NESACS: The Nucleus November 2013 Issue

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    http://www.nesacs.org

    November 2013 Vol. XCII, No. 3

    NO

    E A S

    T ERNSECT

    IONAMER

    ICAN

    CHEM

    ICA

    L

    SOCI

    ETY

    FOUN

    DED1898

    NE

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    AC

    S

    Monthly MeetingNorris Award to Melanie Cooper at Holiday Inn -

    Bunker Hill

    NESACS WinsChemluminary Award

    Summary of GovernanceActions and Reports

    246th National ACS Meeting, Indianapolis, Indiana

    James Flack Norris

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    2 The Nucleus November 2013

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    4 The Nucleus November 2013

    Call for

    Abstracts!12thAnnual UndergraduateSymposium on Sustainabilityand the Environment

    Saturday, December 7, 2013

    9:00 AM 3:00 PM

    Bridgewater State UniversityConant Science and Math Center

    Please join us at the only symposiumdedicated to undergraduate environ-mental research, and projects that

    address sustainability issues from acampus, regional, national, or globalperspective. Undergraduate researchpo st er s (i nc ludi ng co mple te d, inprogress, and proposed research) in allenvironmental disciplines are wel-come. Abstract submission is open toall undergraduate students at http://www.bridgew.edu/Environmental.

    Abstract submission deadline isWednesday, November 20. Pleaseemail questions to Ed Brush([email protected])

    NESACS

    MembersNamed2014 ACS

    AwardeesThe following members of the North-eastern Section have been designatedas recipients of awards administered

    by the American Chemical Society for2014. Vignettes of all the award recip-ients will appear in C&ENin early2014. Recipients will be honored at theAwards Ceremony on Tuesday, March18, 2014, in conjunction with the 247th

    ACS National Meeting in Dallas.ACS Award for Creative Work in

    Synthetic Organic Chemistry spon-sored by Aldrich Chemical Co. LLC,Amir H. Hoveyda, Boston College.

    Arthur C. Cope Awardsponsoredby the Arthur C. Cope Fund, Stuart L.Schreiber, Howard Hughes Medical

    Institute, Harvard University, and theBroad Institute.

    Pr ie st ley Me da l sponsored byACS, Stephen J. Lippard, Massachu-

    setts Institute of Technology.In addition, Matthew S. Platz,University of Hawaii, Hilo, willreceive theJames Flack Norris Awardin Physical Organic Chemistry spon-sored by the ACS Northeastern Sec-tion.

    Melanie Cooper, Michigan StateUniversity, the recipient of the 2013James Flack Norris Award for Out-standing Achievement in the Teachingof Chemistry from NESACS, willreceive theACS Award for Achieve-ment in Research for the Teaching and

    Learning of Chemistry sponsored byPearson Education.

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    The Nucleus November 2013 5

    Abstract:Chemistry, Life, the Universe and

    Everything

    Chemistry is a fascinating science, itplays a central role in scientific under-standing, and yet it has something ofan image problem. General Chemistryis the university course where manystudents begin and end their col-lege level chemistry education. It iswhere many teachers of physical sci-ence and chemistry learn most of theirrelevant chemistry, and as such is thecourse with the greatest impact on the

    publ ic pe rcept ion , knowledg e an dunderstanding of chemical principles.

    However, the structure of the tradi-tional general chemistry course doesnot appear to be effective for promot-

    Biography

    Melanie Cooper received her B.S.,

    M.S. and Ph.D. from the University ofManchester, England.

    In January 2013 she moved toMichigan State University as the Lap-

    pan-Phillips Professor of Science Edu-cation and Professor of Chemistry,from her previous position as AlumniDistinguished Professor of Chemistryat Clemson University.

    Her appointment at Clemson wasground-breaking, not only at Clemson

    but nationally, in that it was one of thefirst tenure track appointments in

    chemistry education in a chemistrydepartment. Her Discipline-Based

    Monthly MeetingThe 935

    th

    Meeting of the Northeastern Section of the AmericanChemical Society

    Presentation of the James Flack Norris Award forOutstanding Achievement in the Teaching of Chemistry

    Thursday, November 14, 2013

    Holiday Inn - Bunker Hill,30 Washington Street, Somerville, MA 02143 (800)- 972-3381

    4:30 pm Board Meeting

    5:30 pm Social Hour

    6:15 pm Dinner

    7:30 pm Award Meeting, Liming Shao, NESACS Chair, Presiding

    Presentation of Arno Heyn Memorial Book PrizeMary Mahaney, Chair, NESACS Board of Publications

