40th ACS Southeast Regional Meeting - C&EN Global Enterprise

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MEETINGS

40th ACS Southeast Regional Meeting The 40th ACS Southeast Regional Meeting will be held at the Radisson Hotel Atlanta, Nov. 9-11. The three-day meeting is hosted by the ACS Georgia Section. Some 640 papers will be presented by distinguished scientists in the symposia, technical sessions, and poster session. Exhibits of scientific and educational equipment, services, instruments, and publications will be held in conjunction with the meeting. Special events include presentation of the Regional High School Chemistry Teacher Award, and three workshops: SARA Title III Risk Communication, CHEMCOM, and Document Preparation and Database Management in the Laboratory. A mixer will be held on Wednesday evening in the Exhibit Hall, and on Wednesday morning, a Women Chemists breakfast will be held in the Tara I Room. Delta Air Lines, the official conference carrier, is offering special rates that afford a 5% bonus off most Delta published roundtrip fares within the U.S. and San Juan, provided all rules and conditions of the airfares are met. Discounts up to 75% off the normal roundtrip day coach fares are included in this offer. Call (800) 241-6760 from 8 AM to 8 PM EDT daily and refer to file number U0466. If flying to Atlanta, the MARTA rail service runs from Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport to downtown Atlanta. From the airport take MARTA to the Peachtree Center Station (Station N-l), which is within two blocks of the RaSPECIAL EVENTS TUESDAY 6:00-9:00 lobby

PM—Registration.

7:30 AM—Women Chemists Breakfast. Tara 1 7:30 AM-4:00 PM—Registration. First floor lobby 9:00 AM—SARA Title III Workshop. Tara 2 9:00 AM-5:00 PM—Scientific Exposition. Hall of Nations 4:00 PM—Local Section Officers and Councilors Meeting. Lee 6:00-8:00 PM—General Poster Session. Hall of Nations 6:00-8:00 PM—Mixer. Hall of Nations

THURSDAY 7:30 AM-4:00 PM—Registration. First floor lobby 9:00 AM-5:00 PM—Scientific Exposition. Hall of Nations 2:00 PM—High School Teacher Award. Hermitage West 2:15 PM—CHEMCOM Workshop. Hermitage West 4:00 PM—Southeastern Regional Steering Committee Meeting. Davis 5:00-7:00 PM—Georgia Tech Alumni Mixer. Boggs Courtyard (Georgia Tech Campus)

30

FRIDAY

THURSDAY AFTERNOON

7:30 AM-10:00 AM—Registration. First floor lobby 9:00 AM—Document Preparation and Database Management Workshop. Twelve Oaks

Hermitage West

September 19, 1988 C&EN

CHEMCOM Workshop (See listing under Chemical Education)

FRIDAY MORNING Twelve Oaks

First-floor

WEDNESDAY

disson Hotel. The trains run every six to 10 minutes, and the fare is 85 cents. Hotel reservations should be made directly with the Radisson Hotel. In order to obtain the special convention rates of $75 for a single and $85 for a double, requests for accommodations must be made prior to Oct. 14. The address and telephone numbers are: Radisson Hotel Atlanta, Courtland and International Blvd., Atlanta, Ga. 30303, (800) 333-3333 or (404) 659-6500. Advance registration for the meeting should be made by completing and mailing the registration form with a check for the appropriate amount no later than Oct. 20. (See registration form on page 37.) Badges will be available at the SERMACS registration desk during registration hours. Admission to sessions, the exhibition, and mixer will be by badge only. The SERMACS registration desk will be located in the first floor lobby of the Radisson Hotel. The hours for on-site registration or receiving advance registration packets are: Tuesday evening, 6 to 9 PM; Wednesday and Thursday, 7:30 AM to 4 PM; and Friday, 7:30 to 10 AM. For additional information, contact the general chairman, David W. Boykin, (404) 651-3120, program chairman, J. Aaron Bertrand, (404) 894-4050, or exhibits chairman, John J. Tice, (404) 981-3220.

WORKSHOPS

Document Preparation and Database Management in the Laboratory (Sponsored by Molecular Design Ltd.)

WEDNESDAY MORNING Tara 2 SARA Title III: Risk Communication {Sponsored by ACS Department of Government Relations & Science Policy)

SYMPOSIA

J. A. Parr, Organizer

WEDNESDAY MORNING

9:00—Welcoming Remarks. J. A. Parr 9:05—Overview of SARA Title III. M. Hertz 9:50—Communicating Chemical Risk Information to the Public. M. Pavlova 10:05—Meeting the Needs of the Media. S. Bronstein 10:30—Responding to Questions about Routine Releases. M. Lum 10:45—Risk Communication and Emergency Releases. J. Coe 11:00—Open Panel Discussion

Tara 3

10:30—3. Applications of 17 0 and 33S NMR Spectroscopy in Organic Chemistry. S. A. Evans Jr. 11:20—4. 17 0 NMR Spectroscopy. Applications to Organic Chemistry: Assessment of Steric Perturbation of Structure. D. W. Boykin

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON D. Lee, Presiding 1:40—5.15N Solid-State NMR of the Gramicidin A Cation Channel. T. A. Cross, C. G. Fields, L. K. Nicholson, Q. Teng 2:30—6. Solution Structure of Nucleic Acid Fragments Determined by NMR and Restrained Molecular Dynamics. A. M. Gronenborn 3:30—7. Solid-State NMR Studies of Macromolecular Dynamics. T. H. Huang 4:20—8. Applications of Two-Dimensional NMR Methods to Biological Molecules. D. G. Davis

Applications of Modern NMR Spectroscopy

THURSDAY MORNING

Y. H. Mariam, Organizer T. H. Huang, Presiding

Y. H. Mariam, Presiding

8:40—1. Solid-State NMR of Glassy Polymers. E. O. Stejskal 9:30—2. Applications of NMR to Analytical Problems in the Pharmaceutical Industry. B. H. Arison

8:40—9. Heteronuclear Two-Dimensional NMR of Biomolecules. D. Live 9:10—10. Three-Dimensional High-Resolution NMR Spectroscopy for Homonuclear Spin Correlation. T. H. Mareci, M. D. Cockman, W. S. Brey 9:30—11. Line Multiplicities in the CP/MAS 13 C NMR Spectra of Various Analgesics. C. G. Moreland, E. O. Stejskal, F. I. Carroll

9:50—12. Molecular Reorientation in Dibromomethane by NMR Relaxation Studies. A. A. Rodriguez 10:20—13. One- and Two-Dimensional Si29 NMR Spectroscopy of Si-N Polymers. Y. H. Mariam, P. Abrahams, K. Feng 10:40—14. 129Xe-NMR Studies of Microemulsions. N. Nugara, A. D. King Jr. 11:00—15. Reassignment of the 13C NMR Spectrum of the Alkaloid Ajmaline Through the Use of Two-Dimensional NMR Techniques. M. D. Johnston Jr., L. R. Soltero, G. E. Martin 11:20—16. Proton Mobility in Liquid and Fro­ zen HCI04 · 5 · 5H20—NMR and Conduc­ tivity Measurements. T.-H. Huang, R. A. Davis, U. Frese, U. Stimming 11:40—17. Zero-field RF-Excitation NMR (ADLF) and High-field Solid-state Deuteri­ um NMR: Applications to Organometallic and Polymer Chemistry. L. G. Butler, M. I. Altback, K. Guo, M. A. Jackisch, W. L. Jarrett

WEDNESDAY MORNING Grand Ballroom North Currents in Organic Synthesis

D. Goldsmith, Organizer, Presiding 8:40—18. Applications of Intramolecular Allylsilane Additions for the Construction of Polycyclic Natural Products. G. Majetich 9:30—19. Synthesis of CC-1065 and Ana­ logs. M. P. Cava 10:30—20. Studies Directed Toward an Enantioselective Synthesis of Tetracyclic Quassinoids. D. S. Watt, R. S. Gross, K. Kawada, M. Kim, U. Wacjen 10:50—21. Stereoselective Cyclopropanation Reactions with Vinylcarbenoids. H. M. L. Davies, L. A. Church, H. D. Smith 11:10—22. Applications of Microbial Trans­ formations to Synthetic Design. T. Hudlicky WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON D. Goldsmith,

Presiding

1:40—23. Transition Metal Organometallics in Organic Synthesis. L. S. Liebeskind 2:30—24. Diastereoselective Formation and Reactions of α-Lithiated Sulfides. B. D. Condon, M. D. Laffosse Jr., A. M. Lauro, P. G. McDougal 2:50—25. Regioselective Synthesis of (+)9-Carboxy THC. J. W. Huffman, Z. Xuehai, H. R Joyner, M.-J. Wu 3:20—26. Rhodium-Based Approach to the Amaryllidaceae Alkaloids. M. E. Krafft, S. E. Milczanowski 3:40—27. Application of the Conformational Reactivity of Methylphenylcyclohexanones to Synthesis. J. Soria, D. Goldsmith 4:00—28. Strategy Level Organometallic and Photochemical Reactions for the Syn­ thesis of Biologically Active Molecules. P. A. Wender

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

G. L. Myers,

C. W. Bayer, Presiding 1:40—55. Macro Programing in Fire Debris Analysis by GC/MS. G. Holzer, W. Bertsch 2:00—56. Quantitation with Super Critical Fluid Chromatography Using Microbore Columns. J. O. Frazier, H. M. McNair 2:20—57. Peak Modeling Approach to the Determination of Extracolumn Effects in Capillary Recycle Gas Chromatography. D. Roberts, W. Bertsch 2:40—58. Microbore Ion Chromatography. W. H. Wilson, H. M. McNair 3:00—59. Advantageous Temperature Ef­ fects in Ion Chromatography. L. N. Polite, H. M. McNair

2:20—72. Oxygen and Water Adsorption on Cu(100), Cu(110) and Cu(111). C. B. Ehlers, J. L. Stickney, B. W. Gregory 2:45—73. Organometallic/Coordination Chemistry of Noble-Metal Electrocatalyst Surfaces. M. P. Soriaga 3:20—74. Quantitative Aspects of Voltammetry in Vivo. J. D'Angelo, J. B. Justice Jr 3:45—75. Observations on the Nature of Ionic Conductance at High Frequencies. R. J. Gale, K. Carney, K. Ghowsi 4:10—76. Reduction of Aromatics in Basic Chloroaluminate Melts. J. E. Coffield, G. P. Smith, S. P. Zingg, G. Mamantov 4:35—77. Electrochemistry of Transition Metal Chloride and Oxide Chloride Com­ plexes in a Room Temperature Chloroalu­ minate Ionic Liquid. I.-W. Sun, C. L. Hussey

R. G. Lewis, Organizer, Presiding

WEDNESDAY MORNING

THURSDAY MORNING

8:30—Opening Remarks 8:40—37. Investigative Procedures for In­ door Air Monitoring. M. S. Black, C. W. Bayer 9:10—38. Preliminary Results from the Los Angeles TEAM Study. L. A. Wallace, D. Westerdahl, E. D. Pellizzari 9:40—39. Determination of Nitrogen Diox­ ide Exposures in Occupied Homes. J. D. Mulik, R. G. Lewis, D. E. Williams 10:25—40. Particle Emissions from Porta­ ble Home Humidifiers. V. R. Highsmith, C. E. Rodes, R. J. Hardy 10:55—41. IAQ and Microbes. J. C. Feeley 11:25—42. Sick Building Syndrome: Review and Exploration of Causation Hypotheses and Proposed Control Methods. H. Levin

Whitehall Spectroscopy in Agricultural Chemistry

Innovations: Voltammetry In Flowing Streams and Stationary Solutions

F. E. Barton II, Organizer

P. E. Sturrock, Presiding

Session: NIR Spectroscopy In Agriculture

8:30—78. Pulsed Amperometric Detection of Aliphatic Compounds in High Perfor­ mance Liquid Chromatography. D. C. Johnson, W. A. Jackson, W. R. LaCourse, L. A. Larew 9:15—79. Voltammetric Detection in Flow Streams. P. E. Sturrock 9:40—80. Voltammetric Detection for Flow Injection Analysis. L.-Q. Zhang, P. E. Stur­ rock 10:05—81. Characterization of Bio-Mass Hydrolyzates for Amino Acid and Amino Sugar Content by Liquid Chromatography Using Pulsed Amperometric Detection to Avoid the Need for Chemical Derivatizations. D. C. Johnson, W. A. Jackson, W. R. LaCourse 10:30—82. Spectroelectrochemical Investi­ gations in Flowing Streams and Stationary Solutions: Applications to Studies of Re­ action Pathways. J. L. Anderson, T. R. Nagy, T.-Y. Ou 10:55—83. Electrochemistry On-Line with Tandem Mass Spectrometry: An Innova­ tive Approach for Studying Redox Reac­ tions. K. J. Volk, R. A. Yost, A. BrajterToth 11:20—84. First- and Higher-Order Deriva­ tive Polarography/Voltammetry for Elec­ tron Transfer Reactions Coupled with Chemical Reactions. M.-H. Kim 11:45—85. Cyclic Square Wave Voltam­ metry. J. C. Helfrick Jr, L. A. Bottomley

