
| Martin Burke wins the 2009 Amgen Young Investigators Award Martin Burke has been selected to received the prestigious 2009 Amgen Young Investigators Award from Amgen, Inc.
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| Alex Scheeline selected to receive 2009 Special Grant in the Chemical Sciences The Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation has recently informed Dr. Alexander Scheeline, a faculty member in the Illinois Department of Chemistry, that he has been selected to receive a 2009 Special Grant in the Chemical Sciences.
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| Wilfred van der Donk was selected as the RSC 2009 Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry Lecture Award winner Wilfred van der Donk was selected as the RSC 2009 Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry Lecture Award winner in recognition of his contribution to the field of bioorganic chemistry, particularly related to lantibiotics and molecular processes associated with resistance to antibiotics and bacterial infections.
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| Ben McCall Wins 2009 Sloan Award Dr. Ben McCall has won the prestigious 2009 Sloan Research Fellowship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
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| Martin Burke Wins Sloan Fellowship Dr. Martin Burke has won a prestigious Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship
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| Ben McCall Receives 2009 Coblentz Award Dr. Ben McCall has won the Coblentz Award, given annually in the Molecular Spectroscopy Symposium at Ohio State.
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| John Hartwig Wins the 2009 Mitsui Chemicals Catalysis Science Award Dr. John Hartwig of Chemistry has just won the 2009 Mitsui Chemicals Catalysis Science Award for his work in the "Development of New Practical Catalytic Reactions Including Efficient C-H Bond Activation and Coupling Reactions".
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| John Rogers Selected as 2008 AAAS Fellow Rogers, Founder Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, was recognized for his contributions to the science and engineering of unusual materials, patterning techniques and metrology methods for electronic and photonic systems.
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| Eric Oldfield Elected 2008 AAAS Fellow Eric Oldfield, professor of chemistry, was selected for his contributions to biological magnetic resonance, including chemical shift analysis and development of anti-malarial drugs.
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| John Rogers Selected as National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellow (NSSEFF) for 2009 John Rogers is one of six scientists selected as a National Security Science and Engineering Faculty Fellow (NSSEFF) for 2009. NSSEFF will provide him with $3 million over five years to conduct basic research that the DoD finds technologically important.
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