lb />Dr. Paul J. Gemperline in 1982, and Dr. Art A. Rodriguez in 1987. The only non-secretarial staff<lb />member hired in the 80's was Mr. Christopher Newton, who joined the department to fill a newly<lb />created Laboratory Manager II position in 1980.<lb /><lb />Dr. Etzler, a physical chemist, taught at Western Michigan University before coming to East<lb />Carolina in Dr. Heckel's vacated position and left the department without tenure at the end of the<lb />1985-86. A year later, Dr. Rodriguez, a physical chemist with specialty in relaxation mechanism<lb />using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was hired in Dr. Etzler's position.<lb /><lb />Dr. Phillip A. Zoretic, a natural product synthetic chemist, was recruited from the University of<lb />Southeastern Massachusetts to chair the department in 1981. Dr. Zoretic brought with him an<lb />NIH grant (over $38,000) and a grant from Massachusetts Lions Eye Fund ($15,000). Dr. Zoretic's<lb /><lb />chairmanship lasted two years.<lb /><lb />Dr. Caroline Ayers was appointed initially in 1983 as Acting Chair and one year later as Chair to<lb />succeed Dr. Zoretic. Prior to her appointment as Chair of the department, she was elected as Chair<lb />of the Faculty by the Faculty Senate for 1982-83. Her popularity on the campus was reminiscent<lb /><lb />of her predecessor, Dr. Volpe. Dr. Caroline Ayers was quickly able to restructure the department<lb />and its budget. Office policies and procedures were established. Under her administration, the<lb /><lb />daily operation of the department was conducted in an orderly and meticulous manner. Faculty<lb />members genuinely appreciated her administrative style, her openness, her willingness to listen to<lb />faculty's problems and her ability to resolve difficulties. She was also easily accessible, and faculty<lb />felt comfortable talking to her. After five years as Chair, Dr. Caroline Ayers stepped down to return<lb />to teaching full-time. Dr. Chia-yu Li was elected as Chair by the faculty and appointed in August<lb />1988 by Dr. Eugene Ryan, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, to succeed Dr. Caroline<lb />Ayers. Following Dr. Ayer's practice, Dr. Li did not appoint an assistant chair. Instead, he appointed<lb />Dr. James E. Hix as Director of Undergraduate Studies, and Dr. Paul J. Gemperline, who was also<lb />the elected chair of the Graduate Committee in 1988, as the Director of Graduate Studies.<lb /><lb />13<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />"""" Chemiuiry 2 ECU<lb /><lb />Remembrance of Dr. Li by Mr. Jeff Rorer:<lb /><lb />"Back in the summer of 1992 during the first week of freshman orientation, the Chem 1150/1 151<lb />sections were all filled. I talked with Dr. Li and he granted me a Special Add. He asked how many more<lb />people would be needing a Special Add, and I indicated that there would be many more since this was just<lb />the first week of orientation. This was my first interaction with Dr Li and the first clue that the Chemistry<lb />Department was growing rapidly."�<lb /><lb />Dr. Gemperline had been hired by the department in 1982, when he just finished his PhD work<lb />at Cleveland State University. He was tenured and promoted to Associate Professor in 1988. In<lb />1982, Dr. Gemperline was only given a modest amount of start-up money, including $2,100<lb /><lb />from the Faculty Senate to launch his research at East Carolina University. In two short years,<lb /><lb />his work caught the attention of the Burroughs Wellcome Co. in Greenville and received the<lb />company's grant support of $24,500 to conduct a project using factor analysis, a technique in<lb />chemometrics. This was an area of research that was new to Dr. Gemperline. In the same year, he<lb />received a second grant from the ACS-Petroleum Research Fund (PRF) in an amount of $15,000.<lb />From that point on his research took off. Within the decade of 80's, he was able to amass over<lb />$218,000 in grant funds from industry. It is most remarkable that Dr. Gemperline was able to pick<lb />a brand new field - chemometrics - in which he had no previous background, and develop it into<lb />a budding discipline. He became one of the youngest, if not the youngest, premier researchers<lb /><lb />in chemometrics in the world. To this date, the international community knows East Carolina<lb />University through Dr. Gemperline.<lb /><lb />The hiring of Dr. Gemperline and Dr. Rodriguez proved to be the wisest thing the department<lb />did in the 80's. Dr. Gemperline's accomplishments in chemometrics have garnered worldwide<lb />recognition, and Dr. Rodriguez has kept the department at the forefront of the NMR technology.<lb /><lb />The second half of the 80's saw a dramatic growth of the Chemistry Learning Center. Ms. Edith<lb />Rand single-handedly built up the Learning Center in 1986 by soliciting funds and developing<lb />computer software for use by students. The Center was originally located in Flanagan 215,<lb /><lb />which was converted from a classroom. In 1989, it was moved to Flanagan 206, a room that the<lb />department traded with the School of Industry and Technology. The Center grew and flourished<lb />since then, recording as many as 10,000 student-visits a semester. Besides the Learning Center,<lb />Ms. Rand, with help from Dr. Klein and Dr. Lamb, was instrumental in developing the chemistry<lb />curriculum sequence, Chem 1120/1121 (Basic, General, and Organic Chemistry and lab) and<lb />Chem 2620/2621 (Basic Biochemistry and lab) taken mostly by nursing and Allied Health<lb />Sciences students.<lb /><lb />During the decade of the eighties, the bulk of the external funding received by Chemistry faculty<lb />went to support the projects of the Science Institute for the Disabled (SID), which was located in<lb />Flanagan 316. Dr. Lunney was founder and Director of SID, and Dr. Morrison served as the co-<lb />director. The projects conducted by the Lunney-Morrison team included micro-computer assisted<lb />instruction for disabled chemistry students and scientists, talking computers, functional group<lb />analysis of infrared spectra using auditory pattern recognition, high-tech aids for disabled science<lb />students, auditory presentation of multivariate data, and many others. Between 1980 and 1989,<lb />these ECU researchers were awarded more than $1 million from the NSF, the Bureau of Education<lb /><lb />14<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00090605_0023" />
        <p>"" 29s = """"<lb /><lb />for the Handicapped, and other agencies. Their work attracted national attention and put ECU on<lb />the map.<lb /><lb />From 1978 "" 1988, Drs. Morrison and Lunney co-directed a team at ECU to design and build<lb /><lb />a prototype of a talking microcomputer as an educational tool for blind scientists in chemistry<lb />laboratories. The prototype had three microprocessors with internally developed interprocessor<lb />communication. At one time, there were about 15 members in the group including students,<lb />research associates, and externally funded support staff. Drs. Morrison and Lunney organized and<lb />established the Science Institute for the Disabled at ECU to extend educational opportunities to<lb />disabled students in secondary schools in eastern NC. The Institute was directed by Dr. Lunney<lb />until he retired in the 1990's.<lb /><lb />In 1988, Drs. Morrison and Lunney received the Pitt County Distinguished Service Award from<lb />the Governor's Advocacy Council for Persons with Disabilities. This project was highlighted as the<lb />cover story, "The Sound of Data" in in the June 1985 issue of Science News. It was also covered<lb />in Chemical and Engineering News, the Toronto Globe and Mail (a Canadian newspaper), the New<lb />Scientist (a British publication), the Christian Science Monitor, and a number of newspapers around the<lb />country. A radio station in Oregon played their music tunes of the infrared spectra of acetic acid,<lb />acetone, ethanol, and other compounds. The station called for several years asking for new tunes.<lb /><lb />Other faculty in the department also received sizable external funding in the eighties. In 1980-<lb /><lb />81, Drs. Clemens, Evans, and Brooks M. Whitehurst (TexasGulf, now PCS Phosphate), received<lb /><lb />a grant of $40,000 from NC Energy Institute to study the use of peat as fuel. In the same year<lb /><lb />Drs. Evans, Li, and Parham received $23,800 from the North Carolina Board of Science and<lb /><lb />Technology to purchase a Varian E-360 60 MHz NMR spectrometer for the department. Under<lb /><lb />the NSF College Science Instrumentation Program, Dr. Li received $4,300 in 1980 and $10,600<lb /><lb />in 1987 to purchase spectroscopic and electrochemical equipment. Both grants were matched by |<lb />ECU. In 1982-83, Dr. P. Wayne Ayers was awarded $3,500 from Abbott Laboratories and Belk-<lb />Tyler Foundation to sponsor the physicians session at the Epilepsy Symposium. Dr. Caroline Ayers<lb /><lb />was awarded a Title II grant in 1982 from UNC Math/Science Education Network to support<lb /><lb />her research in chemical education. In 1989-90, Dr. Rodriguez was awarded nearly $13,000 from<lb /><lb />the North Carolina Board of Science and Technology to engage in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance<lb /><lb />relaxation studies. Dr. Zoretic received two awards ($20,000 each) from the ACS-PRF for his<lb /><lb />natural products synthesis research.<lb /><lb />In this decade, using an innovative purchasing arrangement (e.g. combining the equipment fund<lb />at the end of one fiscal year with the equipment fund at the beginning of the next fiscal year)<lb /><lb />the department was able to purchase some major equipment. The first Analect 6160 Fourier-<lb />Transform Infrared Spectrometer (approximately $20,000) was acquired in 1984. An HP Gas<lb />Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS) system was acquired (approximately $70,000) in<lb />the mid 1980's. In 1988-89, Dr. Evans was awarded an instrument fund of nearly $70,000 from<lb />the Hewlett Packard Co. to purchase an infrared detector for the GC/MS system. Using the<lb />scientific equipment appropriation and money borrowed from the other units, a Varian Gemini<lb />200 MHz superconducting NMR spectrometer (approximately $114,000) was purchased in 1987.<lb />The purchase of this equipment coincided with the hiring of Dr. Rodriguez and the spectrometer<lb />became the workhorse for his research. In addition, Dr. Rodriguez trained countless NMR<lb />spectrometer users with this new equipment. The entire department also benefited from the new<lb /><lb />15<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00090605_0024" />