    Reflections on James Flack NorrisKen Mattes, NESACS Archivist

    Introduction of Norris Award RecipientMarcy Towns, Purdue University

    Presentation of Norris AwardMary Jane Shultz, Chair, Norris Award Committee

    Norris Award Address:Chemistry, Life, the Universe and Everything

    Professor Melanie Cooper, Department of Chemistry,Michigan State University, Lansing, MI

    Dinner reservations should be made no later than noon, Wednesday, November6. Reservations are to be made using PayPal services: http://acssymposium.com/paypal.html. Select pay with credit or debit card option and follow theadditional instructions on the page. Members, $30; Non-members, $35;Retirees, $20; Students, $10. Reservations for new members and for additionalinformation, contact the secretary Anna Singer at (781)272-1966 between 9amand 6pm or e-mail at [email protected]. Reservations not cancelled at least24 hours in advance must be paid.

    THE PUBLIC IS INVITED

    Directions to Holiday Inn-Bunker Hill:

    http://www.ihg.com/holidayinn/hotels/us/en/somerville/bossv/hoteldetailBy Auto: From I-93 North take exit 28, Charlestown/Somerville. Stay in leftlane on ramp. Turn left onto Washington Street. Hotel is 3 blocks ahead.

    By Train: From North Station, below the TD Garden Arena. Distance: 1.0Mile EAST to Hotel. Complimentary Shuttle Available.

    By MBTA: Sullivan Station-Orange Line. Distance: 0.2 Mile EAST to Hotel.Complimentary Shuttle Available

    Turn left from hotel parking lot. Immediate right onto Washington Street. 2blocks to Sullivan Square Subway Station on left.

    Complimentary Local Area Shuttle: Radius 3.0 MI. ComplimentaryParking

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    http://acssymposium.com/paypal.htmlhttp://acssymposium.com/paypal.htmlhttp://acssymposium.com/paypal.html
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    6 The Nucleus November 2013

    The award for an Outstanding Collabo-ration Between a Local Section and aDivision during 2012 was presented to

    NESACS and the Divis ion of SmallChemical Businesses (SCHB) at theChemLuminary Ceremony on Septem-

    be r 10 , 2013 , at the ACS Na ti onalMeeting in Indianapolis. The award,which is given by the Committee onLocal Section Activities (LSAC) andthe Committee on Divisional Activities(DAC), recognizes outstanding col-laboration between an ACS local sec-tion and a division.

    The specific event that was recog-nized was the small chemical businesssymposium held on October 11, 2012,at Nova Biomedical Corp. in Waltham

    prior to the NESACS Monthly Meet-ing. According to Jennifer Maclachlan(SCHB Public Relations Chair), Anumber of startup stories were pre-sented, including programs involving

    SBA and conventional lending, theACS Program for Entrepreneurs,opportunities from the MassachusettsSmall Business Development Center,and dilutive and non-dilutive equityfunding. The symposium wasdescribed in detail in the December2012Nucleus.

    Jack Driscoll (NESACS PublicRelations Chair) and MukundChorghade (SCHB Immediate PastChair) joined Maclachlan in acceptingthe award on behalf of NESACS andSCHB in the presence of Mike Morello(DAC), Sharon Vercellotti (SCHBCouncilor), Joseph Sabol (SCHB Pro-gram Chair), Stan Seelig (SCHBChair), Mitchell Bruce (LSAC Chair),and Tom Barton (2013 ACS Chair-Elect).

    The Northeastern Section was alsoa finalist in four other award categoriesfor its activities based on self-nomina-

    tions in its annual report for 2012,which was generated by Ruth Tanner,

    NESACS Chair that year: OutstandingContinuing Public Relations Program

    of a Local Section (Committee on Pub-lic Relations and Communications),Outstanding High School Student Pro-gram (Society Committee on Educa-tion), Local Section Partnership Award(LSAC), and Outstanding Performance

    by a Local Section in the Very LargeCategory with more than 3,200 mem-

    bers (LSAC). The winners in thosecategories were the Georgia, NewYork, Indiana, and New York LocalSections, respectively.

    The NESACS Continuing PublicRelations Program nominationincluded new social media communi-cations, press releases, Science Cafs,and public outreach events. The nomi-nation for the High School StudentProgram cited the High School ScienceSeries event at the Museum of ScienceBoston during National ChemistryWeek, the annual Connections toChemistry workshop event for highschool teachers, and the ChemistryOlympiad activities. The LSAC/DAC

    NESACS Wins

    ChemLuminary AwardBy Morton Z. Hoffman

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    The Nucleus November 2013 7

    In cooperation with THE NORTHEASTERN SECTION OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY

    (NESACS), ACS DIVISION OF SMALL CHEMICAL BUSINESSES, and NOVA BIOMEDICAL

    CORPORATION, YOU are cordially invited to participate in a full-day program of business

    plan presentations, networking, refreshments, and discussions at the

    ACS ENTREPRENEURIAL RESOURCES CENTER SHOWCASE EAST

    THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2013Nova Biomedical Corporation

    200 Prospect Street, Waltham MA, 02254-9141

    ENTREPRENEURS : ACS is organizing this one-day event to help you introduce your chemistry-based

    technologies or product opportunities to potential investors or partners. During this event, twenty (20) slots

    will be available for 15-minute investment or partnering pitches. You can apply to present by completing

    this Investor Readiness Questionnaire at: Showcase East Presenter Application. Applications must bereceived by October 2, 2013. Applications are competitively scored for investor or partner readiness.

