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         Rotblat Joseph:     more books (77)
  1. British Anti-Nuclear Weapons Activists: Bertrand Russell, Freeman Dyson, Harold Pinter, Peter Taaffe, Joseph Rotblat, Walter Wolfgang
  2. How to get rid of nuclear weapons.(The Vancouver Institute: An Experiment in Public Education)(lecture by Dr Joseph Rotblat at the Vancouver Institute, ... Business Administration and Policy Analysis
  3. Ending War: The Force of Reason : Essays in Honour of Joseph Rotblat, Nl, Frs
  4. Atomic energy : a suvey / edited by J. Rotblat by Joseph (1908-2005) Rotblat, 1954-01-01
  5. Pugwash--the first ten years: history of the conferences of science and world affairs / by J. Rotblat by Joseph (1908-2005) Rotblat, 1967-01-01
  6. War No More: Eliminating Conflict in the Nuclear Age by Robert Hinde, Joseph Rotblat, 2003-08-20
  7. Towards a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: Proceedings of the Forty-Fifth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs Hiroshima, Japan 23-29 July, 1995
  8. New Scientist Volume 22 No 394 by Joseph Rotblat, 1964
  9. Science and Nuclear Weapons: Where Do We Go from Here? (The Blackaby Papers) by Joseph Rotblat, 2005-01
  10. Remember Your Humanity: Proceedings of the 47th Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs
  11. Remembering Bernie: Bernard Feld, who witnessed the beginning of the nuclear age, became an ardent, indefatigable champion of peace. (includes related ... from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Albert Wattenberg, Joseph Rotblat, et all 1993-05-01
  12. Science and world affairs: A history of the Pugwash Conferences by Joseph Rotblat, 1962
  13. Strategic Defences and the Future of the Arms Race: A Pugwash Symposium by England) Pugwash Symposium 1985 (London, Joseph Rotblat, et all 1987-09
  14. Nuclear Strategy and World Security. by Joseph & HELLMAN, Sven ed. ROTBLAT, 1985

41. Towards A World Without Wars - Joseph Rotblat
TOWARDS A WORLD WITHOUT WARS. by joseph rotblat. Former President, Pugwash Conferenceon Science and World Affairs, and nobel Peace Prize Laureate, 1995.
http://www.toda.org/publications/peace_policy/p_p_s98/rotblat.html
TOWARDS A WORLD WITHOUT WARS
by Joseph Rotblat Former President, Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs, and
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, 1995 This lecture will be mainly about humankind and science, which is part of humankind. And since I am a scientist, I'll talk a little bit about myself. Humanity, An Endangered Species I am a man of peace. Of course, you would expect this of a person who has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, but that doesn't necessarily follow. I am also a pacifist. I abhor war. I dislike immensely any violence. But I am not an absolute pacifist. I describe myself as something like a realistic pacifist, though that may sound like an oxymoron. I am not an absolute pacifist, because I do not believe in absolutes. Nature is so immensely rich with infinite variety of possibilities that nothing can be excluded. By the same token, nothing should be impossible. Any concept that seems out of this world can be realized if enough faith and effort are put into it. A world without war is such a concept. The theme of my lecture is to indicate to you that this is a necessary condition for the survival of humankind on this planet. You may have different views about the origin of the human species. You may take the view of the Judeo-Christian Bible that it is the deed of God on the sixth day of creation. Or you may take the other extreme, the view of the rationalists who say that human life is the result of an infinite number of seemingly random changes in the molecular structure of some parts of the body. But whatever view you take, I'm sure you will agree that life is our most precious commodity. We cannot imagine that the whole species can come to an end, least of all by the action of man. Yet, the unimaginable has now become possible.