        <p>"""" Chemistry at ECU -""<lb /><lb />spectrometer as it was indispensable to modern day chemists who needed to acquire structural<lb /><lb />information for their molecules.<lb /><lb />In terms of scholarly activities, faculty published at least four journal articles per year with a peak of<lb />fourteen articles in 1980-81 and another peak of ten articles in 1984-85. Faculty presented on the<lb />average eighteen papers at professional meetings during the ten-year period with a high of 29 papers<lb />in 1984-85.<lb /><lb />In the teaching and advising area, organic chemistry faculty, including Dr. W. Ayers, Dr. Caspar,<lb />Dr. Klein, Dr. Lamb, and Dr. Parham, continued to make improvements in the Chem 2750<lb />(Organic Chemistry I) and Chem 2760 (Organic Chemistry II) sequence. Dr. Caspar was the<lb />faculty member who introduced computer-assisted instruction in teaching organic chemistry,<lb />and Dr. C. Ayers applied Guided Design as a method of instruction in the one-semester physical<lb />chemistry course. New courses implemented in this period included Chem 1163, Computer<lb />Techniques in Chemistry, developed by Dr. Hix, and Chem 6520, Teaching Advanced Placed<lb />Chemistry developed by Dr. C. Ayers. As the chair of the pre-medical and pre-dental advisory<lb />committee, Dr. Wayne Ayers provided advising service to hundreds of students each year. He<lb />was also very active in serving the offices of AED (Alpha Epsilon Delta), SAAHP (Southeastern<lb />Association of Advisors for the Health Professions), NAAHP (National Association of Advisors for<lb />the Health Professions), and others.<lb /><lb />It was during this period (1984-85) that a new Unit Code was created and approved.<lb /><lb />16<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00090605_0025" />
        <p>Aan Gage<lb />THE PASSING OF THE TORCH<lb /><lb />Perhaps, the most significant event in the 1990's was a large turnover of faculty due to retirements.<lb />Dr. Lamb retired in December 1990, the first in the department since the 1970's. Four years later,<lb />in December 1994, Dr. Clemens retired. This was followed by Dr. Wayne Ayers, Dr. Robert<lb />Klein, and Dr. Lunney, all retiring in July 1997. Dr. Hix took a phased-retirement option at the<lb />end of the 1997-98 academic year that allowed him to work half-time for three years until May<lb />2001. During the three-year period, he taught one class and continued serving as the department's<lb />Director of Undergraduate Studies. Dr. Caspar and Ms. Rand retired in December 1998 and<lb /><lb />July 1999, respectively. Dr. Caroline Ayers, having advanced to the position of Associate Vice<lb />Chancellor for Academic Affairs, retired from ECU in December 1999. All in all, nine faculty<lb />members, or more than half of the department faculty, retired between 1990 and 1999.<lb /><lb />A stroke immobilized Mr. Owen J. Kingsbury, the department's first scientific glassblower, in<lb /><lb />the summer of 1995, and he died the following year the at age 68. Mr. Joseph Walas, a scientific<lb />glassblower with nearly 30 years of professional experience, joined the department in November<lb />1996. Like Mr. Kingsbury, he was also a former President of the American Scientific Glassblowing<lb />Society. After ten years as Office Assistant IV, Ms. Mary Hawkins resigned to take a position in the<lb />Medical School in December 1999. Ms. Rebecca Brady was hired in 1998 as Office Assistant III<lb />and was promoted to Ms. Hawkins' position in January 2000, but she resigned in November 2000<lb />to work for the School of Nursing. Ms. Gwendolyn Williams was hired to replace Ms. Brady in<lb />December 2000, Ms. Christie Martin was hired in March 2000 as Office Assistant III. By the end of<lb />the 1990's the department maintained a staff of seven, three office assistants, one lab manager, one<lb />stockroom manager, one scientific glassblower, and one electronics technician.<lb /><lb />Dr. Lamb had been in poor health for years and passed away on January 16, 2000, at age 71.<lb /><lb />The department was saddened by his death. His contributions to building the department during<lb />his tenure as the second Chair of the department, 1966-75, were recognized in the form of an<lb />endowed lectureship. In 1990, the Lamb Lectureship was established by donations from his family,<lb />friends, and colleagues initially to commemorate his retirement. It has been used to support the<lb />chemistry seminar series to this date. When the annual $2,000 seminar fund initially given to the<lb />department by Union Carbide, and later by the Eveready Battery Co. was terminated in the<lb /><lb />late 1980's, the Lamb Lecture endowment afforded continued support for the department's<lb />seminar series.<lb /><lb />In the 1990's the department was busy filling positions created by faculty retirements. In addition,<lb />the department had two new tenure-track positions and two new permanent fixed-term positions<lb />to fill. They were given by the Administration due to the large enrollment increase in chemustry<lb />classes (enrollment doubled between the late 1980's and the mid 1990's). By the mid 1990's the<lb />department had a total of nineteen permanent positions -- seventeen tenure-track and two fixed-<lb />term. The permanent fixed-term positions were increased to four in 2000. In the 1990's, a total<lb />of thirty hires were made by the department, a number equal to all of the previous hires from the<lb />1950's to the 1980's combined.<lb /><lb />Efforts to recruit star candidates in the field were hampered by the lack of adequate start-up<lb />packages. A few institutions in other states were able to attract accomplished researchers with offers<lb /><lb />17<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />""~ (henmustiy at Ow<lb /><lb />of more than $100,000 in start-up funds and an environment to do cutting-edge research. With<lb />the help of the Administration, the department was able to provide (on average) $50,000 start-up<lb />funding for each new tenure-track faculty member who required a "wet" research lab. In addition,<lb />the department had to reallocate regular annual operating budget items (around $150,000) to offset<lb />the differences. This meant that the department had to tighten its belt from year to year to help<lb />young faculty members launch their careers at East Carolina University. Given all the difficulties<lb />mentioned, it is a real blessing that the department has been able to recruit fine and talented faculty<lb />members to ECU.<lb /><lb />Dr. William Church, a NIH bioanalytical chemist at the Salk Institute, and a visiting Assistant<lb />Professor with Trinity College, Connecticut, was the first tenure-track faculty member hired in the<lb />1990's. With only two analytical faculty members (Drs. Gemperline and L1), the department was<lb />happy to have a third analytical chemist on board. Dr. Church joined the department in 1990, but<lb />unfortunately, he departed to return to Trinity in 1994 when his re-appointment was denied.<lb /><lb />Dr. Brian Love, an organic chemist who was teaching at Auburn, and Dr. Andrew L. Sargent, a<lb />theoretical inorganic chemist who was doing post-doctoral research at the University of Minnesota,<lb />joined the department in 1994. They were granted tenure and promoted to Associate Professor in<lb />2000. In 1994, Mr. William C. Lewis, Dr. Irene H. Gerow, and Dr. Orville Day were also hired<lb />into temporary fixed-term positions.<lb /><lb />Dr. Love has been able to attract more than $58,000 external funding from Research Corporation,<lb />DuPont, and the ACS-PRF (Petroleum Research Fund) to support his research on B-carboline<lb />chemistry and chiral chemistry. He has been one of the best teachers in the department, receiving<lb />two university teaching awards in 1999: The Alumni Teaching Award, and the Board of<lb />Governors Distinguished Professor for Teaching Award. He was also instrumental in upgrading the<lb />department's organic and undergraduate student seminar programs.<lb /><lb />Recollections from Dr. Brian Love:<lb /><lb />"In December of 1997 we were conducting a search for an organic chemist, and as part of the interview,<lb />four of us (George Evans, Chia-yu Li, the candidate, and myself) were going out to lunch. As I had<lb />parked the closest to campus that day, I was the "designated driver." Since we were trying to be as<lb />hospitable as possible, we offered the front seat to our candidate, which unfortunately meant that Drs.<lb />Evans and Li were stuck in the none-too-roomy back seat of my '74 Camaro, more or less with their knees<lb />in their noses.<lb /><lb />The suspension system on the car wasn't the greatest at that point either, so every bump we went over<lb />elicited groans and then laughter from the back seat. (Who knows"" this may have been a contributing<lb />factor to Dr. Evans' later knee surgery""sorry, George!). In any case, the candidate said he couldn't<lb />believe that they were being so good-natured and laughing about the whole situation, further adding that<lb />he could never imagine his own department chair being cramped in the back seat of a car and taking it with<lb />good humor. For the candidate, it was an illustration of the camaraderie and humor of the department""<lb />for us, it was just another bumpy ride.<lb /><lb />I arrived at ECU in the fall of 1994 in advance of modern telecommunications. Most of the faculty office<lb />phones in Flanagan at that time were "party lines" "" the same phone line was shared by more than one<lb /><lb />18<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />_ a ail oe?<lb /><lb />faculty member. In my case, I had the same phone number as Fred Parham, whose office was about three<lb />doors down the hall from mine. When I'd get a call for him, I would have to walk (or shout) down the hall<lb />to let him know the phone was for him, and naturally, he would do the same for me."�<lb /><lb />Dr. Sargent was awarded more than 5,000 hours of North Carolina Supercomputer time equivalent<lb />to nearly $1.9 million dollars. He was also the recipient of a $40,000 ACS-PRF research grant. He<lb /><lb />has been invited to speak at ACS national meetings, symposia, and seminars at PhD schools and<lb /><lb />was instrumental in initiating the department's undergraduate teaching assistantship program and in<lb />revamping the graduate seminar course.<lb /><lb />In 1995, Dr. Geoffrey Barker, who had just completed his PhD in analytical chemistry at SUNY-<lb />Binghamton, was hired into Dr. Church's position, but he resigned from the department in<lb />December 1996 to take a lucrative industrial position in California. In the same year, Dr. John W.<lb />Sibert, IV, an inorganic chemist who was doing post-doctoral research at Northwestern, joined the<lb />department. His research on a new class of macrocycles attracted a large group of undergraduate and<lb />graduate students to work for him. He was also applying for patents for his discoveries of potential<lb />anti-cancer chelating agents. However, he chose to resign from ECU to take a position with the<lb />University of Texas at Dallas in the summer of 2000. At the time of his departure, he was awarded<lb />the 2000 Board of Governors' Distinguished Professor for Teaching Award.