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April 5, 2025 - May 10, 2025
NEA Big Read | Discussion of "Beloved" with Tameka Cage Conley & Derek (DK) Nnuro
2:00 pm - 2:00 pm (CDT)
Where: 160 West Burlington Street, Iowa City, IA US 52242

The final discussion session of Beloved will be led by Tameka Cage Conley.

"In a time when dreams might feel distant, I count it 'sheer, good fortune'-a Morrisonian quote from Sula--to return to Iowa City, which remains home to me, and join DK Nnuro for the final discussion of Beloved, a novel that has been seared into my consciousness and all meaning of life for over thirty years. A homecoming of enormous import, we will step into the mercy and splendor of Morrison's language-its gifts and rivers-and tilt the world then set it upright again through Beloved's awe-inspiring galaxy of kin, freedom, horror, and redemption." ~ Dr. Tameka Cage Conley

Conley and Nnuro will open with the question of Beloved's existence as an entry into discussion about the proverbial ghost lurking in America's historical closet. No one expected Beloved's return, not even her mother, Sethe, whose plan was to kill all her children and see her "ma'am," (mother,) on the other side. Beloved willed her way back to her mother-to haunt her, to end her, to love her with all her greed. How has America, too, "played in the dark," to quote Morrison, of its own ghosts and shadows and ghouls? Perhaps we cannot understand the mystery of Beloved until we also understand the mysteries of America as a place, the parts of it, especially, we pretend do not exist, the parts we have the audacity to believe are dead.

Join us for four discussions of Toni Morrison's Beloved and the exhibition it's a fine thing, led by the Stanley´s curator of special projects and author of What Napoleon Could Not Do, Derek (DK) Nnuro.

Register for each session by clicking the dates below, capped at 30 participants: 

Iowa City is one of 62 communities nationwide participating in the 2023-2024 NEA Big Read. From February to May, our community will celebrate Beloved by Toni Morrison with a full calendar of events.

The NEA Big Read in Iowa City is presented in partnership with the Stanley Museum of Art, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

This initiative is tied to the exhibition at the Stanley, it´s a fine thing, opening on Feb. 13, 2025.  

More about NEA Big Read: https://www.arts.gov/initiatives/nea-big-read

More about Beloved by Toni Morrison: https://www.arts.gov/initiatives/nea-big-read/beloved

Contact: Stanley Museum of Art 319-335-1727

Departments: Department of History, Center for Advancement, University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art, The Writing University

May 11, 2025
Sundays with the Docents | "it's a fine thing" exhibition tour
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm (CDT)
Where: 160 West Burlington Street, Iowa City, IA US 52242

Join us for a tour of the Stanley Museum of Art's latest exhibition, it's a fine thing. This tour is presented in conjunction with the NEA Big Read and will draw connections between the show and Toni Morrison's novel Beloved.

This tour is part of the Sundays with the Docents program where Stanley docents create unique tours to share with our audiences throughout the year. Registration is strongly recommended. Walk-ins are welcome, but tours are capped at 20 participants.

Reserve your spot at https://uiowa.doubleknot.com/event/sundays-with-the-docents-its-a-fine-thing-tour/3094341

Contact: Stanley Museum of Art 319-335-1727

Departments: Center for Advancement, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art

May 14, 2025
Council Bluffs/Omaha Hawkeye Fan Event
5:30 pm (CDT)
Where: 501 N 13th St, Omaha, NE US 68102

You and your fellow Hawkeye fans are invited to a special event in Omaha! The event is hosted in partnership with the Nile Kinnick I-Club and will feature:

  • Tom Brands (92BS), Iowa men´s wrestling head coach

  • Tim Lester, Iowa football offensive coordinator

  • Jen Llewellyn, Iowa women´s gymnastics head coach

  • Gary Dolphin, voice of the Iowa Hawkeyes

The event will include a program with remarks and door prizes. Food and refreshments can be purchased throughout the evening.

For more information about this event and other Hawkeye outings, visit jointheiclub.com/events. To learn how you can support Hawkeye student-athletes, visit jointheiclub.com.

