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         Boyer Paul D:     more books (100)
  1. The Enzymes: Control by Phosphorylation, Part A : General Features, Specific Enzymes by Paul D. Boyer, 1986-11
  2. The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters.(Review): An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Paul D. Boyer, 2000-09-01
  3. Enzymes: Volume One: Kinetics, Mechanism, Thermodynamics, Basic Properties 2nd Edition. 1965 Edition (1) by Paul D. edited by Boyer, 1965
  4. Annual Review of Biochemistry - Volume 36, Parts 1 & 2 by Paul D. (ed) Boyer, 1967
  5. Annual Review of Biochemistry. Volume 35, 1966. Part II. by Paul D. ed. BOYER, 1966
  6. Annual Review of Biochemistry. Volume 37, 1968. by Paul D. ed. BOYER, 1968
  7. The Enzymes by Paul D. Boyer, 1970
  8. Annual Review of Biochemistry: 1984 by Charles C. Richardson, Paul D. Boyer, et all 1984-07
  9. Annual Review of Biochemistry. Volume 36, 1967. Part II. by Paul D. ed. BOYER, 1967
  10. The Firecracker Boys.: An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Paul D. Boyer, 1995-05-01
  11. THE ENZYMES, Second Edition: Group Transfer, Syntheses Coupled to ATP Cleavage--Completely Revised. Volume 6. by Paul D. (Ed); Lardy, Henry (Ed): Myrback, Karl (Ed) Boyer, 1962
  12. THE ENZYMES. Second Edition--Completely Revised. Volume 3. by Paul D. (Ed); Lardy, Henry (Ed): Myrback, Karl (Ed) Boyer, 1960-01-01
  13. THE ENZYMES. Second Edition--Completely Revised. Volume 2: Purine and Pyrimidine Nucleotides and Phosphagens; Prosthetic Groups and Cofactors (Part A). by Paul D. (Ed); Lardy, Henry (Ed): Myrback, Karl (Ed) Boyer, 1960-01-01
  14. Annual Review of Biochemistry Volume 36, 1967 (Parts I and II) by Paul D. (editor) Boyer, 1967

21. Boyer Returns To UCLA With Nobel Prize
he is a molecular biologist, nobel Prize winner paul boyer was welcomed back Andbudding scientists crowded around boyer hoping he'd autograph their
http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/DB/issues/97/10.21/news.nobel.html
Tuesday, October 21, 1997
Boyer returns to UCLA with Nobel Prize
CELEBRATION Professor lauded for extensive chemical research on ATP functions, mentorship By Hannah Miller Daily Bruin Senior Staff Although he is a molecular biologist, Nobel Prize winner Paul Boyer was welcomed back to UCLA on Monday like a rock star. A crowd of admirers choked the pathway between the Molecular Biology Institute (MBI) and the Bombshelter. Florist deliverymen milled about, trying to figure out which lab to place the roses in. And budding scientists crowded around Boyer - hoping he'd autograph their lab coats. "I'm beginning to feel like Princess Diana," said Boyer. "This is the first time I've ever had flowers sent to me." Boyer won the 1997 Nobel Prize in chemistry last week for his discoveries detailing the synthase of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), a fundamental life process that supplies energy to all cells in the body. For Boyer, 79, it was the culmination of a research career spanning 50 years - 34 years of which were spent researching ATP. So his homecoming on Monday afternoon, to the MBI that he founded 32 years ago, was met with champagne and a long line of admirers.

22. Zeal.com - United States - New - Library - Sciences - Chemistry - Chemists - Oth
8. boyer, paul D. 1997 nobel Autobiography http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1997/boyer-autobio.h Read the autobiography of paul D. boyer, one of
http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=554800