<lb /><lb />In 1997, Dr. Yu Yang, who was doing post-doctoral research at the Energy and Environmental<lb />Research Center, University of North Dakota, became the third analytical chemist to join the<lb />department. Dr. Yang's research on subcritical water extraction and chromatography took off<lb />quickly at ECU. He was awarded two Research Corporation research grants (approximately<lb />$80,000), a first in the department, and was the sole national recipient of the 1999 Starter Grant<lb />Award ($20,000) from the Society for Analytical Chemists of Pittsburgh.<lb /><lb />In August 1998, two more tenure-track faculty members were recruited to the department,<lb /><lb />Dr. William "Toby" Allen, an organic post-doctoral chemist at University of Texas at Austin,<lb />and Dr. Nathan R. Brandstater, a UCLA educated physical chemist who had been teaching at<lb />Occidental College, California. Two years later, Dr. Brandstater resigned from the department to<lb />pursue a non-teaching career in California. In 1999-2000, five new fixed-term faculty members,<lb />Drs. Robert Hammond, Anthony Hayford, Valislava Kariavanova, Robert McIntyre, and Shaun<lb />Schmidt, were hired to fill positions vacated by retired faculty.<lb /><lb />Faculty members hired in the 1990's were not the only ones who were successful in securing<lb />external funding and in receiving recognition. By the time of his retirement in 1997, Dr. Lunney in<lb />collaboration with Dr. Morrison, had been awarded close to $1.5 million dollars to support projects<lb />associated with the Science Institute for the Disabled. In 1992-93, Dr. Morrison was awarded a<lb />major NSF research grant in the amount of $154,200 to support his work in quantum chemistry.<lb /><lb />In the 1990's, Dr. Zoretic had received three American Chemical Society "" Petroleum Research<lb />Fund awards totaling $70,000. He had more than sixty research papers to his credit by the time he<lb />retired in 2000.<lb /><lb />By the end of the 1990's, Dr. Gemperline's external grant awards also exceeded $1,000,000 from<lb />funding agencies that included private industry, government, and the NSF. He also authored more<lb />than forty papers, two book chapters and two conference proceedings. He has made numerous<lb /><lb />19<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />~"" Chemistry at BOW<lb /><lb />presentations in the U.S. and around the world. He served on the editorial board of numerous<lb />professional journals and served as the North American editor for the Journal of Chemometrics,<lb />and he received many honors including the ECU Sigma Xi Helms Research Award in 1987,<lb />the Five-Year Achievement in Research Award, and the Distinguished Research Professor of<lb /><lb />Chemistry Award in 1999.<lb /><lb />Dr. Rodriguez is another success story. In the 1990's he received more than $327,000 in grant<lb />awards, including two prestigious and highly competitive awards from the NSF.<lb /><lb />The department's Master of Science program received a major uplift in May 1993 when the<lb />Burroughs Wellcome Fund at RTP announced a decision to endow a major gift to the department.<lb />The endowment in the amount of $375,000 was to be used to fund in perpetuity two graduate<lb />fellowships in organic chemistry annually. Another $15,000 was granted to the department to<lb />launch the award in 1993. A ceremony was organized by Dr. Li on September 13, 1993 to<lb />celebrate the event. Dr. Howard Schaeffer, then President of the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, and<lb />Chancellor Eakin were on hand to conduct the ceremony.<lb /><lb />In 1995, Mr. James Ebron, a chemistry alumnus, and then a site manager of the Burroughs<lb />Wellcome Co. in Greenville, donated $100,000 on behalf of Burroughs Wellcome Co. to the<lb />College of Arts and Sciences to establish a distinguished lectureship in biology and chemistry.<lb /><lb />Dr. Byron Coulter, then College Associate Dean, Dr. Charles Bland, Chair of Biology, and Dr.<lb /><lb />Li met and set the guidelines for the lectureship series. The two departments held joint symposia<lb />in March 1996 and again in March 2000. Except 1996 and 2000, the two departments would<lb />alternate sponsoring the lectures. The inaugural symposium chaired by Dr. Li with Dr. Love and<lb />two biology faculty serving on the symposium committee invited three world-class scientists,<lb />Professor Philip S. Portoghese of University of Minnesota, Professor Celia Bonaventura of Duke,<lb />and Dr. Paul L. Feldman of Glaxo, Corp., to speak on campus. The event was held in the Flanagan<lb />Building. Dr. John Sibert single-handedly organized the symposium for chemistry in April 1998.<lb />Dr. Anthony G. M. Barrett of the Imperial College of London, and Dr. Jeffrey I. Seeman of<lb /><lb />the Stevens Institute of Technology, were the invited speakers. Drs. Toby Allen and Nathan<lb />Brandstater successfully organized the 2000 Burroughs Wellcome Lectures jointly with the Biology<lb />Department. Two internationally renowned scientists, Dr. Thomas J. Meyer and Dr. Roger A.<lb />Pederson, were the speakers for the symposium which was held in the Medical School auditorium.<lb />In March 2001, Dr. Toby Allen single-handedly organized the symposium, and he invited two<lb />world-class researchers, Professor Chad A. Mirkin of Northwestern, and Professor Adam P. Arkin<lb />of University of California at Berkeley, to speak at the Flanagan Building.<lb /><lb />In teaching, in the early 1990's, Dr. Caroline Ayers was very active in chemical education research.<lb />She published book chapters in the multi-volume SourceBook and was its Assistant Editor. She had<lb />given presentations at NC Science Teachers Association meetings and at Mississippi's state-wide<lb />Chemsource Workshop. As Chair of the Curriculum Committee, Dr. George O. Evans led the<lb />department to revise and upgrade the chemistry undergraduate curriculum. The accelerated BS/MS<lb />program (also known as the 4+1 program) had been successfully implemented. A new biological<lb />chemistry and lab course (Chem 2770/2771) was developed by Dr. David Bjorkman to satisfy the<lb />ACS certification requirements. Dr. Hix received the University Outstanding Major's Advisor<lb />Award in 1995. Dr. Li was the recipient of the 1996 Robert and Lina Mays (Alumni) Teaching<lb /><lb />Excellence Award. Many faculty were developing web-assisted instruction and PowerPoint<lb /><lb />20<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />= IFS - ot?<lb /><lb />presentations. Dr. Evans developed a coursepak for Chem 1150/1160 and completely revamped<lb />the inorganic lab, Chem 3451. As the coordinator of general chemistry labs, Mr. Lewis led the<lb />development of new experiments several of which were computerized for Chem 1151/1161.<lb /><lb />A team of faculty, Dr. Gemperline, Mr. William Lewis, Dr. McIntyre, and others, also started a<lb />multi-media project to revamp the teaching of Chem 1151/1161. Ms. Rand was very active and<lb />successful in securing funding from various sources including the Student Computer Program for<lb />the Chemistry Learning Center. In 1998-99, she raised approximately $90,000 to renovate the<lb />Center. The money was used to purchase new computers, furniture, and new software. When Ms.<lb />Rand retired in 1998, Dr. Bjorkman was appointed Acting Director of the Learning Center. A year<lb />later, he became the Director.<lb /><lb />In the 1990's, the department nominated three alumni to receive ECU's outstanding alumni<lb />awards. The awardees were:<lb /><lb />1990 "" Dr. Keith Holmes, Jr. Senior Manager in the Pharmaceutical Industry (Analytical<lb />Development and Technical Development)<lb /><lb />(BS in Chemistry, 1968)<lb /><lb />1994 "" Mr. James Ebron Former Site Manager of the Burroughs Wellcome Co.<lb />Greenville Plant, deceased, 2000.<lb />(BS in Chemistry, 1970 and M. S. in 1972)<lb /><lb />1998 "" Dr. Claude Hughes Former Duke Univ. Medical School Professor, the Women's<lb />Guild Chair in Women's Health at Cedar-Sinai Medical Center<lb /><lb />in Los Angeles.<lb />(BS in Biochemistry, 1973)<lb /><lb />There was a major event known as the "Meeting in Miniature," which was conceived and<lb />launched for the department by Dr. Art Rodriguez and his wife, Dr. Vonda Jones Rodriguez then<lb />of Burroughs Wellcome Co. It was a huge success every time it was held. The event had attracted<lb />students from North Carolina and nearby states. Dr. Rodriguez organized three major "Meeting<lb />in Miniatures" on campus in 1991, 1993, and 1995. It was a one-day (Friday) event. During<lb /><lb />the day time, undergraduate and graduate students from ECU, and from North Carolina, South<lb />Carolina, and Virginia, presented their research papers in the Flanagan Building. These papers were<lb />judged by a faculty panel. In the evening, a Nobel Laureate was invited as a keynote speaker at<lb /><lb />the banquet. After the speech and the dinner, the Nobel Laureate would present student winners<lb />with a certificate and cash awards. Typically, the first place winners of both the undergraduate and<lb />eraduate division won $300, second place won $200, and the third place won $100. The winners<lb />were very excited because besides the awards, they got a handshake with a Nobel Laureate. In<lb />1991, the department invited Dr. Gertrude Elion from then Burroughs Wellcome; in 1993 Dr.<lb />Herbert Brown from Purdue; and, in 1995 Dr. Derek Barton from Texas A&amp;M. After 1995, the<lb />department no longer sponsored the event and the event was moved to the Southeastern Regional<lb /><lb />ACS meetings.<lb /><lb />21<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"""" Chemisry at BCU<lb /><lb />The following is an abbreviated summary that reflects the department's scholarly activities in the last<lb /><lb />four decades:<lb /><lb />Comparison of Scholarly Activities in the Department During the Last Four Decades<lb /><lb />No. Journal No. of Presentations New External<lb />Decade Articles at Scientific Meetings Grant Funding<lb />1960's 10 18 $134,065<lb />19705 46 106 $423 328<lb />1980's Yi 180 $1,709,750<lb />1990's 120 eA, $2,448,764<lb /><lb />(Note: The grant funds do not include the Burroughs Wellcome Co. endowments and supercomputer funding.)<lb /><lb />Overall, the major challenges facing the department in the 1990's were: 1) The need for more<lb />release-time for faculty to conduct research; 2) the need to increase the number and the amount<lb />of graduate assistantships; 3) the need to offer competitive start-up packages; and, 4) the need to<lb />increase the budget which had been flat for the past ten years.<lb /><lb />22<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Al ti.