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         Gajdusek D Carleton:     more books (97)
  1. Kuru Epidemiological Patrol from the New Guinea Highlands to Papua. August 21, 1957 to November 10, 1957. by D Carleton. Gajdusek, 1974-01-01
  2. Solomon Islands, New Britain, and East New Guinea Journal. January 7, 1960 to May 6, 1960. by D Carleton. Gajdusek, 1970-01-01
  3. New Guinea journal: October 2, 1961 to August 4, 1962 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1979
  4. Journal of a trip to the Shepherd, Banks, and Torres Islands and to Espiritu Santo and Efate in the New Hebrides, November 15, 1963, to December 25, 1963 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1973-01-01
  5. South Pacific expedition to the New Hebrides and to the Fore, Kukukuku, and Genatei peoples of New Guinea, January 26, 1967 to May 12, 1967 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1982
  6. Bibliography of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (muroid virus nephropathy) by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1982
  7. Melanesian and Micronesian journal: Return expeditions to the New Hebrides, Caroline Islands, and New Guinea : July 29, 1965 to December 20, 1965 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1993
  8. Journal of an Expedition in the Libyan Sahara to Kufra. October 9 to November 14, 1960. by D Carleton. Gajdusek, 1971
  9. Journal Of An Expedition To The Western Caroline Islands 1961 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1976-01-01
  10. Bibliography of Kuru by D. Carleton and Michael P. Alpers Gajdusek, 1970
  11. Journal of Expeditions by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1971-01-01
  12. A year in the Middle East: Expeditions in Iran and Afghanistan with travels in Europe and North Africa, February 4 1954 to December 22, 1954 (Bahman 25, 1332 to Dey 1, 1333) by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1991
  13. Colombian expeditions to the Noanama Indians of the Rio Siguirisua,: And to the Cofan and Ingano Indians of the Putumayo, August 22, 1970 to September 14, 1970 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1972
  14. Journal of a year of travels and medical investigations in the United States, India, Australia, Japan, Papua New Guinea, West New Guinea, France, Columbia ... Moros : January 1, 1982 to December 31, 1982 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1996

1. D. Carleton Gajdusek Winner Of The 1976 Nobel Prize In Medicine
D. carleton gajdusek, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology and Medicine,at the nobel Prize Internet Archive. D. carleton gajdusek.
http://almaz.com/nobel/medicine/1976b.html
D C ARLETON G AJDUSEK
1976 Nobel Laureate in Medicine
    for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases.
Background
    Born: 1923
    Residence: U.S.A.
    Affiliation: National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
Featured Internet Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

2. Index Of Nobel Laureates In Medicine
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE. Name,Year Awarded. Furchgott, Robert F. 1998. gajdusek, D. carleton, 1976.
http://almaz.com/nobel/medicine/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

3. D. Carleton Gajdusek - Autobiography
D. carleton gajdusek – Autobiography. My father, Karl gajdusek, was a Slovakfarm boy from a small village near Senica, who had left home as an
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1976/gajdusek-autobio.html
My scientific interests started before my school years, when as a boy of five years I wandered through gardens, fields and woods with my mother's entomologist-sister, Tante Irene, as we overturned rocks and sought to find how many different plant and animal species of previously hidden life lay before us. We cut open galls to find the insects responsible for the tumors, and collected strange hardening gummy masses on twigs which hatched indoors to fill the curtains with tiny praying mantises, and discovered wasps with long ovipositors laying their eggs into the larvae of wood-boring beetles. In petri dishes we watched some leaf-eating insects succumb to insecticide poison while others survived, and on exciting excursions visited the laboratories and experimental greenhouses of the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research in my hometown of Yonkers, New York, where my aunt, Irene Dobroscky, worked, studying in the 1920's virus inclusions in the cells of leaf-hoppers.
In my first years at school I had problems with my teachers for carrying to school insect-killing jars, correctly labeled "Poison: potassium cyanide". As a grade schoolboy, I met at the Boyce Thompson Institute laboratories the quiet, amused, watchful and guiding eyes of the mathematician and physical chemist, Dr. William J. Youden, who enjoyed letting me play with his hand cranked desk calculator, with his circular or cylindrical slide rules, and with models of crystal lattice structure, and on his laboratory bench where he taught me to prepare colloidal gold solution time color reactions and to manufacture mercuric thiocyanate snake-generating tablets. Before I was ten years old I knew that I wanted to be a scientist like my aunt and my quiet mathematician tutor. I rejected completely, as did my younger brother, Robert, who is now a poet and critic, the interests of our father and maternal grandfather in business, which had made our life style possible.