    INTERESTED INVESTORS OR PARTNERS: you can participate live or online. You will receive an ACS ERCShowcase East Presenter Book containing executive summaries and presenter information before the event.

    Presentations are likely to offer therapeutic, diagnostic, greentech, and renewable energy opportunities, to

    name a few. If interested, please contact Ken Polk directly at [email protected] and indicate your preference for

    live or online participation by October 31, 2013. Credentials to participate will be provided to you.

    PRELIMINARY PROGRAM

    Day (By Invitation Only)

    8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Business Plan Presentations

    Evening (Free & Open to the Public)

    5:00 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. ACS/NESACS Reception & Networking (refreshments provided by ACS)

    6:15 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Announcement of ACS Best-Pitch Award & Presentation by Award Winner;Entrepreneur Panel Discussion

    7:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Networking Continued

    Please register at: http:// acsercs howcaseeast.eventbrite.com/

    The American Chemical Societys Entrepreneurial Resources Center is part of the Societys Entrepreneurial Initiative a 2-

    year pilot member program with the mission of leveraging the Societys information resources, professional relationships,member technical expertise, and connections with sources of funding and larger chemical innovators toward the com-mercialization of promising chemical technologies and the growth of U.S.-based chemistry jobs.

    EARLY-STAGE CHEMICAL START-UPS, INVESTORS, & PARTNERS

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    8 The Nucleus November 2013

    ACTIONS OF THE COUNCIL

    Election Results:The Committee on Nominations

    and Elections presented to the Councilthe following slate of candidates formembership on the Committee onCommittees begi nn in g in 20 14 :Mitchell R. M. Bruce, Janet L. Bryant,Dee Ann Casteel, Amber S. Hinkle,Wayne E. Jones, Jr., V. MichaelMautino, Jason E. Ritchie, Sharon P.Shoemaker, Russell W. Johnson, andRalph A. Wheeler. By electronic ballot,the Council elected Janet L. Bryant,Dee Ann Casteel, Amber S. Hinkle,Wayne E. Jones, Jr., and V. Michael

    Mautino for the 2014-2016 term.The Committee on Nominations andElections presented to the Council thefollowing slate of candidates for mem-

    bership on the Council Policy Com-mitteebeginning in 2014: Harmon B.Abrahamson, Arindam Bose, Judith H.Cohen, Alan M. Ehrlich, Martha G.Hollomon, Paul J. Smith, Ellen B.Stechel, and Angela K. Wilson. Byelectronic ballot, the Council electedHarmon B. Abrahamson, Judith H.Cohen, Alan M. Ehrlich, and Angela K.Wilson for the 2014-2016 term.

    The Council Policy Committeepresented to the Council the followingslate of candidates for membership onthe Committee on Nominations andElectionsbeginning in 2014: Lisa M.Balbes, Jeannette E. Brown, Martha L.Casey, Dwight W. Chasar, D. RichardCobb, Catherine E. Costello, LissaDulany, Kevin J. Edgar, Paul W.Jagodzinski, and Robert A. Pribush.By electronic ballot, the Councilelected Lisa M. Balbes, Jeannette E.Brown, Martha L. Casey, D. Richard

    Cobb, and Lissa Dulany for the 2014-2016 term.

    Candidates for President-Elect and

    Board of Directors:The candidates for the fall 2013 ACSnational election were announced asfollows:

    Candidates for President-Elect,2014

    Dr. G. Bryan Balazs, Associate Pro-gram Leader, Lawrence Livermore

    National Lab, Livermore, CA Dr. Charles E. Kolb, Jr., President

    and CEO, Aerodyne Research Inc.,Billerica, MA

    Dr. Diane Grob Schmidt, SectionHead R&D, The Procter & GambleCompany, Cincinnati, OH

    Candidates for Directors-at-Large,2014-2016 (two will be elected)

    Dr. Susan B. Butts, IndependentConsultant, Susan Butts Consulting,Midland, MI

    Dr. Thom H. Dunning, Jr., Director,National Center for SupercomputingApplications and Professor,Distin-guished Chair for Research, Univer-sity of Illinois at Urbana-