42. Nobel Prize-winner Re-visits Merseyside
Former colleagues and students gave Professor joseph rotblat a warm welcome whenthe nobel Prizewinner for 1995 delivered a lecture entitled 'Science and
http://www.livgrad.co.uk/recorder/Sep97/rec10.html
    Electronic Recorder - September 1997
Nobel Prize-winner re-visits Merseyside
Professor Rotblat (right) with former student Dr David Edwards (left) and former colleague Professor John Holt.
Former colleagues and students gave Professor Joseph Rotblat a warm welcome when the Nobel Prize-winner for 1995 delivered a lecture entitled 'Science and Humanity in the Nuclear Age' as the University's Faculty of Science lecture for 1996-97 on Thursday, 17 April.
Joseph Rotblat came to The University of Liverpool from Poland in 1939 to work as a Research Fellow with Professor (later Sir) James Chadwick. By that time he had envisaged the concept of the atomic bomb, which he worked on with Professor Chadwick, using the cyclotron in the basement of the George Holt Building. Subsequently, in 1943, he went on to Los Alamos to work on the Manhattan Project until the end of 1944.
Throughout the early post-war years, however, he became increasingly preoccupied with the impact of nuclear weaponry on mankind and in 1957, having signed the 1955 Manifesto initiated by Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein, he became deeply involved in the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World affairs which campaigned for the elimination of nuclear arms. He was for seventeen years Secretary General of the Pugwash Conferences and is now President.
The following day Professor Rotblat was the guest speaker at the Convocation Annual Dinner in Staff House. Those attending the Dinner were treated to a highly amusing yet thought-provoking speech by Professor Rotblat, whose deep affection for Liverpool was clearly evident.

43. Rotblat Lecture At The University: Press Release Bradford University
Professor joseph rotblat, nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Emeritus Professorof Physics, recently lectured on 'Preventing Conflict and Promoting Peace
http://www.bradford.ac.uk/admin/pr/pressreleases/2002/manhatten.htm
Press Release
5 June 2002
Professor Joseph Rotblat, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Emeritus Professor of Physics, recently lectured on 'Preventing Conflict and Promoting Peace: scientists and responsibility' at the University of Bradford. The lecture was very successful attracting 200 people from the city, the University of Bradford and involved 30 International Scientists from across the world from Asia, Africa and North America, together with experts from the UK. The lecture examined the emerging challenges of promoting security and peace in the early 21st century following September 11, and in particular examined the dilemmas and responsibilities of scientists. Research Director, Dr Owen Greene, from the University's Department of Peace Studies , said: "Professor Joseph Rotblat gave an excellent lecture and was interviewed by Channel 4 News and the Sunday Times. He focused on dangerous challenges of today including the India and Pakistan dispute over Kashmir and the risk of use of nuclear weapons." Professor Rotblat addressed the complex problems of preventing proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and the relationship between this and efforts to resolve violent transnational and international conflicts. Professor Rotblat was one of the World War II Manhatten project scientists responsible for designing and producing the first atomic bombs. He was the only Manhatten Project scientist who resigned from the project as soon as it became clear that Germany would not be able to produce an atomic bomb and was headed for defeat.

44. Prof Rotblat To Speak At University: Press Release Bradford University
Professor joseph rotblat, nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Emeritus Professor of Physics,will lecture on 'Preventing Conflict and Promoting Peace scientists
http://www.bradford.ac.uk/admin/pr/pressreleases/2002/rotblat.htm
Press Release
24 May 2002
PHOTO-CALL
JOHN STANLEY BELL LECTURE THEATRE, RICHMOND BUILDING, UNIVERSITY OF BRADFORD
FRIDAY, MAY 24, 2002
Professor Joseph Rotblat, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Emeritus Professor of Physics, will lecture on 'Preventing Conflict and Promoting Peace: scientists and responsibility' at the University of Bradford on Friday, May 24, 2002 at 7.30pm. The lecture will examine the emerging challenges of promoting security and peace in the early 21st century following September 11, and in particular will examine the dilemmas and responsibilities of scientists. Professor Rotblat will address the complex problems of preventing proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and the relationship between this and efforts to resolve violent transnational and international conflicts. Professor Rotblat was one of the World War II Manhatten project scientists responsible for designing and producing the first atomic bombs. He was the only Manhatten Project scientist who resigned from the project as soon as it became clear that Germany would not be able to produce an atomic bomb and was headed for defeat.

45. NPQ
1216-02, joseph rotblat NUCLEAR THREAT IS REAL, BUT FROM THE UNITED STATES TREATY;AVOID A WEAPONIZED WORLD BY STICKING TO ABM TREATY nobel LAUREATES ON
http://www.digitalnpq.org/global_services/nobel laureates/
Today's date:
NOBEL LAUREATES
GLOBAL VIEWPOINT