<lb />pS ie gy, ; ee ee Pe<lb />FINDING A NEW NICHE AND MEETING NEW CHALLENGES<lb /><lb />The department started with a bang in the 21st Century with new faculty hired and new grants<lb />awarded. While ECU was being reclassified as a Research Intensive Doctoral University, the<lb />department was also preparing to move toward becoming a more research-oriented academic unit<lb />with new initiatives and directions.<lb /><lb />The department saw two more faculty members retiring upon entering the new century. In July<lb />2000, Dr. Phillip A. Zoretic retired, and in December 2000, Dr. Fred M. Parham, the last faculty<lb />member who was hired in the 1960's, retired. Also, Dr. Magdalena James-Pederson joined the<lb />department on a permanent fixed-term appointment in fall 2000, but she resigned a year later to<lb />join her husband in New Jersey.<lb /><lb />Among the five fixed-term faculty who were hired in 1999-2000, three were later selected to fill<lb />tenure-track positions. The first was Dr. Anthony Hayford, who was hired in August 2000. He,<lb />an organic PhD chemist trained at the University of Maryland, was a Camille &amp; Henry Dreyfus<lb />Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Minnesota, Duluth, and a lecturer at the University of<lb />Wisconsin, Green Bay. The second was Dr. Timothy Romack, who was hired in January 2001,<lb />and the third was Dr. Robert McIntyre, who was hired in August 2001. Dr. Romack is a polymer<lb />chemist from UNC-Chapel Hill and is a co-founder of Micell Technologies. He had dozens of<lb />patent awards. Dr. McIntyre, an inorganic chemist from the University of New Orleans, was a<lb />lecturer at St. Mary's College of California and San Francisco State University, and did his post-<lb />doctoral work under Dr. Art Rodriguez at ECU.<lb /><lb />In August 2001, three new non-tenure-track faculty members joined the department: Rosa<lb />Alvarez-Bolainez, PhD, NCSU; William Donovan; PhD, Purdue, and James Reho, PhD,<lb />Princeton. After a national search conducted in the late fall of 2001 and early spring of 2002, Dr.<lb />Reho was selected to fill the Director of General Chemistry Laboratories position vacated by Mr.<lb />William Lewis who moved to Arizona in May 2002, and Dr. Rachel Ward (PhD, U. Pittsburgh)<lb />was selected to fill the second permanent fixed-term position. The only regret during this period<lb />was the inability to hire a suitable candidate after an extensive national search for a tenure-track<lb />biophysical chemist position because of less-competitive packages and insufficient start-up funds<lb />(compared with what other schools could offer). Offers were made to three top candidates, but<lb />they all turned us down. During this period, two new staff members were hired. Ms. Gwendolyn<lb />Williams joined the department in December 2000 to fill the vacated Office Assistant IV position.<lb />Her position was reclassified in fall 2004 as Office Assistant V, an Administrative Assistant position<lb />handling budget and personnel paperwork. In November 2001, the department hired Ms. Renee<lb />Mayo, Office Assistant III. As the department's receptionist, she also handled graduate committee<lb />work, student payrolls, classroom scheduling, and alumni matters.<lb /><lb />It was a very exciting period between fall 2002 and fall 2004. A total of five new tenure-track<lb />faculty at the Assistant Professor level, and one tenured Full Professor, joined the department. In<lb />December 2002, the department was given two new tenure-track positions, one for enrollment<lb />increase and another for diversity. The department was able to fill these two new positions and two<lb /><lb />existing tenure-track positions during a twelve-month period.<lb /><lb />23<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"" Chemistry at ECU """"<lb /><lb />In July 2003, Dr. Libero J. Bartolotti joined the department as a tenured full-professor and Director<lb />of the Center for Applied Computational Studies in a position specifically allocated by the Provost<lb />William Swart. His hiring came from the Provost's initiative of encouraging academic departments<lb />to recruit star professors. Dr. Bartolotti, a quantum and theoretical chemist, has extensive<lb />experience in high performance computing. His research was concerned with the development<lb /><lb />and application of the concepts of density function theory to problems of chemical interest. He,<lb /><lb />4 Vietnam Veteran, received his Ph. D. from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, and he<lb />worked as a computational scientist at North Carolina supercomputing Center before joining ECU.<lb /><lb />The four new tenure-track faculty members who joined the department starting August 25, 2005<lb />were Dr. Colin Burns (bio-organic), Dr. Yumin Li (bio-computational), Dr. Kwang Hun Lim<lb />(bio-physical), and Dr. Andrew Morehead (organic).<lb /><lb />Dr. Burns, a peptide chemist, received his PhD from the University of North Carolina at Chapel<lb />Hill and did research as an NIH Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of California at Santa Cruz.<lb />Dr. Yumin Li has expertise in molecular dynamics simulation of proteins and their antiviral activity.<lb />She received her PhD from Nanjing University of Science and Technology, China, and did<lb />postdoctoral research in China, Japan, and at Purdue University in the USA. Dr. Kwang Hun Lim,<lb />a Korea-educated chemist, was awarded a PhD in Physical Chemistry from the State University<lb /><lb />of New York at Stony Brook and did post-doctoral research at the University of California at<lb />Berkeley. He is a trained expert in protein solid-state NMR spectroscopy. He spent more than<lb />$100,000 of his start-up funding ($170,000) to purchase a magic-angle spinning solid-state probe<lb />for the department's 500 MHz NMR spectrometer. Dr. Morehead, an AB cum laude in chemistry<lb />from Harvard, received his PhD from Duke University and did his postdoctoral research as an<lb /><lb />NIH postdoctoral Research Fellow at California Institute of Technology. Prior to coming to<lb />ECU, he was an assistant professor in chemistry at the University of Maryland, College Park. He 1s<lb />specialized in catalysis and organometallic chemistry. The success of recruiting these highly qualified<lb />new faculty was due largely to the start-up funding of nearly $357,000 over a three year period<lb />provided by Harriot College of Arts and Sciences.<lb /><lb />In August 2004, the department successfully recruited another new tenure-track faculty at the<lb />Assistant Professor level, Dr. Allison S. Danell. Dr. Danell received her PhD from the University<lb />of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Analytical Chemistry and did postdoctoral research at the<lb />Rowland Institute at Harvard. Dr. Danell is an expert on mass spectrometry (MS) and her research<lb />interests include studying the effects of ionization and vaporization of biomolecules using tandem<lb />mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Like Dr. Lim, she was also given $170,000 startup funding to launch<lb />her research at ECU.<lb /><lb />Comments from Dr. Allison Danell<lb /><lb />"I had the pleasure of hearing Dr. Li tell many stories about how different his life was in the department<lb />in the 1970s versus when I joined the department in 2004. One of my favorite stories, which I was lucky<lb />to hear him tell during my interview here, was of the "flood of 1973"�. It wasn't a natural disaster, but<lb /><lb />a lab accident that occurred over the weekend that no one discovered until it was too late. A chilled water<lb />line Dr. Li had hooked up burst, and his lab flooded. The damage was worst, though, in the workshop<lb />underneath his lab in Flanagan. When he found out the damage to the shop's machinery would cost more<lb />to repair than he earned in a year, Dr. Li figured it was time to pack up and go back to working as a<lb /><lb />24<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />ied<lb /><lb />ch<lb /><lb />ey "" eer _<lb /><lb />postdoctoral researcher. He even called his old advisor to make arrangements, and told his wife it was time<lb />to move again. Their young family had been in Greenville for only a few months! Of course, Dr. Li didn't<lb />lose his job because the chairperson was so understanding about the accident. It was such a scary event for<lb />Dr. Li but somehow he laughed during the telling of the whole story. Even in the short time I knew<lb /><lb />Dr. Li, it was clear that whenever he had to show compassion to one of his young professors, the flood of<lb />1973 must have been on his mind."�<lb /><lb />During the first four years of the new century, the department's research activity in terms of<lb />securing external funding continues to thrive. In August 2000, the department received a major<lb />award from the NSF in an amount of $208,338 ($480,000 with matching funds from ECU) to<lb />purchase two super-conducting Varian multi-nuclei nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometers<lb />(300 MHz, 7.0 Tesla and 500 MHz, 11.7 Tesla). Even though this acquisition was based on a<lb />multi-author proposal, Dr. Rodriguez was instrumental in getting the proposal funded. In April,<lb />2001, Dr. Art Rodriguez directed the installation of these two pieces of equipment. The 500 MHz<lb />now has the distinction of being the only high-field research-grade NMR spectrometer in North<lb />Carolina, east of Interstate 95.<lb /><lb />In 2000-2001, new external grant awards exceeded $269,600 (not including supercomputer-<lb />time awards worth $192,000); there were four active grants ($133,800) and five new submissions<lb /><lb />($608,800).<lb /><lb />In 2001-2002, chemistry faculty received seven new external grant awards (totaling nearly $296,791<lb />from Research Corp -Cottrell Science, ACS-PRF, ORAU, Dreyfus, Reynolds, and DSM-<lb />Catalytica) and four internal grants ($49,600 from Research/ Creative Activity Committee, and<lb />CIITR). Also, the department had seven active grants ($153,800 from MCEC, Research Corp,<lb />DuPont, Eli Lily, ORAU); and submitted ten new external grant proposals ($1,427,700). One<lb />faculty member (Romack) received 10 new patent awards.<lb /><lb />In 2002-2003, Chemistry faculty were awarded five new grants totaling $434,614. They also<lb />submitted 13 grant proposals for a total of $5.06 million, including 7 pending proposals worth $3.39<lb />million.<lb /><lb />The year 2003-2004 was another banner year in terms of external funding. Chemistry faculty<lb />members were awarded 12 new external grants totaling $715,260, and 7 new internal grants totaling<lb />$82,094. Also, Chemistry faculty submitted new grants for a total of $4,897,644.<lb /><lb />All in all, during the four-year period between fall 2000 and fall 2004, the external new grant<lb />funding totaled over $1.7 million. The following lists some of the most notable grant awards. In<lb />addition, during this period, chemistry faculty published 36 peer-reviewed journal articles, three<lb />book chapters, and presented 151 papers at professional conferences.