23. Nobel Prize Winning Chemists
nobel Prize Winning Chemists. 1996 1998 paul D. boyer. The nobelPrize In Chemistry 1997. paul boyer was born in 1918. His father
http://www.sanbenito.k12.tx.us/district/webpages2002/judymedrano/Nobel Winners/p
Nobel Prize Winning Chemists Paul D. Boyer The Nobel Prize In Chemistry 1997 Paul Boyer was born in 1918. His father, Dell Delos Boyer, born in 1879 in Springville, Utah, came from the Pennsylvania Boyers. His mother was Grace Guymon who had Addison's disease, from which she died in 1933, at the age of 45, just weeks after his fifteenth birthday. He was gratified to receive the Award in enzyme Chemistry of the American Chemical Society in 1955. During these years he received peer recognition in the form of the Rose Award of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, the preeminent society in his field. He was awarded the Nobel Prize jointly with John E. Walker "for their elucidation of the enzymatic mechanism underlying the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate." In 1956 he accepted a Hill Foundation Professorship and moved to the medical school campus of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Much of his group's research was on enzymes other than the ATP synthase, but solving how oxidative phosphorylation occurred remained one of the most challenging problems of biochemistry for him. However, much of their effort over several years was directed toward attempting to detect a possible phosphorylated intermediate in the ATP (adenosine triphosphate) synthesis using P as a probe. The combined efforts of some excellent graduate students and post docs culminated in the discovery of a new type of phosphorylated protein, a catalytic intermediate in ATP formation with a phosphoryl group attached to a histidine residue. In the summer of 1963, he and a group of graduate students and postdocs activated laboratories in the chemistry building at the University of California. They soon found that the enzyme-bound phosphohistidine they had discovered was an intermediate in the substrate level phosphorylation of the citric acid cycle.

24. Nobel
nobelWinning Chemists. Kurt Alder. Sidney Altman. Christian B. Anfinsen. FriedrichBergius. Max Born. Carl Bosch. paul D. boyer. Herbert C. Brown. Eduard Buchner.
http://www.sanbenito.k12.tx.us/district/webpages2002/judymedrano/Nobel Winners/n
Nobel-Winning Chemists Kurt Alder Sidney Altman Christian B. Anfinsen Svante August Arrhenius ... Eduard Buchner Adolf Friedrick Johann Butenandt Melvin Calvin Thomas Robert Cech Hans von Euler-Chelpin John Warcup Cornforth Donald J. Cram Marie Curie Elias James Corey Petrus (Peter) Josephus Wilhelmus Debye Paul J. Crutzen Robert F. Curl, Jr. Johann Deisenhofer Otto Diels ... Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff Roald Hoffman Robert Huber Jean Frederic Joliot Irene Joliot-Curie ... Back To Main Page

25. Boyer.html
nobel Prize winner paul boyer helped solve the mystery of how our bodiescapture energy from food. Links to nobel Prize Winner paul boyer
http://www.chemistry.org/portal/Chemistry?PID=acsdisplay.html&DOC=government\suc

26. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Nobel Laureates
About Sigma Xi » Overview » nobel Laureates 1997 paul D. boyer 1998 Walter Kohn1998 John Pople 1999 Ahmed E. Zewail 2000 Alan J. Heeger 2000 Alan G
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/overview/nobel.shtml
Overview Leadership Organization News ... Contact Us About: Overview
Overview
Physics
1907 Albert Michelson
1921 Albert Einstein
1923 Robert A. Millikan
1925 James Franck
1927 Arthur H. Compton
1936 Carl D. Anderson
1937 Clinton J. Davisson 1938 Enrico Fermi 1939 Ernest O. Lawrence 1943 Otto Stern 1944 Isidor Isaac Rabi 1945 Wolfgang Pauli 1946 Percy Williams Bridgman 1952 Felix Bloch 1952 Edward M. Purcell 1955 Polykarp Kusch 1955 Willis E. Lamb, Jr. 1956 John Bardeen 1956 Walter H. Brattain 1956 William Shockley 1957 Chen Ning Yang 1958 Igor Y. Tamm 1959 Owen Chamberlain 1959 Emilio G. Segre 1960 Donald A. Glaser 1961 Robert Hofstadter 1963 Eugene P. Wigner

27. Encyclopædia Britannica
who, with John E. Walker, was awarded the nobel Prize for MLA style boyer, PaulD.. Encyclopædia Britannica 2003 Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
http://search.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=120316&tocid=0&query=paul walker&ct=