Contact: Iowa Athletics Development 319-467-3410

Departments: Center for Advancement

May 14, 2025
2025 Council Bluffs/Omaha Hawkeye Fan Event
5:30 pm (CDT)
Where: 501 N 13 St, Omaha, NE US 68102

You and your fellow Hawkeye fans are invited to a special event in Omaha! Joining us for the event-which is hosted in partnership with the Nile Kinnick I-Club-will be:

  • Ben McCollum, Iowa men´s basketball head coach

  • Tom Brands (92BS), Iowa men´s wrestling head coach

  • Jen Llewellyn, Iowa women´s gymnastics head coach

  • Tim Lester, Iowa football offensive coordinator

  • Gary Dolphin, voice of the Iowa Hawkeyes

Doors will open at 5:30 p.m. The event will include a program with remarks and door prizes. Food and refreshments can be purchased throughout the evening.

For more information about this event and other Hawkeye outings, visit jointheiclub.com/events. To learn how you can support Hawkeye student-athletes, visit jointheiclub.com.

Contact: Iowa Athletics Development 319-467-3410

Departments: Center for Advancement

May 15, 2025
2025 Cedar Rapids Hawkeye Fan Event
5:30 pm (CDT)
Where: 170 1st St. SW Cedar Rapids, Cedar Rapids, IA US 52404

You and your fellow Hawkeyes are invited to a special evening in Cedar Rapids! Joining us for the event-which is hosted in partnership with the Linn County I-Club-will be:

  • Clarissa Chun, Iowa women´s wrestling head coach

  • Seth Wallace (08MA), Iowa football assistant head coach

  • Randi Henderson (01BS), Iowa women´s basketball assistant coach

Doors will open at 5:30 p.m. The event will include a program with remarks, door prizes, and food and refreshments-which can be purchased throughout the night.

For more information about this event and other Hawkeye outings, visit jointheiclub.com/events. To learn how you can support Hawkeye student-athletes, visit jointheiclub.com.

Contact: Iowa Athletics Development 319-467-3410

Departments: Center for Advancement

May 16, 2025
Pictures on the Pentacrest
2:00 pm - 5:00 pm (CDT)
Where: 1 North Clinton Street, Iowa City, IA US 52240

Graduates and their families are invited to stop by the UI Center for Advancement tent for free professional photos, alumni swag, and more.

**This event is weather permitting.

Contact: Lynn Rider (319) 467-3344

Departments: Center for Advancement, College of Dentistry, College of Nursing, College of Public Health, Commencement, Division of Student Life, Tippie College of Business

May 17, 2025
Pictures on the Pentacrest
11:00 am - 4:00 pm (CDT)
Where: 1 North Clinton Street, Iowa City, IA US 52240

Graduates and their families are invited to stop by the UI Center for Advancement tent for free professional photos, alumni swag, and more.

**This event is weather permitting.

Contact: Lynn Rider (319) 467-3344

Departments: Center for Advancement, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, College of Public Health, Commencement, Division of Student Life, Tippie College of Business

January 19, 2025 - May 18, 2025
Drawing Salon with Robert Caputo
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (CST)
Where: 160 West Burlington Street, Iowa City, IA US 52242

The Drawing Salon focuses on drawing artworks from the museum's collection. Each session will focus on a different artwork. The sessions will begin with an introduction and discussion of the selected work. Participants will be encouraged to pursue their own visions and to take inspiration from the artworks in the gallery.

Pencils and sketchbooks/paper are the only artmaking materials allowed in the galleries. The museum has golf pencils with erasers and clipboards for participants to use. Stools and benches are available in the galleries.

Robert Caputo, an Iowa City-based painter and sculptor, will lead the sessions.

The Drawing Salon is limited to 20 participants. Please reserve your spot by clicking below:

January 19, 2025

February 16, 2025

March 16, 2025

April 13, 2025

May 18, 2025

Contact: Stanley Museum of Art 319-335-1727

Departments: Pentacrest Museums, Center for Advancement, Office of the Provost, University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art

May 22, 2025
Dubuque County I-Club Golf Outing
12:30 pm (CDT)
Where: 16682 Thunder Hills Dr, Peosta, IA US 52068

Join the Dubuque County I-Club for its annual golf outing! A cocktail hour, reception with heavy hors d'oeuvres and drinks, and program will follow the golf outing.