Presiding

1:30—Introductory Remarks 1:35—33. Monitoring Exposure in the Chem­ ical Laboratory. D. Taylor 2:15—34. Hazards Recognition and Evalua­ tion During Laboratory Inspections. J. Miller 3:05—35. Oh, No! I'm in Charge of Safety. G. L. Myers 3:45—36. Laboratory Risk Management—a Lawyer's View. A. N. James

WEDNESDAY MORNING Hermitage, Center Indoor Air Quality Measurements

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON L. A. Wallace, Presiding 1:40—43. Latest Developments in the Mea­ surement and Identification of Volatile Or­ ganic Chemicals in Indoor Air. C. W. Bay­ er, M. S. Black 2:05—44. Characterization of Source Emis­ sions in a Test House. M. D. Jackson, S. A. Rasor 2:30—45. Individual Exposures to Pesticides Typically Used Around the Home. A. E. Bond, R. G. Lewis 2:55—46. Correlation Between Adhesive Resin Chemistry and Indoor Formalde­ hyde Levels. C. B. Meyer, P. M. Ayd 3:35—47. Solution Pipes in Limestone: Im­ portance in Transporting Radon Beneath Houses. R. B. Gammage, C. S. Dudney, D. C. Landguth, T. G. Matthews, D. L. Wilson, R. J. Saultz 4:00—48. Radon Measurement Methods Used to Design and Evaluate Residential Mitigation Systems. D. B. Harris 4:25—49. Factors Affecting Success of Ra­ don Mitigation in Houses. C. S. Dudney, T. G. Matthews, R. B. Gammage

W. H. Morrison III, Presiding 8:40—60. Near-Infrared Reflectance Spec­ troscopy of Tobacco and Other Crops. W. F. McClure 9:10—61. Enhancing Resolution with Fouri­ er Self Deconvolution and Other Fourier Techniques. L. A. Carreira 9:40—62. Fourier Self Deconvolution as a Technique to Understand the Spectra of Agricultural Commodities. F. E. Barton, II, D. S. Himmelsbach 10:40—63. Near-IR Spectroscopy in Wheat Milling. D. L. Wetzel 11:10—64. Application of NIR Spectrosco­ py to Food Commodities. I. Murray WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Session: New Areas of Spectroscopy in Ag­ riculture

F. E. Barton II, Presiding 1:30—65. Mass Spectrometry of Forage Vo­ latiles. W. H. Morrison II, R. J. Horvat, J. C. Burns 2:00—66. Microspectrophotometry of Plant Cell Walls. R. D. Hartley, D. S. Himmelsback, D. E. Adkins, D. C. Beach 3:00—67. Application of Modern NMR Spectroscopy Techniques to the Study of Plant Cell Wall Xyloglucan Oligosaccha­ rides. H. van Halbeek, W. S. York, A. G. Darvill, P. Albersheim 3:30—68. Solid-State 13C-NMR in Agricul­ ture. D. S. Himmelsbach 4:00—69. Isolation and Identification of Pos­ sible Insect Resistance Factors in Corn and Teosinte, A Proposed Ancestor of Corn. R. C. Gueldner, M. E. Snook, R. F. Severtson, N. W. Widstrom, B. R. Wise­ man

WEDNESDAY MORNING WEDNESDAY MORNING Twelve Oaks Health and Safety in the Chemistry Labora­ tory

G. L. Myers, Organizer, Presiding 9:00—Introductory Remarks 9:05—29. Overview of OSHA's Standard for Laboratories. C. Wolfe 9:45—30. Laboratory Containment Devices: Component or System. A. D. Paoli Jr. 10:35—31. Personal Protective Equipment. B. Harris 11:35—32. Strategies for Laboratory Waste Management. D. Fleetwood

Plantation

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

Recent Advances in Chromatography

Tara 2

F. L. Bayer, Organizer, Presiding 8:40—50. Recent Advances in Capillary GC. H. M. McNair 9:20—51. Retention Mechanisms in Re­ versed Phase Liquid Chromatography. J. G. Dorsey, K. B. Sentell, P. T. Ying, J. J. Michels 10:00—52. Computer Automated Compari­ son and Identification of Chromatograms. S. L. Morgan, J. C. Rogers, Β. Β. Watt 10:40—53. GC Study of the Surface Proper­ ties of Ceramic Materials. E. V. Dose, J. Roles, G. Guiochon 11:20—54. Extracting Information by Multicolumn/Multidetector Gas Chromatogra­ phy. W. Bertsch, G. Holzer

Electrochemistry—Innovations and Appli­ cations

L. A. Bottomley, Organizer Innovations In Surface Characterization; Applications In Unusual Media

J. L. Stickney, Presiding 1:30—70. Monitoring Corrosion and Metal Deposition with the Quartz Microbalance. M. R. Deakin 1:55—71. Characterization of the Surface Chemistry of Copper Electrodes. J. L. Stickney, C. B. Ehlers, B. W. Gregory

THURSDAY AFTERNOON Applications: Hemoprotelns and Hemoproteln Model Compounds

L. A. Bottomley 1:40—86. The Electrochemistry of Oxygen in Iron-Porphyrin Adducts (PorFe = O, PorFe-OH, PorFe-O-FePor, PorFe (0 2 ), and PorFe-OO-). D. T. Sawyer, P. K. S. Teang, H.-C. Tung, H. Sugimoto 2:05—87. Electrochemical and Spectro­ scopic Studies of Iron Porphyrin Complex­ es with Nitrite, Nitric Oxide and Hydroxylamine. M. D. Ryan, l.-K. Choi, L. Yanming, J. Fernandes 2:30—88. Chemical and Electrochemical Reactivity of Nitridochromium Prophyrins. F. L Neely, L. A. Bottomley 2:55—89. Electrochemical Study of the Charge Transfer Properties of Flavins Ad­ sorbed on a Variety of Electrode Sur­ faces. K. M. Faulkner, J. H. Reeves 3:30—90. Voltammetric Properties of Strongly Adsorbed Redox Proteins. J. L. Willit, V. R. Senaratne, E. F. Bowden 3:55—91. Thermodynamic and Kinetic Stud­ ies of Cytochrome c from Different Verte­ brate Species. Y. Xiaoling, F. M. Hawkridge 4:20—92. Electrochemical Studies of He­ moglobin Electron Transfer Reactions. W. T. Grubbs, L. H. Rickard

September 19, 1988 C&EN

31

Meetings FRIDAY MORNING Applications: trodes M. Porter,

Chemically

Modified

Elec­

Presiding

8:30—93. Porous Polymer Films: Permselective Materials for Electrochemical and Optical Sensors. S. M. Stole, E. L. Smith, T. P. Jones, M. Porter 8:55—94. Modified Electrodes Based on Transition Metal Schiff Base Complexes. L. A. Hoferkamp, K. A. Goldsby 9:20—95. Applications of Polyaniline Elec­ trodes for Anion Detection in Ion Chroma­ tography. R. P. Baldwin, J. Ye 9:45—96. Application of Electrodes Modi­ fied with Inorganic Films to the Amperometric Sensing of Thiols. J. A. Cox, T. J. Gray 10:20—97. Electrodes Modified with Poly­ meric Metalloporphyrins. T. Malinski, J. E. Bennett, A. Ciszewski 10:45—98. Electrochemical Reduction of Nitrate and Nitrite in Concentrated Sodium Hydroxide Solution. H.-L. Li, J. Q. Cham­ bers, D. T. Hobbs 11:10—99. Electrochemistry at Surfaces Modified by Self-Assembling Amphiphilic Molecules. A. Diaz, A. E. Kaifer 11:35—100. Organized Monomolecular As­ semblies: Novel Approaches for Manipu­ lating the Electrochemical Interface. C. Chung, C. A. Cihal, M. Porter WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

10:35—112. Physical Properties and Pro­ cessing of High-Tc Superconductors: Variations on a Chemical Theme. A. Morrobel-Sosa, D. A. Robinson, M. A. Maginnis 10:55—113. Interaction of Ceramic Super­ conductors with Various Container Mate­ rials. W. W. Bilkovich, R. J. Clark, S. Skirius 11:15—114. Growth and Characterization of Crystals of the High-Temperature Super­ conductors. F. Holtzberg FRIDAY MORNING A. Morrobel-Sosa,

Presiding

8:40—115. High-Temperature Supercon­ ductors Produced by the Oxalate Route. G. E. Shankle, R. J. Clark 9:00—116. Synthesis, Substitution Chemis­ try and Magnetism in the Y-Ba-Cu-0 and TI Superconducting Systems. Replacement of Cu with Metal(loid)s (Zn, Ni, Cr, Fe, B, Si, AI, etc.) and Superconductivity in the 'Non-Superconducting' Green Phase, Y2BaCu05. R. Jones, P. P. Edwards, C. Cassel, E. Sinn 9:45—117. New Variations of the High-Tem­ perature Superconductor YBa2Cu307-x. J. W. Hall, V. D. Kelley, J. R. Wasson 10:50—118. Inert Atmosphere Treatment of Bi2CaSr2Cu208 for Carbon Fiber Impreg­ nation Study. V. Modi, B. Lee 11:35—119. AC Magnetic Characterization of High Temperature Copper Oxide Su­ perconductors. H. Yi-Tang, M. L. Norton

Hermitage West Optimizing an Undergraduate Curriculum

THURSDAY MORNING

A. J. Cunningham, Presiding

Hermitage East

Organizer,

1:30—101. Chemistry Curricula for the Nineties—New Opportunities; New Chal­ lenges. A. J. Cunningham 2:30—102. Incorporating Topics in Materi­ als Science and Polymer Science. P. J. Kropp 3:45—103. New CPT Curriculum Guidelines: Incorporating Topics in Biochemistry. M. T. Doig WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Thornwood Photoproperties of Polymers C. Kutal, Organizer,

Presiding

1:40—Introductory Remarks 1:45—104. Ablation of Polymers by Ultravi­ olet Laser Radiation. R. Srinivasan 2:35—105. Chemistry of Resist Materials. S. A. MacDonald 3:25—106. Photocrosslinkable Liquid Crys­ talline Polycinnamates. K. Venkataram, A. C. Griffin, D. Creed, J. R. D. Gross, C. E. Hoyle 3:45—107. Polymers and Nonlinear Optics. G. R. Meredith 4:35—108. Computer Simulation of Exciton Trapping in Highly One-Dimensional Mate­ rials. W. J. Rodriguez, M. F. Herman, G. L. McPherson THURSDAY MORNING Plantation High-Temperature Superconductors M. L. Norton, E. Sinn,

Organizer

Presiding

8:40—109. High Tc Oxides: Natural Superlattices. M. L. Norton 9:10—110. Molecular Orbital Study of YBa2Cu 3 0 7 . E. A. Boudreaux, L. C. Kwark 9:55—111. Some Basic Aspects of Ceramic Superconductors. J. R. Wasson, J. W. Hall, E. R. Menzel

32

September 19, 1988 C&EN

Metal Clusters J. L. Gole, M. A. Duncan, J. L. Gole,

Organizers

Presiding

8:30—120. Rare Gas Matrix Trapping of Small Cluster Ions and Radicals Generat­ ed by Laser Vaporization. L. B. Knight Jr., J. T. Petty, M. P. Winiski, J. O. Herlong, P. E. Kudelko 9:10—121. Photofragmentation Dynamics of Main Group Metal Clusters. M. A. Dun­ can 9:50—122. Transition Metal Cluster Ions with Thermometers. D. Lessen, P. J. Brucat 10:30—123. Spectroscopy of Carbon Clus­ ters: C5 and C6. M. Vala, T. M. Chandrasekar, J. Sczcepanski, R. J. Van Zee, W. Weltner Jr. 11:10—124. Formation and Reactivity of Metal Cluster Ions Studied by Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry. S. B. H. Bach, J. R. Eyler 11:30—125. Spectroscopic Studies of the Jet-Cooled Silver Trimer. P. Y. Cheng, M. A. Duncan 11:45—126. Metal Atom van der Waals Complexes with Rare Gases and Small Molecules. K. LaiHing, P. Y. Cheng, M. A. Duncan THURSDAY AFTERNOON M. A. Duncan,

Presiding

1:30—127. Structure and Reactivity of Clus­ ter Ions. J. R. McDonald 2:10—128. Transition-Metal Diatomics and Monocarbonyls. W. Weltner Jr., R. J. Van Zee, M. Cheeseman 2:50—129. Metal Atom and Cluster Based Complex Oxidation. J. L. Gole, S. H. Cobb, M. J. McQuaid 3:30—130. XPS of Size-Selected Gold Clus­ ters on a Substrate. S. D. Berry 4:10—131. ESR of "Isoelectronic" Transi­ tion-Metal Diatomics. M. Cheeseman, R. J. Van Zee, W. Weltner Jr. 4:25—132. ESR of Transition-Metal Mono­ carbonyls: ScCO, FeCO, and CoCO. R. J. Van Zee, W. Weltner Jr.