GLOBAL ECONOMIC VIEWPOINT

EUROPEAN VIEWPOINT

NOBEL LAUREATES
BALTIMORE: SCIENTISTS IN THE AGE OF TERROR AND KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMIES
SHIMON PERES: IN DEFENSE OF POLITICS GUNTER GRASS: GEORGE BUSH IS A THREAT TO WORLD PEACE JOSEPH ROTBLAT: NUCLEAR THREAT IS REAL, BUT FROM THE UNITED STATES, NOT IRAQ ... MIKHAIL GORBACHEV AND SHIMON PERES: WATER: THE KEY ISSUE OF THE 21ST CENTURY

46. Pugwash Conferences
The Norwegian nobel Committee has decided to award the nobel Peace Prize for 1995,in two equal parts, to joseph rotblat, President of Pugwash, and to the
http://www.pugwashgroup.ca/conferences/confer.htm

47. Letter From Sir Joseph Rotblat
My name is joseph rotblat. In 1995, I received the nobel Prize for Peace alongwith Pugwash for our efforts to rid the world of nuclear weapons.
http://ucnuclearfree.org/articles/020529rotblatletter.htm
An Open Letter to the University of California Community Dear Students, Faculty and Staff of the UC Community: My name is Joseph Rotblat. I am 93 years old. I worked as a scientist on the Manhattan Project to create the atomic bomb. I resigned from this project in late 1944 when I realized that the Germans would not succeed in creating their own atomic weapons and therefore the Allied powers would not need these weapons to deter the Germans. Since that time I have worked for a world free of nuclear weapons. In 1955, I was one of 11 signatories of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto warning humanity about growing nuclear dangers. In 1957, I was a founder of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs. In 1995, I received the Nobel Prize for Peace along with Pugwash for our efforts to rid the world of nuclear weapons. I am writing to ask you to take a great step forward for humanity by disassociating your great University from the oversight and management of the US nuclear weapons laboratories. For more than 50 years, the UC system has provided respectability to these laboratories that carry out research, develop and test nuclear weapons -weapons that could destroy civilization and probably the human species.

48. Nobel Prizes
Here is nobel Prizes report in alphabetic order; if you click upon a name you willbe connected with relative page of nobel Prizes Archive rotblat, joseph, 1995.
http://web.tiscali.it/no-redirect-tiscali/LG_WebPace/nobel.htm

Nobel Prize Archive
Nobel Prizes on-line Museum
A LFRED N OBEL
founder of the Nobel Prizes. October 21, 1833-December 10, 1896
Place of birth: Stockholm, Sweden The Nobel Prize Internet Archive is fully interactive. If you have an interesting and useful Internet link about a particular Nobel Laureate, you can add your link instantly to that laureate's home page here at the Archive. What Nobel e-Museum Offers
Nobel e-Museum offers information on all 736 Prize Winners to date, the Nobel Organization, Alfred Nobel, and Nobel events, as well as educational material and games. Nobel e-Museum consists of more than 9,000 static documents, several databases and a number of multimedia productions with Nobel Prize connection.
Here is Nobel Prizes report in alphabetic order; if you click upon a name you will be connected with relative page of Nobel Prizes Archive.
Name Year Awarded Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Annan, Kofi ... MEDECINS SANS FRONTIERES (showcase) (U.S. Site)

49. Premi Nobel
alle relative pagine dell'Archivio dei Premi nobel. rotblat, joseph, 1995.
http://web.tiscali.it/no-redirect-tiscali/LG_WebPace/premi.htm

Archivio dei Premi Nobel
Museo On-line del Premio Nobel
A LFRED N OBEL
Alfred Nobel fondatore del Premio Nobel. 21 ottobre 1833 -10 dicembre 1896
luogo di nascita: Stockholm, Sweden L'archivio internet dei Premi Nobel è completamente interattivo. Se avete un link interessante e molto usato circa una particolare personalità insignita del Nobel, potete aggiungere qui in-linea quel link. Cosa offre l'e-museo?
L'e-museo offre informazioni aggiornate su tutti i 736 vincitori del Premio, l'Organizzazione Nobel, Alfred Nobel, gli eventi e così pure materiale educativo e giochi. L'e-museo Nobel consta di più di 9.000 documenti statici, diversi data base ed un gran numero di produzioni multimediali connessi ai Premi Nobel.
Di seguito riportiamo l'elenco alfabetico dei Premi Nobel; cliccando sui singoli nomi è possibile connettersi alle relative pagine dell'Archivio dei Premi Nobel
Name Anno di conferimento Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Annan, Kofi ... Wilson, Thomas Woodrow in particolare sito ufficiale di MEDICI SENZA FRONTIERE - MSF ITALIA raggiungibile con la posta elettronica all'indirizzo: msf@msf.it

