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         Bishop J Michael:     more books (100)
  1. The New Yorker - Jan. 2, 1960 by Morris Bishop, Ved Mehta, Michael J. Arlen Richard Wilbur, 1960
  2. The New Yorker - Jan. 2, 1960 by Morris Bishop, Ved Mehta, Michael J. Arlen Richard Wilbur, 1960-01-01
  3. The records of St. Michael's parish church, Bishop's Stortford by Eng Bishop Stortford, J L. jun. Glasscock, 2010-08-25
  4. 600 Years of Reform Bishops and the French Church 1190-1789 by J.Michael and Greenshields, Malcolm Hayden, 2005
  5. There are No Accidents: In All Things Trust in God by Benedict J. Groeschel, John Bishop, et all 2004-06-30
  6. Venerable John Neumann, C.SS.R. Fourth Bishop of Philadelphia by Michael J. Curley, 1952-01-01
  7. Evaluation of a theater production about eating behavior of children.(Critical Essay)(Statistical Data Included): An article from: Journal of School Health by Cheryl L. Perry, Marguerite Zauner, et all 2002-08-01
  8. Biblical Illustrator Magazine Fall 1989 (Volume 16 No 1) by Jimmy Albright, Hugh Tobias, et all 1989
  9. Venerable John Neumann, C.SS.R.,: Fourth bishop of Philadelphia by Michael J Curley, 1952
  10. From Sherborne to a See: The Life of Bishop David Coutts by Michael J. Rogers, 1989-12
  11. Bishop John Nuemann, C.SS.R., Fourth Bishop of Philadelphia by Michael J. Curley, 1952
  12. Venerable John Neumann, C.S.S.R., Fourth Bishop of Philadelphia 1852-1860 by Michael J. Curley, 1952
  13. Venerable John Neumann. 4th Bishop of Philadelphia 1852-1860. by Michael J. Curley, 1952-01-01
  14. Managing the priestly ministry meltdown: creative management needed from bishops to resolve clergy shortage.(VIEWPOINT): An article from: National Catholic Reporter by Michael J. Gallagher, 2006-02-24

41. ?
Alphabetical listing of nobel prize laureates in Physiology and Medicine. Name. Bergstroem,Sune K. 1982. bishop, J. michael, 1989. Black, Sir James W. 1988.
http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_med.htm

42. Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Medicine Or Physiology
nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology. Taken from The nobel Prize Internet Archive.2000. The prize was awarded jointly to J. michael bishop and HAROLD
http://www.manbir-online.com/htm3/nobel-med-list.htm
Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology Taken from - The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
The prize was awarded jointly to: A RVID C ARLSSON ... REENGARD and E RIC K ANDEL for their discoveries concerning signal transduction in the nervous system. The prize was awarded to: G ÜNTER B LOBEL , for the discovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell. The prize was awarded jointly to: R OBERT F F ... GNARRO and F ERID M URAD for their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system. S TANLEY B P ... RUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection The prize was awarded jointly to: P ETER C D ... OHERTY and R OLF M Z ... INKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence. The prize was awarded jointly to: E DWARD B L ... OLHARD and E RIC F W ... IESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. The prize was awarded jointly to: A LFRED G G ... ILMAN and M ARTIN R ODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells.

43. PREMIOS NOBEL RELACIONADOS CON LA GENÉTICA
Translate this page J. michael bishop Harold E. Varmus. Por sus descubrimientos sobre el origen celularde los oncogenes retrovirales. 1989, Sidney Altman Thomas R. Cech. nobel de
http://www.ucm.es/info/genetica/AVG/nobel/nobel.htm
Alfred Nobel La mayoría de los Premios Nobel que figuran en la siguiente lista son de Fisiología y Medicina, salvo algunos de Química y de la Paz que se indican de forma expresa en la tabla. Albrecht Kossel Por sus trabajos sobre las sustancias albuminoides, incluyendo las nucleínas, que han contribuido al conocimiento de la química de las células. Karl Landsteiner Por sus descubrimientos de los grupos sanguíneos de la especie humana. Thomas H. Morgan Por su descubrimiento sobre la función de los cromosomas como portadores de la herencia. Hermann J. Muller Por su descubrimiento de la inducción de mutaciones mediante radiación con rayos X. Linus Carl Pauling Por sus investigaciones sobre la naturaleza de los enlaces químicos y su aplicación en la elucidación de la estructura de las sustancias complejas. También recibió el Premio Nobel de la Paz en 1962 por su lucha contra el desarrollo de las armas nucleares. George W. Beadle Edward L. Tatum Por su descubrimiento de que los genes actúan regulando sucesos químicos definidos.

