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         Fitch Val L:     more detail
  1. Critical Problems in Physics

21. 32 Nobel Laureates In Physics Back Atomic Test Ban
the grave that of Henry W. Kendall, a nobel laureate at Cooper, Brown University;Hans Dehmelt, University of Washington; val L. fitch, Princeton University
http://tms.physics.lsa.umich.edu/214/other/news/100699nobels-test-ban.html
October 6, 1999
32 Nobel Laureates in Physics Back Atomic Test Ban
Related Article
  • Both Parties Seek Graceful Way to Put Off Nuclear Treaty Vote By WILLIAM J. BROAD group of 32 Nobel laureates in physics on Tuesday urged the Senate to approve the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, calling it "central to future efforts to halt the spread of nuclear weapons." U.S. approval is imperative, the scientists said, and would mark "an important advance in uniting the world in an effort to contain and reduce the dangers of nuclear arms." The plea was conveyed by the American Physical Society, the world's leading group of physicists, which sent letters Tuesday to every senator. Representatives of the group said they knew of no instance in which so many prominent American physicists had shown such unity. "To line up this many physics Nobel laureates is unprecedented," said Dr. Robert L. Park, a physicist at the University of Maryland who directs the group's Washington office. The 32 signers range from hawks to doves, Park pointed out, making the appeal wide and deep. A few are former designers of nuclear arms, a field dominated by physicists. Jerome I. Friedman, the president of the physics group, a Nobel laureate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an organizer of the letter, said the test ban "is important for the future of humankind, and therefore has to be taken extremely seriously."
  • 22. The Hindu : Nobel Laureates In Physics: Down Memory Lane
    Science Tech Previous Next nobel Laureates in physics Down memory lane. 1980JAMES W. CRONIN and val L. fitch for the discovery of violations of
    http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2001/10/11/stories/08110005.htm
    Online edition of India's National Newspaper
    Thursday, October 11, 2001
    Front Page
    National Southern States Other States ... Next
    Nobel Laureates in physics: Down memory lane
    2001 WOLFGANG KETTERLE, ERIC CORNELL AND CARL WEIMANN for their achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates. 2000-1991 2000 ZHORES I. ALFEROV, and HERBERT KROEMER for developing semiconductor heterostructures used in high-speed- and opto- electronics and JACK ST. CLAIR KILBY for his part in invention of the integrated circuit. 1999 GERARDUS 'T HOOFT, and MARTINUS J.G. VELTMAN for elucidating the quantum structure of electroweak interactions in physics. 1998 ROBERT B. LAUGHLIN, HORST L. STORMER and DANIEL C. TSUI for their discovery of a new form of quantum fluid with fractionally charged excitations. 1997 STEVEN CHU, CLAUDE COHEN-TANNOUDJI and WILLIAM D. PHILLIPS for development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light. 1996 DAVID M. LEE, DOUGLAS D. OSHEROFF and ROBERT C. RICHARDSON for their discovery of superfluidity in helium-3.

    23. Palestine Chronicle - American Nobel Laureates Make A Stand For Peace
    In addition to winning nobel prizes, 18 of the signers have received the NationalMedal of Science, the nation's highest science honor C val L. fitch P Robert
    http://www.palestinechronicle.com/article.php?story=20030308094712824

    24. UU World Mar/Apr 2002: The Dispossessed, By 100 Nobel Laureates
    the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the first nobel prizes Esaki Physics,1973 Edmond H. Fischer Physiology/Medicine, 1992 val L. fitch Physics, 1980
    http://www.uua.org/world/2002/02/prophecy.html
    reflections
    See also commentary meditation
    Contents: March/April 2002
    p r o p h e c y
    The Dispossessed
    by 100 Nobel Laureates
    The following statement was released on December 7, 2001, by 100 Nobel Prize winners to coincide with the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the first Nobel prizes. Although the statement began circulating among the laureates last summer, most of them signed it after September 11. The most profound danger to world Peace in the coming years will stem not from the irrational acts of states or individuals but from the legitimate demands of the world's dispossessed. Of these poor and disenfranchised, the majority live a marginal existence in equatorial climates. Global warming, not of their making but originating with the wealthy few, will affect their fragile ecologies most. Their situation will be desperate and manifestly unjust. It cannot be expected, therefore, that in all cases they will be content to await the beneficence of the rich. If then we permit the devastating power of modern weaponry to spread through this combustible human landscape, we invite a conflagration that can engulf both rich and poor. The only hope for the future lies in cooperative international action, legitimized by democracy. It is time to turn our backs on the unilateral search for security, in which we seek to shelter behind walls. Instead, we must persist in the quest for united action to counter both global warming and a weaponized world.