THURSDAY MORNING Whitehall Modern Advances in Tobacco Chemistry M. E. Snook,

Organizer

W. S. Schlotzhauer,

Presiding

8:00—133. Pyridine Alkaloid Related Com­ pounds in Air- and Fire-Cured Tobaccos During Storage. R. A. Anderson, P. D. Fleming, T. R. Sutton, H. R. Burton 8:20—134. Evaluation of Dark Tobacco Germplasm for Alkaloid and Nitrosamine Constituents. W. J. Chamberlain, P. D. Legg, O. T. Chortyk, J. L. Baker 8:40—135. Tobacco-Specific Nitrosamine Accumulation and Distribution in FlueCured Tobacco Alkaloid Isolines. M. V. Djordjevic, S. L. Gay, L. P. Bush, J. F. Chaplin 9:00—136. On the Chemical Composition of Dry and Moist Snuff. K. D. Brunnemann, D. Hoffmann 9:20—137. Influence of Adverse Storage Conditions on Changes in Nitrogen Con­ stituents in Air-Cured Burley Tobacco. H. R. Burton, L. P. Bush, M. V. Djordjevic 9:40—138. Influence of Volatile and NonVolatile Tobacco Leaf Surface Compo­ nents on Germination of Peronospora Tabacina Sporangia. M. L. Menetrez, D. A. Danehower, H. W. Spurr Jr. 10:20—139. Thin-Layer Densitometry Tech­ nique for the Rapid Quantitation of Nicot'h ana tabacum Leaf Surface Compounds. D. A. Danehower, D. R. Lawson 10:40—140. Analysis of Volatile Com­ pounds from Flowers of Nicotiana Spe­ cies. T. R. Hamilton-Kemp, J. H. Loughrin, R. A. Anderson 11:00—141. Correlation of Tobacco Leaf Composition with Tobacco Smoke Con­ stituents by Semi-Micro-Pyrolytic Meth­ ods. W. S. Schlotzhauer, M. E. Snook, R. F. Severson, R. F. Arrendale, R. M. Martin 11:20—142. Determination of Major Pheno­ lic Compounds in Tobacco Smoke. C. H. Risner, S. L. Cash 11:40—143. Separation and Quantification of Phenolic Compounds in Mainstream Cigarette Smoke by Capillary GC/MSD/ SIM. E. J. Nanni, M. E. Lovette, R. D. Hicks, K. W. Fowler, M. F. Borgerding THURSDAY AFTERNOON D. A. Danehower,

Presiding

1:20—144. Mass Spectrometry of Sucrose Esters from Nicotiana Species. R. F. Ar­ rendale, R. F. Severson, V. A. Sisson, M. G. Stephenson, J. A. Leary, C. E. Costello 1:40—145. Application of Plasmaspray Liq­ uid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS) for the Analysis of Sugars and Polyphenols in Flue-Cured Tobacco. J. H. Lauterback, S. C. Moldoveanu 2:00—146. Measurement of Volatile Organ­ ic Compounds in Smoking and Non-Smok­ ing Areas Using Combined Adsorption/ Thermal Desorption-Gas Chromatogra­ phy-Mass Spectrometry. L. W. Eudy, M. W. Stancill 2:20—147. Comparisons of a New Cigarette (NC) which Heats Rather Than Burns To­ bacco and a 1R4F Kentucky Reference Cigarette. M. F. Borgerding, J. E. Bodnar, R. D. Hicks, D. M. Riggs, E. J. Nanni, G. W. Fulp Jr. 2:40—148. Mainstream Vapor Phase Smoke Comparison of a 1R4F Kentucky Reference Cigarette and a New Cigarette that Heats Rather Than Burns Tobacco. G. D. Byrd, K. W. Fowler, R. D. Hicks, M. E. Lovette, M. F. Borgerding 3:20—149. Mainstream Particulate Phase Comparison of a 1R4F Kentucky Refer­ ence Cigarette and a Cigarette That Heats Rather Than Burns Tobacco. W. M. Cole­ man III, H. L. Chung, D. S. Moore, E. L. White. B. M. Gordon, M. S. Uhrig, J. A. Giles, J. F. Elder Jr., M. F. Borgerding, R. D. Hicks 3:40—150. Determination of the Major Con­ stituents in the Mainstream Total Particu­ late Matter of a New Cigarette Which Heats Rather Than Burns Tobacco. M. F. Borgerding, L. A. MilhoJs* Jr.-R. D. Hicks, V. B. Stennis, D. F. Simmons, A. M. Slater

4:00—151. Comparison of Selected Com­ pounds in the Mainstream Vapor Phase Smoke of a Reference Cigarette and a New Cigarette that Heats but Does Not Burn Tobacco. G. D. Byrd, K. W. Fowler, M. F. Borgerding 4:20—152. Sidestream Smoke Composition Comparison of 1R4F Kentucky Reference Cigarette and a New Cigarette that Heats but Does Not Burn Tobacco. J. E. Bodnar, J. N. Schumacher 4:40—153. Separation and Quantitation of Ionic Species in Mainstream Smoke Aero- sols from 1R4F Kentucky Reference Ciga­ rettes and New Cigarettes that Heat but Do Not Burn Tobacco. R. D. Hicks, K. W. Fowler, M. E. Lovette, M. F. Borgerding, E. J. Nanni THURSDAY MORNING Grand Ballroom North Molecular Modeling D. Liotta, Organizer,

Presiding

8:40—154. MMX, An Extended MM2 Molec­ ular Mechanics Program. J. J. Gajewski, K. E. Gilbert, T. W. Kreek 9:30—155. Receptor Modeling of Highly Charged Ligands; Free Energy Perturba­ tion. J. P. Snyder, S. N. Rao 10:20—156. Conformational Dynamics Un­ derlying the Biological Activity of the Carboxylic Acid lonophores Narasin A and Lasalocid A. G. R. Painter, C. W. Andrews 11:10—157. Organic Molecules in Strong Electric Fields. C. L. Liotta THURSDAY AFTERNOON D. Liotta,

Presiding

1:30—158. Chemistry, Computers, and Ra­ tionally Designed Enzyme Activators. P. A. Wender 2:20—159. Drug Design and Synthesis. K. Siellou, Y. Gareau, P. Salama, G. Milot 3:30—160. Hazards of Transition State Mod­ eling: Intramolecular Hydride Transfer. M. J. Sherrod, F. M. Menger 3:50—161. Progress in Protein Folding from First Principles. Ε. Μ. Burgess 4:10—162. Molecular Mechanics Calcula­ tions and the Stereochemical Course of Intramolecular Dipolar Cycloadditions of Nitrile Oxides. A. Padwa, A. Hassner 4:30—163. Ab-initio and Molecular Mechan­ ics Calculations on Imine Derivatives: A Study of the Rotational Barriers and the Development of MM2 Parameters. J. P. Bowen, A. J. Hoffman, A. B. Miller THURSDAY MORNING Tara 1 Nucleic Acid Structure and Interactions W. D. Wilson, L. G. Marzilli, Organizers W. D. Wilson, Presiding 8:40—164. Structural Studies of Oligonucle­ otides and Their Interactions with Small Molecules. K. M. Morden 9:10—165. Conformational Transition in Poly dA Poly dT. J. B. Chaires, J. E. Herrera 9:40—166. Structural Details of Unusual DNA Molecules. T. D. Tullius 10:30—167. Influence of Inverted Repeat Sequences on the Melting of Linear DNAs. R. M. Wartell 11:00—168. Utilization of 1H NMR to Study the Association of Aflatoxin Βλ with the Oligodeoxynucleotide d(ATGCAT)2. S. Gopalakrishnan, M. P. Stone, T. M. Harris 11:30—169. Binding of Carcinogens to Spe­ cific Sequences on pBR 322. S. A. Winkle 12:00—170. Nuclease SP: A Novel Enzyme from Spinach That Discriminates Amongst Different Types of DNA Helical Distortions. P. W. Doetsch, W. H. McCray, K. Lee, D. R. Bettler, M. R. L. Valenzuela

THURSDAY AFTERNOON

THURSDAY MORNING

THURSDAY AFTERNOON

Κ. M. Morden, Presiding

Twelve Oaks

1:40—171. Recent Advances in Bleomycin Application. L Strekowski, W. D. Wilson, J. L. Mokrosz 2:10—172. Use of 31P NMR To Study Inter­ actions of Drugs, Ligands, and Metal Com­ plexes with DNA. L. G. Marzilli 2:40—173. Topological^ Constrained Bifunctional Intercalators: A Macrocyclic Diacridine Binds to DNA by Intercalation. S. C. Zimmerman, C. R. Lamberson, M. Cory, T. A. Fairley 3:30—174. Analysis of Binding Mode and Specificity in DNA Interactions: Coopera­ t i v e and Induced Fit in Intercalation and Groove-Binding Complexes. W. D. Wil­ son, L. Strekowski, D. W. Boykin, F. Tanious, M. K. Venkatramanan 4:00—175. Approach to Determining the Sequence Specificities of DNA-Ligand In­ teractions. R. Rill, J. Veal, G. Marsch 4:30—176. Binding of Actinomycin to DNA, Sequence Specificity Beyond the dG-dC Dinucleotide Level. F.-M. Chen 5:00—177. Polyamine/DNA Interactions: Base Pair Selectivity. K. D. Stewart

RCRA/Superfund: Toxics Monitoring

Session: Physical Chemistry of Polymeric Systems

THURSDAY MORNING Thornwood Quality Assurance/Quality Control

A. A. Liabastre, Organizer J. W. Locke, Presiding 8:10—Introductory Remarks 8:20—178. Laboratory Data Quality and Evaluation. J. W. Locke 8:40—179. N. J. Laboratory CertificationPast, Present, Future. R. L. Fischer 9:00—180. Quality Assurance in Third Party Testing.. G. B. Berchtold, L. Rigsby 9:20—181. QA for a Full-Service Environ­ mental Laboratory. J. R. Forbes 9:40—182. The EPA Radon/Radon Progeny Measurement Proficiency Program-Expe­ rience to Date. J. M. Smith, E. L. Sensintaffar 10:20—183. Asbestos Fiber Counting Pro­ grams. P. C. Schlecht 10:40—184. Quality Assurance and Quality Control in the RCRA Program. D. Fried­ man 11:00—185. Problem Areas in Method Vari­ ations and Non-Standard Quality Control. R. L. Booth