Registration Options:

  • $175 per person, which includes golf (green fees, cart, driving range balls), cocktail hour, and reception

  • $60 per person for the reception only

For more information or to register for the event, contact the Thunder Hills Golf Shop at golf@thunderhillscc.com or 563-556-3256.

For information about other Hawkeye outings, visit jointheiclub.com/events. To learn how you can support Hawkeye student-athletes, visit jointheiclub.com.

Contact: Iowa Athletics Development 319-467-3410

Departments: Center for Advancement

January 26, 2025 - May 25, 2025
Write at the Stanley
2:30 pm - 4:15 pm (CST)
Where: 160 West Burlington Street, Iowa City, IA US 52242

Write at the Stanley: A Generative Writing Workshop is back for the Spring Semester!

Join us monthly to generate new creative writing inspired by works in the Stanley collection. Each session will be led by a different talented writer from our area, who will be offering a new prompt and a new approach to ekphrastic writing (writing inspired by visual art). Bring your own notebook and pencil or computer and leave with the beginning of a newly written piece.

Co-sponsored by Iowa City Poetry. Teen and adult writers in all genres are welcome.

Write at the Stanley meets every fourth Sunday of the month. Space is limited, so we encourage you to reserve your spot by clicking the dates below:

Jan. 26 | Barbara Price 
Feb. 23 | Akwi Nji
March 23 | Caroline Clay
April 27 | Darius Stewart
May 25 | Jeneé Skinner

Contact: Stanley Museum of Art 319-335-1727

Departments: Department of English, Iowa Writers' Workshop, Pentacrest Museums, Center for Advancement, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, International Writing Program, Office of the Provost, University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art, The Writing University

May 29, 2025
Chicago Together Hawkeyes Tour
6:00 pm - 7:30 pm (CDT)
Where: 76 E. Monroe St., Chicago, IL US 60603

Together, Hawkeyes continue to blaze new trails and fuel discoveries. This spring, we are headed to Chicago-and we hope you will join us for a special night celebrating all things black and gold.

Together Hawkeyes Tour

Thursday, May 29, 2025

6-7:30 p.m. | Program at 6:45 p.m.

You'll gain insights into the Together Hawkeyes campaign and plans to expand programming to support our first-generation students. You´ll also learn about other university happenings as you hear from:

  • Lynette Marshall, UI Center for Advancement president and chief executive officer

  • Amy Kristof-Brown, dean of the UI Henry B. Tippie College of Business

  • Jane Lam, a first-generation college student from Iowa City seeking degrees in risk management and insurance, finance, and accounting

Hors d´oeuvres and a hosted bar will be provided.

We hope to see you in Chicago!

The University of Iowa Center for Advancementis dedicated to providingan inclusive, respectful, and safe environment for everyone.Individuals with disabilities are encouraged to attend all University of Iowa-sponsored events. If you are a person with a disability who requires a reasonable accommodationin order toparticipate in this program, please contactLaurel Hall at events@foriowa.org or 319-467-3518.

Contact: Laurel Hill 319-467-3518

Departments: Center for Advancement

August 2, 2024 - December 4, 2025
Art & Write Night
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm (CDT)
Where: 39-53 East Jefferson Street, Iowa City, IA US 52240

NOTE: The April 4th occurrence in this series will move to the Old Capitol Museum for a very special Art & Write Night!

Join the long, rich, historical tradition of artists creating in our spaces.

Professional, aspiring, and amateur artists alike, make our museum your muse. The return of this popular program series welcomes guests into the Museum of Natural History's magical gallery spaces after-hours to work on sketching or writing projects with other campus and community artists.

Tell a friend, grab a notebook, and join us on the first Friday of each month. We'll provide a new inspo prompt for each session and will sometimes move about the Museum but we'll always start in Mammal Hall on the third Floor of Macbride Hall. Join anytime between 6-8 p.m. and feel free to participate in a themed creation challenge or work on your own project with our exhibits as inspiration. We'll save the last 15-30 minutes of each session to share what we've been working on, connecting with others (optional, of course!).

Please note, the Museum is typically closed during this time, meaning the main entrance to Iowa Hall (atop the large staircase outside on the east side of Macbride Hall) will be closed and locked. All other building doors will be open, offering access to the Ground Floor of Macbride Hall. Mammal Hall is located on the third floor of Macbride Hall and can be reached by stairs or by taking the elevator to the third floor of the building.