44. Rectores De La Universidad De California
Translate this page J. michael bishop, ganador del premio nobel en Fisiología y Medicina y uno de losprincipales investigadores médicos del mundo y defensor de la educación
http://www.ucop.edu/news/rectores.htm

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Berkeley
Robert M. Berdahl
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Albert Carnesale
San Diego
Robert C. Dynes
Santa Barbara
Henry T. Yang
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Larry N. Vanderhoef
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Carol Tomlinson-Keasey
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J. Michael Bishop
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M.R.C. Greenwood
Irvine Ralph J. Cicerone Riverside Raymond L. Orbach El presidente Richard C. Atkinson dirige el sistema UC, que incluye a los diez planteles. UC Berkeley Robert. M. Berdahl
Volver arriba UC Davis Larry N. Vanderhoef Larry N. Vanderhoef Volver arriba UC Irvine Ralph J. Cicerone Volver arriba UCLA Albert Carnesale Volver arriba UC Merced Carol Tomlinson-Keasey Riverside desde 1980 hasta 1992. desarrollo de la UC Berkeley en 1970. Volver arriba UC Riverside Raymond L. Orbach Volver arriba UC San Diego Robert C. Dynes Volver arriba UC San Francisco J. Michael Bishop

45. ŵ ±´ ¶û ½± Ïû Ï¢
? ? ? (1936 ) J. michael bishop Shared the nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine1989 With Harold E. Varmus (1939- , USA) For their discovery of the
http://www.networkchinese.com/chineseprof/region/other/uc_camtus/sanfranc/bishop

J. Michael Bishop

J. Michael Bishop
Shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1989
With Harold E. Varmus (1939- , USA)
"For their discovery of the cellular origin of retroviral oncogenes" À ¹ú Ò½ ѧ ¼Ò¡£ Òò ·¢ ÏÖ Äæ ת ¼ ¸ ²¡ ¶¾ »ù Òò µÄ ϸ °û À´ Ô´£¬ ¶ø Óë À´ ×Ô Í¬ У (À ¹ú ¼Ó ÖÝ ´ó ѧ ¾É ½ð ɽ ·Ö У) µÄ »ª Ī ˹ (Harold E. Varmus)£¬ ͬ »ñ 1989 Äê ŵ ±´ ¶û Ò½ ѧ ½±¡£
www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1989/bishop-autobio.html

46. ClubCaminantes - Premios Nobel - Medicina, El Club De Los Caminantes
Translate this page PREMIOS nobel, MEDICINA. 1989. bishop, J. michael (Estados Unidos). Por sudescubrimiento del origen celular de los oncogenos retrovirales.
http://caminantes.metropoliglobal.com/web/nobel/medicina4.htm

Inicio
Foros Chat Top 10 ... PREMIOS NOBEL
MEDICINA Blumberg, Baruch S. (Estados Unidos) Por su descubrimiento relativo a nuevos mecánismos para el origen y diseminación de enfermedades infecciosas. Gajdusek, Daniel C. (Estados Unidos) Por su descubrimiento relativo a nuevos mecánismos para el origen y diseminación de enfermedades infecciosas.
Guillemin, Roger (Estados Unidos) Por sus descubrimientos de la producción de hormonas peptidas en el cerebro. Schally, Andrew (Estados Unidos) Por sus descubrimientos de la producción de hormonas peptidas en el cerebro. Yalow, Rosalynn Sussman (Estados Unidos) Por el desarrollo de radioinmuno-ensayos de hormonas peptidas.
Arber, Werner (Suiza) Por el descubrimiento de enzimas de restricción y su aplicación a problemas de la genética molecular. Nathans, Daniel