<lb /><lb />Dr. Toby Allen received $38,494 from the Research Corporation in 2001-2002, and $57,531 from<lb />the North Carolina Biotechnology Center in 2002-2003.<lb /><lb />Dr. Colin Burns received grant funding in the amount of $20,000 from the American Cancer<lb />Society Institutional Research via ECU Brody School of Medicine in 2004.<lb /><lb />25<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />=~ emustry at BC ""<lb /><lb />Dr. Paul Gemperline was awarded $40,902 from the Measurement and Control Engineering<lb />Center (MCEC), and $8,000 from Eastman Kodak in 2000-2001; $38,400 from MCEC in<lb />2001-2002; and, a major NSF award of $238,000 in 2001-2002 to support his research entitled<lb />"Chemometrics Tools for Characterization of Evolving Chemical Processes."�<lb /><lb />Dr. Kwang Hun Lim was awarded the College Research Award in 2003, and $35,000 from the<lb />ACS-PRF.<lb /><lb />In 2004, Dr. Andrew Morehead was awarded a major NSF grant in the amount of $228,000 to<lb />support his research on the catalytic synthesis of antagonists, the indanones and tetralones.<lb /><lb />In Spring 2001, Dr. Timothy Romack received the Ralph E. Powe Junior Faculty Enhancement<lb />Award ($5,000 with an equal match from ECU) sponsored by Oak Ridge Associated Universities,<lb />and in July 2001 he received the 2001 Camille &amp; Henry Dreyfus Faculty Start-up Grant Award for<lb />Undergraduate Institutions ($20,000). Both awards were a first in the history of the department.<lb />He was also awarded an ACS-PRF Type G grant of $35,000 in 2001.<lb /><lb />Dr. Yu Yang was awarded $49,650 from Research Corporation in 2001-2002. This was a renewal<lb />grant from his first Research Corporation Award of $39,218 in 1998. Remarkably, the Research<lb />Corporation very rarely offers a second grant to the same investigator.<lb /><lb />The department was awarded two major grants, $250,000 from the Golden LEAF Foundation, and<lb />$32,500 from the North Carolina Biotechnology Center, to fund the construction of a first-ever<lb />GMP (Good Manufacturing Practices) lab in analytical chemistry in eastern North Carolina, or<lb />likely in the state of North Carolina. Dr. Chia-yu Li served as the Primary Investigator for the two<lb />grants. The lab was built in one of the Science &amp; Technology Building shell spaces (Room 348).<lb />Two industrial partners, DSM Pharmaceutical Inc. and Metrics. Inc. were instrumental in assisting<lb />Dr. Li secure the grants and in assisting in the design of this new analytical lab under FDA approved<lb />guidelines. Seniors and graduate-level students are being trained to work in this lab, which is<lb />being filled with modern analytical equipment (dissolution apparatus, chromatographs and optical<lb />spectrometers, etc.) under strict GMP and FDA guidelines. A course has been developed to train<lb />students industrial analytical chemistry techniques. The first class was offered as a special topics ""<lb />analytical chemistry course, Chem 5526, in the fall semester of 2004 with a capacity enrollment of<lb />10 students. Students who finish this class have an excellent chance of being offered an outstanding<lb />industrial position.<lb /><lb />A third industrial partner, Fuji Silysia Chemical Co., provides the department annually with a<lb />$10,000 donation. Under the agreement, Fuji Silysia sends a Japanese scientist to take classes and/<lb />or work on research projects every two years. The scientist was paid by Fuji Silysia with an annual<lb />stipend. To date, two scientists have been hosted from Japan. They were Mr. Toru Kondo,<lb /><lb />from August 2000 to July 2002, and Mr. Massatoshi Okada from August 2002 to July 2004. The<lb />Chemical Engineering Department at NC State is the only other North Carolina institution that<lb />has a similar partnership arrangement like that of the Chemistry department.<lb /><lb />The department has also been successful in securing funds from industries for industrial internship<lb />training. The department has established a good relationship with local firms. With funding<lb />($26,000) from Catalytica Pharmaceuticals (now DSM Pharmaceuticals, Inc.), the department<lb /><lb />26<lb /></p>
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          <lb />red<lb /><lb />eS dad J ~ eer _<lb /><lb />started an innovative industrial internship program in spring 1999. Three senior students were<lb />enrolled in the program with the stipulation that they would continue as MS students in the<lb />department. In the following year, Catalytica Pharmaceuticals provided funding of $22,683 for<lb />three students to do fourteen weeks of summer intern work. A new summer internship program<lb />was established in May 2000 with PCS Phosphate. The new program supports one student ($2,304)<lb />performing 200 hours of work at the company. Both industrial internships were continuing in the<lb />summer of 2001.<lb /><lb />Other notable awards include:<lb /><lb />Dr. William E. Allen was the recipient of the 2002 UNC Board of Governors Distinguished<lb />Professor for Teaching Award. He was tenured and promoted to Associate Professor starting<lb />August 2004.<lb /><lb />Dr. David Bjorkman was a finalist for the 2003 University Award for Outstanding Teaching and for<lb />the 2003 Robert L. Jones Award for Outstanding Teaching.<lb /><lb />Dr. Paul Gemperline was honored in August 2001 as the fifth (and the youngest) Distinguished<lb />Professor of the College of Arts and Sciences by Dean Sparrow. He was also the recipient of<lb />the 2003 Eastern Analytical Symposium Award for Achievements in Chemometrics, the highest<lb />international award in the field of chemometrics. In November of 2003, Dr. Gemperline was<lb />appointed Interim Associate Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Studies.<lb /><lb />Dr. James Reho was a grand winner of Five Ventures at UNC-Charlotte for his research on<lb />identifying the chemical composition of the attractant of pre-molting female blue crabs in 2004.<lb /><lb />In 2001, Dr. Love was the recipient of the Vice Chancellor's Teacher-Scholar Award.<lb /><lb />Dr. Tim Romack was awarded three new US patents in 2003 and one in 2004, all of which deal<lb />with the uses of carbon dioxide as environmentally friendly cleaning agents.<lb /><lb />Dr. Yang was the recipient of the Sigma Xi Helms Research Award in April 2003 and the Teacher-<lb />Scholar Award in May 2003. Also, he was an invited speaker at the 2001 International Symposium<lb />on Supercritical Fluid Chromatography. Dr. Yang was rated as one of the best teachers in the<lb />department by students, receiving the 2001 UNC Board of Governors Distinguished Professor for<lb />Teaching Award, and he was a finalist for ECU's Alumni Teaching Award. Dr. Yang was tenured<lb />and promoted to Associate Professor starting in August 2005.<lb /><lb />Dr. Allen and Dr. Morehead's students were awarded 2004 summer fellowships from Pfizer and<lb />GlaxoSmithKline pharmaceutical companies. One of Dr. Yang's graduate students was awarded<lb />scholarships and admissions to five Medical Schools. Dr. Hayford's undergraduate research student,<lb />Gwen Bass, was selected as a finalist for the 2004 NOBCCHhE (National Organization for Black<lb />Chemists and Chemical Engineers) Undergraduate Research Award Competition sponsored by<lb />Rohm and Haas Company. She was given a $3000 per month summer internship with Rohm and<lb />Haas working on nanotechnology.<lb /><lb />27<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />=~ Chenery abl<lb /><lb />Innovations and Memorable Events<lb /><lb />In the fall of 2000, the department launched a highly successful program, the "Bachelor of Science<lb />and Accelerated MS in Chemistry" program, also known as the "4+1"�program. This idea was<lb />originally conceived by Dr. Andrew Sargent. Under this program, highly motivated B. S. students<lb />are encouraged to do undergraduate research under the supervision of faculty mentors during their<lb />senior year. They can complete the MS degree requirements with one more year of research and<lb />coursework, usually under the same mentors. Students have benefited from the program because,<lb />in theory, they can get their BS and Masters' degrees in five years. Faculty members have benefited<lb />because they can recruit their graduate students from the already trained undergraduate researchers.<lb />The department has benefited because it provides a very valuable supply of graduate students to the<lb />M. S. program at a time when the number of international students is dwindling. This is indeed a<lb />Win-win-win situation.<lb /><lb />Another highly successful program known as the "Undergraduate Teaching (Lab) Assistants (UTAs<lb />or ULAs) Program" was started in fall 2002. This was also a product of Dr. Andrew Sargent's<lb />creative idea. Through this program, highly trained undergraduate students were paid a modest<lb />stipend with department funds to teach general chemistry labs, Chem 1151/1161, alongside faculty<lb />or senior graduate students. All ULAs, who were selected from a pool of qualified undergraduate<lb />students, must go through vigorous training by taking Chem 2301, Teaching Laboratory<lb />Chemistry, before they are assigned lab assistant duties. The program has helped reduce faculty's<lb />teaching load and allowed them to spend more time on their research. On the other hand, the<lb />ULAs get very valuable experience in lab instruction. It helps enhance their understanding of the<lb />subject matter and hones their problem solving skills.<lb /><lb />Largely due to the efforts of Dr. Andrew Sargent, the department has successfully developed and<lb />implemented a three-year program (including summer school) for our BA students and the MD7<lb />program (to finish medical school in seven years including getting an undergraduate degree).<lb /><lb />The Department held the Burroughs Wellcome Distinguished Lectures in the Sciences (organized<lb />by Chia-yu Li and Yu Yang) on March 14, 2003 in Flanagan 201, followed by an evening banquet<lb />at the Mendenhall Student Center. The theme of the symposium was "Bio-Separation" featuring<lb />four distinguished speakers, Profs. Milton Lee of Brigham Young, Edward Yeung of Iowa State,<lb />Jonathan Sweedler of U. of Illinois, and James Jorgenson of UNC Chapel Hill.<lb /><lb />The department organized a College Science Departments - Medical School Conference on<lb />"Bio-Initiative" on Feb. 5, 2002. The major purpose of the Conference was to promote research<lb />collaboration and to focus new faculty hires in the areas of biochemistry, biotechnology, nano-<lb />technology, and new drug discoveries. The Conference was attended by three College chairs<lb />(Biology, Chemistry, and Physics), three Medical School chairs (Biochemistry, Microbiology &amp;<lb />Immunology, and Pharmacology), and more than a dozen research-active science faculty. This<lb />meeting helped set the stage for the department to move to a bio-related research focus.<lb /><lb />In fall 2003, Dr. Chia-yu Li was diagnosed with cancer and submitted his resignation as Chair of<lb />Chemistry to Dean Keats Sparrow in January 2004. Dean Sparrow accepted his resignation but<lb />asked him to stay as Chair until his replacement was found provided that his health condition<lb />allowed. In November 2003 the Harriot College of Arts &amp; Sciences honored Dr. Li by naming<lb /><lb />28<lb /></p>