50. The Scientist - Nobel Peace Prize Signals New Beginning For Pugwash
HIPPOCRATIC OATH The time has come to formulate guidelines for the ethical conductof scientists, said laureate joseph rotblat in his nobel Peace Prize
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1996/jan/pugwash_960108.html
The Scientist 10[1]:, Jan. 08, 1996
News
Nobel Peace Prize Signals New Beginning For Pugwash
By Karen Young Kreeger Author: Karen Young Kreeger Sidebar Plugging into Pugwash It would be reasonable to assume that last month's awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs and Pugwash president and cofounder Joseph Rotblat represents something of a glorious swan song. The conferences and Polish-born physicist Rotblat, 87, were honored by the Nobel Committee last month in Oslo, Norway, for their nearly 40-year effort "to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international politics" ( K.Y. Kreeger, The Scientist , Nov. 13, 1995, page 1 But as Rotblat and the group's many thousands of members and admirers point out emphatically, their work is hardly over. The challenges to peace and disarmament in the post-Cold War world are different-and in many ways more difficult-they maintain. Although nuclear disarmament remains Pugwash's main concern, the subjects tackled at annual conferences and workshops have branched out in a number of directions. "The range of issues and topics has expanded greatly, particularly with the considerable interest that people have in environmental issues and in some of the problems of developing countries," says United States Pugwash Committee cochairwoman Judith Reppy. She is an associate professor in the science and technology studies department and assistant director of the peace studies program at Cornell University.

51. GSI - News Archives
joseph rotblat is a physicist who won the nobel Peace Prize in 1995 for his workto eliminate the dangers posed by nuclear weapons, a lifelong campaign since
http://www.gsinstitute.org/archives/000148.shtml
Main Archives Nobel Peace Laureates Challenge Doctrine of Unilateral Militarism
Report of the Third World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates
GSI Report
Rome
October 19-20, 2002
From October 19-20, 2002, the City of Rome hosted the 3rd World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates. Jonathan Granoff, President of the Global Security Institute, and Senator Douglas Roche, Chairman of the Middle Powers Initiative (a program of GSI) represented the International Peace Bureau, a Nobel Laureate organization. During the conference, Granoff and Roche convened and co-chaired an "Extraordinary Session" of Nobel Peace Laureates to discuss concrete responses that could be taken against the emerging doctrine characterized as Unilateral Militarism. Nobel Laureates took up the issue of an impending war in Iraq, challenges posed by unilateral militarism to the United Nations system, with particular emphasis on the Bush Administration's policies regarding nuclear weapons. Nobel laureates were especially concerned by doctrines relating to testing and building new nuclear weapons, their integration into conventional war-fighting doctrines, and threats of preemption. New Advisors for GSI Nobel Peace Laureates Rigoberta Menchú Tum and Sir Joseph Rotblat accepted invitations to be active members of GSI's Advisory Board.

52. Joseph Rotblat
Translate this page joseph rotblat nació en Varsovia en 1908, estudió Física en su Universidad licenciándose dichomovimiento y el pasado año recibió el Premio nobel de la
http://www.sefm.es/revista/boletin3/Rotblat.html
Joseph Rotblat
J oseph R

53. PROFESSOR JOSEPH ROTBLAT 3
INTERVIEW WITH PROFESSOR joseph rotblat Continue. INT Excellent. Could world.I don't think that we worked for a nobel Prize at the time.
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/coldwar/interviews/episode-8/rotblat3.html

Interviews:

Agnew,

Harold
Asam, ...
Herbert

INTERVIEW WITH PROFESSOR JOSEPH ROTBLAT
Continue INT: Excellent. Could you tell me a little bit more about that issuing of it to the press? I believe... was it at the Caxton Hall meeting? (B/g talk) Could you tell me a bit about what the atmosphere was like, and what the media's reaction was to the Manifesto? INT: What was not so much yours, because you came from a European background, but it must have been fascinating watching both Americans and Russian scientists meet, both of whom had been fed copious amounts of propaganda about how each side was out to destroy them. What was their reactions like when they first met? INT: You say that a very important part of Pugwash was the fact that the attendees were coming as individuals and not as government representatives. How did the governments react to Pugwash? INT: Did you ever have any idea in the first Pugwash meetings how important Pugwash would become, and the fact that even today it is still going on?
JR: Well, no, the important idea was to establish a contact. This was our main problem at the time, because we felt, if we don't have this contact, then really we are going on a way which is bound to lead to military confrontation and then catastrophe. This was our worry at the time, how to prevent this catastrophe. And we felt, by talking toeach other, as scientists, this is our contribution to establishing some sort of peace in the world. I don't think that we worked for a Nobel Prize at the time. Of course, every scientist always thinks about a NobelPrize, but this is not the way we have been motivated. We have really... our worry was that we are on a very dangerous path, and we must do something to stop this downhill road to the abyss.

