Calvin Prof To Be Honored By Indiana U

From: Phil deHaan (dehp@calvin.edu)
Date: Tue Aug 06 2002 - 10:59:58 EDT

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    August 6, 2002 == FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Calvin College chemistry professor Ronald Blankespoor (for a pic and more info,
    see http://www.calvin.edu/academic/chemistry/faculty/) is one of eight faculty
    members from midwest colleges and universities scheduled to be honored by the
    Department of Chemistry at Indiana University in late September 2002.

    Blankespoor will be honored on September 28 at the Symposium for Excellence in
    Undergraduate Chemical Research as a faculty member who not only excels as a
    researcher but also serves as a tireless mentor to students, encouraging their
    pursuit of careers in the sciences.

    Blankespoor, who will be joined by colleagues at schools such as Denison,
    DePauw, Grinnell and Hope (whose Nicole Bennett is a 2002 honoree), says the
    award recognizes the role of research at the undergraduate level in preparing
    students for graduate school and careers in industry and academia.

    "Many faculty in the sciences at Calvin," he says, "work on research projects
    with students that are supported by external grants and often result in articles
    that are published in peer-reviewed journals."

    For the past decade or so, Blankespoor and his students have been studying a
    photochemical reaction that they discovered accidentally in connection with a
    totally unrelated research project.

    "We found that a solution of an organic substance changed color upon standing
    in room light over several days," he says. "A quick search in the literature
    revealed that this was a new reaction and we were off and running on a project
    that subsequently received outside funding and has resulted in three articles in
    the Journal of Organic Chemistry and two articles in the Journal of the American
    Chemical Society.

    "A total of 17 students have worked on the project and each has his or her name
    on at least one publication. Twelve of these students went to graduate school
    and seven have received their Ph.D. degree. This photochemical work is a good
    example of how an unexpected result can completely change the direction of
    ongoing research."

    -end-



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