FRIDAY MORNING W. G. Kavanagh, Presiding 8:00—186. U.S. Army Toxic and Hazardous Materials Agency Installation Restoration Quality Assurance Program. Κ. Τ. Lang 8:20—187. Quality Assurance for Radioac­ tivity Measurements in Drinking Water. J. A. Broadway 8:40—188. Intralaboratory Approach to Quality Control for Environmental Compli­ ance Monitoring. E. P. Brantly, L. E. My­ ers, B. Price, P. Sprey 9:00—189. QA Programs for Occupational Health Labs. M. T. Abell 9:20—190. Statistical Analysis of Data from U.S.E.P.A. Laboratory Performance Eval­ uation Studies. P. W. Britton 9:40—191. Analytical Chemistry, Laborato­ ry Performance and National Drinking Wa­ ter Regulations. A. H. Perler 10:20—192. Criteria for Data Review and Release. W. G. Kavanagh 10:40—193. Standard Reference Materials and Analytical Quality Assurance. S. D. Rasberry 11:00—194. Estimating the Limit of Detec­ tion in Environmental Samples. F. C. Gar­ ner 11:20—195. Setting Detection Limits for En­ vironmental Parameters. C. A. Clayton, J. W. Hines

E. W. Loy Jr., Organizer F. Allen, Presiding 8:30—Opening Remarks. E. W. Loy Jr. 8:40—196. Comparative Evaluation of Ex­ traction Methods for Semivolatile Organic Compounds in Sediment. P. A. Hyldburg, J. W. Hines, L. S. Sheldon 9:20—197. Hierarchical Approach to the Analysis of Hazardous Organic Com­ pounds in Waste Waters. R. A. Kornfeld, J. S. Warner, S. V. Lucas 10:20—198. Development and Evaluation of Methodology to Determine Formaldehyde in Samples of Environmental Origin. M. K. L. Bicking 11:00—199. Evaluation of Method 1311, the Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Proce­ dure (TCLP). P. J. Marsden

THURSDAY AFTERNOON J. Ellington, Presiding

J. W. Gooch, Presiding 1:40—214. Laser-Induced Photopolymerization of Mono- and Multi-Functional Monomers. M. A. Trapp, C. E. Hoyle 2:00—215. Kinetic Analysis of the LaserInitiated Polymerization of Liquid Crystal­ line Monomers. C. P. Chawla, C. E. Hoyle 2:20—216. Continuous Emulsion Copolymerization with Vinyl Acid Monomers. D. Lange, G. Shoaf, G. W. Poehlein 2:40—217. Particle Nucleation in Emulsifier-Free Emulsion Polymerization of Sty­ rène. Ζ. Q. Song, G. W. Poehlein 3:00—218. A Simple Method of Studying Competitive Binding of Alkali Ions to Polyanions by 23Na NMR. M. E. Kotun, C. P. Qian, H. G. Spencer, G. B. Savitsky 3:40—219. Enhanced Ionic Recognition by Polymer-Supported Reagents in the Complexation of Transition Metal Ions. S. D. Alexandratos, D. R. Quillen 4:00—220. Photodegradation Studies of Polyureas and Polyimides. E. T. Anzures, C. E. Hoyle 4:20—221. Photooxidative Degradation of Aromatic Diisocyanate Based Polyurethanes and Polyureas. C. E. Hoyle, K. S. Ezzell

1:20—200. Current and Future Directions in Organic Methods Development for the RCRA Program, An Overview. B. Lesnik 2:00—201. Stability of Environmental Sam­ ples Containing Volatile Organics. M. Maskarinec, L. H. Johnson, S. K. Holladay FRIDAY MORNING 2:40—202. Environmental Analysis by Im­ munoassay. J. Van Emon Session: Engineered Polymeric Materials 3:40—203. U.S. EPA's Advanced Field Mon­ and Their Applications. itoring Methods Program. L. R. Williams 4:20—204. Robots for Sample Preparation I A. S. Abhiraman, Presiding and Analytical Techniques. J. G. Cleland 8:40—222. Surface Modification of Polybenzimidazole/(lmide-Siloxane) Copoly­ mer Miscible Blends. D. H. Chen, Y. P. THURSDAY MORNING Chen, C. A. Arnold, J. D. Graybeal, T. C. Ward, J. E. McGrath Hermitage Center 9:00—223. Electrically Resistive Polymeric Tactile Sensors. J. W. Gooch Recent Advances in Polymer Technology 9:20—224. Poly(imide-siloxane) Thermo­ F. L. Cook, Organizer plastic Segmented Copolymers for Struc­ Session: Synthesis and Characterization of tural Adhesive Ti-6/4 Bonding. T. H. Yoon, New Polymers C. A. Arnold, E. S. Moyer, B. E. McGrath, J. E. McGrath F. L. Cook, Presiding 9:40—225. Surface Chemical Changes in Aramid Fibers as a Result of Plasma 8:30—Introductory Remarks Treatment. J. G. Dillard, M. Furukawa 8:40—205. Synthesis and Characterization 10:20—226. Plasma Treatment of Polymer of Soluble Polymide Homopolymers and Siloxane-Modified Polyimides. D. L. WilSurfaces. J. T. Keiser, M. A: Mason kens, C. A. Arnold, J. E. McGrath 10:40—227. Characteristics of Adhesive Bonding of Sheet Molded Composites. G. 9:00—206. Solution Imidization Techniques for the Preparation of Soluble Polyimide Choi, J. G. Dillard Homo- and Copolymers. Y. Kim, J. D. 11:00—228. Adhesion in Composites. I. Summers, C. A. Arnold, J. E. McGrath Spinu, J. G. Dillard 9:20—207. Synthesis and Characterization 11:20—229. High Temperature Deformation of Star-Branched lonomers Composed of of PAN-Based Precursors for Carbon Fi­ Sulfonated Polystyrene Outer Blocks and bers. G. Bhat, V. Daga, A. S. Abhiraman Elastomeric Inner Blocks. R. F. Storey, S. 11:40—230. Polytitanocarbosilane Synthe­ E. George sis and Characterization. T. H. Ibrahim, A. 9:40—208. Synthesis and Characterization G. Ludwick of Polycarbonates Carrying Terminal Hydroxyl Groups. R. F. Storey, D. C. Hoffman 10:20—209. Synthesis and Characterization THURSDAY MORNING of Poly(Arylene Ether) Sulfone Poly(aryHickory Hill lene) Segmented Copolymers Via Melt Acidolysis. K. L. Cooper, D. H. Chen, J. E. Trace Analysis in Biological Specimens McGrath 10:40—210. Synthesis and Characterization L. L. Needham, Organizer, Presiding of Amorphous Homopolymers and Seg­ mented Poly(Arylene Ether Ketone) Co­ 8:35—Opening Remarks polymers of Aromatic Polymers Based on 8:40—231. The EPA/NBS Human Liver Specimen Banking Project. R. Zeisler 5 Tertiary Butyl Isophthalic Acid. W. Wae9:10—232. Biological Monitoring with hamad, J. E. McGrath Atomic Absorption and Emission Spec­ 11:00—211. Novel Charge-Transfer Poly­ trometry D. C. Paschal mers. J. Kowalik, L. M. Tolbert 11:20—212. Deprotonation and Conductiv­ 9:30—233. Evidence of the Presence of Early Eluting (Pre-DDE) and Late Eluting ity Studies of SP3-lnterrupted Polyacety(Post-DDE) Polychlorinated Biphenyls lene. L. M. Tolbert, J. A. Schomaker (PCBs) in the Serum of New Bedford Resi­ 11:40—213. Macrocyclic Polyethers dents with Concomitant Patterns in Blue ("Crown" Ethers) in Polymers and Poly­ Fish and Lobsters. V. W. Burse, D. F. merizations. F. L. Cook, J. R. Robertson, Groce, M. P. Korver, P. C. McLure, D. L. C. R. Kleissler Phillips, S. L. Head, C. R. Lapeza Jr., D. G. Patterson Jr., D. T. Miller 10:00—234. Quality Assurance Measures in Trace Organic Analysis. S. J. Smith

10:40—235. Measurement of Urinary Phe­ nols Derived from Metabolism of Environ­ mental Contaminants Using Tandem Mass Spectrometry. R. H. Hill Jr., C. C. Alley, D. L. Orti, S. L. Bailey, D. B. Shealy, D. G. Todd, R. E. Cline, L. L. Needham 11:00—236. Automation of Sample Extrac­ tion, Derivatization, and Clean-up for Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometric Analysis through the Use of Robotics. D. L. Orti, S. L. Bailey, D. B. Shealy, R. H. Hill Jr. 11:20—237. The Application of a High Res­ olution Mass Spectrometric Method for Measuring 2,3,7,8-TCDD in Human Adi­ pose Tissue and Serum. D. G. Patterson Jr., L. R. Alexander, W. E. Turner, L. L. Needhan, J. S. Andrews Jr., J. L. Pirkle, E. J. Sampson

THURSDAY AFTERNOON L. L. Needham, Presiding 1:40—238. The Application of Two-Dimen­ sional Electrophoresis in the Detection and Quantification of Trace Proteins in Biological Materials. J. E. Myrick, M. K. Robinson, T. L. Hubert, S. P. Caudill 2:20—239. Characterization of DNA Adducts. R. K. Mitchum. 2:50—240. Quantification of Volatile Organ­ ic Compounds in Human Blood. J. S. Hol­ ler, J. M. McCraw, F. L. Cardinali, G. D. Todd, M. A. Bonin 3:40—241. Using GC MS To Monitor Extra Cellular Cocaine Concentration in Rat Striatum. H.-T. Pan, L. C. Nicolaysen, J. B. Justice 4:10—242. Prefractionation, Enrichment, and Analyses of Complex Biological Specimens for Chlorinated Pesticides and PCBs. R. M. Parris, M. S. Schantz, S. A. Wise, S. N. Chesler 4:25—243. Distribution of Organochlorinated Pesticides, and Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-Dioxins, Furans, and Biphenyls in Human Blood. L. L. Needham, D. G. Pat­ terson Jr., V. W. Burse, L. O. Nenderson

THURSDAY AFTERNOON Plantation Applications of Commercial Packages in Chemistry J. B. Justice Jr., Organizer,

Software Presiding

1:40—244. Computer Technology in the Daily Life of an Organic Chemist. A. Padwa 2:00—245. Use of TK Solver Plus as a Tool for Solving Problems in Physical and Ana­ lytical Chemistry. J. E. Bloor 2:20—246. Useful Commercial Software in the Laboratory: No More Programming? L. C. Nicolaysen, J. B. Justice Jr. 2:40—247. Chemical Databases and the Laboratory Computer. H. M. Bell, K. Har­ rington 3:20—248. MACCS-II as the Medicinal Che­ mist's Thought Processing System at Bur­ roughs Wellcome. C. E. Gragg 3:40—249. Look at Some Relevant Micro­ computer Applications Software for Phys­ ical Chemistry. J. H. Reeves 4:00—250. Computer Control of a Transient EPR Spectrometer Using the ASYST Soft­ ware Package. E. G. Bradford, L. D. Kispert 4:20—251. Use of a Graphical Programming Language (LabView) to Control Zero-Field RF-Excitation NMR Spectrometers. L. G. Butler, K. Guo, M. I. Altback, W. L. Jarrett 4:40—252. Comparison of Statistical Soft­ ware for Least-Squares and Multivariant Analysis in Chemistry. S. L. Morgan THURSDAY AFTERNOON Tara 3 Oxygenated Processes in Organic Chemis­ try

A. L. Baumstark, Organizer P. G. McDougal, Presiding 1:50—Opening Remarks 2:00—253. Dioxyphosphoranes: An Emerg­ ing Class of Versatile Reagents in Organic Synthesis. S. A. Evans Jr.