47. Nobel Laureate To Present Grossman Lecture At DDW
This year, J. michael bishop, MD, 1989 nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology or Medicine,University Professor and Chancellor, University of California, San
http://www.gastro.org/news/2002/05/text/Laureate.html
Nobel Laureate to present Grossman Lecture at DDW
J. Michael Bishop, MD The 14th Annual Morton I. Grossman Distinguished Lecture will be held at DDW at 6 p.m., Saturday, May 18, at the San Francisco Marriott. This year, J. Michael Bishop, MD, 1989 Nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, University Professor and Chancellor, University of California, San Francisco, will be the Grossman Lecturer. He will discuss "Cancer: The Rise of the Genetic Paradigm." return to text May 2002 AGA News

48. Nobel Prize Winners Support Basic Science
Americans have been awarded more than onehalf of all nobel Prizes in D., Hans A.Bethe, James W. Cronin, David H. Hubel, MD, J. michael bishop, MD, Stanley
http://www.sdsc.edu/SDSCwire/v2.13/nobelists.html
Nobel Prize Winners Seek Stronger Support for Basic Science
The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Science
Policy News Number 101: June 26, 1996 The letter, dated June 19, follows: "Dear President Clinton and Members of Congress: "As men and women who have helped to shape the modern scientific age and who care deeply about the future of our nation, we urge you to reaffirm the fundamental role of the federal government in supporting basic scientific research. "Americans have been awarded more than one-half of all Nobel Prizes in physics, chemistry and medicine since 1945. This impressive success is no accident, but the result of a firm and consistent commitment by the federal government to basic science research at our universities. Our nation's policymakers and public have been prudent investors because their support has paid off in tremendous ways. "America's investment in research over the last fifty years has been a vital source of our economic and political strength around the world, as well as the quality of life Americans enjoy at home. The polio vaccine, computers, jet propulsion and disease resistant grains and vegetables are some of the thousands of advances pioneered at our universities that have had dramatic benefits for our health, economy, security and quality of life. "New and equally breathtaking advances may be just around the corner. Genetic research, for example, gives promise of better treatments for Alzheimer's, cancer and other diseases. Lighter and stronger composite materials may be developed with important applications in transportation, medicine and the military. Continuing support for university-based research will not only pave the way for these important breakthroughs, but will also train the next generation of pioneers and Nobelists.

49. Premios Nobel De Fisiología Y Medicina
Translate this page AÑO, PREMIOS nobel OTORGADOS EN FISIOLOGÍA Y MEDICINA. 1901, Behring, Emil Adolphvon (Alemania). 1989, bishop, J. michael (EEUU) Varmus, Harold E. (EEUU).
http://fcmjtrigo.sld.cu/nobel.htm
Premios Nobel de Fisiología y Medicina
Premio Nobel
: premios concedidos cada año a personas, entidades u organismos por sus aportaciones extraordinarias realizadas durante el año anterior en los campos de la Física, Química, Fisiología y Medicina, Literatura, Paz y Economía. Otorgados por primera vez el 10 de diciembre de 1901, los premios están financiados por los intereses devengados de un fondo en fideicomiso contemplado en el testamento del químico, inventor y filántropo sueco Alfred Bernhard Nobel. Además de una retribución en metálico, el ganador del Premio Nobel recibe también una medalla de oro y un diploma con su nombre y el campo en que ha logrado tal distinción. Los jueces pueden dividir cada premio entre dos o tres personas, aunque no está permitido repartirlo entre más de tres. Si se considerara que más de tres personas merecen el premio, se concedería de forma conjunta. El fondo está controlado por un comité de la Fundación Nobel, compuesto por seis miembros en cada mandato de dos años: cinco elegidos por los administradores de los organismos contemplados en el testamento, y el sexto nombrado por el Gobierno sueco. Los seis miembros serán ciudadanos suecos o noruegos. De acuerdo con la voluntad de Nobel, se han establecido institutos separados en Suecia y Noruega para favorecer los objetivos de la Fundación con el fin de potenciar cada uno de los cinco campos en los que se conceden los galardones. En 1968, para conmemorar su 300 aniversario, el Banco Nacional de Suecia creó el Premio de Ciencias Económicas Banco de Suecia en Memoria de Alfred Nobel, que sería otorgado por la Real Academia Sueca de las Ciencias (conocida con anterioridad por el nombre de Academia Sueca de las Ciencias). La Real Academia Sueca de las Ciencias concede también los premios de Física y Química.