    Champaign, Urbana, IL Dr. Dorothy J. Phillips, Retired,

    Waters Corporation, Milford, MA

    Dr. Kathleen M. Schulz, President,Business Results, Inc., Albuquerque,

    NM

    Candidates for District II Director,2014-2016

    Dr. George M. Bodner, Arthur KellyDistinguished Professor of Chem-istry Education and Engineering,Purdue University, West Lafayette,

    IN

    Dr. Alan A. Hazari , Director ofChemistry Labs and Lecturer, Uni-versity of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN

    Candidates for District IV Director,2014-2016

    Dr. Rigoberto Hernandez, Chem-istry and Biochemistry, GeorgiaInstitute of Technology, Atlanta, GA

    Dr. Larry K. Krannich, ProfessorEmeritus of Chemistry, University ofAlabama, Birmingham, AL

    Committee Reviews:As part of a regular committee per-formance review, the Council voted tocontinue the joint Board-Council Com-mittee on International Activities andthe Council Other Committee on

    Nomenclature, Terminology and Sym-bols. Continuation of the Committeeon International Activities also requiresBoard of Directors concurrence.

    Committee Charters Approved:The Council voted to approve amend-ments to the charters of the committeeson International Activities and on

    Nomenclature, Terminology and Sym-bols.

    Committee Reports (Highlights):

    Society Committee on EducationSOCED recognized the achievementthat is present in the Next GenerationScience Standards, including their

    basis in research on teaching and learn-ing, their formulation as performancestandards, and their basis in the NRCframework and its dimensions of Sci-ence and Engineering Practices, Disci-

    plinary Core Ideas, and Cross CuttingConcepts. SOCED supported the Stan-dards as a document that is broadlyapplicable as a basis for K-12 science

    SUMMARY OF GOVERNANCE

    ACTIONS and REPORTSAmerican Chemical Society246th ACS National Meeting

    Indianapolis, Indiana

    September 8-12, 2013

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    instruction and called upon the Societyto develop innovative programming tosupport the implementation of theStandards.

    Standing Committee on Economicand Professional Affairs (CEPA)Committee on Economic and Profes-sional Affairs reported that employ-ment is up and unemployment is downfor ACS chemists. The completereview of the Comprehensive SalarySurvey will appear in the September23 issue of C&EN.

    Project SEEDThe Committee on Project SEED needsmentors in Alaska, Arkansas, Connecti-cut, Hawaii, Maine, Nebraska, Nevada,

    New Mexico, North Dakota, RhodeIsland, South Dakota, Utah, Washing-ton, and Wyoming. Contact CeciliaHernandez ([email protected]) formore information.

    Realignment of Electoral Districts:ACS Bylaws require that the six elec-toral districts from which six direc-tors are elected to the ACS Board ofDirectors be balanced in their totalmember populations. The Council

    voted to approve a proposal by theCommittee on Nominations and Elec-tions to realign these districts. Therealignment meets the specified criteria

    for redistricting as required by BylawV, Section 4a and brings all six dis-tricts within permissible populationrange. This change takes place in 2014and does not affect the 2013 nationalACS elections. Councilors and othersmay visit the N&E website to look atthe actual proposal and its impact.

    Meeting Registration Report:As of the morning of September 11,2013, the ACS fall national meetinghad attracted 10,840 registrants,including 6,630 regular attendees and

    2,584 students.Local Sections:The Council voted, on the recommen-dation of the Committee on Local Sec-tion Activities (LSAC), to approve arequest from the Syracuse Local Sec-tion to change its name to the Central

    New York Local Section. Council alsoapproved a recommendation fromLSAC that the Monmouth CountyLocal Section (in New Jersey) be dis-solved, effective January 1, 2014, due

    to a decline in activity over the lastseveral years. The North Jersey LocalSection has contacted LSAC and willsubmit a petition in 2014 to annex the

    Monmouth County territory.Divisions:After much debate, a proposed namechange for the Division of Colloid andSurface Chemistry to the Division ofColloids, Surfaces, and Nanomaterialswas defeated by the Council in a closevote.