September 19, 1988 C&EN

33

Meetings 2:45—254. Oxygen-Atom Transfer Chemis­ try of Organic Peroxides and Hydroperox­ ides. A. L. Baumstark 3:30—255. Better Catalysts for the Oxygen­ ation of Hydrocarbons. The Inorganic Por­ phyrin. C. L. Hill, M. Faraj, R. B. Brown Jr. 4:15—256. Reaction of Singlet Oxygen with Enones. H. E. Ensley

TECHNICAL SESSIONS

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY FRIDAY MORNING Tara 3

WEDNESDAY MORNING

Laser Spectroscopy of Jet-Cooled Mole­ cules M. C. Heaven, Organizer,

Presiding

8:20—257. Very High Resolution Electronic Spectroscopy of Organic Free Radicals. T. A. Miller 8:50—258. Photofragmentation Studies of Expansion-Cooled Molecules. S. S. Hunnicutt, L. D. Waits, J. A. Guest 9:20—259. Atoms and Electrons in an In­ tense Laser Field. L. F. DIMauro 9:50—260. Excess Energy Dependence of Internal Conversion in Azulene. J. E. Ken­ ny 10:30—261. High-Resolution Electronic Spectroscopy of Jet-cooled Free Radi­ cals. F. J. Northrup, T. J. Sears 11:00—262. Effect of Complexation of Rare Gas Atoms on an Out-of-Plane Ring Mode in p-C6H4CI2 and p-C6D4CI2. W. D. Sands, R. Moore 11:30—263. Open-Shell van der Waals Complexes. W. Fawzy, M. C. Heaven

FRIDAY MORNING Grand Ballroom North Protein-Protein Interactions

D. W. Dixon, Organizer S. A. Allison, Presiding 8:40—Introductory Remarks 8:45—264. Electrostatic Calculations: The Static Structure Problem. J. B. Matthew, J. J. Wendoloski 9:30—265. Electrostatic Interactions in Pro­ teins. B. Honig 10:15—266. Plastocyanin, Azurin and Elec­ trostatics. W. H. Koppenol, J. D. Rush 10:40—267. Role of Protein-Protein Interac­ tions in the Rate of Electron Transfer from Flavodoxin to Cytochrome c. D. E. Edmondson, R. DeFrancesco, G. Tollin 11:05—268. Electrostatic Interactions in Cytochrome Electron Transfer. D. W. Dix­ on, X. Hong, S. E. Woehler 11:30—269. Brownian Dynamics and Elec­ trostatics of Association of Heme Pro­ teins. S. H. Northrup 12:00—270. Modeling Interactions of Elec­ tron Transfer Proteins from Sulfate Re­ ducing Bacteria. J. E. Wampler FRIDAY MORNING Tara 1 Topics in Complex Carbohydrate Science P. Albersheim, Organizer,

Presiding

8:20—271. Carbohydrate Chains of Glyco­ proteins as Studied by Modern NMR. Spectroscopy. H. van Halbeek 9:20—272. Mutational Analysis of Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans. J. D. Esko 9:40—273. Glucose Phosphotransferase is Cytosolically Oriented. R. B. Marchase, C. Srisomsap, K. L. Richardson, J. C. Jay 10:40—274. Sugar Chains of Glycoproteins Synthesized by Schistosoma mansoni. The Organism Causing Schistosomiasis in Humans. R. D. Cummings, K. Nyame 11:20—275. Effect of Oligosaccharins on Plant Growth and Development. A. G. Darvlll, P. Albersheim, C. Augur, N. Doubrava, S. Eberhard, D. J. Gollin, T. Gruber, V. Marfa-Riera, M. E. Mayorga, D. Mohnen, R. O'Neill, A. Southwick, W. S. York

34

September 19, 1988 C&EN

Hermitage East General Session J. B. Justice,

Chairman

P. E. Sturrock,

Presiding

8:20—276. Spherical Diffusion and Geo­ metrical Corrections for Chronoamperometry/Chronocoulometry at Mercury Drop Electrodes. R.H. Gibson, P. E. Sturrock, G. O'Brien 8:40—277. Applications of Chemometrics to HPLC/Voltammetric Detection. H. Z. Msimanga, P. E. Sturrock 9:00—278. Average Power Optimization in Raman Measurements. T. J. Vickers, C. K. Mann 9:20—279. Development of Attenuated To­ tal Reflectance Fourier Transform Infra­ red Spectroscopy as an On-Line-Monitor­ ing Device to Study the Attachment of Living Bacteria. D. E. Nivens, A. Tunlid, M. J. Franklin, J. Q. Chambers, D. C. White 9:40—280. Fourier Transform Infrared Study of a C18 Modified Silica Surface. V. Rangnekar, P. B. Oldham 10:20—281. Least Squares Rate Method for the Determination of Ascorbic Acid in Pharmaceuticals. P. J. Sapp, R. W. Swiney, Β. Κ. Sizemore, C.-N. Ho 10:40—282. Automatic Calibration of a So­ lution Calorimeter. J. G. Fletcher, J. A. Lynch, E. T. Lane 11:00—283. Pattern Recognition of Neat Jet Fuel Gas Chromatographic Profiles. H. T. Mayfield, M. V. Henley 11:20—284. Pattern Recognition of Aviation Fuels from Their Water-Soluble Gas Chromatograms. M. V. Henley, H. T. Mayfield 11:40—285. GC/MS Analysis of Anabolic Steroids in Urine. E. S. Arafat, K. Ceesay, J. Smith, M. A. ElSohly

FRIDAY MORNING

Tara 5

Hermitage East

Session II: Proteins

General Session

D. W. Dixon,

J. Adams,

2:00—313. Brownian Dynamics of Enzymat­ ic Reactions of Carbonic Anhydrase B. J. C. L. Reynolds, S. H. Northrup 2:20—314. Brownian Dynamics of Associa­ tion and Electron Self-Exchange in Pseudomonas Aeruginosa Cytochrome c-551. R. Herbert, S. H. Northrup 2:50—315. Electron Self-Exchange of Cyto­ chrome b5. X. Hong, D. W. Dixon, S. E. Woehler 3:10—316. Spectroscopic Studies on Nitrimyoglobin. L. L. Bondoc, R. Timkovich 3:50—317. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Relaxation Studies of Manganese(ll) Bind­ ing to Apoferritin. M. Lu, J. G. Wardeska 4:10—318. Flavin Substrate Specificity of Flavin Adenine Dinucleotide Synthetase. D. M. Bowers-Komro, D. B. McCormick 4:30—319. Amino Terminal and Active Site Sequence Determinations of Tyrosine Phenol-lyase: Possible Evolutionary Rela­ tionship with Tryptophan Indole-Lyase. R. L. von Tersch, R. S. Phillips Wednesday evening poster session: See posters 610-623, page 38.

Presiding

8:40—295. Structural Characteristics of Photosensitive Metal Dithizonates as Indicated by Reversible Color Transformations Induced by Water and Other Ligands. R. A. Watson, M. W. MacDonald, D. G. Hicks 9:00—296. Does Coal Contain Environmentally Dangerous Amount of Fluorine and Chlorine? Determination of Fluorine in Coals Before and After Rapid Chemical Beneficiation via HF-HN03 Leaching. D. G. Hicks, J. Hardee 9:20—297. Analysis of Berry Clay (Floyd Shale), Rome, Georgia. C. M. Earnest, J. Teague, C. Morgan 9:40—298. Substituent Effects in the Proton Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra of Chlorinated Dibenzo-p-dioxins and Dibenzofurans. D. L. Ashley, V. V. Ready, D. G. Patterson Jr. 10:20—299. Azo Dye Degradation Products. S. Camp, P. E. Sturrock 10:40—300. Studies of Arsenate, Methylarsonic Acid, and Dimethylarsinic Acid in Aqueous Ethanolic Solutions. C. Gillyard, K. Rhodes 11:00—301. Characterization of Charged Species in a Glow Discharge Plasma by Use of a Langmuir Probe. D. Fang, R. K. Marcus 11:20—302. Analysis of Nonconducting Sample Types by Glow Discharge Atomization Absorption Spectroscopy. M. R. Winchester, R. K. Marcus 11:40—303. Tungsten Filament Sample Vaporization. B. T. Buckley, C. B. Boss, R. M. Alvarez

BIOCHEMISTRY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Tara 1 Session I: Nucleic Acids

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON Hermitage East General Session G. Patonay,

Presiding

1:40—286. Direct Electron Transfer Reac­ tion of Euglena Gracilis Cytochrome c552 at Pyrolytic Graphite Electrodes. V. R. Senaratne, E. F. Bowden 2:00—287. Homogeneous Inhibition of Biotinylated Adenosine Deaminase by BiotinSpecific Binders; Bioanalytical Applica­ tions. M. S. Barbarakis, S. Daunert, L. G. Bâchas 2:20—288. Effects of Flow Conditions on Fluorescence Lifetime Determinations Using Phase-Modulation Fluorometry OnLine with HPLC. W. T. Cobb, L. B. McGown 2:40—289. Analysis of Multifrequency Phase-Resolved Fluorescence ExcitationEmission Matrix Data. D. W. Millican, L. B. McGown, X. M. Tu, D. S. Burdick 3:20—290. Design and Application of a Fiber Optic Based Multidimensional Fluorometer. J. B. Zung, M-R. S. Fuh, I. M. Warner 3:40—291. Optimization of Laser Diode Spectrometer. E. Unger, G. Patonay 4:00—292. Near-Infrared Fluorescence as an Analytical Tool. G. Patonay, J. Pierre, D. Andrews-Wilberforce 4:20—293. Determination of Charged Organic Molecules Using Near Infrared Fluorescence. M. A. Roberson, G. Patonay 4:40—294. Fluorescence Quenching Studies of Near Infrared Fluorophores. D. Andrews-Wilberforce, A. Huff, G. Patonay Wednesday evening poster session: See posters 592-598, page 38.

W. D. Wilson, Chairman K. D. Stewart, Presiding 1:30—304. Non-Watson-Crick Conformations of DNA Stabilized by Protonation of Cytosine. M. P. Stone, R. J. Topping, C. K. Brush, T. M. Harris 1:50—305. NMR Study of an Unusual Purine-Rich Oligomer Duplex DNA. Y. Li, Μ­ Η. Dotrong, G. Zon, W. D. Wilson 2:10—306. Selective Deuteration of Oligodeoxynucleotides as a Means of Simplifi­ cation of NMR Spectra. T. M. Harris, C. K. Brush, R. P. Hodge, P. J. Thomas, M. P. Stone 2:30—307. Interactions of Porphyrins and Metalloporphyrins with DNA. J. A. Strick­ land, L. G. Marzilli, W. D. Wilson 2:50—308. Interactions of Oligopeptides with Nucleic Acids. E. Pares, I. Cruzado, D. Santiago, C. Robledo-Luiggi 3:30—309. Synthesis and DNA-Complexation of Actinomycin D Analogs. V. Geisler, K. Stewart 3:50—310. Synthesis and DNA-Binding Studies of 2,5-Bis(4-Guanylphenyl)Furans. M. K. Venkatramanan, F. Tanious, W. D. Wilson, D. W. Boykin 4:10—311. Preparation and Reactions of Aflatoxin B r Epoxide: The Ultimate Car­ cinogen of Aflatoxin B v T. M. Harris, S. W. Baertschi, K. D. Raney, S. Gopalakrishnan, S. Byrd, M. P. Stone 4:30—312. Electrophoretic Studies of the Non-Covalent Interactions Between Ana­ toxins and Closed-Circular DNA. S. Byrd, T. M. Harris

THURSDAY

Presiding

AFTERNOON

Tara 5 General Session R. F. Borkman,

Presiding

2:00—320. Characterization of Com­ pound^) with Antiglaucoma Activity Iso­ lated from Tobacco Callus. L. C. Hodges, G. W. Robinson, K. Green 2:20—321. Oxidation of 4-Substituted Benzaldehydes by Xanthine Oxidase: Quanti­ tative Structure-Activity Relationships. R. B. Banks, W.-H. Lin 2:50—322. The UV Photolysis of Trypto­ phan Residues in Calf Gamma-ll Crystallin. D. H. Tallmadge, R. F. Borkman 3:30—323. Rigid Tryptophan and Related Dipeptides. Y. Jia, D. Hu, M. R. Eftink 3:50—324. Restricted Motion of the Phos­ phate Group in Crystalline 3'-Cytidine Monophosphate/Ribonuclease A Complex. T.-H. Huang, W. Gilbert, G. A. Petsko, R. G. Griffin 4:10—325. Detection of Liquid Phase Nucle­ ic Acid Hybridization by Piezoelectric Resonance. R. L. Thompson, N. C. Fawcett, J. A. Evans 4:30—326. Chemical Synthesis of a Model Cyclopenta-Fused PAH Adduct of Adeno­ sine. A. W. Bartczak, R. Sangaiah, G. Toney, A. Gold

CATALYSIS FRIDAY MORNING Whitehall General Session M. G. White, Chairman,

Presiding

8:40—327. Importance of Surface OH Groups in the Reaction of C0 2 with Alumi­ na. J. T. Keiser, C. P. Booker 9:00—328. Formation of Bimetallic Carbonyl Clusters in Solution and on Metal Oxide Supports. J. J. Bergmeister, Β. Ε. Hanson 9:20—329. Novel Cobalt Stearate-Aluminum Alkyl Hydrogénation Catalyst. A. Alvanipour, L. D. Kispert 9:40—330. Interactive Chemistry of CoalPetroleum Reaction Using Model Compounds with in situ Generated Molybdenum Sulfide. H. Kim, C. W. Curtis 10:20—331. Thermal Decomposition Studies of Metal Chromâtes and Molybdates. M. G. White, J. A. Bertrand, H. Liu