28. Nobel Laureates In Chemistry By Alphabetical Order
Themes Science Chemistry About Chemistry Generalities nobel Laureates inChemistry by Alphabetical order. Name, Bosch, Carl, 1931. boyer, paul D. 1997.
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/Chemistry/Aboutchemistry/AlphaNobel
Themes Science Chemistry About Chemistry Generalities
Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August Aston, Francis William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Von Barton, Sir Derek H. R. Berg, Paul Bergius, Friedrich Bosch, Carl Boyer, Paul D. Brown, Herbert C. Buchner, Eduard Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann Calvin, Melvin Cech, Thomas R. Corey, Elias James Cornforth, Sir John Warcup Cram, Donald J. Crutzen, Paul Curie, Marie Curl, Robert F., Jr. Debye, Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus De Hevesy, George Deisenhofer, Johann Diels, Otto Paul Hermann Eigen, Manfred Ernst, Richard R. Euler-chelpin, Hans Karl August Simon Von Fischer, Ernst Otto Fischer, Hans Fischer, Hermann Emil Flory, Paul J. Fukui, Kenichi Giauque, William Francis Gilbert, Walter Grignard, Victor Haber, Fritz Hahn, Otto Harden, Sir Arthur Hassel, Odd Hauptman, Herbert A. Haworth, Sir Walter Norman Heeger, Alan J. Herschbach, Dudley R. Herzberg, Gerhard Heyrovsky, Jaroslav Hinshelwood, Sir Cyril Norman Hodgkin, Dorothy Crowfoot Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't

29. NOBEL CHEMISTRY
Three chemists whose work helped answer that question share this year's nobel Prizein Chemistry. Professor paul D. boyer, University of California, Los Angeles
http://www.accessexcellence.org/WN/SUA11/nobelchem1097.html
NOBEL TO ATP RESEARCHERS By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence Stockholm, Sweden (October15, 1997)- Where would we be without ATP? Three chemists whose work helped answer that question share this year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Professor Paul D. Boyer, University of California, Los Angeles, USA, and Dr. John E. Walker, Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, United Kingdom were recognized for their elucidation of the enzymatic mechanism underlying the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), along with Professor Jens C. Skou, Aarhus University, Denmark who first discovered the ion-transporting enzyme, Na+, K+-ATPase. "The three laureates have performed pioneering work on enzymes that participate in the conversion of the "high energy" compound adenosine triphosphate," notes the citation by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Adenosine is a nucleoside comprising adenine linked to D-ribose through a beta-glycoside bond. Phosphorylated forms of adenosine (AMP, ADP, and ATP) are the major compounds involved in energy transfer in biological systems. ATP acts as an energy source for many cellular processes. Indeed, an active cell needs about two million ATP molecules per second to function. ATP serves as an energy transporter in all living organisms. The compound captures the chemical energy released by the combustion of nutrients and transfers it to reactions that require energy, e.g. the building up of cell components, muscle contraction, transmission of nerve messages and many other functions.

30. NIGMS -- News & Events: Long-Time NIH Grantee Wins Nobel Prize In Chemistry
Dr. paul D. boyer, a longtime NIH grantee, is one of three recipientsof the 1997 nobel Prize in chemistry. boyer, who is a professor
http://www.nigms.nih.gov/news/releases/boyer.html
skip navigation NIGMS Home
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Long-Time NIH Grantee Wins Nobel Prize in Chemistry
by Alisa Zapp Machalek and Ann Dieffenbach (301) 496-7301
October 15, 1997
Dr. Jens C. Skou of Aarhus University in Denmark, one of the other prize recipients, received support from NIH's National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in the early 1960's. "The Nobel Prize recognizes Dr. Boyer for a lifetime spent investigating the molecular mechanism by which ATPthe cellular energy that drives all biological reactionsis formed," said Dr. Marvin Cassman, NIGMS Director. "Determining how ATP is synthesized has been a central problem in biology for decades and is at the core of an understanding of metabolic processes in the cell. Dr. Boyer has been a key contributor to the molecular understanding of ATP synthesis." Since the early 1950's, Boyer has sought to understand the inner workings of ATP synthase, the enzyme he calls the "splendid molecular machine" that produces ATP. The enzyme is a complex protein rooted in the inner membranes of cellular structures called mitochondria, the "powerhouses of the cell." Over several decades, Boyer developed a model of how the various subunits of the enzyme work together like gears, levers, and ratchets to generate cellular energy. His theories were confirmed in 1994 with a detailed, three-dimensional structure of the enzyme determined by the third recipient of the chemistry prize, Dr. John E. Walker of the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, UK. The techniques Boyer developed are now commonly used to study other ATP-utilizing enzymes.

