Iran: Nobel Peace Prize For Shirin Ebadi Still it took us by surprise as the chairman of the nobel Committee announced Talkingto one of its Iranian correspondents index on Censorship was told This http://www.indexonline.org/news/20031011_iran.shtml
Extractions: Index 2/04: From public relations to spin to the lie direct, Index on Censorship Noam Chomsky Stanley Cohen Romesh Gunesekera Martin Jay John le Carré Caroline Moorehead and Peter Pringle . With new photographs from Heidi Bradner inside the Siberian Artic Circle. Plus a file on books in the Arab world, fiction from Alexander Solzhentisyn and our regular cartoon from Martin Rowson In awarding this year's Nobel Peace Prize to Shirin Ebadi , the committee has made a more than usually imaginative choice - and an unexpected one. Judith Vidal-Hall comments. If you had been stuck awake and, for want of anything better to do, were tracking the movements at the bookies across the world's time zones, you would by this morning at least, have realised that something very strange was happening in the odds on the front-runners in this years Nobel Prize for Peace.
Extractions: STOCKHOLM, Sweden Two Americans have won the 2002 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences. Daniel Kahneman and Vernon L. Smith received the honour on Wednesday for their work using psychological research and laboratory experiments in economic analysis. Kahneman, 68, a U.S. and Israeli citizen based at Princeton University in New Jersey, and Smith, 75, of George Mason University, will share the roughly $1 million prize. The economics prize is the only one of the Nobel awards not established in the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel. Kahneman has integrated insights from psychology into economics, especially concerning human judgment and decision-making under uncertainty, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in its citation. Smith laid the foundation for the field of experimental economics, demonstrating the importance of alternative institutions. The academy singled out Smith's use of "wind-tunnel tests," where trials of new, alternative market designs are carried out in the laboratory before being implemented.
Nobel Prize In Literature - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia Szymborska. The other recipients are men. External links. http//www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/index.html.nobel Prizes. Chemistry http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize_in_literature
Extractions: Nobel Prizes Chemistry Literature Physiology or Medicine Peace Physics Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel ... Nobel Prize Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox Other languages Dansk Deutsch Eesti Esperanto ... Suomi This page was last modified 05:12, 4 Jun 2004. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see for details).
The Scientist :: Nobel Laureates Declare Support For Butler http//www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030905/04/ nobel Prize in Chemistry 1996 http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1996/index.html National Academy proposes http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20031105/07/
Extractions: Four American Nobel Laureates have come out in support of Thomas Butler, the Texas Tech University professor whose trial for an assortment of charges involving his handling of plague samples began this week in Lubbock, Texas. In a statement released Monday night (November 3), Peter Agre, Sidney Altman, Robert Curl, and Torston Wiesel wrote that the Justice Department's determination to send Butler to jail sends a strong message to the scientific community "that those scientists most involved in bioterrorism-related research are most likely to be victims of punitive attacks at the hands of federal authorities." The group predicted that this message will intimidate "precisely the scientists we need most in this effort of high national priority," and they urged the prosecution and defense to agree to a plea bargain that does not include prison time. "I think the four of us all feel just adamantly that this is turning out to be a gross miscarriage of justice," Peter Agre, a Johns Hopkins University professor who won half of this year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry , told The Scientist . "This is outrageous," he said. "It smacks of McCarthyism."
Economics 1995 Includes an autobiography and curriculum vitae of the economist, as well as a press release from the nobel Foundation. http://www.nobel.se/economics/laureates/1995/index.html
The Scientist :: MRI Scientists Win Nobel Prize awards/awards.html Medical Research Council http//www.mrc.ac.uk nobel Prize in Physics1952 http//www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1952/index.html nobel Prize http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20031006/06
Extractions: For the third time since 1951, scientists working in the field of nuclear magnetic resonance technology have been recognized by the Nobel Academy , with a British physicist and an American chemist this year taking home the prize for physiology or medicine. The assembly, at Stockholm's Karolinska Institutet, named Paul C. Lauterbur and Peter Mansfield as the 2003 laureates for work in the early 1970s, which provided the basis for the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a technique that has found a central role in modern medicine. Lauterbur, born 1929, is a professor of Chemistry, Biophysics and Computational Biology, and Bioengineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. During the early 1960s, he used nuclear magnetic resonance devices to develop carbon-13 spectroscopy and in the early 1970s, discovered the possibility of creating a two-dimensional image by introducing gradients in the magnetic field. In 1984, he was awarded the Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research for this work.