10:40—332. Study of the Interaction of CO and NH3 over Supported Ruthenium Cata­ lysts. D. K. Paul, S. D. Worley 11:00—333. Investigation of the Effects of Anti-Stripping Agents on the Adsorptive Behavior of Asphalt Model Functionalities on Silica, a Model Aggregate. Y. W. Jeon, C. W. Curtis, B. M. Kiggundu

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY THURSDAY

AFTERNOON

Lee General Session

CHEMICAL EDUCATION WEDNESDAY

MORNING

Hermitage West General Session C. T. Sears, Chairman D. Dever, Presiding 9:00—334. 100 Demonstrations for Ele­ mentary Education Teachers for Under $100. C. H. Atwood, M. E. Murray, B. G. Allison 9:20—335. University On-Campus Program for Gifted, Accelerated, and Talented High School and Elementary School Students. R. E. Poore 9:40—336. Research Experience in Electro­ chemistry for High School Students. R. H. Gibson 10:00—337. Microchemistry in the G.O.B. Lab. D. F. Dever, A. Samper, C. Smith, M. Sommer 10:20—338. Freshman Microchemical Lab. D. F. Dever 10:40—339. Simple Demonstrations of Fun­ damental Phenomena in Solvent Extrac­ tion Separation of Metals. J. W. McMeen, K. Heiges, L. Sears, D. G. Hicks 11:00—340. Preparation of Superconductor Materials from Scrap Metal, Ores, and Toxic Industrial By-Products: A Laboratory Course for General Chemistry. D. G. Hicks, K. Heiges 11:20—341. New Experiments for the Or­ ganic Teaching Laboratory. S. G. Levine, N. E. Heard, K. D. Barboriak, K. Kasdorf 11:40—342. Using the Periodic Table as a Guide to Nuclide Stability and Decay. H. F. Blanck Wednesday evening poster session: See posters 589-591, page 38

THURSDAY MORNING Hermitage West General Session

G. S. Owen, Presiding 9:00—343. KC Tutor: An Intelligent Chemi­ cal Tutorial System. G. S. Owen 9:20—344. Using Computers in Chemistry Lecture. R. G. Botdorf 9:40—345. Use of Computerized Instrumen­ tation In The Undergraduate Chemistry Program. C. M. Earnest, D. Kinzer 10:00—346. General Course on Applica­ tions of Microcomputers to Chemistry. J. E. Bloor 10:20—347. Computer-Enhanced Physical Chemistry Lectures. D. M. Whisnant 10:40—348. Dis-integrating the ClausiusClapeyron Equation. R. D. Mathews 11:00—349. Complex Oxide of a Lanthinide Series' Element with Iron and Silicon. R. G. Botdorf 11:20—350. What You've Always Wanted To Ask About Thermodynamics—But Were Afraid To Know. L. J. Sacks 11:40—351. Molecular Modeling Package for Microcomputers. G. S. Owen

THURSDAY AFTERNOON Hermitage West CHEMCOM Workshop

A. A. Liabastre, Chairman W. H. Cross, Presiding 1:40—353. Partial Molar Refractions of Aqueous Electrolytes of Tropospheric Aerosol Importance. A. W. Stelson 2:00—354. Mathematical Modeling of In Situ Vapor Stripping of Contaminated Soils. D. J. Wilson, A. N. Clarke, R. D. Mutch Jr. 2:20—355. Soil Cleanup by In Situ Surfac­ tant Flushing. I. Mathematical Modeling and Lab Results. D. J. Wilson, R. D. Mutch Jr., A. N. Clarke 2:40—356. Halogenated Aqueous Pollutants Reduction with a Platinum/Glass Wool Re­ actor. T. Wang, M. Hoffman, C. Tan 3:20—357. Field Portable Electrolytic Chlo­ rine Calibrator. S. A. Nodlng, D. K. Wolcott 3:40—358. Chemist's Contribution to SARA Local Emergency Planning Committees. M. E. Deerhake 4:00—359. Acid Rain in East Central Florida During 1977-87. B. C. Madsen, T. Kheoh, T. W. Dreschell 4:20—360. Prentiss Creosote Superfund In­ cineration Project. T. F. McGowan, K. S. McCarty

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY WEDNESDAY

MORNING

Tara 4 Session I: Materials C. Kutal, Chairman E. L. A m m a , Presiding 8:40—361. Characterization of a Cobalt(ll) Cyanide Complex Inside Zeolite-Y Which Reversibly Binds Oxygen. R. J. Taylor, I. Bresinska, R. S. Drago 9:00—362. New Materials with Metal Doped Pyrolyzed Polymer Composites. G. C. Grunewald, S. K. Showalter, R. S. Drago 9:20—363. Synthesis, Solution Behavior, and Solid State Structure of RIM-Derivatized Calixarenes. G. W. Orr, F. Hamada, H. Zhang, K. A. Belmore, J. L. Atwood 9:40—364. Matrix Supported Calixarenes: Application to Separations of Organics from Dilute Aqueous Feeds. M. J. Plishka, G. W. Orr, F. Hamada, D. A. Roberts, J. L. Atwood 10:00—365. Single Crystal Studies of the Inclusion Chemistry of β-Cyclodextrin. K. D. Robinson, F. Hamada, J. L. Atwood 10:20—366. Changes in the Crystalline Mor­ phology of α-FeOOH Produced by Compe­ tition of Anions in Solution. T. Barton, J. G. Dillard 10:40—367. Preparation and Characteriza­ tion of KxCrF3 (x = 0.43 - 0.59). A. V. Shah, W. O. J. Boo 11:00—368. New Class of Potential Nonlin­ ear Optical Materials. E. A. H. Griffith, L. Cathey, E. L. Amma 11:20—369. Synthesis and Structure of Lar­ iat Ethers Based on Aza-15-Crown-5 and Their Metal Ion Complexes. P. J. Cragg, K. D. Robinson, J. L. Atwood 11:40—370. Some Interesting Observations on the Dissolution of Copper in DMSOCCI4 Systems. B. B. Bunn, T. T.-S. Huang

C. T. Sears, Presiding

Tara 5

2:00—Introduction 2:05—Presentation of High School Teaching Award. C. T. Sears 2:15—352. CHEMCOM Workshop. C. L. Stanitskl

Session II: Reactivity and Catalysis E. W. Goldman,

Presiding

8:40—371. Kinetics and Mechanism of Cyclopropanation of Olefins by [MCp(CO)2CH2SPh2]BF4 (M = Fe, Ru). M. C. Hlllhouse, P. McCarten, Ε. Κ. Barefield

9:00—372. Carbon Dioxide Fixation by a Cobalt(l) Macrocyclic Ligand Complex. J. S. Summers, E. K. Barefield, D. G. Vanderveer 9:20—373. Mg(ll) and Zn(ll) Promoted Enolization and Hydration of 4-Ethyl Oxaloacetate. D. L. Leussing, K. T. Chang 9:40—374. Decatungstate as an Initiator of Hydrocarbon Autoxidation Using Visible Light. R. C. Chambers, C. L. Hill 10:00—375. EPR Study of Catalytic Photo­ chemical Oxidation of Organic Substrates by Polyoxometalates. M. Kadkhodayan, C.L.Hill 10:20—376. TMSP/TBHP Catalytic Alkane Oxidation System. M. Faraj, C. L. Hill 10:40—377. Catalytic Oxidations by Trinuclear Ruthenium Carboxylate Complexes. A. S. Goldstein, S. Davis, R. S. Drago 11:00—378. Nonclassical Selectivities in Catalytic Functionalization of Alkanes. R. F. Renneke, C. L. Hill 11:20—379. Biomimics of Hemocyanin and Tyrosinase. T. N. Sorrell, M. Garrity, V. Vankai, J. Richards 11:40—380. Alpha Elimination from Transi­ tion Metal Silicon Complexes. E. W. Gold­ man, C. Kelley, M. Terry, M. Gwaltney WEDNESDAY

AFTERNOON

9:20—393. Isomers and Isomerizations of Heteroatomic and Substituted P73~. Β. Μ. Glmarc, J. J. Ott 9:40—394. Correlation Between Bond Order and Bond Length in the Electron Deficient C/oso-Boranes. J. J. Ott, C. A. Brown, M. Webber, B. M. Gimarc 10:00—395. Synthesis and Structure of AlN Cage Products. F. Moise, S. A. Sangokoya, W. T. Pennington, G. H. Robinson 10:20—396. Organoaluminum Chemistry of Bidentate Phosphorus Ligands. Synthesis and Characterization of Al-P Products. M. F. Self, S. A. Sangokoya, W. T. Penning­ ton, G. H. Robinson 10:40—397. Reaction of Organoaluminum Species with Bis(diphenylphosphinoyl)methane. B. Lee, S. A. Sangokoya, G. H. Robinson 11:00—398. Synthesis and Crystal Struc­ ture of [Cs + · (18-C-6)] [SF 5 ]. H. Zhang, M. Clark, C. Kellen, J. S. Thrasher, J. L. Atwood 11:20—399. Tris(pentafluorosulfanyl)amine, (SF5)3N. J. B. Nielsen, K. V. Madappat, W. B. Waites, J. S. Thrasher, K. D. Robinson, H. Zhang, J. L. Atwood 11:40—400. Synthesis of Salts of the Hydro­ gen Dichloride Anion in Aromatic Sol­ vents. M. T. May, S. G. Bott, C. M. Means, A. W. Coleman, M. S. Kalo, J. L. Atwood

Tara 4

Tara 5

Session I: Synthesis and Characterization

Session II: Photochemistry and Photophysics

R. D. Bereman, Presiding 1:40—381. Preparation and Reactivity of Organometallic Complexes Incorporating New Substituted Tetramethylcyclopentadienyl Ligands. E. A. Mlntz, D. M. Bensley Jr., B. A. Mackey-Clipper, J. E. Cortopassi, J. C. Pando 2:00—382. Preparation and Reactivity of Transition Metal Bridged Tetramethylcyclopentadienyl Ligands. J. C. Pando, E. A. Mintz 2:20—383. Synthesis of Pt(O) Alkene Com­ plexes Using Bis(tribenzylideneacetylacetone) Pt(O). M. J. Smellle, S. Ledbetter, L. L. Wright 2:40—384. Synthesis and Characterization of Substituted Phenanthroline Complexes of Pt(O) and Pd(O). B. L. Martin, L. L. Wright 3:00—385. Synthesis and Characterization of Substituted Bipyridene Complexes of Pt(O) and Pd(O). J. L Whittemore, L. L. Wright 3:20—386. Synthesis and Reactivity of New Amido Complexes of Ruthenium. G. C. Martin, G. J. Palenik, Z.-Y. Zhang, J. M. Boncella 3:40—387. Synthesis and Characterization of Two Water-Soluble Sulfonic Acid De­ rivatives of Meso-Tetraphenylporphyrin. A. N. Thompson Jr., L. M. Dawson, A. D. King, E. J. Madlock 4:00—388. Electrochemical and Spectral Properties of the Ni(ll) and Cu(ll) Complex­ es of 5,7,12,14-tetraphenyldibenzofb,i][1,4,8,11]tetra-aza[14]annulene. R. D. Bereman, P. J. Hochgesang 4:20—389. Nickel Complexes of Tetradentate N2S2 Ligands. E. M. Martin, J. Dorfman, R. D. Bereman 4:40—390. Synthesis and Characterization of Tetraethylammonium Bis(5,6-Dihydro1,4-Dithiin-2,3-Dithiolato)Cobaltate(lll). Crystal Structure of [(C4H9)4N]2[Co(DDDT)2]2. J. H. Welch, R. D. Bereman, P. Singh Wednesday evening poster session: See posters 599-604, page 38

