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  <title><![CDATA[Two Georgia Tech Faculty Named Fellows by the American Chemical Society]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>The American Chemical Society (ACS) has named two Georgia
Tech professors as fellows for 2011. Paul Houston, dean of the College of
Sciences and professor in the School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and C. David
Sherrill, professor in the School of Chemistry and Biochemistry were added to
the ACS Fellows list in August for their work in chemistry as well as their
contributions to the society.</p>

<p>“ACS is especially
proud to honor these chemists during the 2011 International Year of Chemistry,”
said ACS President Nancy B. Jackson.&nbsp;
“The work they are doing will improve all of our lives as they unleash
the power of chemistry to solve global challenges like providing clean water,
sufficient food, new energy sources and cures for disease.&nbsp; But that’s not all. They’re also
organizing scientific conferences for their peers, doing outreach with scouts
and schools, and being mentors to the next generation of scientists.” &nbsp;</p>

<p>The ACS Fellows Program was created in December 2008 “to recognize members of ACS for outstanding
achievements in and contributions to Science, the Profession, and the Society.”
Fellows come from academe, industry
and government.</p>

<p>This year the ACS named 213 distinguished scientists who have demonstrated outstanding
accomplishments in chemistry and made important contributions to ACS, the
world’s largest scientific society. The 2011 Fellows will be recognized at an
induction ceremony on August 29 during the Society’s 242nd&nbsp;National
Meeting &amp; Exposition in Denver.</p>

<p>“I am honored that these
contributions are appreciated by my colleagues,” said Houston, who arrived at
Tech in 2007.</p>

<p>Houston’s research involves
figuring out how molecules that are involved in combustion or atmospheric
chemistry react after they absorb light.</p>

<p>“In the case of combustion, the
studies give us information about what intermediate species might be involved in
the burning of fuel,” said Houston. “In the case of atmospheric chemistry, our
results help to understand how ozone in the stratosphere is created and
destroyed.”</p>

<p>“Our work is motivated by
scientific curiosity but made possible by the technological advances in tools
like lasers and charge coupled device optical elements.&nbsp; New technologies
make new science possible, and that is why it is exciting to be a scientist at
a technological institute like Georgia Tech,” he added.</p>

<p>Before taking the
dean’s position at Georgia Tech’s College of Sciences, Houston had&nbsp; a distinguished career at Cornell
University where he served as Senior Associate Dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences as well as Chair of the Department of Chemistry. He was elected a
member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2003 and elected into
the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2002. He received
the Herbert P. Broida Prize from the American Physical Society in 2001. He
received his doctorate in the chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.</p>

<p>David Sherrill has
been at Georgia Tech since 1999.</p>

<p>“It's&nbsp;an honor to be recognized by such a venerable
institution as ACS,” said Sherrill.</p>

<p>Sherrill’s research
lies in the realm of computational quantum chemistry, which mixes chemistry,
physics, mathematics and computational science. It involves developing new
theoretical approaches to describe molecules, executing them as efficient
computer programs and applying them to study challenging problems in chemistry.</p>

<p>“We are especially interested in
non-bonded interactions between molecules,&nbsp;because these interactions
govern everything from biomolecular structure&nbsp;to drug docking,” he said.
&nbsp;“My group is developing much more efficient methods to&nbsp;compute and
analyze these interactions. We are using the new techniques to&nbsp;understand
drug binding and DNA base-pair stacking.”</p>

<p>Sherrill is
currently an associate editor for the Journal of Chemical Physics. He was
elected as a fellow in the American Physical Society in 2010. He was named a
Vasser Woolley Faculty Fellow from 2008-2010. He received the Class of 1940 W.
Howard Ector Outstanding Teacher Award in 2006 and the CAREER award from the
National Science Foundation in 2001.</p>

<p>Sherrill has been active with the
ACS through the years. He has served as a councilor for the Georgia section of
ACS as well as a coordinator for National Chemistry Week and chair of the
subdivision of theoretical chemistry.</p>

<p>Previous honorees
from Georgia Tech include Bridgette Barry, Rigoberto Hernandez and Paul Wine in
2010. Jean-Luc Bredas , Mostafa El-Sayed, Elsa Reichmanis and Laren Tolbert
were named as ACS Fellows in 2009.&nbsp;</p>]]></body>
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      <value><![CDATA[Designation honors Dean Paul Houston, of the College of Sciences, and David Sherrill, of the School of Chemistry and Biochemistry.]]></value>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>The American Chemical Society (ACS) has named two Georgia
Tech professors as fellows for 2011. Paul Houston, dean of the College of
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            <title><![CDATA[Paul Houston Named Fellow by the American Chemical Society]]></title>
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