2017 ACS Fellows - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS Publications)

Additional information about the program, including a list of fellows named in earlier years, is available at www.acs.org/fellows. Roxie V. Allen St. ...
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ACS NEWS

2017 ACS Fellows

Nicole S. Sampson

The American Chemical Society has named 65 members as ACS Fellows. The new fellows will be feted at the society’s fall national meeting in Washington, D.C., in August. The fellows program began in 2009 as a way to recognize and honor ACS members for outstanding achievements in and contributions to science, the profession, and ACS. Nominations for the 2018 class of ACS Fellows will open in the first quarter of next year. Additional information about the program, including a list of fellows named in earlier years, is available at www.acs.org/fellows.

Roxie V. Allen

Stephen O. Duke

John T. Gupton

Yinfa Ma

St. John’s School

University of Richmond

Balu Balasubramanian

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service

Missouri University of Science & Technology

Pharma Innovation Sourcing Center

Gerald B. (GB) Hammond

Harold M. McNair

Tammy J. Dwyer

Virginia Polytechnic Institute (emeritus)

Lisa M. Balbes

University of San Diego

University of Louisville

Robert H. Hill Jr. Battelle Memorial Institute (emeritus)

Balbes Consultants

Larry R. Faulkner Grace Baysinger Stanford Libraries

University of Texas, Austin

James M. Boncella

John J. Fortman

Los Alamos National Laboratory

Wright State University (emeritus)

Timothy J. Bunning Materials & Manufacturing Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory

Elise Bickford Fox Savannah River National Laboratory

University of California, San Diego (emeritus)

Northwestern University

Dean J. Tantillo

Lynn Hogue

Alyson E. Mitchell

University of California, Davis

Miami University (retired)

University of California, Davis

Lorena Tribe

Wyn Jennings

Sarah Mullins

Pennsylvania State University, Berks

National Science Foundation

3M

Ziling Xue

Nicholas R. Natale

University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Julie L. P. Jessop Mark E. Jones

Dennis G. Peters

Dow Chemical

Indiana University, Bloomington

Dana Garcia

Ralf I. Kaiser

Arkema

University of Hawaii, Manoa

Viacheslav Petrov Chemours

University of Houston

Barbara S. Larsen DuPont

Todd M. Przybycien

Washington State University

Regis Ann Goode

Katherine L. Lee

Carnegie Mellon University

Ridge View High School

Pfizer

D. Richard Cobb

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Donald J. Darensbourg Texas A&M University

James Reynolds Irvin J. Levy

Eastman Kodak

Sergio GranadosFocil

Gordon College

Clark University

Dennis L. Lichtenberger

Dow Chemical

Etta C. Gravely

University of Arizona

JaimeLee Iolani Rizzo

Lucian Lucia

Pace University

Arthur Greenberg University of New Hampshire

James H. Wang

Chad A. Mirkin

Johns Hopkins University

North Carolina Agricultural & Technical State University

CiVentiChem

Georgia Institute of Technology

U.S. Geological Survey

Aurora E. Clark

Rick L. Danheiser

Gary B. Schuster

Ean Warren

University of Montana

Fordham University

Bhaskar R. Venepalli

Consultant in drug development (retired)

Scott R. Gilbertson

Peter W. R. Corfield

Auburn University

William A. Szabo

Nanjing University

Eastman Kodak Company (retired)

Indiana UniversityPurdue University Indianapolis

University of Wisconsin, Madison

University of Iowa

Hong-Yuan Chen

Stewart W. Schneller

Pratibha VarmaNelson

Sinopec Shanghai Research Institute of Petrochemical Technology

Joelle Frechette Marjorie C. Caserio

Stony Brook University

Al Ribes

North Carolina State University and Qilu University of Technology

Kenneth S. Sajwan Savannah State University

Edwin Sibert

Martha J. M. Wells EnviroChem Services

Marek A. Wójtowicz Advanced Fuel Research

▸ ChemPlanner to integrate with SciFindern CAS, a division of the American Chemical Society, has announced a partnership with John Wiley & Sons to enhance organic chemists’ ability to predict synthetic routes to target molecules. Under this new collaboration, Wiley’s cheminformatics software tool ChemPlanner will incorporate additional reaction content from CAS and associated references, including reactions from patents. It will also include new features such as stereoselective retrosynthetic prediction and customizable references associated with relevance ranking. This new version of ChemPlanner will be delivered exclusively through CAS’s SciFindern, which brings the most relevant answers to the top for more seamless searching. “The integration of the rich CAS content portfolio will greatly enhance the quality and scope of ChemPlanner’s predictions, as well as the utility of the resulting synthetic routes to help researchers overcome synJUNE 19, 2017 | CEN.ACS.ORG | C&EN

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