    Special Discussion Item:A special discussion item was put onthe Council agenda for this meeting.ACS President Marinda Wu presentedand moderated a discussion on Whatcan we as the Society and as individ-ual citizens do to help create jobs ordemand for chemists? She sharedfive recommendations from the presi-dential task force Vision 2025: Help-ing ACS Members to Thrive in theGlobal Chemistry Enterprise andwhat they might imply for our effortsto help create jobs: discover and shareinformation about the skills and com-

    petencies that a wide range of employ-

    The Nucleus November 2013 9

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    10 The Nucleus November 2013

    ers will need; continue to expandresources which help our members to

    posi tion themselves fo r successfulcareers in the global chemistry enter-

    prise; enable entrepreneurs to createand strengthen their startups that hirechemistry professionals; advocate for

    policies that improve the business cli-mate and promote the creation ofchemistry jobs; and work with otherstakeholders to understand and influ-ence the supply and demand ofchemists and jobs. Following the pres-entation, numerous Councilorsengaged in a discussion of this focusedtopic on possibilities to encourage jobscreation and offered several sugges-tions.

    ACTIONS OF THE BOARD OFDIRECTORSAt this meeting, the ACS Board ofDirectors considered a number of keystrategic issues and responded withseveral actions.

    The Boards Committees and Work-ing Groups:The Board of Directors received re -

    ports from its committees on Planning,Executive Compensation, Grants andAwards (G&A), Budget and Finance

    (B&F) and the working group on Soci-ety Program Portfolio Management.

    The Board held a lengthy strategicissue discussion on the topic Connect-ing Chemists with Each Other. It con-sidered what the role of ACS should bein helping chemists develop relation-ships with other chemists and thestrategies that enable those relation-ships; how these strategies encourageand support younger and internationalmembers; and how these strategiesdevelop relationships to leverage the

    world renowned chemists/innovatorsthat comprise our membership.

    On the recommendation of theCommittee on Grants and Awards, the

    Board voted to approve Society nomi-nations for the National ScienceBoards Public Service Award and the

    National Science Foundations (NSF)Alan T. Waterm an Award. The

    National Science Boards Public Serv-ice Award honors individuals andgroups that have made substantial con-tributions toward increasing publicunderstanding of science and engineer-ing in the US. The Alan T. WatermanAward recognizes an outstandingyoung researcher in any field of sci-ence or engineering supported by the

    NSF.The working group on Society

    Program Portfolio Managementbriefed the Board on its activities. Theworking group is charged with deliver-ing a process for portfolio managementof Society programs in the divisions ofMembership and Scientific Advance-ment, Education, and the Office of theSecretary and General Counsel (Officeof Public Affairs) and pilot programs.

    The Board received a briefing andapproved a recommendation from itsCommittee on Executive Compensa-tion. The compensation of the Soci-etys executive staff receives regularreview from the Board.

    On the recommendation of theCommittee on Budget and Finance(B&F), the Board voted to approve anadvance member registration fee of$380 for national meetings held in2014. The Board also voted to reau-thorize funding in next years proposed

    budget for the ACS International Cen-ter, and the ACS Entrepreneurial Initia-tive, and to authorize funding for anew initiative, the National Associa-tion of Chemistry Teachers (NACT).This association will be an ACS pro-gram to provide teachers a professionalhome. Through NACT they will haveaccess to specialized resources and the

    broader ACS community.The Board confirmed the recom-

    mendation of the ACS ExecutiveDirector/CEO of the new President ofChemical Abstracts Service (CAS).

    GovernanceContinued from page 9

    New MembersInvitation to attend a meeting

    You are cordially invited to attend oneof our upcoming Section meetings as aguest of the Section at the social hourand dinner preceding the meeting.

    Reservations for new membersand for additional information, contactthe secretary Anna Singer at (781)272-1966 between 9am and 6pm or e-mailat [email protected]

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    The Nucleus November 2013 11

    The James Flack Norris Award forOutstanding Achievement in theTeaching of Chemistry pays tribute tooutstanding contributions to the fieldof chemical education and in so doinghonors the memory of a distinguishedteacher of chemistry: James Flack

    Norris.The Award: The Norris Award is

    one of the oldest national awards of theAmerican Chemical Society and is pre-sented annually by the Northeastern

    Section. The recipient is selected froman international list of nominees whohave served with special distinction asteachers of chemistry at any level andwhose efforts have had a wide-rangingeffect on chemical education. Theaward has been given for a wide vari-ety of achievements: for outstandinglyeffective textbooks, lecture demonstra-tions, or laboratory experiments, forediting the Journal of Chemical Educa-tion, for developing the Chemical Edu-cational Material Study Project, or for

    new ways to teach laboratory coursesin chemistry. Always, and this is of theutmost importance, the specificachievement must be coupled withdedicated teaching of chemistry at thegraduate, undergraduate, or highschool level. The award consists of acitation and an honorarium.