31. Nobel Prize In Chemistry - Wikipedia
http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html. Molina, F. Sherwood Rowland 1996Robert Curl, Sir Harold Kroto, Richard Smalley 1997 paul D. boyer, John E
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Chemistry

32. Campus Names: Instruction
boyer Hall The Molecular Biology Institute building, completed in 1976, was renamedfor paul D. boyer after he won the nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1997.
http://www.ucla.edu/about/buildings/instruction.html

Home
Welcome to UCLA Campus Names Instruction
Original Buildings
Administration Instruction The Arts ... Libraries Instruction
The buildings in this section are those whose primary purpose is instruction: lecture halls, classrooms and laboratories. We also include one academic unit: the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science. There are additional classroom buildings listed in other categories such as Health Sciences and Management. The building shown at left is Moore Hall, the fifth building on the UCLA campus (1930).
Boelter Hall
Llewellyn Michael Kraus Boelter was UCLA's first dean of engineering. His service began with the school's founding in 1944 and continued until his retirement in 1965. He was internationally known for his work in the field of heat and mass transfer.
Boyer Hall
The Molecular Biology Institute building, completed in 1976, was renamed for Paul D. Boyer after he won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1997. Boyer was a professor of chemistry and biochemistry at UCLA from 1963 until his retirement in 1990, and he was the founding director of the UCLA Molecular Biology Institute. While at UCLA he discovered the mechanism by which cells make adenosine triphosphate, the major internal energy source for all organisms. His discovery was so revolutionary that it was rejected by the leading science journal. Years later, British biochemist John Walker worked out the methodology to prove Boyer's hypothesis. Walker and Boyer subsequently shared the Nobel Prize. (

33. Editorial Box
by Margaret Merryfield The 1999 nobel Laureate Lecture was given on March 18, byDr. paul D. boyer, Professor Emeritus of Chemistry and Biochemistry at UCLA.
http://www.chemistry.natsci.csulb.edu/newslttr/99/paulboyer.html
Nobel Laureate Chemist Paul Boyer Visits Campus by Margaret Merryfield The 1999 Nobel Laureate Lecture was given on March 18, by Dr. Paul D. Boyer, Professor Emeritus of Chemistry and Biochemistry at UCLA. Dr. Boyer received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1997 for his work in elucidating the mechanism of ATP synthase, the enzyme responsible for synthesis of ATP in mitochondria. He delivered two lectures, one providing a general picture of his research interests as well as some reflections on the Nobel Prize experience, and the other presenting some of his studies of the mechanism of ATP synthase.
Dr. Paul Boyer, Nobel Laureate Dr. Boyer received his PhD in biochemistry from the University of Wisconsin in 1943, and has been at UCLA since 1963. His name is familiar to biochemists for his insights into the "splendid molecular machine," ATP synthase, his role as a key player in the scientific debate over the mechanism by which mitochondrial oxidation was coupled to ATP synthesis, and his work as editor of the multi-volume series, The Enzymes.

34. Nobel Prize
work on cell energy production is fundamental to biochemistry, received a share ofthe nobel Prize in Chemistry on Oct.15. paul D. boyer, a professor emeritus
http://magazine.byu.edu/bym/1997/97winter/nobelnews.html
Back to On Campus Page
1939 BYU Alumnus Shares in Nobel Prize
By Julie Walker and Carri P. Jenkins, Staff Writers
Below: Paul Boyer, shown here posing for a picture in the 1939 Banyan, is the first BYU alum to receive a Nobel Prize.
A 1939 BYU alumnus, whose pioneering work on cell energy production is fundamental to biochemistry, received a share of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry on Oct.15. Paul D. Boyer, a professor emeritus at the University of California, Los Angeles, shares the award with colleagues John Walker from the Medical Research Council Laboratory in England and Jens Skou from Aarhus University in Denmark. The researchers were honored for their discovery of the enzymes that participate in the conversion of ATP (adenosine triphosphate), which fuels energy production within the cell. Boyer, the first BYU alum to receive a Nobel Prize, said he is grateful for his BYU experiences and for superb chemistry faculty. "I'm indebted to Professors Joseph K. Nicholes and Charles Maw of the chemistry faculty. The background I received from them enabled me to do the type of research I've been doing for the last 50 years," he said. "Teachers deserve more credit than they get." Boyer said that while on a visit to BYU's lower campus in early October, he reminisced about time spent studying chemistry in the basement of one of the buildings. He said one of the benefits of the announcement is that it provides an opportunity to reconnect with former colleagues.

