American | American Civil War | American Broadcasting Company | American football | African American | American Idol | American Revolutionary War | American Revolution | American Association for the Advancement of Science | American Red Cross | type species | American Library Association | American Museum of Natural History | American Express | American Academy of Arts and Sciences | American League | American Association | American Heart Association | American comic book | American Institute of Architects | American Airlines | American Hockey League | Spanish-American War | Pan American Games | American Cancer Society | Whitney Museum of American Art | American Ballet Theatre | American Legion | American University | Union (American Civil War) |
Clostridium acetobutylicum, ATCC 824, is a commercially valuable bacterium sometimes called the "Weizmann Organism", after Jewish-Russian-born Chaim Weizmann, then senior lecturer at the University of Manchester, England, used them in 1916 as a bio-chemical tool to produce at the same time, jointly, acetone, ethanol, and butanol from starch.