Special thanks to Blick Art Materials for supplying extra art materials. Make sure to check in with us in Mammal Hall to check out a variety of special art tools and supplies.

Contact: Jessica Smith 319-335-3591

Departments: Department of Biology, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Department of Rhetoric, Division of World Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, Iowa Writers' Workshop, Iowa Youth Writing Project, Leadership and Engagement, Magid Center for Writing, Museum of Natural History

June 16, 2025
Polk County I-Club Golf Outing
12:00 pm (CDT)
Where: 3915 Fleur Dr, Des Moines, IA US 50321

Join the Polk County I-Club for their annual golf outing!

Entry fees-which are $500 per player and $2,000 per team-include green fees, cart, and dinner. You´ll also have the chance to meet Hawkeye celebrities such as athletics department staff, coaches, and former student-athletes. A silent auction, dinner, and program will immediately follow golf.

Hole sponsorships are $250 and include a tee sign on a hole and a complimentary dinner ticket ($75 value).

Space is limited, and early sign-up is encouraged.

For more information or to sign up for the event, contact Jim Carney at 515-282-6803 or carney@carneyappleby.com.

For more information about other Hawkeye outings, visit jointheiclub.com/events. To learn how you can support Hawkeye student-athletes, visit jointheiclub.com.

Contact: Iowa Athletics 319-467-3410

Departments: Center for Advancement

July 17, 2025
Grandparents University® 2025
8:00 am - 4:30 pm (CDT)
Where: 125 North Madison Street, Iowa City, IA US 52245

Grandparents University® is an intergenerational learning program that allows grandparents-or honorary grandparents-to spend a day of discovery with their grandchildren (ages 8-14).

This campus event will offer hands-on educational opportunities with UI experts. You can make lasting memories while exploring engaging topics in everything from the arts and humanities to medicine and science.

Learn More!

Registration opens on Thursday, April 7, 2025, at 9 a.m. and will remain open until Tuesday, July 1, 2025-or until we´ve reached capacity.

For more information, please contact Erin Brokel, at the University of Iowa Center for Advancement, at GrandparentsUniversity@foriowa.org or 319-467-3668. We hope to see you on Thursday, July 17, 2025!

The term Grandparents University® is a registered trademark originating at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and is used with permission.

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Individuals with disabilities are encouraged to attend all University of Iowa-sponsored events. If you are a person with a disability who requires a reasonable accommodation in order to participate in this program, please email GrandparentsUniversity@foriowa.org or call 319-467-3668.

Contact: Erin Brokel 319-467-3668

Departments: Center for Advancement

October 24, 2025
Application Deadline: Obermann International Fellowships (Spring 2026)
11:59 pm (CDT)
Where: 111 Church Street, Iowa City, IA US 52245

The UI Obermann Center for Advanced studies is accepting applications for Spring 2026 Obermann International Fellowships. This program offers dedicated space, time, and funding for interdisciplinary scholars to collaborate on innovative research at the University of Iowa. Up to eight international fellowships will be granted every academic year. Applicants must be active researchers at an accredited institution of higher learning outside of the United States or independent researchers/artists with a track record of excellence based outside of the U.S. Their area of research must have a direct equivalent at the University of Iowa. 

Obermann International Fellows will receive:

  • A $2,000 stipend to help defray the cost of travel and lodging

  • University of Iowa health insurance coverage for the duration of the fellowship

  • Office space at the Obermann Center for Advanced Studies

  • Temporary University of Iowa affiliation, including access to UI libraries

  • Structured opportunities for scholarly exchange (seminars, lectures, introduction to UI researchers, etc.)

  • An official letter of invitation for institutional and visa purposes

  • Information about accommodations and other practical needs

Read more about the program and application process at https://obermann.uiowa.edu/obermann-international-fellowships. Applications for the Spring 2026 semester are due October 24, 2025. 

Obermann International Fellowships are funded by the University of Iowa's Obermann Center for Advanced Studies with generous additional support from International Programs and the Center for Social Science Innovation.