54. Nobel Laureate Jody Williams Meets Suu Kyi
Desmond Tutu, Dr. Oscar Arias, joseph rotblat, Norman Borlaug, Betty Williams, MaireadMcGuire, to Burma's countrybound nobel laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
http://www.mizzima.com/archives/news-in-2003/news-in-feb/18-feb03-20.htm
window.defaultStatus=''; self.moveTo(0,0); self.resizeTo(screen.availWidth,screen.availHeight); Contents Home News in Burmese Nationalities questions Documents ... Chat Room Seminars Mizzima's Activities Recent Activities New! English Language School Art Exhibitions Music Album Research on Indo-Burma Relations ... Mizzima Team Others Feedback Advertise Archives Calendar ... News in January 2003
Nobel Laureate Jody Williams meets Suu Kyi February 19, 2003
Mizzima News (www.mizzima.com) The 1997 Nobel Peace Laureate Ms. Jody Williams visited Burma this week and met Burma’s country-bound Nobel Laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, according to a press statement of Nonviolence International Southeast Asia yesterday. It was the first visit to Daw Aung San Suu Kyi by another Nobel Peace Laureate since she received the award while under house arrest in 1991. Ms. Jody Williams, who received the Nobel Peace Laureate with the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, carried personal messages of support from fellow Nobel Peace laureates Rigobera Menchu Tum, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Dr. Oscar Arias, Joseph Rotblat, Norman Borlaug, Betty Williams, Mairead McGuire, to Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.

55. ISAFP Sorted : Joseph Rotblat: Societal Verification (Article Summary)
Number 4), written by joseph rotblat (Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs),who recently collected the nobel Peace Prize. joseph rotblat Towards A
http://csf.colorado.edu/forums/isafp/95/0428.html
Joseph Rotblat: Societal Verification (Article Summary)
Thu, 19 Oct 95 16:58:03 gmt
Harnby, Louise harnby@sageltd.co.uk
***** PRESS RELEASE *****
The following is the editor's summary of an article that appeared in
SECURITY DIALOGUE in December 1992 (Volume 23, Number 4),
written by Joseph Rotblat (Pugwash Conference on Science and World
Affairs), who recently collected the Nobel Peace Prize.
JOSEPH ROTBLAT
Towards A Nuclear Weapon-Free World: Societal Verification (Editor's
Summary)
The feasibility of a world free of nuclear weapons depends largely on effective verification. Such a regime would have to be nearly 100% effective. Further intensive research work is needed to improve the effectiveness of technological verification. In parallel with this, there is the equally urgent need to evolve a system of societal verification in which all members of the community, or large groups of

56. CSICOP Announcment Mailing List: Skeptical Inquirer Electronic Digest 6-8-99
FOR INQUIIRYLA Remember Your Humanity The Ethical Duty of Scientists Sir josephrotblat July 2, 1999 @ 730pm Sir joseph rotblat, 1995 nobel Peace Prize
http://www.csicop.org/list/archive/0171.html
Skeptical Inquirer Electronic Digest 6-8-99
SkeptInq@aol.com
Tue, 8 Jun 1999 10:51:30 EDT
Skeptical Inquirer Electronic Digest 6-8-99 www.csicop.org/si In this week's SI DIGEST: Nobel Peace Laureate to Speak at Center for InquiryLos Angeles Review of Psychic James Van Praagh on CNN's Larry King Live FICherry@aol.com . Please forward this message to any interested party. REVIEW OF PSYCHIC MEDIUM VAN PRAAGH ON CNN'S LARRY KING LIVE SI Electronic Digest is the biweekly e-mail news update of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP.) Visit http://www.csicop.org/ . Rated one of the Top Ten Science sites on the Web by HOMEPC magazine. The Digest is written and edited by Matthew Nisbet and Barry Karr. SI Digest is distributed directly via e-mail to over 3000 readers worldwide, and is sent from CSICOP headquarters at the Center for Inquiry-International, Amherst NY, USA. To subscribe for free to the SI DIGEST, go to: http://www.csicop.org/list/