4. Medicine 1976
The nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1976. Baruch S. Blumberg, D.carleton gajdusek. 1/2 of the prize, 1/2 of the prize. USA, USA.
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1976/
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1976
"for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases" Baruch S. Blumberg D. Carleton Gajdusek 1/2 of the prize 1/2 of the prize USA USA The Institute for Cancer Research
Philadelphia, PA, USA National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, MD, USA b. 1925 b. 1923 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1976
Press Release

Presentation Speech
Baruch S. Blumberg ...
Banquet Speech
The 1976 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry

Physiology or Medicine

Literature
...
Economic Sciences
Find a Laureate: Last modified June 16, 2000 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

5. Gajdusek, D. Carleton
gajdusek, D. carleton,. in full DANIEL carleton gajdusek (b. Sept. and medical researcher,corecipient (with Baruch S. Blumberg) of the 1976 nobel Prize for
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/224_63.html
Gajdusek, D. Carleton,
in full DANIEL CARLETON GAJDUSEK (b. Sept. 9, 1923, Yonkers, N.Y., U.S.), American physician and medical researcher, corecipient (with Baruch S. Blumberg ) of the 1976 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his research on the causal agents of various degenerative neurological disorders. Gajdusek graduated from the University of Rochester (N.Y.) in 1943. He received his M.D. from Harvard University in 1946 and was a fellow in pediatrics and infectious diseases at Harvard from 1949 to 1952. In the next three years he held positions at the Institute of Research of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., and the Institut Pasteur, Tehr a n. It was in 1955, while he was a visiting investigator at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research in Melbourne, Australia, that Gajdusek began the work which culminated in the Nobel Prize. Gajdusek codiscovered and provided the first medical description of a unique central nervous system disorder occurring only among the Fore people of New Guinea and known by them as kuru ("trembling"). Living among the Fore, studying their language and culture, and performing autopsies on kuru victims, Gajdusek came to the conclusion that the disease was transmitted in the ritualistic eating of the brains of the deceased, a Fore funeral custom. Gajdusek became the head of laboratories for virological and neurological research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in 1958. After years of further research, much of it conducted with his NIH colleague Clarence Gibbs, Jr., he postulated that the delayed onset of the disease could be attributed to a virus capable of extremely slow action or, perhaps, having the ability to remain dormant for years.

6. Nobel Prize Winners GI
Gabor, Dennis, 1971, physics, UK, invention of holography, gajdusek, D. carleton,1976, physiology/medicine, US, studies of origin and spread of infectious diseases,
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/win_g-i.html

7. China Invites Nobel Laureate To Help Combat Mad Cow Disease
PDO D. carleton gajdusek, winner of the 1976 nobel Prize in medicine, was invitedby the Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant for
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200210/19/eng20021019_105343.shtml
About Us Help Sitemap Archive ... China Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Saturday, October 19, 2002
China Invites Nobel Laureate to Help Combat Mad Cow Disease
D. Carleton Gajdusek, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in medicine, was invited by the Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant for the bureau's mad cow disease lab.
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D. Carleton Gajdusek, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in medicine, was invited by the Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant for the bureau's mad cow disease lab.
Gajdusek, awarded the Nobel Prize for his discoveries concerning "new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious disease," said he would help China improve its researchand prevention of mad cow disease.
Wei Chuanzhong, director of the bureau, said the issue of food safety has increasingly become a concern for all governments and the spread of mad cow disease poses a threat to mankind.
He said he believes that with the American laureate's expertise,the lab will advance in terms of testing methods for the disease.
The bureau's mad cow disease lab is China's first and has mastered a number of ways to test for the disease. A research center is in the planning to further the country's fight against the deadly disease.