50. Nobel Medicine Prize
The nobel Peace Prize for Physiology and Medicine dates from 1901. Year, Winner(s),Country. 1989, J. michael bishop Harold E. Varmus, USA USA.
http://www.geocities.com/Axiom43/nobelmedicine.html
Nobel Peace Prize for Physiology and Medicine The Nobel Peace Prize for Physiology and Medicine dates from 1901. Year Winner(s) Country E. von Behring Germany Sir Ronald Ross Great Britain N. R. Finsen Denmark I. P. Pavlov Russia R. Koch Germany C. Colgi
S. R. y Cajal Italy
Spain C. I. A. Laveran France P. Ehrich
E. Metchnikoff Germany
Russia T. Kocher Switzerland A. Kossel Germany A. Gullstrand Sweden A. Carrel USA C. Richet France R. Barany Austria 1915 to 1918 No Award Made J. Bordet Belgium A. Krogh Denmark No Award Made Archibald V. Hill
G. Meyerhof Great Britain
Germany F. C. Banting
J. R. Macleod Canada
Canada W. E. Einthoven Netherlands No Award Made J. Fibiger Denmark J. Wagner-Jauregg Austria C. Nicolle France C. Eijkman
Sir Frederick G. Hopkins Netherlands
Great Britain K. Landsteiner Austria O. Warburg Germany Sir Charles S. Sherrington

51. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
winners of the 1993 nobel Prize in medicine incorrectly identified the institutionat which two 1989 nobel laureates are employed. J. michael bishop and Harold
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1993/1993g.html

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BEHIND NOBEL, A STRUGGLE FOR RECOGNITION
SOME SCIENTISTS SAY COLLEAGUE OF BEVERLY RESEARCHER DESERVED A SHARE OF
MEDICAL PRIZE
Author: By Anthony Flint, Globe Staff Date: Friday, November 5, 1993 Page: Section: NATIONAL/FOREIGN The champagne bottles were uncorked and the television cameras whirred in the atrium of New England Biolabs in Beverly that sunny afternoon of Oct. 11. Hours before, one of the lab's top researchers, Richard J. Roberts, had learned that he had won the Nobel Prize in Medicine, and everyone was beaming. But behind that happy celebration is a tale of an intense competition for recognition among the scientists involved in the work that won the prize, a landmark study on how genes are spliced. The struggle raises new questions about how the scientific community bestows credit for major discoveries. According to several scientists, Louise T. Chow, a Taiwanese researcher who worked with Roberts at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island in 1977, the year the discovery was made, should have shared in the Nobel. Chow operated the electron microscope through which the splicing process was observed and designed the crucial experiment using techniques she developed in the previous two years at the lab. "The evidence she discovered formed an important part of the total creative insight that splicing was taking place. Only she could have interpreted those data," said Norman Davidson, a professor emeritus at the California Institute of Technology and well-known expert in electron microscopy, under whom Chow apprenticed as a graduate student.

52. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
Date Tuesday, October 10, 1989 Page 1 Section NATIONAL/FOREIGN Two San Franciscoresearchers, J. michael bishop and Harold E. Varmus, won the nobel Prize in
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1989/1989m.html

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TWO WIN NOBEL FOR CANCER RESEARCH
Author: By Dolores Kong, Contributing Reporter and Richard Saltus, Globe Staff Date: Tuesday, October 10, 1989
Page:
Section:
NATIONAL/FOREIGN Two San Francisco researchers, J. Michael Bishop and Harold E. Varmus, won the Nobel Prize in medicine yesterday for landmark work that has led to an understanding of the genetic basis of cancer and has major implications for diagnosis and treatment. Bishop and Varmus, who both have longstanding ties to the Boston area, discovered that genes carried in normal cells could mutate and cause cancer. The finding is a major contribution to the current understanding of the disease, say scientists familiar with their work. These cancer-causing genes are called oncogenes. "Their work on oncogenes is landmark in our progress against cancer," said Dr. Kurt J. Isselbacher, director of the cancer center at Massachusetts General Hospital, who was Bishop's clinical supervisor when he was a medical resident. "They were really among the first to show that there were specific genes" for cancer. But Boston researchers familiar with Bishop's and Varmus' work were disappointed and surprised that a local scientist, Robert A. Weinberg of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, was not included in the award.