35. Special Events & Protocol
Blackmun, Harry A. Associate justice of the Supreme Court. boyer, paul D. Professorof Chemistry and nobel Prize winner. Bradley, Tom, ‘41, Mayor of Los Angeles.
http://www.eventsprotocol.ucla.edu/events/medalalpha.html
The UCLA Medal Recipients
Alphabetical Index
Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem Basketball player Ackerman, William Coit UCLA pioneer, coach Adams, Robert McCormick Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution Ahmanson, Robert Howard Philanthropist Alexander, Jane Actress and chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts Anderson, John E. Donor to UCLA and owner of Topa Equities, Ltd. Annan, Kofi Secretary-General of the United Nations Apple, Michael Professor, University of Wisconsin Madison Arnold, Anna Bing Philanthropist, humanist Atkinson, Byron Harry Administrator Ball, Gordon H. Professor, zoology Bhutto, Benazir Prime minister of Pakistan Billington, James Librarian of congress Blackmun, Harry A. Associate justice of the Supreme Court Boyer, Paul D. Professor of Chemistry and Nobel Prize winner Bradley, Tom Mayor of Los Angeles Brown, Jr., George E., B.A. Congressman Burnett, Carol Actress Canaday, John E. Past president, UCLA Alumni Association, regent Carter, Edward William Regent, philanthropist Carter, Jimmy Former president of the United States of America Cavazos, Lauro F.

36. 31 Janvier 2003 - Irak 41 Prix Nobel Américains S'opposent à La Guerre
Translate this page espère que la majorité des quelque cent vingt prix nobel américains de Hans A.Bethe (Ph) 1, (*) Nicolaas Bloembergen (Ph), paul D. boyer (Ch), Leon N
http://www.humanite.presse.fr/journal/2003/2003-01/2003-01-31/2003-01-31-013.htm
31 Janvier 2003 - INTERNATIONAL
Irak
ACCUEIL DERNIER NUMERO ARCHIVES RECHERCHE ... Intern@tif - Vendredi 31 Janvier 2003

37. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
A listing of nobel Prize winners in chemistry from 1901 to 1999.Category Science Chemistry History......Deutsche Version; nobel Prize for Chemistry (with pictures). Richard E. Smalley (USA,*1943) for their discovery of fullerenes 1997 paul D. boyer (USA, *1918
http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_chemie_e.html
Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (Netherlands, 1852-08-30 - 1911-03-01)
Discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and of the osmotic pressure in solutions
Emil H. Fischer (Germany, 1852-10-09 - 1919-07-15)
Synthetic studies in the area of sugar and purine groups
Svante A. Arrhenius (Sweden, 1859-02-19 - 1927-10-02)
Theory of electrolytic dissociation
Sir William Ramsay (United Kingdom, 1852-10-02 - 1916-07-23)
Discovery of the indifferent gaseous elements in air (noble gases)
Adolf von Baeyer (Germany, 1835-10-31 - 1917-08-20)
Organic dyes and hydroaromatic compounds
Henri Moissan (France, 1852-09-28 - 1907-02-20)
Investigation and isolation of the element fluorine
Eduard Buchner (Germany, 1860-05-20 - 1917-08-13)
Biochemical studies, discovery of fermentation without cells
Sir Ernest Rutherford (United Kingdom, 1871-08-30 - 1937-10-19)
Decay of the elements, chemistry of radioactive substances
Wilhelm Ostwald (Germany, 1853-09-02 - 1932-04-04)
Catalysis, chemical equilibria and reaction rates

