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- 04.15.08 - UH Chemist is One of America's Rising Stars in Science
A University of Houston chemist has been honored as one of America’s most promising young
scientists for research that ultimately could lead to breakthroughs in solar cells and memory
devices such as flash drives. Vassiliy Lubchenko, assistant professor of chemistry, researches
the electronic structure of amorphous materials – a category that includes glass, porcelain and
plastics. He is one of only 16 recipients in the nation of the coveted Beckman Young Investigator
Award. The Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation announced the 2008 winners this month.
- 04.14.08 - Simplifying Manufacture of Drugs, Plastics Earns UH Chemist Top Honor
Simplifying the process for forming compounds that can be used in many everyday products, such
as pharmaceuticals and plastics, has earned one University of Houston chemist a prestigious
honor. Olafs Daugulis, assistant professor of chemistry in the College of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics at UH, is among 118 outstanding young scientists, mathematicians and economists in
the United States and Canada to be named an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow for 2008. This
distinction is bestowed upon exceptional researchers early in their academic careers. Thirty-five
of these fellows have gone on to win the Nobel Prize since the Sloan Foundation first began these
awards in 1955.
- 03.31.08 - The Department of Chemistry Welcomes a New Assistant Professor
The Department of Chemistry welcomes one of its two new faculty members, Ognjen Miljanić.
Ognjen Miljanić was born in Belgrade, Serbia. He received his Ph.D. in 2005 from the
University of California, Berkeley where he worked with Professor K. Peter C. Vollhardt on the
synthesis and characterization of novel aromatic hydrocarbons. He subsequently moved to UCLA,
where he conducted postdoctoral research in the lab of Professor J. Fraser Stoddart.
Dr. Miljanić's research at UCLA focused on the development of mild synthetic methods
suitable for use in supramolecular chemistry.
- 03.25.08 - The Department of Chemistry Welcomes a New Assistant Professor
The Department of Chemistry welcomes one of its two new faculty members, Dr. Jeremy May.
Dr. May received his Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology while working in the
lab of Professor Brian Stoltz. He then pursued postdoctoral research in the lab of Professor
Samuel Danishefsky. Dr. May's research efforts include the development of novel reaction
methods catalyzed by transition metals and the total synthesis of natural products for further study.
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