    The Man: James Norris was bornin 1871 in Baltimore. He was the fifthof nine children and attended schoolsin that city and in Washington, D.C.His collegiate career started at Johns

    Hopkins University, from which hegraduated with an A.B. degree, PhiBeta Kappa, in 1892. He was stronglyattracted by the great Ira Remsen andconsequently decided to carry out hisgraduate studies at Johns Hopkinswhere he investigated complex com-

    pounds of selenium and tellurium. In1895 he obtained his Ph.D. After grad-uation, Professor Norris served in theChemistry Department of M.I.T. In1904 he then moved to the newlyfounded Simmons College to become

    its first Professor of Chemistry and to

    head its School of Science. Heremained at Simmons until 1915except for 1910-11 when, feeling theneed for more physical chemistry, hespent a sabbatical with Fritz Haber atKarlsruhe. After one year at VanderbiltUniversity, Norris returned to M.I.T.where he remained for the next 24years as an enthusiastic and successfulteacher of chemistry. On February 4,1902 he was married in Washington,D.C. to Anne Bent Chamberlin, daugh-

    ter of an Army Captain. They had nochildren. Professor Norris died inCambridge, Massachusetts on August4, 1940.

    In 1916 Norris was a member ofthe Naval Consulting Board and duringWorld War I he served as a Lt. Colonelin the Chemical Warfare Service.After the war, he served for ten yearsas vice chairman and chairman of theDivision of Chemistry and ChemicalTechnology of the National ResearchCouncil.

    Although serious when the occa-sion called for it, the debonair Norriswas known as Sunny Jim to a host offriends who found him a jovial com-

    panion.His activities in the ACS were

    many: Chairman of the NortheasternSection in 1904 and President of the

    National Society in 1925 and 1926.As President of the Society, he didmuch to improve and clarify thefinances of the society. He was alsoactive in the National Research Coun-

    cil and in IUPAC, serving as vice pres-ident of the latter from 1925-28. Hewas an honorary member of theRumanian Chemical Society and of theRoyal Institute of Chemistry in GreatBritain. In 1937, he received the goldmedal of the American Institute ofChemists for outstanding service as ateacher and as an investigator. Norriswas one of the first chemists to studythe structure-reactivity relationship oforganic compounds on a systematic

    basi s. Between 1912 and 1922 he

    authored four influential textbooks in

    inorganic and organic chemistry. Theincome from those texts, at least in

    part , fo rmed the foundat io n of thebequest from Mrs. Norris to the North-eastern Section in 1948. The purposeof this bequest, to quote the will ofMrs. Norris, is to keep green thememory of James Flack Norris.

    The Norris Fund has grown overthe years with judicious management

    by the Trustees of the NortheasternSection. From its income the Section

    sponsors two James Flack NorrisAwards: the James Flack NorrisAward in Physical Organic Chemistry,administered by the National ACS, andthe James Flack Norris Award for Out-standing Achievement in the Teachingof Chemistry. Tonights recipient joinsa distinguished group of predecessors.

    *Taken from the biographicalmemoir of James Flack Norris by John

    D. Roberts and from the biography ofJames Flack Norris given by JosephBornstein at the presentation of the

    James Flack Norris Award for Out-standing Achievement in the Teachingof Chemistry.

    James Flack Norris: The Man and The

    Award

    Q. Exactly, how many awards and

    scholarships does NESACS sponsor?

    A) One b) Two c) Many

    www.nesacs.org/awards

    Whats Yours?Many local employers post positions

    on the NESACS job board.

    Find yours atwww.nesacs.org/jobs

    http://www.nesacs.org/awards_main.htmlhttp://www.nesacs.org/careers.htmlhttp://www.nesacs.org/careers.htmlhttp://www.nesacs.org/awards_main.htmlhttp://www.nesacs.org/careers.html
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    12 The Nucleus November 2013

    Education Research has focused onimproving teaching and learning inlarge enrollment, introductory chem-istry courses, including general andorganic chemistry.

    She has investigated how studentslearn to construct and use representa-tions, problem solving, conceptualunderstanding, and development of

    practices such as argumentation andmeta-cognition, and has collaboratedwith researchers in chemistry educa-tion research and other fields - frommolecular biology, to the cognitive sci-ences and computer science. She was amember of the inaugural class ofAmerican Chemical Society Fellowsand is a Fellow of the AAAS. She is a

    pa st ch ai r of th e AC S Di vi si on ofChemical Education, and the WesternCarolinas Local Section. She is amember of the Leadership team for the

    Next Generation Science Standards(NGSS), and the NRC Board on Sci-ence Education (BOSE). She hasreceived a number of teaching awards,including the 2010-2011 the Societyfor College Science Teachers (SCST)Outstanding Undergraduate ScienceTeacher Award (OUSTA).

