Dr. Keiter
completed his undergraduate work at Shepherd College in 1961 with
a B.S. in chemistry. His undergraduate
experience was enhanced by two summer internships at Ruberoid
Corporation. He
earned his M.S degree in inorganic chemistry from West Virginia University in 1964 and
his Ph.D. (with Samuel Grim) at the University of Maryland in 1967.
This was followed by two years of
post-doctoral research at Iowa State University (with John
Verkade) that included one year of
teaching general chemistry (with Bill Hutton).
In
1969 Dr. Keiter joined the faculty at Eastern
Illinois University, was named Professor of Chemistry in 1979, and
Distinguished
Professor in 1988, and Professor Emeritus in 2007. He has served as
Visiting Professor
of Chemistry at the University of Wisconsin during the summers of 1972
and 1977
(with Bassam Shakhashiri), the University of Exeter (England) in 1975
(with
Edward Abel), the University of Illinois in 1980-81 (with John
Shapley), at
Colorado State University in 1990 (with Jack Norton) and the University
of
Washington (2003). He taught senior
inorganic chemistry while at the University of Illinois.
In 1998, Dr. Keiter received the Lawrence A.
Ringenberg
Award at Eastern Illinois
University, the
highest Award
presented by the College of Sciences
to recognize impact of achievements. In 1992 and again in 1998 he was
the
recipient of a Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation Scholar/Fellow
Award. For
nine years he served as a Councilor of the Council on Undergraduate
Research
where he was editor of the Inorganic Series an associate editor of the
1990
Research in Chemistry at Undergraduate Institutions. From 1992-1997 he
served on
the Petroleum Research Fund Advisory Board where he chaired the
inorganic
committee for non-Ph.D. schools and was a member of the Advisory Board
policy
committee.
Courses
taught include general chemistry lecture
and lab, honors general chemistry lecture and lab, sophomore
descriptive
inorganic chemistry, senior inorganic chemistry lecture and lab,
graduate
organometallics and graduate group theory.
Born
in the Shenandoah
Valley near Winchester, Virginia, Dr. Keiter
has spent his professional life in the Midwest.
After passing through a decade of playing chess and another of doing
triathlons, he and his wife (Ellen) joined Jim Huheey in revising his
classic
inorganic text, Inorganic Chemistry, published by HarperCollins in
1993. Other
books include: A Study Guide for Chemistry, Matter, and the Universe,
W.A.
Benjamin, Inc., Menlo Park, California, l976 (with E.A. Keiter),
Teaching
Assistance for Chemical Principles, W. A. Benjamin, Inc., Menlo Park,
California, l974, (with W. Hutton and E.A. Keiter), and Teaching Guide
for
Models in Chemical Science, W.A. Benjamin, Inc., Menlo Park, California
(l971).
One son,
Eric, is a Senior Member of the
technical staff at Sandia National Laboratories in computational
science and
resides in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and one daughter, Lise, is an
Associate
Professor of Piano Performance and Chair of the Music Department at
Mary
Baldwin College in Staunton, Virginia.
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