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          <lb />#9 ty = feer _<lb /><lb />the Chemistry Conference Room (Room 311) after him. Dr. Li humbly accepted the honor. The<lb />department began looking for a new chair. Dr. Rickey Hicks, from Mississippi State University and<lb />Walter Reed Army Hospital, accepted the position.<lb /><lb />Through the nomination by the department, Mr. Phil Hodges received the Outstanding Alumni<lb />Award in October 2004. Mr. Hodges received his degrees from ECU (BS in Chemistry, 1979, and<lb />MS in Analytical Chemistry, 1984), and he is the founder of Metrics, Inc., and has been the CEO<lb />and President since its inception in 1994.<lb /><lb />In spring 2000, Dr. Morrison was elected Chair of the Faculty Senate and was re-elected to two<lb />more terms in spring 2001 and spring 2002. He was the second faculty member in the department<lb />to become Chair of Faculty. Dr. Caroline Ayers was the first and served in that capacity in 1982-83.<lb /><lb />Tenured faculty voted on May 4, 2001, to approve a new Code, which was drafted by the<lb /><lb />Code Committee. The members of the committee were Drs. Evans (Chair), Love, Sargent, and<lb />Rodriguez. Dr. Evans had spent countless hours in preparing the code for the department. The<lb /><lb />new Code was finally approved by the Chair of the Faculty Senate, Rick Niswander, on September<lb />16, 2003, and by Interim Chancellor William Shelton on October 7, 2003.<lb /><lb />Starting in May 2001, Dr. Sargent succeeded Dr. Hix as Director of Undergraduate Studies. Dr. Art<lb />Rodriguez continued serving as the department's Director of Graduate Studies since 1999.<lb /><lb />One of the most frustrating problems facing the department is that the continuing operating budget,<lb />despite significant enrollment growth, has remained flat for the last twelve years. Sole dependence<lb />on the state budget to address continuing monetary needs is no longer acceptable. The Faculty have<lb />been encouraged to seek external funding sources and they are doing very well. To sustain and to<lb />enhance growth, the department is committed to acquiring more funding from non-state sources<lb />such as grants, contracts, and fund-raising projects.<lb /><lb />29<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />OF THE DEVELOP T OF THE DEPARTM *S<lb />UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE DEGREE PROGRAMS<lb /><lb />In 1965, a new Bachelor of Science in Chemistry degree program was approved by the ECC<lb />Administration. By 1967, three undergraduate degree programs were offered in the department --<lb />BA in Chemistry, BS in Chemistry, and BS in the Teaching of Chemistry. In September 1967, just<lb />prior to the 154" National American Chemical Society (ACS) meeting in Chicago, Dr. Lamb went<lb />before the ACS Subcommittee on Professional Training to request approval for the accreditation<lb /><lb />of the BS (professional) degree program. The application was well received, and a site visit by Dr.<lb />William H. Fletcher of the University of Tennessee, appointed by the ACS, was conducted in the<lb />fall of 1969. The formal accreditation was granted a few months later on March 13, 1970.<lb /><lb />During the fall quarter of 1967, the application for the MS in Chemistry degree was approved<lb /><lb />by the North Carolina Board of Higher Education. Five graduate students initiated the program<lb /><lb />in 1967-68, and there were eight in the program in the fall quarter, 1968-69. The number of<lb />graduate students in the program grew to 14 in 1970-71. Prior to formal granting of the MS in<lb />Chemistry at East Carolina University, there were two recorded MA in Chemistry theses written<lb />by students. The first entitled "Some N,N'-Tetrasubstituted Thioureas" was written by Cheong-hwan<lb />Kim under the supervision of Dr. Joseph N. LeConte in August 1963. The second entitled "A<lb />Study of the Reaction of Chlorine with Dimethylamine and the Preparation of Some Chloraminated Nitrogen<lb />and Phosphorus Bases" by Randall Frank Andrews in June 1966 under Dr. Donald F. Clemens. The<lb />year 1969 marked the first year the department offered the MS in Chemistry degree at ECU. In<lb />that year, three MS theses were defended. They were: "Solvent Effect on the Decomposition Kinetics<lb /><lb />of bis-(a,0-dibenzylacetyl) Peroxide" by Murdock McKinnon Butler, Jr. in May 1969 under Dr.<lb />Robert Lamb, "Thermal Decomposition Mechanisms for Some Isobutyryl Substituted Benzoyl Peroxides<lb /><lb />in Cyclohexane" by John Ronald Sanderson in May 1969 (also under Dr. Lamb), and "A Line<lb />Sharpening Amplifier for Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy" by Stewart Phinizy Barrett, Jr. in August<lb />1969 under Dr. David Lunney.<lb /><lb />While the MS program was still in its infancy, the department had already looked forward to the<lb />ultimate goal of establishing a PhD program in Chemistry. In 1970, the Department submitted<lb /><lb />a formal proposal to the University's Ad Hoc Committee on doctoral programs in 1970, but the<lb />attempt failed to win approval from the Committee. It was not until 1999, nearly thirty years<lb />later, when the department was trying again for a PhD program. A letter of intent to study the<lb />feasibility of establishing an interdisciplinary doctoral program related to chemistry was submitted<lb />to the Vice Chancellor for Research, Tom Feldbush. The Administration's response was that it<lb />was pre-mature for Chemistry to submit a plan. The department submitted a plan to develop a<lb />new MS in Biochemistry program in 2002 to then Provost William Swart. The rationale was<lb />that ECU has a BS in Biochemistry degree program offered by the Department of Biology, and a<lb />PhD in Biochemistry offered by the Brody Medical School's Department of Biochemistry (now<lb />Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology), but no academic unit was offering a MS<lb /><lb />in Biochemistry. The Provost's ruling was that the idea of developing another MS program be<lb />dropped and, instead, strive for a new PhD degree.<lb /><lb />In conjunction with the university's five year plan (1974-80), the department was planning a new<lb />M. S. Degree in Industrial, Biomedical, and Environmental Instrumentation. This was the niche<lb /><lb />31<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"""" (ier ustry at ECU<lb /><lb />that the department was hoping to develop eventually into a PhD program. It made sense because<lb />the department in the mid 1970's had a nucleus of five faculty members with expertise in electronic<lb />instrumentation interfacing with minicomputers. However, this degree program was never<lb /><lb />realized. In the early 1990's, the department was very interested in launching a feasibility study for<lb />establishing an interdisciplinary PhD program in bioanalytical chemistry, but the initiative was not<lb />pursued.<lb /><lb />The department completed a successful MS program review in the 1998-1999 academic year. A<lb />panel composed of two external reviewers (Dr. Joseph Templeton of UNC-Chapel Hill, and Dr.<lb />Fred Hawkridge of Virginia Commonwealth University) and two internal reviewers (Dr. Scott<lb />Snyder of Geology, and Dr. Gerhard Kalmus of Biology) visited the department in December<lb />1998. They affirmed the quality of the MS program and recommended its continuation. On the<lb />other hand, the MS program was identified by the UNC-GA for the third time in four years as a<lb />low productivity program, meaning the department produced less than eight MS degreed persons<lb />per year. An active recruiting strategy that is partially based on the new accelerated MS plan was<lb />then developed and implemented to attract students into the graduate program.<lb /><lb />The head counts in all chemistry classes increased from slightly over 800 in 1973 (data not available<lb />prior to 1973) to around 1,300 at the end of 1970's. The headcount remained relatively flat until<lb />about the mid 1980's before it dropped to around 900 in the late 1980's. The enrollment figure<lb />(fall semesters) started to climb rapidly to over 1,700 in the late 1990's, a nearly 200 % increase over<lb />the previous decade. After reaching a high of more than 1,750 students in fall 1998, the number<lb />declined to just over 1,500 students in fall 2000. The decline seemed to coincide with a decrease<lb />in pre-medical and pre-health applications. Starting in fall 2000, the fall enrollment figures began<lb />to climb again. In fall 2004, more than 2,000 students registered for chemistry classes, a new high<lb />in the last three decades. In other words, during the last five years (from fall 2000 to fall 2004),<lb /><lb />the enrollment had grown by greater than 30%, or more than 6% per year. In all likelihood,<lb /><lb />the number will continue to rise because of the anticipated increase in the overall ECU student<lb />population in the coming decade.<lb /><lb />To absorb these extra students, faculty members had to teach larger classes and labs. The size of<lb />each lab section was 20 students per section when they were in the Flanagan Building. Now, the<lb />maximum size of each lab section has increased to 24 students in the new building. Again, the<lb />Faculty had to make the sacrifice by teaching a larger lab with 20% more students in each section<lb />resulting in an increase in workload (e.g. more papers, reports, and exams to grade, etc.).<lb /><lb />During the past 30 years, the number of chemistry BA/BS undergraduate majors also fluctuated in<lb /><lb />a cyclic manner. The number reached a high of 65 in the mid 1970's, and then declined to a low of<lb />22 in the mid 1980's. The headcount started to increase steadily in the 1990's to a record high of 79<lb />in 1999-2000. A similar trend was also observed in the graduate student enrollment for past three<lb />decades. The number of BA/BS and MS degrees conferred followed the same trend.<lb /><lb />Despite the growth of enrollment in service courses, the department has maintained a healthy and<lb />steady growing enrollment of chemistry majors. The department graduated 31 students (15 BA and<lb />16 BS) in May 2001. This class was probably a historic new high. This class also had more than 40%<lb />of the graduates with an overall GPA greater than 3.5 (Cum Laude: 3 students, Magna Cum Laude:<lb /><lb />32<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />er<lb /><lb />79<lb /><lb />)%<lb /><lb />= ety -_ ae?