    25. Appello Dei 110 Premi Nobel
    val L. fitch (Physics, 1980
    http://www.iac.rm.cnr.it/~spweb/documenti/appello_premiNOBEL.html
    L'appello di 110 premi Nobel
    La minaccia maggiore per la pace mondiale verrà negli anni a venire non dai comportamenti irrazionali di stati o individui, ma dalle legittime richieste dei diseredati del mondo. La maggioranza di queste persone povere e senza diritti vive un'esistenza marginale nei climi equatoriali. Il surriscaldamento del pianeta - originato non da loro, bensì da pochi ricchi - colpirà soprattutto le loro fragili ecologie. La loro situazione sarà disperata e manifestamente ingiusta. Perciò non ci si può attendere che essi si accontentino sempre e comunque di aspettare la beneficenza dei ricchi. Se permetteremo dunque alla potenza devastante delle armi moderne di diffondersi in questo esplosivo paesaggio umano, innescheremo una conflagrazione in grado di travolgere tanto i ricchi quanto i poveri. La sola speranza per il futuro riposa nella collaborazione internazionale, legittimata dalla democrazia. È tempo di voltare le spalle alla ricerca unilaterale di sicurezza, in cui noi cerchiamo di rifugiarci dietro ai muri. Dobbiamo invece insistere nella ricerca dell'unità d'azione per contrastare sia il surriscaldamento del pianeta che un mondo armato. Questi obiettivi gemelli costituiranno due condizioni fondamentali per la stabilità, mentre ci muoveremo verso il più ampio grado di giustizia sociale che, esso solo, può dare una speranza di pace. Alcuni degli strumenti legali necessari sono già a portata di mano, come il trattato sui missili anti-balistici (Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty), la convenzione sui cambiamenti climatici (Convention on Climate Change), i trattatti strategici sulla riduzione di armi (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties) e il Trattato sul bando dei test nucleari (Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty). In quanto cittadini preoccupati, chiediamo a tutti i governi di impegnarsi per questi obiettivi, che costituiscono dei passi in avanti affinché il diritto prenda il posto della guerra.

    26. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
    including a Harvard professor, and one Briton won the 1980 nobel prizes in physics JamesW. Cronin of the University of Chicago and val L. fitch of Princeton
    http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1980/1980l.html

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    HARVARD PROFESSOR GETS NOBEL
    WALTER GILBERT WORKED IN DNA
    Author: By Dick Soderlund Associated Press Date: Tuesday, October 14, 1980
    Page: Section: RUN OF PAPER Four Americans, including a Harvard professor, and one Briton won the 1980 Nobel prizes in physics and chemistry today for their work on the origins of the universe and of life. The physics award was given for nuclear research that contributed to the big-bang theory of the creation of the universe. The chemistry prize went for biochemical studies of nucleic acids, the master blueprints of life. James W. Cronin of the University of Chicago and Val L. Fitch of Princeton University won the physics prize. Professor Paul Berg of Stanford University in California received one half of the $212,000 prize in chemistry. The other half went jointly to Professor Walter Gilbert of Harvard and Professor Frederick Sanger of Cambridge University. Gilbert and Sanger were cited by the awarding body "for their contributions concerning the determination of base sequences in nucleic acids." Gilbert, 48, told a reporter he was "delighted, pleased and honored" to receive the chemistry prize.

