Awards and honors - ACS Publications - American Chemical Society

of Illinois, will receive the 1970 Medal for Creative Research in Organic Chemistry given by Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturers Association ...
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Dr. William von E. Doering, who is Mallinckrodt Professor of Chemistry at Harvard, received the Theodore William Richards Medal from the ACS Northeastern Section this month. He was honored "for conspicuous achievement in chemistry," and spoke on the occasion on Stereo Chemistry of Thermal Rearrangements. Dr. David Seligson, who is professor of medicine and pathology and chairman of the section of clinical pathology at Yale school of medicine, will receive the Van Slyke Medal of the American Association of Clinical Chemists, New YorkMetropolitan section, in May. He will lecture at the time on An Approach to Automation in Clinical Chemistry. Dr. Seligson is a past president of AACC. Dr. Nelson J. Leonard, professor of chemistry and member of center for advanced study at University of Illinois, will receive the 1970 Medal for Creative Research in Organic Chemistry given by Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturers Association in June. Dr. Leonard's contributions toward a better understanding of organic reactions have spanned almost three decades and have led to a number of new methods of synthesis, particularly in the field of ring compounds. He is a former editor of Organic Syn-

Tannenbaum

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theses, and in 1963 received the SOCMAsponsored ACS Award for Creative Work in Synthetic Organic Chemistry. Dr. Herbert E. Carter, vice chairman for academic affairs at University of Illinois, receives the Bailey Award of American Oil Chemists' Society "in recognition of his major contributions to the biochemistry of complex lipids and to the education of young scientists." Dr. Edward C. J a h n , former dean of State University College of Forestry, Syracuse, and for 40 years educator, author, and researcher in forestry and forest products, as well as a pioneer in fostering interest in the plastics-paper industry, will receive the 1970 TAPPI Research and Development Award in May. J o s e p h T. Loomer, director of commercial development—paper, CPC International, Inc., will receive the 1970 Award of the TAPPI Coating and Graphic Arts Division. He will be cited for his part in the development of chemicals, equipment, and processes for improved coating of paper and paperboard. Dr. Steven R. T a n n e n b a u m , associate professor of nutrition and food science at Massachusetts Institute of Food Technology, will receive the Samuel Cate Prescott Award for Research from the Institute of Food Technologists in May. The award, which recognizes research scientists 35 or under for outstanding ability in research in some area of food science and technology, consists of a plaque and $1000. Dr. David B. Hand, retired professor of biochemistry and head of the department of food science and technology at Cornell, will receive IFT's International Award of a silver salver and $1000 for his outstanding efforts and work to promote the international exchange of ideas in food technology. Dr. T. Brooke Benjamin, currently a

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visiting distinguished professor in the de­ partment of chemical engineering at Clarkson College of Technology, has been awarded the William Hopkins Prize for 1969 by the Cambridge Philosophical So­ ciety of Cambridge University, England. He was honored for his "outstanding work on the mechanics of fluids" at Cam­ bridge. J a m e s D. Grant, science and manage­ ment specialist who was deputy director of the White House Conference on Food, Nutrition, and Health, has been ap­ pointed deputy commissioner of Food and Drug Administration, Washington, D.C.

EDUCATION David R. Boylan, Jr., named dean of col­ lege of engineering at Iowa State Univer­ sity. He continues as director of engi­ neering research institute Liere . . . C. H. Β reed love, Jr., assistant professor of chemistry at Rockville, Md., campus of Montgomery Community College, named chairman of the chemistry department ef­ fective July 1 . . . Dr. Ronald Breslow of Columbia University and Dr. John D. Baldeschwieler of Stanford University are centennial lecturers at Loyola University, Chicago. Dr. Breslow spoke April 15 on Quantitative Studies on Aromaticity and Antiaromaticity, and Dr. Baldeschwieler will speak May 20 on Study of Biological Molecules Using Angular Correlations of Gamma Radiation. The inaugural Rob­ ert G. Denkewalter Lectureship in Chem­ istry and in Medicine was given to Dr. Robert G. Denkewalter, v.p. for devel­ opmental research at Merck Sharp & Dohme. He spoke April 22 on Ribonuclease—the Synthesis of an Enzyme . . . Dr. J a m e s J. Carney becomes chairman of chemistry department at College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn., June 1. He succeeds Dr. William D. Larson . . . Dr. Clinton O. Chichester, chairman of de­ partment of food science and technology at University of California, Davis, ap­ pointed professor of food and resource chemistry at University of Rhode Island . . . Dr. F. Albert Cotton, professor of chemistry at MIT, delivered the 22nd ACS Lecture series at Michigan State University this month. The series is sponsored by the ACS MSU Section and Renaud Foundation . . . Dr. John T. Heibel joins staff of Ohio State University, Columbus, as assistant professor of chem­ ical engineering. His specialty will be environmental systems simulation . . . Felipe Herrera, president of InterAmerican Bank, elected president of the Society for International Development . . . Madeline C. Key, chemistry and physics teacher at Altavista High School, receives the Distinguished High School Teaching Sendee Award from ACS Vir­ ginia Blue Ridge Section . . . Dr. George Porter, director of the Royal Institute of London and president of The Chemical Society ( L o n d o n ) , will serve as scientistin-residence in the spring of 1971 at NewYork Academy of Sciences . . . Dr. Charles C. Price, who is Benjamin Frank­ lin Professor of Chemistry at University Continued

on p. 82

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