1994 Board Members Appointed

Inc., and professor of chemistry at. Purdue University, received his B.S. degree from ... ceived his B.S. de- gree from West- minster College in. 1978...
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1994 Board Members Appointed Five new members from government, academia, and industry have been selected to serve three-year terms on Analytical Chemistry's Editorial Advisory Board. Each January, membership is rotated as new appointees replace mem­ bers whose terms have expired. In addi­ tion to the five new members, the chair of the ACS Division of Analytical Chemistry serves a one-year term as the ex officio representative of the Division. Short bio­ graphical sketches of the new members follow.

Scott A. McLuckey, head of the Analyt­ ical Spectroscopy Section at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, re­ ceived his B.S. de­ gree from West­ minster College in 1978 and his Ph.D. from Purdue University in 1982. During 1983 he was a visiting scientist at the FOM Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics in Amsterdam. His research interests center on ion chemistry in MS and instrumentation for organic and biological compounds.

Phyllis R. Brown, professor of chemis­ try at the Univer­ sity of Rhode Is­ land, received her B.S. degree from George Washing­ ton University in 1944 and her Ph.D. from Brown Uni­ versity in 1968. She joined the faculty at the University of Rhode Island in 1973. Brown's research interests include the development of analytical and preparative LC and electrophoretic methods as well as their application to investigations in medical research, biotechnology, and en­ vironmental monitoring.

Milos V. Novotny, Rudy Professor of Chemistry at Indi­ ana University, received his Ph.D. from the Univer­ sity of Brno (Czechoslovakia) in 1965 and joined the faculty of Indi­ ana University in 1971. Novotny's research interests include separations, column technology, detec­ tion techniques, and instrumentation. He did pioneering work in microcolumn LC and capillary SFC. His contributions to instrumentation include laser-based de­ tectors, photodiode array devices, and Peter T. Kissinger, president of Bioan- miniaturized flame and plasma detectors. alytical Systems, Inc., and professor Janet G. Osteryoung, professor and of chemistry at head of the chemis­ Purdue University, try department at received his B.S. North Carolina degree from Union State University, College in 1966 received her Β A and his Ph.D. from degree in 1961 from the University of North Carolina in 1970. Swarthmore Col­ Kissinger's current research focuses lege and her Ph.D. on the development of bioanalytical ap­ in 1967 from the California Institute of proaches based on in vivo sampling with Technology. hydrophilic membranes coupled to minia­ Her research interests include chemis­ turized LC systems and on-line amperotry of natural waters, methods develop­ metric biosensors. He served on the ment for toxic substances, pulse voltamInstrumentation Advisory Panel from metry, and microelectrodes. Osteryoung, 1977 to 1979. the ex officio representative from the Di­ 24 A

Analytical Chemistry, Vol. 66, No. 1, January 1, 1994

vision of Analytical Chemistry, served on Analytical Chemistry's Editorial Advisory Board from 1981 to 1983. James A Yergey, an associate director at the Merck Frosst Centre for Thera­ peutic Research, received his B.S. degree from Muhlenburg College in 1977 and his Ph.D. from The Pennsyl­ vania State University in 1981. His primary research interests are the development of chromatography and MS methods for the quantitation of eicosanoids and the qualitative study of drug metabolism. Established in the 1940s to advise the journal's Editors, the board meets for mally once a year at ACS headquarters. (The board will meet off site this year, however, because renovations to the headquarters building will begin some­ time in the spring.) The board members are a vital link between the Editors and the analytical community, providing guid­ ance and advice on editorial content and policy. Leaving the board are Michelle Bucha­ nan, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; M. Bonner Denton, University of Arizona; Timothy Harris, Bell Laboratories; Philip LaFleur, Eastman Kodak Co.; Michael Thompson, University of Toronto; and ex officio member Joseph L Glajch, DuPont Merck Pharmaceutical Co. Continuing to serve are Bruce Chase, DuPont; Joseph G. Gordon, IBM Research Division; David M. Haaland, Sandia Na­ tional Laboratory; Joel M. Harris, Univer­ sity of Utah; Franz Hillenkamp, Universitât Munster; Kiyokatsu Jinno, Toyohashi University of Technology; Dennis C. Johnson, Iowa State University; Richard A. Keller, Los Alamos National Laboratory; Gary E. Maciel, Colorado State University; Géraldine L Richmond, University of Oregon; and Ralph Riggin, Lilly Research Laboratories.