    27. Letter From Nobel Laureates To Congress Supporting CTBT
    val L. fitch PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 1980 nobel Prize, William Phillips GAITHERSBURG1997 nobel Prize, Steven Weinberg UNIV. OF TEXAS, AUSTIN 1979 nobel Prize.
    http://www.ceip.org/files/projects/npp/resources/ctbtnobel.htm
    Letter from Nobel Laureates to Congress Supporting CTBT
    To Senators of the 106th Congress: We urge you to ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty is central to future efforts to halt the spread of nuclear weapons. Ratification of the Treaty will mark an important advance in uniting the world in an effort to contain and reduce the dangers of nuclear arms. It is imperative that the CTBT be ratified. Philip W. Anderson
    PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
    1977 Nobel Prize Henry W. Kendall
    MIT
    1990 Nobel Prize Arthur L. Schawlow
    STANFORD UNIVERSITY
    1981 Nobel Prize Hans A. Bethe
    CORNELL UNIVERSITY
    1967 Nobel Prize Leon M. Lederman
    ILLINOIS INSITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 1988 Nobel Prize J. Robert Schrieffer FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY 1972 Nobel Prize Nicolaas Bloembergen HARVARD UNIVERSITY 1981 Nobel Prize David M. Lee CORNELL UNIVERSITY 1996 Nobel Prize Mel Schwartz COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 1988 Nobel Prize Owen Chamberlain UC, BERKELEY

    28. FOR- News And Current Events
    the 100th anniversary of the nobel prize, 100 nobel laureates have Esaki Physics,1973 Edmond H. Fischer Physiology/Medicine, 1992 val L. fitch Physics, 1980
    http://www.forusa.org/News/NobelStatement1201.html
    Veterans Call to Conscience Phil Berrigan, 12/6/02 No War With Iraq! Israel/Palestine: STOP THE VIOLENCE! ... Nobel Laureates Statement ABOUT THE FOR
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    ACTION NEWS EMAIL Subscribe! FELLOWSHIP MAGAZINE Fellowship Home Page Subscribe Interfaith Peace Quotes ... Writings on Peace LINKS Links to other web sites ONLINE STORE Books Bumper Stickers Calendars Gifts ... Videos Statement of 100 Nobel Laureates OSLO, Norway-December 7, 2001 (OTVNewswire) At the Nobel Peace Prize Centennial Symposium here yesterday celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Nobel prize, 100 Nobel laureates have issued a brief but dire warning of the "profound dangers" facing the world. Their statement predicts that our security depends on immediate environmental and social reform. The following is the text of their statement: THE STATEMENT: The most profound danger to world peace in the coming years will stem not from the irrational acts of states or individuals but from the legitimate demands of the world's dispossessed. Of these poor and disenfranchised, the majority live a marginal existence in equatorial climates. Global warming, not of their making but originating with the wealthy few, will affect their fragile ecologies most. Their situation will be desperate and manifestly unjust.

    29. 100 Nobel Laureates Call For Environmental And Social Reforms
    The nobel PrizeWinning Signatories Zhores I. Alferov Physics, 2000 Sidney Altman 1973Edmond H. Fischer Physiology/Medicine, 1992 val L. fitch Physics, 1980
    http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/articles/article341.html
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    100 Nobel laureates call for environmental and social reforms The statement The Nobel Prize-Winning Signatories Zhores I. Alferov Physics, 2000
    Sidney Altman Chemistry, 1989
    Philip W. Anderson Physics, 1977
    Oscar Arias Sanchez Peace, 1987
    J. George Bednorz Physics, 1987
    Bishop Carlos F.X. Belo Peace, 1996
    Baruj Benacerraf Physiology/Medicine, 1980
    Hans A. Bethe Physics, 1967
    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 The Dalai Lama Peace, 1989

    30. James W. Cronin, Cosmic Ray Research, Nobel Laureate
    He won a nobel Prize in 1980. Then he was off to Brookhaven in 1955 as a postdoctoralstudent. It was at Brookhaven that Cronin met val L. fitch.
    http://www.science.utah.edu/cronin.html
    BIOLOGY
    Mario Capecchi

    Phyllis Coley

    James Ehleringer

    James Ehleringer

    CHEMISTRY
    Joel Miller

    Thanh N. Truong

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    MATHEMATICS
    Graeme W. Milton