K. S. Schanze,

Presiding

8:40—401. Spectroelectrochemical Studies of Ru(BPY)2(CN)2 and its Polynuclear Complexes. J. B. Cooper, K. W. Hanck, D. W. Wertz 9:00—402. Spectroscopy and Ultraviolet Photochemistry of Alkylamine Complexes of Cobalt(lll). S. K. Welt, C. Kutal, G. Ferraudi 9:20—403. Photochemistry of a Square Pla­ nar Co(lll) Complex. K. S. Schanze, G.-H. Lee 9:40—404. Studies of Mono- and Bimetallic Complexes of 2,3,4,6-Tetrakis(2-Pyridyl)Pyrazine, (TPP), A Tridentate Bridging Li­ gand. A. K. Satpathy, J. D. Petersen, W. T. Pennington 10:00—405. Light-Induced Ruthenium to Iron Electron or Energy Transfer vis MonoDentate Azine Bridging Ligands. M. A. Billadeau, J. D. Petersen 10:20—406. Structure and Photochemistry of Monometallic and Bimetallic Hydride Complexes. D. B. MacQueen, J. D. Peter­ sen 10:40—407. Luminescence Properties of Weakly Coupled, Dinuclear Ruthenium Complexes Linked by a Novel, Bridging Bis-Bipyridyl Ligand. J. R. Shaw, R. H. Schmehl 11:00—408. Ag + Quenching of Ru(BL)32+; Ground State Complex Formation, Exciplex, or a Combination? K. V. Goodwin, J. D. Petersen 11:20—409. Electrogenerated Chemiluminescence in Some Transition Metal Com­ plexes. D. Casadonte, N. A. P. Kane-Maguire, L. L. Wright, J. A. Guckert 11:40—410. Intramolecular Dehydrogenation of Unactivated Carbocyclic Skeletons Remote from Functional Groups. L. Combs, C. L. Hill THURSDAY

AFTERNOON

Tara 4 Session I: Spectroscopy

THURSDAY

MORNING

Tara 4 Session I: Main Group Chemistry G. H. Robinson,

Presiding

8:40—391. Molecular Complexes of Sili­ con-Containing Macrocycles. D. C. Hrncir, C. S. Pomeroy, W. D. Kim 9:00—392. Complexes of Antimony(lll) and Bismuth(lll) Chlorides with a Novel New Bidentate Thiourea-1,1 '-MethyleneS/'s(3Methyl-2H-lmidazole-2-Thione). D. J. Wil­ liams, D. VanDerveer, R. L. Jones, D. S. Menaldino

L. K. Krannich,

Presiding

1:40—411. 13C and 1H NMR Studies of Some Aminoarsonium Chlorides. C. L. Watkins, L. K. Krannich, R. K. Kanjolia, D. Srivastava 2:00—412. Orientations of 113Cd NMR Chemical Shielding Tensors Predicted with Crystallographic Data. W. Y. Li, E. L. Amma 2:20—413. Solid-State 113Cd NMR, Shield­ ing Tensor Components, Crystal Struc­ tures of All Oxygen Coordination. L. Pe­ terson, H. Li, E. L. Amma

September 19, 1988 C&EN

35

Meetings 2:40—414. Multinuclear Magnetic Reso­ nance Studies of Organoseleno- and Organotelluro-Group 14 Compounds. J. M. Irlarte, J. D. Odom 3:00—415. Evaluation of Several Chemical Shift References in 125Te NMR Spectros­ copy. J. M. Iriarte, L. A. Silks III, J. D. Odom 3:20—416. Aqueous Proton Relaxation Rate Enhancement by Cu(ll) Macrocyclic Com­ plexes. S. C. Jackels, E. S. Pretorius 3:40—417. Structural Studies on Monome­ tallic Complexes of Group 11 (IB) Cations with Polyazine Ligands. K. V. Goodwin, W. T. Pennington, J. D. Petersen 4:00—418. FAB Studies of Cationic SquarePlanar Rhodium(l) Bis-Phosphine Com­ plexes. R. M. Wharf, W. E. Hill 4:20—419. Insights into Paramagnetic NonHeme Iron Complexes, Clusters, and Pro­ teins from Their 1H NMR Spectra. F.-J. Wu, M. T. Werth, D. M. Kurtz Jr. 4:40—420. Generation of a Novel Heme Protein with Arginine Ligation via SiteDirected Mutagenesis of Yeast Cyto­ chrome c. T. N. Sorrel, P. K. Martin FRIDAY

10:40—437. Pentadienyl Ligands in Cluster Complexes. R. D. Adams, J. E. Babin, M. Tasi, J.-G. Wang, T. A. Wolfe 11:00—438. Reaction of Alkyl Lithium re­ agents with Uranium Tetrachloride. D. N. Schwenn, L. J. Levine, T. P. Hanusa 11:20—439. Synthesis of Fused Ring Peralkylated Cyclopentadienes and Their Metal Complexes. T. J. Clark, R. Narehood, T. A. Nile 11:40—440. Pyridine Containing Cyclopen­ tadienes and Their Metal Complexes. T. J. Clark, T. A. Nile, J. Smith, D. McPhail, A. T. McPhail

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY J. T. Stewart, Chairman Wednesday evening poster session: See posters 624-629, page 38

MORNING THURSDAY

Tara 4 Session I: Electron Transfer N. A. Lewis,

Presiding

8:40—421. Outer-Sphere Electron Transfer Reactions of Actinide(VI) Ions with Rhenium(l) in Aqueous Carbonate Media. J. C. Sullivan, M. Woods, C. J. Anderson, K. Libson, E. Deutsch 9:00—422. High-Pressure Studies on Intervalence Electron Transfer Reactions. N. A. Lewis, Y. S. Obeng, D. V. Taveras 9:20—423. Noncontinuum Contributions to Optically Induced Intramolecular Electron Transfer Processes. N. A. Lewis, Y. S. Obeng 9:40—424. Electrochemical Studies of Dimolybdenum Compounds: Implications for Oxidative-Addition Reactions. K.-Y. Shih, D. M. Baird 10:00—425. Electrochemistry of Oxomolybdenum Complexes with Surfactant Deriv­ atives of Tridentate Schiff Base Ligands. K. Waldron, J. Topich 10:20—426. Electron Transfer in Vanadyl and Vanadium(V)-Oxo Schiff Base Com­ plexes. L. A. Hoferkamp, K. A. Goldsby 10:40—427. Synthesis, Characterization, and Redox Properties of Ruthenium Com­ plexes Containing 2-Pyridinecarboxaldehyde. J. K. Blaho, K. A. Goldsby 11:00—428. (Nitro)Ruthenium(lll) Redox Chemistry. C. A. Bessel, R. A. Leising, D. L. Jameson, K. J. Takeuchi 11:20—429. Electronic Causes of Dissym­ metry in Side-On Bonded Dioxygen Com­ plexes. T. R. Cundari, M. C. Zerner, R. S. Drago 11:40—430. Effect of Ring Substitution on the Infrared Spectra of Arenetricarbonylchromium Complexes. J. Rawtings, C. A. L. Mahaffy

General Session S. Cutler,

Session II: Synthesis and Characterization J. W. Kolis,

Presiding

8:40—431. Preparation of Novel Transition Metal Selenides and Sulfides via Oxidative Decarbonylation. S. C. O'Neal, J. W. Kolis 9:00—432. Reactions of Soluble Polytellurides with Transition Metal Salts. W. A. Flomer, J. W. Kolis 9:20—433. Synthesis and Characterization of Some Pyrazolato Bridged PlatinumRhodium Dimers. J. DePriest, C. Woods 9:40—434. Platinum(ll) Complexes of Unsymmetrical Long-Chain Bisphosphines. Precursors for Chiral Complexes. D. E. Patton, W. E. Hill 10:00—435. Synthesis and Crystal and Mo­ lecular Structures of Mixed-Metal Clusters of Iron, Ruthenium, and Osmium with Tungsten. R. D. Adams, T. S. A. Hor, P. Mathur, J.-G. Wang 10:20—436. Synthesis and Reactivity of a Bridging Dimetallamethyl(Diethylamino)carbene Ligand in the Cluster Complex Os3(CO)9[M3-HCC(NEt2)](M-H)2. R. D. Ad­ ams, J. T. Tanner

36

September 19, 1988 C&EN

Presiding

8:40—441. Synthesis and Spectral Analysis of /3-Hydroxy-3-methylfentanyi. G. A. Brine, P.-T. Huang, D. K. Sawyer, K. D. Gaetano, F. I. Carroll 9:00—442. Synthesis of Some Novel Anti­ dotes for the Decorporation of Cadmium. S. G. Jones, P. K. Singh, M. M. Jones 9:20—443. Novel Cyclization Products: A Study in 1,4-Dihydropyridine Synthesis. R. L. Williams, T. Christos 9:40—444. Local Anesthetic-Phospholipid Interactions. S. Barghouthi, M. R. Eftink 10:20—445. Inhibition of Aldose Reductase by N-Arylsulfonylglycines. C. A. Mayfield, J. DeRuiter 10:40—446. Studies on the Pharmacophore for the Benzodiazepine Receptor Inverse Agonist Site: Synthesis of a Potent LongLived Inverse Agonist and an Irreversible Inhibitor. M. S. Allen, T. J. Hagen, M. L. Trudell, P. Skolnick, J. M. Cook 11:00—447. Bioactivity and Mode of Action of 1,3,4-Oxadiazoles and the Correspond­ ing Diacylhydrazides. G. Cunningham, J. Miller, J. Tarrant, K. Helms, J. Gupton 11:20—448. Supplemental Choline Chloride (CC) and Dimethylethanolamine (DMEA) Each Reduce Toxicity of Lithium Carbonate (Li2C03). S. Blau, E. Seifter, D. Kanofsky THURSDAY

AFTERNOON

Grant General Session S. Fisher,

Tara 5

MORNING

Grant

Presiding

1:40—449. In-Vitro Antipicornaviral Activity of Pyrrole, Indole, and Indazole Analogs of N-3-Hydroxyphenyl-N'-Phenylthiourea. L. C. Weir, J. M. Chapman, J. W. Sowell, R. F. Schinazi 2:00—450. 1,2,4-Trioxane Lactones as Po­ tential Antimalarial Agents. J. A. Kepler, Y.-W. Lee, M. C. Morey, F. I. Carroll 2:20—451. Substituted Oxazolidines as Po­ tential Cardiovascular Drugs. R. L. Wil­ liams, T. Wang 3:00—452. Prodrug Forms of Radioprotec­ tive Aminothiols. M. D. Ochs, J. R. Piper 3;20—453. Dietary β-Carotene (BC) and Vi­ tamin A (VA): Inhibitors of Tumor Progres­ sion. E. Seifter 3:40—454. NMR Studies of the Intracellular Chemistry of Cyclophosphamide and Ifosfamide Metabolites. S. M. Ludeman, J. H. Boal, W. Egan

ORGANIC CHEMISTRY WEDNESDAY MORNING

11:20—474. Photostimulated Reactions of Mono- and Dibromoindoles with Ketone Enolates. T. D. Greenwood, J. A. Camp­ bell, J. F. Wolfe 11:40—475. Generation and Recombination of Electrophile-Nucleophile Pairs in Solu­ tion. J. A. Schmidt, E. F. Hilinski

Grand Ballroom Center Session I: Organometallics

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

G. D. Kennedy, Chairman A. Thompson, Presiding

Grand Ballroom Center

8:20—455. Reduction of Nitrites to Alde­ hydes Using Unsolvated Magnesium Diisopropylamide (MDA). R. Sanchez, L. E. Despres 8:40—456. Reduction of Nitro Compounds Using Unsolvated Magnesium Diisopropylamide. R. Sanchez, G. Vest 9:00—457. Preparation, Properties, and Chemical Reactivity of [R2N-C02]2Mg Compounds. R. Sanchez, T. M. Smith 9:20—458. Carbonylation of Organomagnesium and Organoaluminum Compounds. R. Sanchez, D. R. Johnson 9:40—459. Synthesis and Reaction of Pyranyl Iron Complexes. S. H. Cho, L. S. Liebeskind 10:00—460. Synthesis of Substituted Cyclobutenediones via Palladium Catalysis. R. W. Fengl, L. S. Liebeskind 10:20—461. One-Step Selective Catalytic Photochemical Functionalization of Caged Hydrocarbons. C. M. ProsserMcCartha, C. L. Hill 10:40—462. i(CO)2(h5-Cp)Fe(h2-4-Protoadamantene)]* by Ligand Rearrange­ ment. R. S. Bly, M. Raja 11:00—463. [(CO)L(h5-Cp)Fe(h2-exo-5 and endocyclic olefins)] + from [(CO)L(h5Cp)Fefh1-(1-methyl-1-cycloalkyl)methylidenesj + . R. K. Bly, R. Wu, R. S. Bly 11:20—464. Synthesis and Reaction Chem­ istry of Transition-Metal S 2 0 Complexes. D. S. Brown, S. A. Cawood, W. J. Elias, M. E. Raseta, M. E. Welker 11:40—465. Substitution Effects on the Alkylation of Carbon-Carbon Multiple Bonds with Bis(Cyclopentadienyl)Titanium Dichloride/Organoalane Reagents; The Mo­ lecular Structure of Bis(1,2,4-Trimethylcyclo-pentadienyl)Titanium Dichloride. D. W. Thompson, N. A. Nikolic, G. P. McQuil­ lan