Contact: Erin Hackathorn 319-335-4034

Departments: Division of World Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, International Studies Program, Center for Advancement, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, International Programs, International Writing Program, Office of the Vice President for Research

December 2, 2025
Student Impact Grant Presentations
4:00 pm (CST)

Hear from the eight 2025 Student Impact Grant recipients and learn how private support enhanced their Iowa experience. Student Impact Grants are made possible by generous gifts from alumni and friends who provide unrestricted support to the university.

About Student Impact Grants

The University of Iowa Office of the President and the Student Advancement Network have partnered to create Student Impact Grants, which provide funding for undergraduate and graduate student activities outside of the classroom-including research, travel, and service projects. These grants enable students to pursue opportunities that might not otherwise be possible without financial assistance.

Contact: Holly Jones 319-467-3377

Departments: Carver College of Medicine, Center for Advancement, University Honors Program

Related Content

Approaching graduation this spring, a student looks back on her University of Iowa experience.

It vanished from campus 34 years ago. Now a UI relic with a fascinating history returns to the Chemistry Building. Photo: Frederick W. Kent Collection of Photographs, UI Special Collections University of Iowa professor Elbert W. Rockwood gives a lecture in the 1930s in the Chemistry Building. Police divers were combing the icy Raisin River in southeast Michigan in January 2001 when they spotted a strange figure. There, amid the murk and muck, was the upper torso and head of a mustachioed man, hair neatly parted down the center, in a necktie and academic robe. Michigan State Police had been dredging the riverbed for discarded evidence from a robbery. Instead, what they pulled from the water was an old bronze bust, 2 feet tall and about 60 pounds. The face wasn't familiar to police in Michigan?or anyone else living in the 21st century, for that matter. Authorities could, however, decipher the signature etched into its base: ?E.W. Rockwood.? Back at the crime lab, a Michigan State Police employee searched for the name online and came up with a hit. It seemed that the man with the mustache was linked to the University of Iowa's history. She contacted the State Historical Society of Iowa, which sent over a Rockwood signature from its archives. It was a match. But questions remained. How did the statue of an Iowa City academic end up in the bottom of a river 450 miles away? Just how long had it been there? And who heaved it in? The bust of Elbert W. Rockwood, which was reinstalled in the Chemistry Building earlier this summer, disappeared under mysterious circumstances in the 1980s. A century earlier and a couple states west, the living, breathing Elbert W. Rockwood (1895MD) was one of the most recognizable faces at the State University of Iowa. A distinguished professor of chemistry and toxicology, Rockwood had likely taught more students than any other professor since the founding of the university, the Iowa Alumnus wrote in 1924. Rockwood, who came to the university in 1888, was the first director of the university's hospital and established what's believed to be the first courses on physiological chemistry in this part of the country. He served as head of the Department of Chemistry from 1904 to 1920, growing the department from 50 students to 575 enrolled in courses. In fact, Rockwood was such a popular lecturer that a group of his former students commissioned a bronze bust in his honor in 1930?no small expense during the Great Depression. To capture their professor's likeness, they hired a noted Chicago sculptor named Alice Littig Siems (1919BA), who also had deep ties to the university. An Iowa City native and daughter of a UI physician, Siems studied at the prestigious Chicago Art Institute after earning her degree at the UI. She was the prot?g? of renowned sculptor Lorado Taft, a frequent lecturer at the UI who had met Siems on a visit in 1921 when she was working as a museum assistant in the zoology department. Taft was so impressed by her artistic talent that he invited her to work in his Chicago studio. Siems became one of the more prominent sculptors of her era and exhibited work at galleries in New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia. She created portrait busts of many well-known figures, including Taft and poet Carl Sandburg. Several UI leaders also sat for Siems, who sculpted bronze likenesses of university president Walter Jessup (34LITTD), Graduate College dean Carl Seashore (27BSAS), and political scientist Benjamin Shambaugh (1892BPH, 1893MA), among others. ?Each head is a forceful portrait,? the Chicago Tribune once wrote of Siems' work. ?These portraits stand out, each one alone, complete, able, and distinctive substitutes for the men who sat for her.? Rockwood remained on the faculty until his death in 1935, but his bust became a longstanding presence in the Chemistry Building. Though not a permanent one, as it turned out. Photo: 1932 Hawkeye yearbook. Alice Littig Siems, a prominent sculptor