    Jim Carlson
    PHYSICS James W. Cronin Charles Jui Craig Taylor Valy Vardeny Cosmic Rays Keep Cronin Happy By Paula Huff U. College of Science
    James W. Cronin counts himself one of the luckiest and most content people on earth. He won a Nobel Prize in 1980. He taught physics at Princeton, then moved to the University of Chicago where he is an emeritus professor. Now, from a new position in the University of Utah's Department of Physics, he is leading a worldwide attempt to find the source of cosmic rays. "When I ask myself, 'Who are the happiest people on the planet?' my answer is, 'Those who can't wait to wake up in the morning to get back to what they were doing the day before,' " said Cronin, who accepted a five-year faculty appointment and will teach students at all levels. Cosmic rays equal happiness for Cronin, a world leader in ultrahigh-energy gamma-ray astronomy. These ultrahigh-energy atomic nuclei are the most energetic particles found in the universe. One entering the earth's atmosphere carries the energy of a fast-ball pitch by Ryan Nolan. Little else is known about them. Their source is unexplained; they are simply hurled through space by some powerful force. Unraveling the mysteries of cosmic rays keeps this 66-year-old zooming around the globe convincing 18 nations and a team of 160 scientists to collaborate on $150 million observatories in Argentina and Millard County, Utah. Why Millard County? It has a large, flat unpopulated area, said Cronin. More importantly, it is near the University of Utah, a hot bed for astrophysics.

    31. International Recognition Of Croatia, Nobel Prize
    An Appeal by 104 nobel Laureates. FOR PEACE IN CROATIA. Richard R. Ernst, chemistry,1991; val L. fitch, physics, 1980; William A. Fowler, physics, 1983;
    http://www.hr/darko/etf/nobel.html
    Nobel Prize winners
    against the aggression on Croatia
    Many people throughout the world contributed to the international recognition of Croatia (January 15, 1992). We would like to present a list of 104 Nobel prize winners (in alphabetic order) who signed an appeal to stop the aggression of the Yugoslav Army on Croatia that started in 1991 (The New York Times, January 14th, 1992). We do this we the feeling of deepest gratitude.
    An Appeal by 104 Nobel Laureates
    FOR PEACE IN CROATIA
    During the past several weeks the Yugoslav Army has escalated its war against Croatia. Dozens of villages have been razed. Many historical monuments have been destroyed. Several cities, including Croatia's capital of Zagreb, have been bombed. Over 2,000* people have been killed. The undeclared war has already produced more than 100,000* refugees. The violence and destruction unleashed in Croatia is on a scale unknown in Europe since the Second World War. Innocent civilians are massacred. Hospitals and places of worship are destroyed. Conscience demands that we raise our voices against this senseless war.
    • We appeal to the Western and Eastern governments to stop the Yugoslav Army wanton destruction.

    32. Nobel Laureates: Nuclear Disarmament: Greenpeace USA
    val L. fitch PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 1980 nobel Prize in physics. RobertF. Furchgott SUNY HEALTH SCIENCE CTR. 1998 nobel Prize in medicine.
    http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/nuclear/laureatetext.htm
    letter from nobel laureates July 6, 2000 President William Jefferson Clinton
    The White House
    1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
    Washington, DC 20502 Dear Mr. President: We urge you not to make the decision to deploy an anti-ballistic missile system during the remaining months of your administration. The system would offer little protection and would do grave harm to this nation's core security interests. We and other independent scientists have long argued that anti-ballistic missile systems, particularly those attempting to intercept reentry vehicles in space, will inevitably lose in an arms race of improvements to offensive missiles. North Korea has taken dramatic steps toward reconciliation with South Korea. Other dangerous states will arise. But what would such a state gain by attacking the United States except its own destruction? While the benefits of the proposed anti-ballistic missile system are dubious, the dangers created by a decision to deploy are clear. It would be difficult to persuade Russia or China that the United States is wasting tens of billions of dollars on an ineffective missile system against small states that are unlikely to launch a missile attack on the U.S. The Russians and Chinese must therefore conclude that the presently planned system is a stage in developing a bigger system directed against them. They may respond by restarting an arms race in ballistic missiles and having missiles in a dangerous "launch-on-warning" mode. Even if the next planned test of the proposed anti-ballistic missile system works as planned, any movement toward deployment would be premature, wasteful and dangerous.

    33. 100 Nobel
    val L. fitch Physics,1980;
    http://www.legambiente.com/documenti/2001/1211_100nobel.html
    L'appello di 100 premi Nobel contro le scelte della Casa Bianca
    Raccolti dal canadese John Polany, Nobel per la chimica 1986, cento laureati all'Accademia di Stoccolma (sui 225 viventi) denunciano che "il più profondo pericolo per la pace mondiale viene dalle legittime richieste della maggioranza povera del mondo". Un documento che parla di clima e di trattato anti-missili, di poveri che reclamano e di muri costruiti dai ricchi, ma che finisce per colpire al cuore le scelte del paese più potente del mondo: gli Stati Uniti d'America Per sopravvivere nel mondo che abbiamo trasformato dobbiamo imparare a pensare in modo nuovo. Mai come oggi, il futuro di ciascuno dipende dal contributo di tutti.
    • Zhohres Alferov Physics,2000 Sidney Altman Chemistry,1989 Philip W. Andreson Physics,1977 Oscar Arias Sanchez Peace,1987 J.Georg Bednorz Physics,1987 Bishop Carlos F.X: Belo Peace,1996 Baruj Benacerraf medicine,1980 Hans A. Bethe phYsics,1967 James W. Blach Medicine,1988 Guenter Blobel Medicine,1999