53. Research Centers Are A Boon To The Bay Area's Sagging Economy J. Michael Bishop
Dr. J. michael bishop is chancellor of the University of California at San Francisco.He received the nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology in 1989, along with
http://www.mindfully.org/Industry/Academic-Economic-Value19feb02.htm
Research Centers are a Boon to the Bay Area's Sagging Economy
J. Michael Bishop / Commentary / SF Chronicle 19feb02
THE DECLINING economy has not been kind to the Bay Area. Hotel rooms are empty, offices are going begging, the dot-com world has deconstructed. But things are still jumping at research universities and federal laboratories in the Bay Area one of the largest concentrations of centers for discovery and education in the nation. A multitude of economic studies have shown that discovery is a major driver of the nation's economy. A recent analysis, presented at the Bay Area Council Outlook Conference 2002, confirmed that this is particularly true for the Bay Area's knowledge-based, innovation-driven economy. Thanks to the region's culture of innovation and other factors attributable to research institutions, the analysis forecasts economic growth for the Bay Area of more than 4.2 percent and as much as 5.1 percent during the next three to five years. Academic institutions produce precisely the advantages that ensure stability and vitality in the economy during times such as these. Consider these examples of the contributions from just one institution, the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF):
  • Previous studies have indicated that UCSF now injects as much as $2 billion into the local economy. Similarly, recent data for UC Berkeley reveal that every dollar spent by that campus generates another 67 cents in local spending, resulting in a total impact on the Bay Area of $1.4 billion.

54. HSC News Jan. 17, 2002
Return to top. Ted Couch lecture features nobel Laureate J. michael bishop,MD. The Fourth Annual Ted Couch Cancer Research Lectureship will be on Feb.
http://hsc.usf.edu/PUBAFF/hscnews/pastissues/jan17.htm
In this Issue: January 17, 2002 1. State of the College highlighted at COM Faculty Council Meeting 2. Conference will highlight what may be the most painful syndrome 3. Ted Couch lecture features retroviral oncogene expert. 4. Research Day is Feb. 14 ... 6. Free yoga classes start Jan. 23
COM Faculty Council meeting
By Michael Hoad
The College of Medicine used a new process to decide how to implement $2.2 million in state budget cuts imposed because of the recession and falling state revenue after Sept. 11.
In December, Dean Robert Daugherty, MD, PhD, led a budget retreat of all department chairs and budget officers. All budget cut proposals were reviewed and consensus found on some key elements.
The critical loss was to the research infrastructure in the basic science departments, Dr. Daugherty told the Faculty Council Tuesday. If the legislature permits any restoration of those cuts, the college will use such funds to focus on gaining grants.
Despite the cuts, however, the health of the college is good, Dr. Daugherty told a crowded Faculty Council meeting as his "state of the college" address.

55. History For Sale - Nobel Prize Autographs
Pulitzer Prize Winners. nobel Prize Winners. Notorious. LINUS CARL PAULING FIRSTDAY COVER SIGNED CIRCA 1978 CO-SIGNED BYJ. michael bishop , FRANCIS HENRY
http://www.historyforsale.com/html/specialslist.asp?page=62

56. Nobel For Medicine: All Laureates
Bert Sakmann 1990 Joseph E. Murray, E. Donnall Thomas 1989 J. michael bishop, HaroldE Tonegawa 1986 Stanley Cohen, Rita LeviMontalcini 1985 michael S. Brown
http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/med-list.html
NOBEL
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IG Nobel 2002 The invention of :-) West Nile Virus Asteroid Impact? ... Book: Russell Read also: Nobel Prize Women in Science : Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries by Sharon Bertsch McGrayne THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR MEDICINE: ALL WINNERS 2001 Leland H. Hartwell, R. Timothy Hunt, Paul M. Nurse 2000 Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard, Eric R. Kandel 1999 Günter Blobel 1998 Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro, Ferid Murad 1997 Stanley B. Prusiner 1996 Peter C. Doherty, Rolf M. Zinkernagel 1995 Edward B. Lewis, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, Eric F. Wieschaus 1994 Alfred G. Gilman, Martin Rodbell 1993 Richard J. Roberts, Phillip A. Sharp 1992 Edmond H. Fischer, Edwin G. Krebs