    BiographyContinued from page 5

    ing deep conceptual understanding oran interest and pleasure in learningchemistry. There have been numerouscalls for reform of chemistry educa-tion: white papers have been issued,committees convened, curricula devel-

    oped, and tests written, yet few are sat-isfied with the outcomes and littleseems to have changed. Is there hope?We believe so. This presentation willfocus on how and why an understand-ing of basic chemistry concepts isimportant for everyone, and how wemight change our approach to chem-istry education to achieve a deeperunderstanding and appreciation forchemistry.

    AbstractContinued from page 5

    He is Manuel (Manny) Guzman, mostrecently Executive Vice President ofLearning and Research Solutions ofCengage Learning. Mr. Guzman suc-ceeds Robert J, Massie, who is retiringafter leading CAS with great distinc-tion and success for 21 years and isretiring in March 2014. Mr. Guzmanwill begin September 30. Mr. Massiewill assist in the transition when hereturns from medical leave.

    The Executive Director/CEOReport:The Executive Director/CEO and her

    direct reports updated the Board on thefollowing: highlights and high-levelrecommendations on the ACS global

    presence; and the activities of CAS(Chemical Abstracts Service) and theACS Publications Division. As a fol-low-up to the Publications report, theBoard voted to approve one journaleditor appointment and several editorre-appointments.

    Other Society Business:The Board also voted to hold theDecember 2015 Board of Directors

    meeting in Honolulu, Hawaii, in con-junction with the 2015 InternationalChemical Congress of Pacific BasinSocieties (Pacifichem). The ACS is thehost society for the 2015 Pacifichemmeeting, and co-location will allowBoard members to participate in thisvery successful Pacifichem meeting.

    Finally, the Board received reportsfrom the Presidential Succession ontheir current and planned activities forthe remainder of 2013 and 2014.

    ADDITIONAL INFORMATIONThe following is a list of URLs andemail addresses presented on slides atthe Council meeting. You will find theinformation noted on these sites help-ful.

    www.my.acs.orgShowcases stories and photos submit-ted by members describing what bestdefines their ACS membership experi-ence. If your story is selected, youreceive a T-shirt.

    www.acs.org/councilors

    The ACS Councilors Handbook sets

    out reasonable lists of duties andexpectations of Councilors, their rolein governance, and information on

    governance organization and opera-tions.

    www.acs.org/getinvolvedACS offers many ways to get involvedat the local, regional, and national lev-els. There are opportunities for every-one, whether you are a student, juststarting your career, or a seasoned pro-fessional.

    www.acs.org/ctaInformation about the Committee onTechnician Affairs and its f iftiethanniversary will be posted here.

    www.ACS.org/ChemistryAmbas-sadorsVisit the Chemistry Ambassadors web-site for ideas and resources to engageyour community with positive mes-sages about chemistry.

    [email protected] you are a Councilor who has not yetcommitted to service on an ACS com-mittee and would like to try Constitu-tion and Bylaws, to make an impact onthe Societys governing documents andunit bylaws, please send an email.

    [email protected] revision of the Professional Employ-ment Guidelines is in the CouncilAgenda Book for consideration (page95). Send revisions or comments by

    November 1, 2013.

    GovernanceContinued from page 10

    Join NESACSon facebook

    www.facebook.com/nesacs

    award that was received recognized thepartnership of NESACS with SCHB.For the Outstanding Performance nom-ination, the wide array of NESACS

    programs, activities, and projects werepres en ted as we ll as the numerousawards and recognitions received byits members, graduate students, andundergraduate student chapters.

    ChemLuminary AwardContinued from page 6

    http://www.acs.org/ChemistryAmbassadorshttp://www.acs.org/ChemistryAmbassadorshttp://www.acs.org/ChemistryAmbassadors
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    B U S I N E S S D I R E C T O R Y

    SERVICESSERVICESSERVICES

    Whats Yours?Many local employers post positions

    on the NESACS job board.

    Find yours atwww.nesacs.org/jobs

    NESACSArchivesHave MovedThe NESACS Archives were movedfrom their location of many years inthe basement of the Regis CollegeLibrary to a new temporary location atSigma-Aldrich Corporation in Natick,MA. A more permanent long-termstorage location is desired.

