суббота, 28 мая 2011 г.

French Chemical Society award

On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of Chemistry - A European Journal, the founding Editor of the journal, Peter
GпїЅlitz, was recently awarded the Medal of the French Chemical Society (Societe Francaise de Chimie, SFC) during a symposium
at the Institut de Science et d'Ingenierie Supramoleculaires (ISIS) in Strasbourg. In his presentation speech the society's
President, Armand Lattes, praised the achievements of Peter GпїЅlitz who as the first Editor of Chemistry made this journal a
top chemistry publication from the start. The high impact factor, currently 4.353 (a measure of how often the articles in the
journal are cited by scientists), confirms the quality of Chemistry. "Peter GпїЅlitz has played a decisive role in this
success," said Lattes.


The impulse to launch Chemistry came in 1993 during a discussion at a conference in Munich between Nobel Prize winner
Jean-Marie Lehn, Heinrich NпїЅth, then the President of the German Chemical Society (Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker, GDCh),
and Peter GпїЅlitz, the Editor of Angewandte Chemie for over 20 years. Together the GDCh and Wiley-VCH (the publishers of
Angewandte Chemie) quickly got the project off the ground. Initially Chemistry was published bound with Angewandte Chemie.
The number of articles increased rapidly, and from 1997 onwards Chemistry appeared as an independent journal. In an Editorial
in the very first issue in April 1995 Peter GпїЅlitz and Jean-Marie Lehn, the first chairman of the Editorial Board, wrote
that Chemistry is designed to be "European in spirit and international in appeal. Looking at the journal today one can see
that this aim has been achieved," observed a convinced Lattes. The high numbers of articles received from the outset from the
USA, Japan, China, and other non-European countries also confirms this. In its first ten years, Chemistry has published more
than 40,000 pages and over 4,000 articles, and all this with a rejection rate of almost 50%.


Chemistry published by the Weinheim publishing house Wiley-VCH, is currently in the hands of its Editor Dr. Neville Compton
and is owned by the Editorial Union of Chemical So-cieties (EUChemSoc), a consortium of the chemical societies of 13 European
countries: Bel-gium, Germany, France, Greece, Italy, Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Swe-den, Czech Republic,
and Hungary. Following on from Chemistry, Peter GпїЅlitz together with some of the same societies launched two other European
journals, ChemBioChem and ChemPhysChem, in 2000 and is still their Editor today. For years, most leading scientific journals
have come out of the USA - the fact that this is not the case in the field of chemistry is in large part due to Peter GпїЅlitz.



"From 2006 we will extend the range of European chemical journals still further with ChemMedChem, which will be devoted to
medicinal chemistry," says GпїЅlitz. "The world of science publishing is as stimulating and competitive as science itself, and
that is its appeal!"


Wiley-VCH, founded in 1921, is one of the leading technical publishers in Germany with an emphasis on science. For several
years, technical and specialist information in print and electronic form, for professionals and experts, has been a major
focus (e.g. the "...for Dum-mies" series). Wiley-VCH is part of the international publishing house, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
Hoboken, NJ.


Founded in 1807, Wiley provides must-have content and services to cus-tomers worldwide. Its core businesses include
scientific, technical and medical journals, en-cyclopedias, books and other online products and services, professional and
consumer books and subscription services, and education materials for undergraduate and graduate students and lifelong
learners. Wiley has publishing, marketing and distribution centers in the United States, Canada, Europe, Asia and Australia.
The company is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbols JWa and JWb. Wiley's Internet site can be accessed at
wiley.

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