57. The Lasker Foundation | Lasker Awards And The Nobel
Year of. Basic Award Winner, Lasker, nobel. George Wells Beadle, 1950, 1958.Paul Berg, 1981, 1980. K. Sune D. Bergström, 1977, 1982. J. michael bishop,1982, 1989.
http://www.laskerfoundation.org/awards/n_vs_l.html
Lasker Awards Jury Members This Year's Winners Former Winners ... Award History View Video Interviews
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Lasker Awards and the Nobel
The Lasker Medical Science Awards in basic research, clinical research, special achievement and public service, which have been bestowed since l945, provide a chronicle of the progress of biomedical research over the last half-century. The Lasker Foundation is proud that many of the amazing discoveries and achievements of Lasker Award winners are recognized, in addition, by the prestigious Nobel Prize. As of 2002, sixty-six Lasker winners have gone on to win the Nobel. The following statistics are of interest:
  • 47.5% of the Basic Lasker Winners go on to win the Nobel

58. Past California Scientist Of The Year Award Recipients
1983, James Collman, Ph.D. Stanford University. 1982, J. michael bishop, MD(1989 nobel Prize in Medicine) University of California at San Francisco.
http://www.casciencectr.org/GenInfo/NewsAndEvents/AnnualEvents/ScientistOfTheYea
California Scientist of the Year Award Recipients BACK TO OVERVIEW Irving Weissman, M.D.
Stanford University School of Medicine Geoffrey W. Marcy, Ph.D. University of California at Berkeley Elizabeth H. Blackburn, Ph.D. University of California at San Francisco Richard N. Zare, Ph.D. Stanford University Richard Lerner, M.D. The Scripps Research Institute Peter G. Schultz, Ph.D. University of California at Berkeley Robert Tjian, Ph.D. University of California Berkeley Ronald Evans, Ph.D. The Salk Institute for Biological Studies Hiroo Kanamori , Ph.D.

59. The Scientist - The 1989 Nobel Prize In Medicine: 20 Who Deserve It
The trio of J. michael bishop and Harold E. Varmus A nobel Prize honoring these threewould recognize pioneering research on tumor viruses, oncogenes, and the
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1989/oct/leaders1_891002.html
The Scientist 3[19]:14, Oct. 2, 1989
LEADERS OF SCIENCE
The 1989 Nobel Prize In Medicine: 20 Who Deserve It
By DAVID PENDLEBURY Pity the Nobel committee now trying to make its selection for the next prize in physiology or medicine, soon to be announced. The committee has a very difficult task. The five-member group at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm is sifting through dossiers on more than 100 candidates. The committee members are no doubt asking themselves, as they must ask themselves every year, “How are we to select from among this collection of outstanding, world-class researchers just one (or at most three) to honor with the Nobel Prize in Medicine?” All of the candidates have conducted exceptional research all are of the highest scientific caliber. Plainly, there are more scientists worthy of receiving the prize than there are Nobel Prizes to go around. That circumstance leaves a great number of researchers “who are peers of prize winners in every sense except that of having the award,” Columbia University sociologist of science Harriet Zuckerman observed in Scientific Elite (New York, Free Press, 1977, page 42), her classic study of the Nobel Prize and its winners. Such peers-without-the-prize can be said to be “of Nobel class.” It stands to reason that if one wants to know who might one day win a Nobel Prize, it may be useful to identify scientists who are “of Nobel class.”

60. Prix Nobel De Physiologie Ou Médecine - Wikipedia
Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Les prix nobel de physiologieet médecine. 1989 J. michael bishop, Harold E. Varmus.
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prix_Nobel_de_Physiologie_ou_Médecine
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Prix Nobel de Physiologie ou Médecine
Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Les prix nobel de physiologie et médecine Emil Adolf von Behring Ronald Ross Niels Ryberg Finsen Ivan Petrovich Pavlov ... Christiaan Eijkman , Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins Karl Landsteiner Otto Heinrich Warburg Sir Charles Scott Sherrington Edgar Douglas Adrian Thomas Hunt Morgan George Hoyt Whipple ... Hans Spemann Sir Henry Hallett Dale Otto Loewi Albert von Szent-Györgyi Nagyrapolt Corneille Jean François Heymans ... Herbert Spencer Gasser Sir Alexander Fleming Ernst Boris Chain , Sir Howard Walter Florey Hermann Joseph Muller Carl Ferdinand Cori Gerty Theresa , née Radnitz Cori, Bernardo Alberto Houssay Paul Hermann Müller Walter Rudolf Hess Antonio Caetano De Abreu Freire Egas Moniz ... Dickinson W. Richards

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