G. Cummings, Presiding

Grand Ballroom South Session II: Photochemistry G. D. Kennedy,

Presiding

8:40—466. 1-Phenyl-1,2-Cyclohexadiene. L. M. Tolbert, N. Islam 9:00—467. Excited-State Acidities of Cyano-2-Naphthols. L. M. Tolbert, J. Haubrich 9:20—468. Structural Constraints in Proton Transfer of Photoexcited Naphthols. L. M. Tolbert, S. M. Fitzwater 9:40—469. Novel Photorearrangement of Some Bicyclic /3,7-Unsaturated Ketones. L. Zhi, A. Padwa 10:00—470. Direct Detection of Singlet (102) Oxygen Phosphorescence Upon Photolysis of α,«'-Substituted Anthrones and Anthraquinones. R. Dabestani, R. D. Hall, C. F. Chignell 10:20—471. Quenching of Luminescent MLCT States by Intramolecular Electron Transfer in Re(l) Chromophore-Quencher Complexes. L. A. Cabana, K. S. Schanze 10:40—472. Photoinduced Intramolecular Electron Transfer in Os-Bipyridine Com­ plexes. T. A. Perkins, K. S. Schanze, T. L. Netzel, D. Porreau 11:00—473. Photostimulated Reactions of Ketone Enolates with 2-Halobenzenesulfonamides. Enolate Structure Dependent Competition Between Substitution and Hy­ drogen Atom Transfer. W. J. Layman Jr., G. Nwokogu, S. B. Hendi, M. S. Hendi, J. F. Wolfe

Session I: Synthetic Methods

1:40—476. Tandem Cyclization-Cycloaddition Chemistry of Keto Rhodium Carbenoids. S. Hornbuckle, A. Padwa, L. Zhi 2:00—477. Approach to the Synthesis of Tropane Alkaloids via Reactions of Vinylcarbenoids with Pyrroles. W. B. Young, H. D. Smith, H. M. L. Davies 2:20—478. On the Stability of Dimethyldioxirane in Acetone. M. Beeson, A. L. Baumstark 2:40—479. Regioselectivity in 1,4-Dialkylnaphthalene Radical-Cation Deprotonations. L. M. Tolbert, B. Huck 3:00—480. Micellar Induced Selectivity in the Rearrangement and Cyclization of Linalyl- and Geranyl Acetates. T. S. Chamblee, B. C. Clark Jr., G. A. lacobucci 3:20—481. Relative Reactivities of Phosphinidine Carbene with Olefins. K. Lammertsma, P. Chand, S.-W. Yang 3:40—482. Phosphinidine Carbene Addition to Bicyclo(2.2.1)Hepta-2,5-diene. K. Lammertsma, P. Chand, J.-T. Hung 4:00—483. The Formation of Methyl Indolyl Ethers in Gramine Alkylations: Mechanis­ tic Implications. H. F. Russell, E. J. Waller 4:20—484. Electrochemical Behavior of Fluorinated Aromatic Compounds. G. T. Cheek 4:40—485. Some New Reactions of Arylhydrazines with alpha.beta-Unsaturated Al­ dehydes and Ketones. M. J. Hearn, S. A. Lebold, J. Schulz, A. Sinha

Grand Ballroom South Session II: Heterocyclic Chemistry A. Rodriquez,

Presiding

1:40—486. Synthesis of Substituted Cyclic alpha-Azo Alcohols. P. C. Vasquez, A. L. Baumstark 2:00—487. Formation of Functionalized Cy­ clic Ethers by Intromolecular Nitrile Oxide Cycloadditions. D. Dean, A. M. Schoffstall A Pâdwâ 2:20—488. Use of 2,3-Diphenylsulfonyl-1,3butadiene as a Heterocyclic Synthon. B. H. Norman, B. Harrison, A. Padwa 2:40—489. Regio- and Chemoselective Routes to Substituted Quinazolines, Dihydroquinazolines, and Quinolines. L. Strekowski, D. B. Harden, M. J. Mokrosz, M. T. Cegla, S. B. Kong 3:00—490. Synthesis of Bis-(2,5-Dimethylpyrrolo-(3,4-D))-Tetrathiafulvalene. W. Chen, M. P. Cava, M. A. Takassi, R. M. Metzger 3:20—491. Synthesis of Isoxazoles and Isothiazoles from Oxo Keten Dithioacetals. R. K. Dieter, H. J. Chang 3:40—492. 1-Benzoxocinide and 1-Benzthiocinide Anions. H. S. Kasmai, X. Wang, D. E. Dotton, T. Yablonsky, S. G. Mischke 4:00—493. Stereoselective Synthesis of Hydroxy-Substituted Heterocycles. Y. G. Kim, J. K. Cha 4:20—494. Strong-Base Preparations of New Pyrazoles, Pyrazolinones, Isocarbostyrils, Isocoumarins, and Related Materials. R. J. Lachicotte, C. F. Beam 4:40—495. Heteroaromatic SRN1 and Related Substitution Reactions Involving Halogenated Benzofurans and Benzoxazoles. J. A. Campbell, T. D. Greenwood, J. F. Wolfe Wednesday evening poster session: See posters 632-641, page 38

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Grand Ballroom Center Session I: Synthetic Methods L. Frazier,

Presiding

8:20—496. Synthesis of 3,3'-Biindolyls Us­ ing Mixed lodonium Salts. A. Tuncay, R. M. Moriarty 8:40—497. intramolecular Aromatic Nucleophilic Substitution Reactions Involv­ ing Amide and Imide α-Anions. S. A. Dandekar, J. F. Wolfe 9:00—498. Unexpected Products from the Reactions of Some 1-(Bromodifluoromethyl)-2-Bromoalkanes with Potassium Hydroxide. S. Elsheimer, M. Michael, A. Landavazo, J. Weeks 9:20—499. Selective Oxidation of Primary Alcohols Using Benzotriazole-Chromium Trioxide. H. Honda, E. J. Parish 9:40—500. Approach to the Synthesis of Cyclic Ethers Via a Cationic Transacetalization-Cyclization Sequence. D. W. Thompson, L. Gonda, N. A. Nikolic, C. P. D. Longford, C. L. Wells, L. M. Robinson 10:00—501. Vicinal Anti Hydroxylation of Alkenes. G. F. Morris 10:20—502. Preparation and Reactions of a 2-Phenylsulfonyl Vinamidinium Salt. J. Gupton, A. Shah, S. Riesinger 10:40—503. lodination of Alkynes on Alumi­ na. G. Hondrogiannis, L.-C. Lee, G. W. Kabalka, R. M. Pagni 11:00—504. Facile Synthesis of Ethynylcarbinol Steroid Analogs via the Reaction of Ketones with Lithium Acetylide-Ethylenediamine Complex. N. M. Goudgaon, G. W. Kabalka 11:20—505. Dimethylborane in Organic Synthesis: The Preparation of Alkylamines and Dialkylamines. G. W. Kabalka, Z. Wang 11:40—506. Reduction of α,/3-Unsaturated Nitroalkenes to Nitroalkanes with Borohydride Supported on an Ion Exchange Res­ in. P. P. Wadgaonkar, N. M. Goudgaon, G. W. Kabalka Grand Ballroom South Session II: Carbohydrates and Blomolecules C. McCloskey,

OnSite

$50

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Presiding

8:20—507. Synthesis and Application of a Forskolin Photoaffinity Probe to a Tubulin Binding Site. H. Lee, D. S. Watt, H. Kim, B. E. Haley

8:40—508. Synthesis of 3-Quinuclidinyl Benzilates. S. B. Mathur, Y.-Z. Gai, G. W. Kabalka 9:00—509. Synthesis of 1-Azabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-3-yl-a-hydroxy-a- · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ' M I N M M M M M I · · · · · · · · » * · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ' * · * · ' · · · · · · · · · · · ·

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September 19, 1988 C&EN

Letters essary to know science to use them. It is more important that everyone under­ stand how the discoveries of science af­ fect our lives and our culture; what sci­ entists do and how they do it; what the scientific method is and how it is used; what other methods of problem solving are available; how to collect and analyze data. Most scientists could use more of this knowledge, but it will not be gotten by taking more courses in science and mathematics. When the faculty votes by a large mar­ gin to reduce the number of science and mathematics courses for nonscientists, they are sending a message that they do not want more of what you want to teach. This does not imply that they think science is unimportant or that their students do not need to under­ stand science and its role in today's world. The rest of the faculty is not the prob­ lem—the science faculty is. Work with representatives of the humanities facul­ ty to find out what they think is impor­ tant. Spend your time listening. Ask questions that help you understand what they really think their students need to know about science and mathe­ matics. When you reach a mutual under­ standing, design a program that they will buy. You may be surprised to find that the science content of the curricu­ lum may increase. This will not be an easy job. It must be a team effort from start to finish, includ­ ing the teaching. Universities and col­ leges must recognize that their purpose is twofold, generating new knowledge and transmitting knowledge to others. The rewards and prestige for each should be comparable. The job may seem hopeless. If it is, it is not because the job is too big, but be­ cause the players are not big enough. Hubert M. Hill Kingsport, Tenn. SIR: All readers of C&EN owe a deep thanks to Frank Westheimer for his sa­ gacious and provocative Priestley Med­ al address. I wish that the address could receive wider readership beyond the precincts of ACS. Perhaps the society would consider dissemination to the ac­ ademic community—particularly presi­ dents, provosts, and deans of our col­ leges and universities. Westheimer's analysis of science literacy and knowl­ edge is so perceptive and on target that it merits consideration by all who are concerned with education and the fu­ ture quality of life in America. Many years ago I had the opportunity to address a statewide convention of the New Jersey Science Teachers Associa­ tion. I made the point that more scien­

tists knew some facets of the liberal arts—be it music, poetry, literature, his­ tory, or painting—as compared to nonscientifically trained persons who had an awareness of fundamentals in the physical and life sciences. I tried to chal­ lenge the audience to add to their teach­ ing activities by proselytizing their nonscience teacher colleagues to have them learn more about the biological and physical world. In this way, it is hoped they could convey the appreciation of science to students inclined to a liberal arts, posthigh school education or work experience. I wish I had some of the ideas of Westheimer to sell to the audi­ ence. Eliot Steinberg Morristown, N.J. SIR: Regarding Westheimer's Priestley Medal address—agreed, we need more science taught in our universities. How­ ever, this is not likely to come about until its payoff is shown in extra-scien­ tific fields (as currently defined). I believe this is slowly but surely com­ ing about in applying thermodynamic principles, and simple kinetic models, to processes once thought to be intracta­ ble social processes. Frank Holloway Tega Cay, S.C. SIR: In his Priestley Medal address on the education of nonscientists, Frank Westheimer makes several good points, two of which I will comment on. First, he states that the Harvard facul­ ty scientists voted against more science for nonscientists because they didn't want nonscientists in their courses. To correct this situation we must ask why this attitude prevailed. A primary an­ swer is that teaching rather general ma­ terial to nonspecialists will not rein­ force the faculty research work (they feel). Professors (those who are re­ tained) reflect the attitude of the deans (read "money managers") who often tell one that they can't evaluate good teach­ ing, and therefore give it zero value. With teaching valued in this way, it is obvious that faculty will minimize that sort of teaching that does not contribute to their research work. Second, Westheimer states that spe­ cial courses in science are not needed because "humanists have a different kind of intelligence," but rather because of the vertical nature of science. The lat­ ter argument is true; however, both ex­ perience and modern educational psy­ chology tell us that intelligence has many components that are not uniform­ ly distributed among people or within each person. Some people are not as talContinued on page 55