    NESACS expresses great appreci-ation to Regis College for allowing

    NESACS to store its a rchives in i tslibrary. NESACS is further apprecia-tive of Michael Singer and Sigma-Aldrich for making storage spaceavailable while a more permanentsolution is sought.

    http://www.nesacs.org/careers.htmlhttp://www.nesacs.org/careers.htmlhttp://www.nesacs.org/careers.html
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    14 The Nucleus November 2013

    CAREER SERVICESSERVICES

    B U S I N E S S D I R E C T O R Y

    SERVICES

    Index of Advertisers

    Chem Show .......................6

    Eastern Scientific Co. ......10

    Front Run OrganX, Inc....13

    Mass-Vac, Inc.....................4

    Micron Inc. ......................13

    Northeastern University2,15

    NuMega Resonance Labs13

    Organix, Inc.....................13

    PCI Synthesis...................16

    Pittcon 2014.......................9

    Rilas Technologies, Inc. ..14

    Robertson Microlit Labs..13

    VACUUBRAND .............14

    Waters Corporation..........14

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    Check the NESACS home pagefor late Calendar additions:http://www.NESACS.orgNote also the Chemistry Department webpages for travel directions and updates.These include:http://www.bc.edu/schools/cas/chemistry/semina

    rs.htmlhttp://www.bu.edu/chemistry/seminars/http://www.brandeis.edu/departments/chemistry/

    events/index.htmlhttp://www.chem.harvard.edu/courses/seminars.

    phphttp://chemcalendar.mit.edu/index.phphttp://chem.tufts.edu/seminars.htmlhttp://engineering.tufts.edu/chbe/newsEvents/se

    minarSeries/index.asphttp://www.chem.umb.eduhttp://www.umassd.edu/cas/chemistry/http://www.uml.edu/Sciences/chemistry/Seminar

    s-and-Colloquia.aspxhttp://www.unh.edu/chemistry/events

    Nov 04

    Bristol-Myers Squibb SymposiumProf. Brent Stockwell (Columbia Univ.)Harvard University, Pfizer Hall 4:15 pm

    Prof. Xi Chen (UC Davis)Chemoenzymatic Synthesis and Applications ofCarbohydratesBrandeis, Gerstenzang 121 4:00 pm

    Nov 05The 2013 Max Tishler Lecture

    Prof. Roderick MacKinnon (Rockefeller U.)The Remarkable Diversity of K+ ChannelsTufts U., Pearson P-106, 4:30 pm

    Prof. Shawn Collins (Univ. de Montral)Advanced Strategies for MacrocyclizationBoston College, Merkert 130

    4:00 pm

    Nov 06Prof. Gojko Lalic (University of Washington)

    Northeastern, 129 Hurtig Hall12 noon

    Prof. William Kobertz (UMass Medical School)UMass Dartmouth, Dion Building-Rm 1154:00 pm

    Nov 11Prof. Kate Pletneva (Dartmouth)Brandeis, Gerstenzang 1214:00 pm

    Nov 12Prof. Zev Gartner (U. Cal. San Francisco)Towards the Total Synthesis of the HumanMammary GlandTufts U., Pearson P-106, 4:30 pm

    Prof. Jonathan Lai (Albert Einstein)Boston College, Merkert 1304:00 pm

    Nov 13Inorganic Harvard/MIT Seminar

    Prof. Amy Prieto (Colorado State Univ.)Harvard University, Pfizer Hall4:15 pm

    Prof. Sarbajit Banerjee (Univ. of Buffalo)UMass Dartmouth, Dion Building-Rm 1154:00 pm

    Nov 14Dina Anchin, Nicole Ledoux, Harry Metcalf(Harvard Art Museums) Technical Analysis inArt Conservation: Three Case StudiesU. of New Hampshire, Iddles N10411:10 am

    Prof. Deyang Qu (U. Mass. Boston)Boston College, Merkert 1304:00 pm

    Prof. Gunda Georg (Univ. of Minnesota)Drug Discovery in Academia

    Northeastern, 129 Hurtig Hall

    12 noon

    Physical Chemistry SeminarProf. Jesse Kroll (M.I.T.)Harvard University, Pfizer Hall4:15pm

    Nov 18Prof. Tom Markland (Stanford Univ.)Quantum Fluctuations in Hydrogen Bond

    Networks: from Atmospheric Science to EnzymeCatalysisBrandeis, Gerstenzang 1214:00 pm

    Nov 19Prof. Gonghu Li (Univ. of New Hampshire)Combining Molecular Catalysts and

    Nanostructured Surfaces for Solar CO2ReductionTufts U., Pearson P-106, 4:30 pm

    Prof. Nathanael Gray (Harvard Univ.)Boston College, Merkert 1304:00 pm

    Nov 20Prof. Catherine Drennan (MIT)Shake, Rattle & Roll: Capturing Snapshots ofMetalloenzymes in Action

    Northeastern, 129 Hurtig Hall

    12 noon

    Nov 21Prof. Alex Briseno (U. Mass. Amherst)Boston College, Merkert 1304:00 pm

    Nov 25Prof. Hongkun Park (Harvard University)Harvard University, Pfizer Hall4:15 pm

    Notices for The NucleusCalendar of Seminarsshould be sent to:Michael Filosa, email:

    Michael filosa(at)zink com

    NONPROFITO

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