<lb /><lb />3 students, and Summa Cum Laude: 7 students). Also, one of two University Award recipients was<lb />a chemistry student, Seth Weaver (overall GPA 4.0). Seven MS students completed their studies<lb />before the end of summer of 2001. More than 200 people attended the graduation and awards<lb />ceremony on May 11, 2001 in the Mendenhall Student Center. At the ceremony, the department<lb />distributed five endowed scholarships (LeConte, Everett, Holmes, Clemens, and Moldin) totaling<lb />$6,500 to 17 chemistry majors, and two endowed Burroughs Wellcome Fellowships in Organic<lb />Chemistry at $11,500 each to two MS students.<lb /><lb />The department held its annual graduation and awards ceremony for the first time in the new<lb />building's large classroom (# C-307) at 10:30 am on May 7, 2004. A lunch was served in the third<lb />floor lobby area following the celebration. The event was well attended by 250 guests and family<lb />members of our graduates. It was a standing room only celebration. The department recognized the<lb />craduation of 8 MS, 10 BS, and 21 BA students in the ceremony. The department also recognized<lb />eleven undergraduate and three graduate students, who were given endowed scholarships<lb /><lb />(LeConte, Everett, Holmes, Moldin, Kizer, and Li) and cash awards totaling $4,600. Eleven other<lb />students were recognized and received non-cash awards.<lb /><lb />The March 29, 2004 issue of the Chemical &amp; Engineering News, an official publication of the<lb />American Chemical Society, reported the degrees awarded by schools offering an ACS-certified<lb />(accredited) chemistry program for the academic year 2001-2002. ECU's three Chemistry<lb />programs (BA, BS, and MS) ranked very well nationally. With 14 BS students graduated from the<lb />department in 2001-2002, ECU Chemistry ranked 24th among 107 ACS-certified schools. ECU<lb />was ahead of six ACC schools except UNC-Chapel Hill and NC State. The group of schools<lb />ranked lower than ECU also included some of the most prestigious schools in the nation, such<lb /><lb />as UC-Berkeley, Chicago, Harvard, Brown, Columbia, Notre Dame, Northwestern, U Penn,<lb />Dartmouth, Princeton, Ohio State, Penn State, and Wisconsin-Madison, etc. With 28 BA and BS<lb />(combined) students graduated from the department in 2001-2002, ECU's Chemistry Department<lb />ranked 39% among the 107 schools. Under this category, ECU ranked higher than Clemson, Wake<lb />Forest, lowa State, Northwestern, Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, Yale, and<lb />many others. With six MS students graduated from our department in 2001-2002, ECU ranked<lb />22nd among 98 schools that offer the MS program in the nation. ECU ranked higher than three<lb />ACC schools (Clemson, Duke and Wake Forest) and two Ivy League schools (Dartmouth and<lb />Princeton). This report indicates that ECU Chemistry is not only big in size when compared with<lb />107 other certified schools, but also offers a quality education to our students.<lb /><lb />However, in the following two years, the number of certified BS graduates dropped to 11 in 2003,<lb />and to10 in 2004. In contrast, the number of BA graduates increased to 18 in 2003, and to 21<lb /><lb />in 2004. In the same time span, the number of MS graduates decreased to five in 2003, but the<lb />number increased to 8 in 2004.<lb /><lb />The growth in chemistry majors was the result of active recruitment by the Faculty. Many of them<lb />were attracted by the accelerated BS/MS (4+1) program mentioned above, which allows students<lb />to pursue and finish a MS degree within one year after the completion of their BS degree. The<lb />new BA-in-three year program has also attracted many non-chemistry majors (mainly biology) to<lb />add a BA in chemistry as their second major.<lb /><lb />33<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"""" GChemustry a ECU<lb /><lb />The promotion of undergraduate research has always been encouraged in the Chemistry<lb />Department. Faculty members have actively recruited undergraduate students into their research<lb />sroups. In fall 2003 and fall 2004, 28 and 16 students, enrolled in Chem 4515, 4516, and 4517<lb />(Research Problems in Chemistry), respectively. All of them had a faculty mentor who advised<lb />their research. The Faculty had to take a "voluntary overload" to supervise these undergraduate<lb />students in their groups while they were still carrying a regular teaching load.<lb /><lb />Many faculty members are now using smart-board and multi-media presentation technology<lb />along with Blackboard to present their lectures in the Science &amp; Technology Building classrooms.<lb />Dr. David Bjorkman and Dr. Irene Gerow spearheaded the development of 3-D visualization<lb /><lb />of molecular models using the RAVE technology in their Chem 1120 classes. Chemistry faculty<lb />continued to develop new courses for the department such as Introduction to Chemical Literature<lb />(Chem 2103), Practicum in Teaching (Chem 3301), Chemistry for Engineering Students, and<lb />Forensic Chemistry.<lb /><lb />Under the interim leadership of Dr. Art Rodriguez, the department has actively pursued becoming<lb />a major player in the ECU's IDPBS (Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in the Biological Sciences).<lb />This is a newly minted PhD program that involves faculty from both east (academic departments<lb />such as biology, chemistry, and physics) and west campuses (Brody Medical School). Many<lb />research-active tenured faculty and newly hired young faculty with research agendas in bio-related<lb />areas are eager to participate. Given time, Chemistry will have its first PhD student graduated under<lb />this new umbrella program.<lb /><lb />Closing Statement from Dr. Li<lb /><lb />Chemistry has come a long way. The Chemistry Department's history is a part of ECU history.<lb /><lb />In the last fifty plus years, the department has grown from being a small teaching unit to a major<lb />academic unit that offers both undergraduate and graduate degrees. The department's alumni,<lb />some 400+ strong, have become successful citizens of North Carolina and the country. Some of<lb />them have become entrepreneurs that founded their own companies. The department's impact on<lb />local and North Carolina economies is immeasurable. In this State, the new century started with<lb />two types of up-and-coming industries, the nano-technology and the revamped bio-technology<lb />industries that includes biopharmaceuticals. In each of these areas, the Chemistry Department<lb /><lb />can play a significant role in contributing to their development. The Chemistry Department<lb /><lb />is becoming a more and more research-oriented department. Its growth will not only help the<lb />economic growth of the region but also the entire state. Research-active faculty have been, and are<lb />continuing to be, recruited. Students are getting a better and better education through exposure to<lb />cutting edge chemical research. The future is bright for chemistry and for ECU!<lb /><lb />Statement from Dr. Rickey Hicks<lb /><lb />It was a great honor and privilege for me to be recruited to serve as Chair of the Chemistry<lb />Department at East Carolina University. Over the past twenty years I have worked at various<lb />research and teaching institutions, including the Department of Chemistry at Mississippi State<lb />University for twelve years and at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Washington,<lb />DC. The Chemistry Department at ECU is without question the friendliest and most respectful<lb />institution I have had the pleasure to work with. What attracted me most to this position was the<lb /><lb />34<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />7 "" feer _<lb /><lb />dedication of the faculty to provide students with the best educational experience possible. Since<lb />joining the Department and University in August of 2006, my positive opinions and feelings of<lb />respect for the students and faculty have been confirmed many times over.<lb /><lb />As Dr. Li, our previous Chair, stated: "The Chemistry Department is becoming a more and more<lb />research-oriented department. Its growth will not only help the economic growth of the region<lb /><lb />but also the entire state. Research-active faculty have been, and are continuing to be, recruited."�<lb />This is a major part of my mission as Chair, to increase the research productivity and visibility of<lb />our Department. I take this responsibility very seriously. Currently we have excellent faculty poised<lb />to become national leaders in various areas of research and technology. This growth will have a<lb />dramatic impact on the economic wellbeing of Eastern North Carolina.<lb /><lb />Even with the greater emphasis on research, let me assure you, that on my watch, we as a<lb />department will continue to focus on the student. My promise to you is even as we grow in<lb />research we will continue to provide our students the best quality education in the state of North<lb />Carolina. In fact, involving our great students in cutting-edge research is a critical part of their<lb />education! So, as always, the focus of this department is our students.<lb /><lb />The past hundred years have been exciting and full of change. I want to thank you for your<lb />personal contributions to that history as a student, faculty or staff member, and as alumni. I<lb />personally look forward to serving you and all our students in their life-long quest for education<lb />and professional development.<lb /><lb />35<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />KEEPING Up APPEARANCES: AWARD RECOGNIZES 10 PROPERTIES<lb /><lb />This article was published October 5, 2006 by The Daily Reflector, Greenville, NC.<lb />Author: I. Scott Batchelor, The Daily Reflector<lb /><lb />"If you were bringing somebody to this town," said Greenville resident Diane Kulik, "and they had<lb />no clue what it looked like, what would you show them?" Her answer is the Pitt County Court<lb />House and grounds, one of 10 winners recognized Wednesday in a biennial ceremony that bestows<lb />awards on private and public entities whose properties add aesthetic value to the community.<lb /><lb />"The courthouse blows you away when you stand there and look at that," said Kulik, a member of<lb />the city's Community Appearance Commission and chairwoman of its landscape and architecture<lb />awards committee. Kulik and her colleagues chose the courthouse and the other recipients from a<lb />pool of 72 winners recognized during monthly presentations made by the commission during the<lb />past two years.<lb /><lb />The 10 who received top honors during a brief ceremony on Wednesday include East Carolina<lb />University property, a shopping center, a city streetscape, a private medical center and a church.