8. China Invites Nobel Laureate To Help Combat Mad Cow Disease
D. carleton gajdusek, winner of the 1976 nobel Prize in medicine, was invited bythe Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant for the
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200210/19/print20021019_105343.html
China Invites Nobel Laureate to Help Combat Mad Cow Disease
D. Carleton Gajdusek, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in medicine, was invited by the Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant for the bureau's mad cow disease lab.
Gajdusek, awarded the Nobel Prize for his discoveries concerning "new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious disease," said he would help China improve its researchand prevention of mad cow disease.
Wei Chuanzhong, director of the bureau, said the issue of food safety has increasingly become a concern for all governments and the spread of mad cow disease poses a threat to mankind.
He said he believes that with the American laureate's expertise,the lab will advance in terms of testing methods for the disease.
The bureau's mad cow disease lab is China's first and has mastered a number of ways to test for the disease. A research center is in the planning to further the country's fight against the deadly disease.
People's Daily Online - http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/

9. Premios Nobel De Medicina
Premios nobel de Medicina. Año, Tema, Ganador. 1976, Blumberg, Baruch S.; gajdusek,D. carleton. 1977, Guillemin, Roger; Schally, Andrew V.; Yalow, Rosalyn.
http://fai.unne.edu.ar/biologia/nobeles/nobelmed.htm
Premios Nobel de Medicina
Tema Ganador Behring, Emil Adolf Von Ross, Sir Ronald Finsen, Niels Ryberg Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich Koch, Robert Cajal, Santiago Ramon Y.; Golgi, Camillo Laveran, Charles Louis Alphonse Ehrlich, Paul; Metchnikoff, Ilya Ilyich Kocher, Emil Theodor Kossel, Albrecht Gullstrand, Allvar Carrel, Alexis Richet, Charles Robert Barany, Robert Bordet, Jules Krogh, Schack August Steenberger Hill, Sir Archibald Vivian; Meyerhof, Otto Fritz; Banting, Sir Frederick Grant; Macleod, John James Richard; Einthoven, Willem; Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib Wagner-Jauregg, Julius Nicolle, Charles Jules Henri Eijkman, Christiaan; Hopkins, Sir Frederick Gowland Landsteiner, Karl Warburg, Otto Heinrich Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas; Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott Morgan, Thomas Hunt Minot, George Richards; Murphy, William Parry; Whipple, George Hoyt Spemann, Hans Dale, Sir Henry Hallett; Loewi, Otto Nagyrapolt, Albert Szent-Gyorgyi Von Heymans, Corneille Jean Francois Domagk, Gerhard Dam, Henrik Carl Peter; Doisy, Edward Adelbert Erlanger, Joseph; Gasser, Herbert Spencer

10. China Pide A Premio Nobel Ayudar En Combate A Mal De Vaca Loca
Translate this page D. carleton gajdusek, premio nobel de Medicina en 1976, fue invitado por el Buróde Inspección y Cuarentena de Beijing para actuar como consultor del
http://spanish.peopledaily.com.cn/spanish/200210/21/sp20021021_58584.html
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Actualizado a las 10:41(GMT+8), 21/10/2002 China
China pide a premio Nobel ayudar en combate a mal de vaca loca
D. Carleton Gajdusek, premio Nobel de Medicina en 1976, fue invitado por el Buró de Inspección y Cuarentena de Beijing para actuar como consultor del laboratorio de la enfermedad de la vaca loca.
Gajdusek, quien ganó el premio Nobel por sus descubrimientos relacionados con "nuevos mecanismos para el origen y diseminación de enfermedades infecciosas", dijo que ayudará a China a mejorar su investigación y prevención de la enfermedad de la vaca loca.
Wei Chuanzhong, director del Buró, dijo que el asunto de la seguridad alimentaria se ha convertido en una creciente preocupación de todos los gobiernos y la proliferación del mal de la vaca loca y representa una amenza para la humanidad.
Indicó que cree que con la experiencia del estadounidense premiado, el laboratorio avanzará en términos de métodos de análisis de la enfermedad.
El laboratorio de la enfermedad de la vaca loca del Buró es el primero de su tipo en China y domina varias formas de pruebas de la enfermedad. Un centro de investigación está en planes para impulsar el combate del país contra esta mortal enfermedad. (Xinhua)
En esta sección