    34. Pictures Gallery Of The Nobel Prize Winners In Physics
    Translate this page 1982. Kenneth G. Wilson 1981. Nicolaas Bloembergen Arthur L. Schawlow KaiM. Siegbahn 1980. James Watson Cronin val Logsdon fitch 1979.
    http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physpicnobel.html

    35. Premi Nobel Fisica
    Translate this page 1981, NICOLAAS BLOEMBERGEN - ARTHUR L. SCHAWLOW - KAI M. SIEGBAHN. 1980, JAMES W.CRONIN - val L. fitch. 1979, SHELDON L. GLASHOW - ABDUS SALAM - STEVEN WEINBERG.
    http://www.econofisica.com/premi nobel fisica.htm
    ANNO PREMIATO ZHORES I. ALFEROV - HERBERT KROEMER
    JACK ST. CLAIR KILBY GERARDUS 'T HOOFT - MARTINUS J.G. VELTMAN ROBERT B. LAUGHLIN - HORST L. STORMER - DANIEL C. TSUI STEVEN CHU - CLAUDE COHEN TANNOUDJI - WILLIAM D. PHILLIPS DAVID M. LEE - DOUGLAS D. OSHEROFF - ROBERT C. RICHARDSON MARTIN L. PERL - FREDERICK REINES BERTRAM N. BROCKHOUSE - CLIFFORD G. SHULL RUSSEL A. HULSE - JOSERPH H. TAYLOR JR GEORGES CHARPAK PIERRE-GILLES DE GENNES JEROME I. FRIEDMAN - HENRY W. KENDALL - RICHARD E. TAYLOR NORMAN F. RAMSEY - HANS G. DEHMELT - WOLFGANG PAUL LEON M. LEDERMAN - MELVIN SCHWARTZ - JACK STEINBERGER J. GEORG BEDNORZ - K. ALEXANDER MULLER ERNST RUSKA - GERD BINNIG - HEINRICH ROHRER KLAUS VON KLITZING CARLO RUBBIA - SIMON VAN DER MEER SUBRAMANYAN CHANDRASEKHAR - WILLIAM A. FOWLER KENNETH G. WILSON NICOLAAS BLOEMBERGEN - ARTHUR L. SCHAWLOW - KAI M. SIEGBAHN JAMES W. CRONIN - VAL L. FITCH SHELDON L. GLASHOW - ABDUS SALAM - STEVEN WEINBERG

    36. American Nobel Laureates Make A Stand For Peace
    In addition to winning nobel prizes, 18 of the signers have received the NationalMedal of Science, the nations highest science honor. C. val L. fitch P.
    http://www.arabia.com/newsfeed/article/english/0,14183,377167,00.html
    Home Mersal instant messenger Wanees ... Printer-friendly format
    American Nobel Laureates Make a Stand for Peace March 08, 2003, 09:56 AM The following is a declaration signed by 41 American Nobel Laureates who are opposed to war with Iraq. In addition to winning Nobel prizes, 18 of the signers have received the National Medal of Science, the nations highest science honor. The Declaration Reads: "The undersigned oppose a preventive war against Iraq without broad international support. Military operations against Iraq may indeed lead to a relatively swift victory in the short term. But war is characterized by surprise, human loss and unintended consequences. Even with a victory, we believe that the medical, economic, environmental, moral, spiritual, political and legal consequences of an American preventive attack on Iraq would undermine, not protect, U.S. security and standing in the world." The signers are these, with E designating economics; P, physics; C, chemistry; and M, medicine or physiology: George A. Akerlof E Philip W. Anderson P