Quotez - Author Index If I have a thousand ideas and only one turns out to be good,I am satisfied. Alfred nobel. Displaying results 1 1 of 1 http://www.digiserve.co.uk/quotations/search.cgi?type=Author&terms=Alfred Nobel
Index Des Mots Clef Des Articles De Sciences Et Info-prépas Translate this page index des mots clef des articles de Sciences et Info-prépas. PrixNobel Numéro de la revue, 7 (Consulter le sommaire du numéro 7). http://infoprepas.poleditions.com/infosMotClef.php?mot=prix Nobel
Extractions: Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Korean Arabic Japanese Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW InStyle Business 2.0 The U.S. has issued a special stamp to honour the 100-year anniversary STOCKHOLM, Sweden Two Americans and a German have won the Nobel physics prize for discovering a new state of matter that could lead to super-small machines. Americans Eric A. Cornell and Carl E. Wieman and German-born Wolfgang Ketterle won the prize for freezing matter into a new state that may help make microscopic computers and revolutionise aircraft guidance. The trio of scientists will split about $950,000 for their efforts. "This year's Nobel laureates have succeeded they have caused atoms to 'sing in unison' thus discovering a new state of matter," the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in a statement. Cornell, 39, is a senior scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colorado.
Index Of /group/nobel/pakkaukset Parent Directory 07Feb-2003 1254 - external.ps 21-Feb-2001index of /group/nobel/pakkaukset. Name Last modified Size http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/group/nobel/pakkaukset/
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Index Of /group/nobel/dokumentit Parent Directory 07Feb-2003 1254 - FTR_esityslista.html 15index of /group/nobel/dokumentit. Name Last modified Size http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/group/nobel/dokumentit/
Extractions: CNN Europe CNN Asia Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Korean Arabic Japanese On CNN TV Transcripts Headline News CNN International ... Special Reports SERVICES Video E-Mail Services CNNtoGO SEARCH Web CNN.com Carter: "The United Nations is the best place for nations to resolve the differences that always exist" Story Tools RESOURCES Profile: Jimmy Carter Text of Carter Nobel citation Recent winners Nobel Peace Prize RELATED Carter wins Nobel Peace Prize Nobel prize winners give advice Carter's award a swipe at Bush Americans win economics Nobel ... Hungarian wins literature Nobel QUICKVOTE Do you agree with the choice of Jimmy Carter for the Nobel Peace Prize? Yes No VIEW RESULTS OSLO, Norway Nobel peace prize winner-elect Jimmy Carter has urged the U.S. to respect the United Nations' rulings on policy over Iraq. The ex- U.S. president, speaking ahead of the 2002 Nobel prize giving ceremony on Tuesday, also called for renewed efforts to solve "the festering problem" of Israel and its neighbours. Carter told a news conference on Monday: "If there is (Iraqi) compliance, as judged by the U.N. Security Council, then I see no reason for armed conflict."
Index PPs Betako Merpati Putih Kolat Akzo nobel Surabaya. Dipersembahkan untukanggota PPs Betako Merpati Putih dan negaraku tercinta Indonesia. http://mpakzo.tripod.com/
Www.peacejam.org8001/peacejam/ Inside Illinois index, Oct. 16, 2002 (Vol. 23, No. 8) The nobel Effect Campus, world laud UI nobel laureates Lightning struck thecampus early on Oct. Full story. Two Illinois professors win nobel Prize. http://www.peacejam.org:8001/peacejam/
Extractions: 26 March 2004 MARK PEPLOW Isadore Singer (left) and Sir Michael Atiyah (right) won half a million pounds for their work. The Abel Prize, often described as a Nobel Prize for maths, has been awarded to two mathematicians for unifying swathes of mathematical theories that were once thought to be unrelated. Sir Michael Atiyah and Isadore Singer worked together to create something called index theory, which helps to bring together branches of maths from topology to geometry. Their work can be described as a tool that helps scientists work out how many solutions there are to problems they are trying to unpick - such as how heat flows, or how an object moves. "It is basically a formula that counts the number of solutions to another equation," says Atiyah. "This theory is now a cornerstone of maths; it is one of the most fundamental results of the last 50 years," says Elmer Rees, a colleague of Atiyah's at Edinburgh University. "It was as if an archaeologist had discovered exactly the same patterns on tombs in completely different parts of the world, proving that some underlying civilization had carved them all," says Marcus du Sautoy, a mathematician at Oxford University.