<lb /><lb />Representatives of these visually pleasing places were on hand at City Hall to receive a hand-painted<lb />decorative tile honoring their commitment to keeping the city looking great. "I really appreciate<lb /><lb />it, said Connie Cluderay, co-founder of Argus Properties of Charlotte, which developed and owns<lb />Lynncroft shopping center, one of the award recipients. "We appreciate the city of Greenville.<lb />Everyone here has been great to work with...and we love being here." Lynncroft is emblematic<lb /><lb />of conscientious planning and maintenance, Kulik said in an earlier interview. "There are shopping<lb />centers that just evolve - more buildings get put on top of each other," she said. Lynncroft 1s different,<lb />from the brickwork, to the architecture, to gas light accents on the facade and to the landscaping.<lb />"There's landscaping in layers - different kinds of plants, textures - they went the nine yards,"�<lb /><lb />Kulik said.<lb /><lb />37<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />mS ad ""_ hee?<lb /><lb />Billy Godwin, ECU head baseball coach, accepted the award for the recently opened Clark-LeClair<lb />Stadium. "It's a great honor,' Godwin said. "We've got one of the nicest baseball facilities not just in<lb /><lb />North Carolina but in the country."�<lb /><lb />This year's award continues a tradition begun in November 2004. Kulik said the appearance<lb />commission, established by the City Council, recognizes organizations that have put in an extra<lb /><lb />effort to beautify their properties. "How they look affects how we feel about our city," she said<lb />Wednesday. Publicly noting those achievements is important for two reasons, Kulik said. "No. 1, it's<lb />for enhancement of quality of life for all of our citizens in the city,' she said. But there's also a tangible<lb />benefit that accrues from making things look good.<lb /><lb />"It's very important for economic development," she said. Companies take into consideration many<lb />factors when deciding where to locate or expand their operations. "Part of it is the quality of life it<lb />will bring their employees, and this can be a deciding factor,' Kulik said.<lb /><lb />Another award recipient was the city of Greenville, for the landscaping along Hooker Road. "It makes<lb />you feel uplifted when you drive down streets that are taken care of," Kulik said. "This city has a<lb /><lb />lot of pride in the city." Recipients take the awards to heart, she said, recalling a chance encounter<lb />with the manager of an apartment complex. "They immediately said, "We just won a landscaping<lb />award!'"�' Kulik said. "Real pride," she said. "Real ownership." Much of the credit goes to the city's<lb />own development regulations, which include vegetation and other requirements that help preserve<lb />Greenville's aesthetic appeal, she said Wednesday.<lb /><lb />Following are this year's recipients:<lb />. Hooker Road landscaping - city of Greenville<lb />. Clark-LeClair Stadium - East Carolina University<lb />. Greenville Convention Center - city of Greenville<lb />. ECU chancellor's residence - East Carolina University<lb />. ECU Science and Technology Building - East Carolina University<lb />. Lynncroft Shopping Center - Argus Properties<lb />. Pitt County Court House - Pitt County<lb />. St. Paul's Episcopal Church - Episcopal Diocese of East Carolina<lb />. Surgicenter Services of Pitt - Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb />. The Daily Reflector - Cox N.C. Publications<lb /><lb />*This article was reprinted with the permission of The Daily Reflector, Greenville, NC.<lb /><lb />38<lb /></p>
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        <p>fa<lb /><lb />THROUGH THE YEARS<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Dr. Mary C. Helms<lb />Dr. R.M. Helms<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />41<lb /><lb />Dr. Donald E. Bailey<lb />Dr. Austin D. Bond<lb />Mtr. Joseph G. Boyette<lb />Dr. J. William Byrd<lb />Miss H. Frances Cozart<lb /><lb />Dr. Graham J. Davis<lb />Mtr. J. O. Derrick<lb /><lb />Dr. Frank W. Eller<lb /><lb />Dr. Grover W. Everett<lb />Mrs. Lucille B. Garmon<lb /><lb />Dr. Donald B. Jeffreys<lb />Dr. Clifford B. Knight<lb />Dr. Joseph N. LeConte<lb />Dr. Floyd E. Mattheis<lb />Mr. James D. Nicholson<lb /><lb />Mr. Charles W. O'Rear, Jr.<lb />Mr. Floyd M. Read, Jr.<lb />Dr. Charles W. Reynolds<lb />Dr. Tom Sayetta<lb /><lb />Mr. Moses M. Sheppard<lb /><lb />Dr. Everett C. Simpson<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Dr. Robert C. Lamb, Director |<lb />Dr. Donald Clemens<lb /><lb />Mr. J. O. Derrick |<lb />Dr. Frank W. Eller |<lb />Dr. Grover W. Everett<lb /><lb />Dr. Arthur R. Macon<lb /><lb />Dr. Robert A. Klein<lb /><lb />Dr. Jang Kuo |<lb />Dr. Joseph N. LeConte<lb />Dr. Ivie Lee Smith<lb /><lb />The department lost three faculty members in 1967-68. Dr. Ivie Lee Smith resigned, Dr. Susan T. |<lb />Smith moved to Medical Technology, and Dr. Jang Kuo took his own life. The tragic death of Dr. |<lb />Kuo was a real blow to the department as everyone had anticipated a bright and promising career<lb /><lb />for him. In their place, three new faculty were hired in 1968: Dr. David C. Lunney, Dr. James E. |<lb />Hix Jr, and Dr. William K. H. Hu.<lb /><lb />Chemical Society Sponors Lectures<lb /><lb />American Student Affiliate Chapter of the American<lb />Chemical Society was formed to instill in its members |<lb />a professional pridee in shemistry through intellectual<lb />stimulation arising from professional association. The<lb />society stimulated and maintained an interest in modern |<lb />developments in chemistry through field trips to<lb />industry and lectures by guests. The club sponsored the<lb />sales of chemical handbooks and a symposium for high<lb />school seniors. |<lb /><lb />A R. Roberts, Vice President; K. Holmes Jr, President; R. Peele, Secretary;<lb />Dr. F. Parham, Advisor; W. Lindsey, Treasurer. |<lb /><lb />First Row: J. Woodford, P Allen, K. Holmes, Jr. &gt;<lb />Second Row: Z. Tyndall, J.R. Jenkins, C. Rivenbark<lb />Third Row: C. Moore, R. Oglesby, S. Brower<lb /><lb />Fourth Row: J. Bailes, R. Marry Peele, B. Lindsey<lb />Fifth Row: G. Locks, D. Beavers, R. Roberts<lb /><lb />Sixth Row: C. Hudson, Jr, M. Wright<lb /><lb />42<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Officers: President - Benjamin Winters; Vice-President - Larry Surles; Secretary - Peggy Jones; Treasurer - Sally Templemon<lb />Members: Joseph Chan, Walter Lackey, Dr. Heckel, Bart Cleary, Harry Severance, Vandell Clark, Tillet Mills,<lb />Tom Barrett, Charles Banlowe, Denise Worington, Kathy Rubel, Corky Johnston, Jonathan Phair<lb /><lb />1976<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />American Chemical Society<lb /><lb />The student affiliate chapter of the American<lb />Chemical Society at ECU was selected for special<lb />commendation by ACS's committee on chemical<lb />education. The ECU chapter was one of only<lb />92 of the 609 affiliate chapters in the nation to<lb />be rated above average for the 1974-75 academic<lb />year, according to committee officials. Among activties for which the commendation was made was a free tutoring<lb />service provided by the local chapter for any student enrolled in chemistry.<lb /><lb />43<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />First Row: Bruce Whitaker, Carol Hanoites, Bill Dawson, Myron Casper, Owen Kingsbury; Second Row: Angelo Volpe, Bene Collier, Don Clemens, Bob<lb />Morrison, Chia-Yu Li; Third Row: Bob Lamb, ?, Edith Rand, Carol Meyers, Barbara Andrews; Fouth Row: David Lunney, Jim Hix, Wayne Ayers, Bob<lb />Klein, Fred Parham; Fifth Row: ?, Edgar Heckel<lb /><lb />44<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />A Shan Biggers (left) and Bob Lamb (center)<lb /><lb />A Woody Dixon (left) and Myron Casper (center)<lb /><lb />45<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />A American Chemistry Society - Student Affiliate Chapter Float<lb /><lb />46<lb /></p>
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          <lb />A Left to Right: Brooks Whitehurst, Edith Rand, Skip Rand, Don Clemens' daughter<lb /><lb />A Left to Right: Floyd Reed, Stan White, Jim Hix, Bob Klein,<lb />Bob Lamb<lb /><lb />A Kay Clemens<lb /><lb />A Left to Right: Brian Love, Andy Sargent, Garnett Whithurst, Shirley Morrison, Brooks Whitehurst,<lb />Bob Morrison<lb /><lb />47<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00090605_0056" />
        <p>A Dr. Art Rodrigues<lb />48<lb /><lb />1995<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00090605_0057" />
        <p>ee<lb /><lb />/ ge ea<lb />May 6, 7<lb /><lb />Top: Dr. Bill Church and student; Bottom: Dr. Paul Gemperline and student<lb /><lb />A Kathy Herman and Dr. Paul Gemperline A Brandye Smith and Family<lb /><lb />49<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Chemistry faculty take sticky hits in a pie-throwing contest, but not without good cause. The<lb />Chemistry Student Research Association sponsored the booth at Barefoot on the Mall to raise<lb />money to buy research supplies and to attend research conferences. The targets are Geoffrey Barker,<lb />Richard Vinson, and Paul Gemperline. Photo by Linda Fox.<lb /><lb />50<lb /><lb />|<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />199<lb /><lb />NOVEMBER 2<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />53<lb /><lb />CEMBER 12, 1997<lb /><lb />ae<lb /><lb />7<lb />if<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />A Middle Facing: Mr. Toririste O'Neal<lb /><lb />54<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00090605_0063" />
        <p>£t4124wW ew<lb /><lb />YY<lb /><lb />OcToser 9, 1998<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />199<lb /><lb />J<lb /><lb />OcTOBER 23<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00090605_0065" />
        <p>OF LEARNING CENTER FOR Mrs. RAND<lb /><lb />A Dr. Li and Mrs. Rand<lb /><lb />A Mrs. Hawkins<lb /><lb />57<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />DO<lb /><lb />ee<lb /><lb />ECEMBER 2000<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />59<lb /><lb />tC�,�ece�,�y<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />60<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />aes<lb /><lb />AY 11, 2001<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />2002<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
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          <lb />63<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
        </p>
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        <p>""g<lb /><lb />Marcu 22, 2007<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />C, Lead<lb /><lb />2007<lb /><lb />66<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />67<lb /><lb /></p>
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