D. Carleton Gajdusek, premio Nobel de Medicina en 1976, fue invitado por el Buró de Inspección y Cuarentena de Beijing para actuar como consultor del laboratorio de la enfermedad de la vaca loca.

11. [Fredrickson With Nobel Laureates Marshall Nirenberg, Carleton Gajdusek, And Jul
Profiles in Science The Donald Fredrickson Papers. Title Fredrickson withNobel Laureates Marshall Nirenberg, carleton gajdusek, and Julius Axelrod
http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/FF/B/B/D/Z/
The Donald Fredrickson Papers
Title:
[Fredrickson with Nobel Laureates Marshall Nirenberg, Carleton Gajdusek, and Julius Axelrod]
High resolution version (4,481,738 Bytes)
Description:
This photograph was taken after the announcement that Gajdusek had won the Nobel Prize. Gajdusek shared the 1976 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Baruch S. Blumberg "for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases."
Number of Image Pages:
1 (110,568 Bytes)
Date:
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Courtesy of Donald S. Fredrickson.
The National Library of Medicine's Profiles in Science profiles@nlm.nih.gov
Exhibit Category:
NIH Director, 1975-1981: Biomedical Research in a Time of Trial
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The Donald Fredrickson Papers

Profiles in Science

U.S. National Library of Medicine

12. Humanitarian And Political Activism, 1967-1994
Ten years later, in June 1983, Anfinsen, Axelrod, Nirenberg, and 1976 nobel LaureateD. carleton gajdusek publicly criticized the Reagan administration's
http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/KK/Views/Exhibit/narrative/humanitarian.html
The Christian Anfinsen Papers
Humanitarian and Political Activism, 1967-1994
Documents Visuals Exhibit
Biographical Information
...
Interferon and Thermophilic Bacteria, 1973-1995

Humanitarian and Political Activism, 1967-1994
All Visuals
The social climate of the late 1960s and early 1970s encouraged scientists like Anfinsen to lobby for political reform, although he said in 1972 that he did not support "the Berkeley type of violent display." In May 1969, for example, Anfinsen and Marshall Nirenberg, a 1968 Nobel Laureate and NIH colleague, protested the Brazilian government's purging of its renowned scientists Isaias Raw, Alberto Carvalho da Silva, and Helio Lourenco de Oliveira. In January 1973, just a month after he was awarded the Nobel Prize, Anfinsen and other scientistsincluding 1970 Nobel Laureate Julius Axelrod implored Richard Nixon to support greater scientific exchange between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. In June 1973, Anfinsen formed an alliance of NIH scientists, including Axelrod and Nirenberg, who circulated a petition to protest Nixon's Conquest of Cancer Agency. Over 3,000 biomedical scientists who signed the petition felt that the agency funneled money away from basic scientific research projects that, in the long run, actually contributed to cancer research. Ten years later, in June 1983, Anfinsen, Axelrod, Nirenberg, and 1976 Nobel Laureate D. Carleton Gajdusek publicly criticized the Reagan administration's severe budget cuts to biomedical research programs at the NIH. In 1981, Anfinsen became chairperson of the National Academy of Sciences' Committee for Human Rights, a position he held until 1989. Anfinsen's committee work was not merely administrative. Like Julius Axelrod, he spent many hours of his own personal time writing letters to the leaders of Brazil, Mexico, Turkey, and the U.S.S.R., whose governments repressed and, in many cases, imprisoned scientific researchers considered politically or intellectually dangerous. In 1981, Anfinsen and other Committee members traveled to Argentina on a rescue mission to liberate twelve scientists who faced domestic coercion by the country's military government and its controversial president, Jorge Rafael Videla. "At that point in my life I had stopped smoking for ten years," Anfinsen wrote of the rescue mission a few years later. "[B]ut two weeks in Buenos Aires got me back on the weed as an antidote to nervewracking interviews with relatives and State officials at all hours of the day and night."