57. Intellectual Output  From The Arab World
JEWISH nobel WINNERS 0.2% OF WORLDS POPULATION 14,000,000 million Jews. Begin 1986 Elie Wiesel 1994 - Shimon Peres 1994 - Yitzhak Rabin 1995 - joseph rotblat.
http://masada2000.org/nobel.html
nobel prize, nobel prize winners, jewish nobel prize winners, islam, muslim, moslem
INTELLECTUAL OUTPUT
ARAB / ISLAMIC NOBEL WINNERS
of World's Population
1,400,000,000 Muslims
Literature
1988 - Najib Mahfooz 1988.
Peace
1978 - Anwar El-Sadat
1994 - Yasser Arafat ... A Joke!!!
Chemistry
1990 Elias James Corey 1999 - Ahmed Zewail Medicine 1960 Peter Brian Medawar 1998 Ferid Mourad Physics Abdus Salam The Norwegians played an ugly joke on the world by pretending Arafat was a Man of Peace. It is time to correct a vile error. Click HERE to add your name to the petition to revoke his award. Masada2000.org special Nobel Prize for I N T E G R I T Y! Norwegian, Kaare Kristiansen was a member of the Nobel Committee. He resigned in 1994 to protest the awarding of a Nobel "Peace Prize" to Yasser Arafat, whom he correctly labeled a "terrorist." JEWISH NOBEL WINNERS OF WORLDS POPULATION 14,000,000 million Jews

58. West By Northwest.org
For those interested on Dr. joseph rotblat's, nobel Peace Laureate work on peacethey can visit http//www.wagingpeace.org/bios/joseph_rotblat_bio.html
http://www.westbynorthwest.org/winter01/peace.new/andreas.openletrNPP.shtml

I met Professor Joseph Rotblat on March 31st, 2000 just exactly two months after my January 31st, 2000 resignation from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.For "The Reasons for My Resignation from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory" please visit:
http://www.globalcomment.com/articles/currentaffairs/andreas/resignation.htm

We had both been invited, among others, to speak at a conference titled "Averting Nuclear Anarchy: The Current Crisis in Arms Control" which took place at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. I greatly enjoyed his company and personality, and I attended his keynote speech. Since listening to his speech that night, I have wanted to discuss some concerns I have with him. Since I thought that these concerns are also the concerns of millions of people around the world, I decided to write him an open letter. For those interested on Dr. Joseph Rotblat's, Nobel Peace Laureate work on peace they can visit: http://www.wagingpeace.org/bios/joseph_rotblat_bio.html

December, 2001
Open Letter to Nobel Peace Prize Winner
Joseph Rotblat
from Dr. Andreas Toupadakis

59. The Norwegian Nobel Institute - List Of Laureates
was transferred to the Main Fund, and twothirds to the nobel Institute's Special 1995The prize was divided equally between rotblat, joseph, England, 1908-.
http://www.nobel.no/eng_lau_list.html

60. BRC News
joseph rotblat was Professor of Physics at the University of London at St. In1995 Dr. rotblat and Pugwash received the nobel Prize for Peace.
http://www.brc21.org/newsletters/n10-06.html
Conversation with
Professor Joseph Rotblat Joseph Rotblat was Professor of Physics at the University of London at St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College and the hospital's Chief Physicist from 1950 to 1976. In 1955 Professor Rotblat was one of the eleven signatories of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto, which invited scientists from around the world to ward off the danger of nuclear weapons being used again. He founded the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs in 1957 and served as its secretary-general and later as its president for forty years. In 1995 Dr. Rotblat and Pugwash received the Nobel Prize for Peace. He is the author of over 300 publications.
Professor Joseph Rotblat Professor Rotblat visited the Boston area this past October to deliver a keynote address at the New England Organizing Conference for Nuclear Weapons Abolition (see below). On a break from the conference, he kindly consented to visit the Center for an interview. What follows are excerpts of his remarks on the motivation for his lifelong devotion to nuclear abolition, the mission of Pugwash, and the social responsibility of scientists.
What motivated you to devote yourself to the nuclear abolition movement?

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