38. Nobel Prize In Chemistry Since 1901
Mario; Rowland, F. Sherwood. 1997, boyer, paul D. Walker, John E.
http://www.planet101.com/nobel_chemistry_hist.htm
Nobel Prize in Chemistry since 1901 Year Winners Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't Fischer, Hermann Emil Arrhenius, Svante August Ramsay, Sir William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Von Moissan, Henri Buchner, Eduard Rutherford, Lord Ernest Ostwald, Wilhelm Wallach, Otto Curie, Marie Grignard, Victor; Sabatier, Paul Werner, Alfred Richards, Theodore William Willstatter, Richard Martin Haber, Fritz Nernst, Walther Hermann Soddy, Frederick Aston, Francis William Pregl, Fritz Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf Svedberg, The Wieland, Heinrich Otto Windaus, Adolf Otto Reinhold Euler-chelpin, Hans Karl August Von; Harden, Sir Arthur Fischer, Hans Bergius, Friedrich; Bosch, Carl Langmuir, Irving Urey, Harold Clayton Joliot, Frederic; Joliot-Curie, Irene Debye, Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus Haworth, Sir Walter Norman; Karrer, Paul Kuhn, Richard Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann; Ruzicka, Leopold De Hevesy, George Hahn, Otto Virtanen, Artturi Ilmari Northrop, John Howard; Stanley, Wendell Meredith; Sumner, James Batcheller Robinson, Sir Robert Tiselius, Arne Wilhelm Kaurin Giauque, William Francis

39. Nobel Prize For Chemistry
nobel Prize for Chemistry boyer, paul D., USA WALKER, JOHN E., Great Britain, 1997, for their elucidation of the enzymatic mechanism underlying the synthesis of
http://www.planet101.com/nobel_chemistry.htm
Nobel Prize for Chemistry Name Year The Work William S. Knowles , USA
Ryoji Noyori,
Japan
K. Barry Sharpless
, USA for their work on chirally catalysed hydrogenation reactions" Alan J. Heeger, Alan G. MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa for the discovery and development of conductive polymers Ahmed H. Zewail For his studies of the transition states of chemical reactions using femtosecond spectroscop Walter Kohn, U.S.A
John A. Pople, Great Britain "to Walter Kohn for his development of the density-functional theory and to John Pople for his development of computational methods in quantum chemistry." BOYER, PAUL D., U.S.A
WALKER, JOHN E., Great Britain "for their elucidation of the enzymatic mechanism underlying the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP)" SKOU, JENS C., Denmark "for the first discovery of an ion-transporting enzyme, Na+, K+-ATPase" CURL, ROBERT F. JR., U.S.A
KROTO, Sir HAROLD W, Great Britain
SMALLEY, RICHARD E., U.S.A "for their discovery of fullerenes"

40. John Polanyi Official Website Nobel Statement, Signatories, Statement By Nobel L
on the occasion of the onehundredth anniversary of the nobel Prize. Bloembergen (Physics,1981); Norman E. Borlaug (Peace, 1970); paul D. boyer (Chemistry, 1997
http://www.utoronto.ca/jpolanyi/nobelstatement/signatures.html
Signatores, Statement by Nobel Laureates
on the occasion of the one-hundredth anniversary of the Nobel Prize
  • Zhores I. Alferov (Physics, 2000) Sidney Altman (Chemistry, 1989) Philip W. Anderson (Physics, 1977) Oscar Arias Sanchez (Peace, 1987) J. Georg Bednorz (Physics, 1987) Bishop Carlos F. X. Belo (Peace, 1996) Baruj Benacerraf (Physiology/Medicine, 1980) Hans A. Bethe (Physics, 1967) Gerd K. Binnig (Physics, 1986) James W. Black (Physiology/Medicine, 1988) Guenter Blobel (Physiology/Medicine, 1999) Nicolaas Bloembergen (Physics, 1981) Norman E. Borlaug (Peace, 1970) Paul D. Boyer (Chemistry, 1997) Bertram N. Brockhouse (Physics, 1994) Herbert C. Brown (Chemistry, 1979) Georges Charpak (Physics, 1992) Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (Physics, 1997) John W. Cornforth (Chemistry, 1975) Francis H.C. Crick (Physiology/ Medicine, 1962) James W. Cronin (Physics, 1980) Paul J. Crutzen (Chemistry, 1995) Robert F. Curl (Chemistry, 1996) His Holiness The Dalai Lama (Peace, 1989) Johann Deisenhofer (Chemistry, 1988) Peter C. Doherty (Physiology/Medicine, 1996) Manfred Eigen (Chemistry, 1967)
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