13. NIH: About: NIH Almanac: Nobel Laureates
1976 – Dr. D. carleton gajdusek, National Institute of Neurological Disordersand Stroke, shared the nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Dr. Baruch S
http://www.nih.gov/about/almanac/nobel/

Home
About NIH NIH Almanac
About the Almanac
... Past Issues Nobel Laureates Read about the NIH Scientists who have won Nobel prizes. Laureate Field Year Supporting NIH Institute(s) Leland H. Hartwell, U.S.A. (shared with P.M. Nurse and R.T. Hunt, U.K.) Physiology or medicine NIGMS, NCI, NCRR K. Barry Sharpless, U.S.A. (shared with W.S. Knowles, U.S.A. and R. Noyori, Japan) Chemistry NIGMS, NHLBI Paul Greengard, U.S.A. (shared with E. Kandel, U.S.A. and A. Carlsson, Sweden) Physiology or medicine NIMH, NIA, NIDA, NINDS, NIAAA, NHLBI, NIAMS Erik R. Kandel, U.S.A. (shared with P. Greengard, U.S.A. and A. Carlsson, Sweden) " NIMH, NIGMS, NINDS, NCRR James J. Heckman, U.S.A. (shared with D. McFadden, U.S.A.) Economic sciences NICHD, NIMH Daniel L. McFadden, U.S.A. (shared with J. Heckman, U.S.A.) " NIA Günter Blobel, U.S.A. Physiology or medicine NIGMS, NCI Robert Furchgott, U.S.A. (shared with L. Ignarro and F. Murad, U.S.A.) Physiology or medicine NIGMS, NHLBI, NINDS

14. NIH Almanac (1997)
1976Dr. D. carleton gajdusek, National Institute of Neurological Disorders andStroke, shared the nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Dr. Baruch S
http://www.nih.gov/about/almanac97/chapt7/nobel.htm
NIH Nobel Prize Winners
1968Dr. Marshall W. Nirenberg, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering the key to deciphering the genetic code. Dr. Nirenberg and two other researchers, working independently, with whom he shared the prize, made major advances in understanding the chemical mechanisms by which genetic language or information is translated into various proteins that determine the nature and characteristics of all living things. Dr. Nirenberg was the first NIH Nobelist and also the first Federal employee to receive a Nobel Prize. 1970Dr. Julius Axelrod, National Institute of Mental Healthshared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with two scientists from England and Swedenfor independent research into the chemistry of nerve transmission. The three were cited for their “discoveries concerning the humoral transmitters in the nerve terminals and the mechanisms for their storage, release and inactivation.” Specifically, Dr. Axelrod found an enzyme that terminates the action of the nerve transmitter, noradrenaline. He also demonstrated that some antidepressant drugs act by preventing the reuptake of noradrenaline and thus prolong its action in the brain. 1972Dr. Christian B. Anfinsen

15. ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE; ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGYAND MEDICINE, Name, Year Awarded. gajdusek, D. carleton, 1976.
http://www.bioscience.org/urllists/nobelm.htm
FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE;
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Zinkernagel, Rolf M.

16. ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY
Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf, 1925. ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES INPHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE. Name, Year Awarded. gajdusek, D. carleton, 1976.
http://www.bioscience.org/urllists/nobelc.htm
FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE;
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN
CHEMISTRY, PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE

ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August ... Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Zinkernagel, Rolf M. Source: The Nobel Prize Internet Archive

17. Nobel Prizes
HyperCounter. nobel prizes – Microbiologi, Virologi, Genetisti, Immunologi. Temin.1976 Baruch S. Blumberg, D. carleton gajdusek. 1977
http://150.217.100.14/didonline/anno-ii/microbiologia/2001-2002/Lezioni/nobel_pr
UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI FIRENZE DIPARTIMENTO DI SANITÀ PUBBLICA (Direttore: Prof. Nicola Comodo) Sezione di Microbiologia "Renzo Davoli" Accesso n°
Nobel prizes – Microbiologi, Virologi, Genetisti, Immunologi
Cliccando sull’anno o sul nome si va al sito ufficiale, dove si trovano le foto, le biografie, le motivazioni, e altro. Emil Adolf von Behring Ronald Ross Robert Koch Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran ... Stanley B. Prusiner

18. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Nobel Laureates
About Sigma Xi » Overview » nobel Laureates de Duve 1974 George Emil Palade 1975David Baltimore 1975 Howard M. Temin 1976 D. carleton gajdusek 1977 Andrew
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

19. Nobel Laureate Revisiting Lectures
Laureate 1975 May 1984 Host E. Norrby 1985 Christian de Duve, nobel Laureate 1974May 1985 Host N. Ringertz 1986 D. carleton gajdusek, nobel Laureate 1976
http://www.mednobel.ki.se/mednobel/revisiting-lectures.html
Nobel Laureate Revisiting Lectures
Since 1980 previous Nobel Laureates in Physiology or Medicine are invited to give a Nobel Laureate Revisiting Lecture at Karolinska Institutet. The Laureates also meet with the Nobel Committee for informal discussions of recent developments within the scientific area defined by the prize.
May 1980
Host: N. Ringertz
Arthur Kornberg, Nobel Laureate1959
June 1980
Host: P. Reichard
Sir Bernard Katz, Nobel Laureate 1970
September 1980
Host: D. Ottoson
George E. Palade, Nobel Laureate 1974
May 1981 David Baltimore, Nobel Laureate 1975 December 1982 Host: E. Norrby Gerald M. Edelman, Nobel Laureate 1972 April 1983 Host: D. Ottoson Renato Dulbecco, Nobel Laureate 1975 May 1984 Host: E. Norrby Christian de Duve, Nobel Laureate 1974 May 1985 Host: N. Ringertz D. Carleton Gajdusek, Nobel Laureate 1976 May 1986 Host: H. Wigzell Julius Axelrod, Nobel Laureate 1970 October 1987 Howard M. Temin, Nobel Laureate 1975 May 1989 Host: E. Norrby

20. Nobel Laureates At Penn
with D. carleton gajdusek; Awarded for their discoveries concerning new of Medicine,1964 ; Honorary Degree Sc.D. 1990; nobel Foundation information on
http://www.archives.upenn.edu/histy/notables/awards/nobel.html
University Archives and Records Center
University of Pennsylvania Nobel Laureates
at the University of Pennsylvania
Awarded annually since 1901 by the Nobel Foundation , Stockholm.
Raymond Davis, Jr.
Physics, 2002
  • With Masatoshi Koshiba (University of Tokyo, Japan) and Riccardo Giannoni (Associated Universities Inc). Awarded in recognition of their groundbreaking research into the emission of neutrinos produced by nuclear fusion reactions in the center of the sun. The observation of these neutrinos demonstrated conclusively that the sun is powered by the fusion of hydrogen nuclei into helium nuclei. Davis joined Penn's faculty in 1985 after 37 years at Brookhaven Lab. Earlier this year, Davis received the 2001 National Medal of Science from President George W. Bush. Nobel Foundation information on this award.
Alan G. MacDiarmid

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