last century, graduated from the State University of Iowa in 1919 and created busts of several university dignitaries, including E.W. Rockwood. Students who frequent the Chemistry Building may be as science-minded as they come, but even they have their superstitions. For decades it was tradition for test takers to rub the old bust perched outside the lecture hall for luck. In fact, so many nervous hands had patted the sculpture that E.W. Rockwood's nose was said to have developed a distinctive shine to it. The bust also was a favorite target for pranksters. On several occasions the sculpture went missing from its 5-foot pedestal only to reappear a few days later. Fraternity members were the presumed culprits. In the mid-1980s, the bust vanished yet again?only this time it never turned back up. ?It disappeared so often that the last time it disappeared, I don't think anyone really noticed,? chemistry professor emeritus Jack Doyle told a reporter years later. Eventually the empty pedestal was removed, and as the years passed, memory of Rockwood faded. That is, until the 2001 phone call from Michigan. The bizarre story of a UI statue found among the fish in Michigan made headlines in Iowa. The Gazette dubbed it ?heads-up investigative work,? while the Des Moines Register reported that Michigan authorities weren't interested in prosecuting anyone involved in the decades-old caper. ?We just want someone to give up the information so we can find out what happened,? a state police employee said. Soon after the Register story ran, an anonymous caller from Des Moines told Michigan police that fraternity members swiped the bust in fall 1984 and eventually dumped it in the Raisin River. He provided no further details. The statue had been found in waters near Adrian, Michigan, home to Adrian College and Siena Heights University and about 35 miles away from the University of Michigan. It's plausible that the bust's abductors had dumped it while visiting fraternity brothers in Michigan. Or perhaps Michigan fraternity members swiped it from a house in Iowa City and brought it back home before discarding it. Regardless of how it ended up in Michigan, the sculpture was grimy but otherwise in fine shape for sitting at the bottom of a Lake Erie tributary for years. After its discovery, Michigan authorities shipped the bust back home to Iowa City, where the UI Museum of Art took possession of it for restoration. For various reasons, however, the statue was never put back on display. Early on, there was talk of raising money for a new marble pedestal, but the idea proved too costly. The Chemistry Building, which opened in 1922 while Rockwood was leading the department, also underwent major renovations after the sculpture's return, further delaying its reinstallation. Then, the flood of 2008 swamped the old art museum, and the bust and thousands of other UI-owned art pieces were evacuated and placed into emergency storage. Once again, the bust was all but forgotten. Brenna Goode, a departmental administrator, first heard the story of the missing sculpture from a longtime faculty member when she joined the chemistry department in 2010. Goode was curious and inquired about its whereabouts over the years. Her persistence paid off; the bust was located among the items mothballed by the museum after the flood, and plans took shape earlier this year to return it to its rightful perch. The department recently commissioned a new plaque and pedestal. Then in late July, after its strange journey and 34-year absence, the memorial to E.W. Rockwood made its homecoming to the Chemistry Building, no worse for the wear. When students return for classes this fall, Rockwood will be keeping watch just inside the building's main entrance, ready to be rubbed by a new generation of chemists. ?It's great to see the Rockwood bust finally returned to its prominent place in the Chemistry Building,? says Edward Gillan, an associate professor of chemistry who has written about the department's history. ?Our alumni honored Rockwood's teaching legacy with this bust. I hope that its return inspires current and future chemistry faculty to sustain the Rockwood teaching legacy.? One important alteration has been made to the statue, it should be noted. The bust is now fixed to the pedestal, and the pedestal is secured to the floor and wall. ?No one should be able to get at it without some significant effort,? laughs Goode. Do you remember the Rockwood bust or its disappearance? Email josh.oleary@foriowa.org. Department Head A new plaque now accompanies the bust of E.W. Rockwood, which was reinstalled last month just inside the main entrance of the Chemistry Building. The plaque reads: ?Dr. Rockwood joined the teaching staff in 1888 and pioneered laboratory instruction in physiological chemistry at Iowa. Head of the Department of Chemistry from 1904 to 1920, he served as professor until his death.?In 1890, on his return from studying with German master of physiological chemistry Felix Hoppe-Seyler, three medical students asked Dr. Rockwood to introduce them to the field. He later said, ?Our work together on Saturday afternoons... was the beginning, at least west of the Mississippi, of what is now called biochemistry.'?

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