    37. Nobel Prize In Physics Winners 2002
    nobel Prize in Physics Winners 20021901. (also available in alphabetical arrangement),2002 JAMES W. CRONIN and val L. fitch for the discovery of violations
    http://fatihince.tripod.com/nobel.html

    38. Physics Nobel Laureates 1975 - Today
    The first nobel prize in physics was awarded to Wilhelm Röntgen in 1901. Physics1975. fitch, val, L., USA, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, * 1923
    http://www1.physik.tu-muenchen.de/~gammel/matpack/html/Chronics/physics_laureate
    The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
    (Kungl. Vetenskapsakademien)
    Physics 1975
    The prize was awarded jointly to: BOHR, AAGE, Denmark, Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, MOTTELSON, BEN, Denmark, Nordita, Copenhagen, * 1926 (in Chicago, U.S.A.); and RAINWATER, JAMES, U.S.A., Columbia University, New York, NY, "for the discovery of the connection between collective motion and particle motion in atomic nuclei and the development of the theory of the structure of the atomic nucleus based on this connection".
    Physics 1976
    The prize was divided equally between: RICHTER, BURTON, U.S.A., Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, CA, TING, SAMUEL C. C., U.S.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, (European Center for Nuclear Research, Geneva, Switzerland), "for their pioneering work in the discovery of a heavy elementary particle of a new kind".
    Physics 1977
    The prize was divided equally between: ANDERSON, PHILIP W., U.S.A., Bell Laboratories,Murray Hill, NJ, MOTT, Sir NEVILL F., Great Britain, Cambridge University, Cambridge

    39. On The 100th Anniversary Of The Nobel Prize
    On the 100th anniversary of the nobel prize 100 nobel laureates warn that oursecurity hangs on environmental and social val L. fitch Physics, 1980.
    http://www.nativevillage.org/Inspiration-/On_the_100th_anniversary_of_the_.htm
    On the 100th anniversary of the Nobel prize
    100 Nobel laureates warn that our security hangs on environmental and social reform The most profound danger to world peace in the coming years will stem not from the irrational acts of states or individuals but from the legitimate demands of the world's dispossessed. Of these poor and disenfranchised, the majority live a marginal existence in equatorial climates. Global warming, not of their making but originating with the wealthy few, will affect their fragile ecologies most. Their situation will be desperate and manifestly unjust.
    It cannot be expected, therefore, that in all cases they will be content to await the beneficence of the rich. If then we permit the devastating power of modern weaponry to spread through this combustible human landscape, we invite a conflagration that can engulf both rich and poor. The only hope for the future lies in co-operative international action, legitimized by democracy.
    It is time to turn our backs on the unilateral search for security, in which we seek to shelter behind walls. Instead, we must persist in the quest for united action to counter both global warming and a weaponized world.
    These twin goals will constitute vital components of stability as we move toward the wider degree of social justice that alone gives hope of peace.

    40. University Of Chicago News: Nobel Laureates
    The nobel Prize in Physics 1980 with val L. fitch “for the discovery of violationsof fundamental symmetry principles in the decay of neutral Kmesons.”.
    http://www-news.uchicago.edu/resources/nobel/physics.html
    University of Chicago News: Resources
    University of Chicago Physics Nobel Laureates Seventy-four Laureates have been faculty, students or researchers at the University of Chicago. Twenty-five of those Laureates won prizes in Physics.
    Masatoshi Koshiba

    Research Associate in the Enrico Fermi Institute The Nobel Prize in Physics 2002
    with Raymond Davis Jr. and Riccardo Giacconi
    Daniel C. Tsui

    S.M., 1963; Ph.D., 1967. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1998
    Jerome I. Friedman

    A.B., 1950; S.M., 1953; Ph.D., 1956. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1990
    with Henry Kendall and Richard Taylor
    Jack Steinberger
    S.B., 1942; Ph.D., 1949. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1988 with Leon Lederman and Dr. Melvin Schwartz Leon M. Lederman Frank L. Sulzberger Professor in the College The Nobel Prize in Physics 1988 with Dr. Jack Steinberger and Dr. Melvin Schwartz Subramanyan Chandrasekhar Research Associate in the , 1937-1938; Assistant Professor, 1938-1942; Associate Professor, 1942-1943; Professor, 1943-1952; Morton D. Hull Distinguished Service Professor in the Physics , and the Enrico Fermi Institute The Nobel Prize in Physics 1983 with William Fowler James W. Cronin

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