Ir Al Home Page Home Page Translate this page 1945, Sir A. Fleming Ernst Boris Chain lord florey, Reino Unido Reino Unido Australia, 1949,walter Rudolf Hess. 1975, Renato Dulbeco howard M. Temin David Baltimore, http://www.neuroc.sld.cu/nobel.htm
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Result Of Desired Function CHAIN, Sir ERNST BORIS florey, lord (howard walter), for the or Medicine 1949, -HESS,walter RUDOLF, for his DAVID -DULBECCO, RENATO -TEMIN, howard MARTIN, for http://www.tmmu.com.cn/jcb/mianyi/sub/shengwu/nobel/www.nobel.se/cgi-bin/laureat
Florey, Howard Walter - Bright Sparcs Biographical Entry Sir howard walter florey Biography', in nobel e-Museum, The nobel Foundation,1996, http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1945/florey-bio.html. http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/bsparcs/biogs/P000415b.htm
Extractions: Home Browse Search Previous ... Next Sir, FRS Online Sources Archival/Heritage Sources Published Sources Pathologist Born: 24 September 1898 Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. Died: 21 February 1968. Florey was Professor of Pathology, University of Sheffield 1931-35 and at the University of Oxford 1935-62. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine in 1945 for work on penicillin and was Chancellor of the Australian National University 1965-68. Career Highlights Born 24 September 1898. Died 22 February 1968. Kt 1944, Life Peer 1965. Educated Universities of Adelaide (MB, BS), Oxford (MA, BSc) and Cambridge (PhD 1927). Rhodes Scholar for South Australia 1921, Rockefeller Travelling Fellow, United States 1925, Huddersfield Lecturer in Special Pathology, Cambridge from 1927, Joseph Hunter Professor of Pathology, University of Sheffield 1931-35, Professor of Pathology and head of the Pathology School, Oxford 1935-62, Provost of Queen's College, Oxford 1962-. Fellow, Royal Society 1941, Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine 1945 (shared with E. Chain and A. Fleming), first Australian President of the Royal Society 1960-65. Chancellor, Australian National University 1965-68. Online Sources Published Sources 'Sir Howard Walter Florey - Biography', in
Sir Howard Florey - Biography Sir howard walter florey was born on September 24, 1898, at Dr. florey has had manyhonours bestowed upon From nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 19421962 http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1945/florey-bio.html
Extractions: Sir Howard Walter Florey was born on September 24, 1898, at Adelaide, South Australia, the son of Joseph and Bertha Mary Florey. His early education was at St. Peter's Collegiate School , Adelaide, following which he went on to Adelaide University where he graduated M.B., B.S. in 1921. He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to Magdalen College , Oxford, leading to the degrees of B.Sc. and M.A. (1924). He then went to Cambridge as a John Lucas Walker Student. In 1925 he visited the United States on a Rockefeller Travelling Fellowship for a year, returning in 1926 to a Fellowship at Gonville and Caius College , Cambridge, receiving here his Ph.D. in 1927. He also held at this time the Freedom Research Fellowship at the London Hospital. In 1927 he was appointed Huddersfield Lecturer in Special Pathology at Cambridge. In 1931 he succeeded to the Joseph Hunter Chair of Pathology at the University of Sheffield
Lincoln College - Famous Old Members - Lord Florey howard walter florey was born on 24th September 1898 in He was knighted in 1944, andmade lord florey of Adelaide Sir Ernst Boris Chain and florey were jointly http://www.linc.ox.ac.uk/famous/florey/
Extractions: Lord Florey (1898 - 1968) While at medical school in Adelaide, he met his future wife, Ethel Hayter Reed, who was three years his junior. She was also a medical student, and subsequently became a part of his research team at Oxford during the work on penicillin. They married in 1926, but it was not a happy relationship. However, they did stay together, and had two children. Ethel died in 1966, and in 1967, Florey married Dr. Margaret Jennings, who was his long-term colleague of thirty years. This partnership was happier, but only brief as Florey died suddenly in 1968 of a heart attack, aged 69. Lady Margaret Florey died in 1994. There is a memorial stone dedicated to his memory in Westminster Abbey. The Lasker Rose Garden was established opposite Magdalen, at the entrance of the Oxford Botanic Garden in honour of Florey's achievements. Florey was a physiologist by training and was dedicated to the application of physiological and chemical methods to pathology. The area that commanded most of his interest was the physiology of the cells in the gut, inflammatory reactions, and atherosclerosis. However, his main area of work was guided by the paper written ten years previously by Alexander Fleming, on the anti-bacterial effects of the Penicillin mould. Florey developed the unique therapeutic properties of penicillin, a development which has probably done more than any other in medical history to relieve human suffering. The Oxford team of scientists discovered how to produce an effective and safe antibacterial agent from the raw mould juice. The purification of penicillin was achieved by Norman Heatley and Edward Abraham. Abraham later determined its chemical structure. Penicillin was first tested on eight mice in 1940, with remarkable results proving its effectiveness. Tests on humans occurred in 1941 and before long, the drug was in mass production. For their painstaking and difficult work Sir Alexander Fleming, Sir Ernst Boris Chain and Florey were jointly awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945. Chain was invaluable in the early purification and identification, but without Florey, he couldn't have continued the work. Fleming saw penicillin as an antiseptic that could be used locally, but failed to see its potential as a method of combating deep seated infections.
Lincoln College - Famous Old Members - Lord Florey howard walter florey was born on 24th September 1898 in He was knighted in 1944, andmade lord florey of Adelaide Sir Ernst Boris Chain and florey were jointly http://www.linc.ox.ac.uk/famous/florey/index_printable.html
Extractions: University of Oxford Lord Florey (1898 - 1968) While at medical school in Adelaide, he met his future wife, Ethel Hayter Reed, who was three years his junior. She was also a medical student, and subsequently became a part of his research team at Oxford during the work on penicillin. They married in 1926, but it was not a happy relationship. However, they did stay together, and had two children. Ethel died in 1966, and in 1967, Florey married Dr. Margaret Jennings, who was his long-term colleague of thirty years. This partnership was happier, but only brief as Florey died suddenly in 1968 of a heart attack, aged 69. Lady Margaret Florey died in 1994. There is a memorial stone dedicated to his memory in Westminster Abbey. The Lasker Rose Garden was established opposite Magdalen, at the entrance of the Oxford Botanic Garden in honour of Florey's achievements. Florey was a physiologist by training and was dedicated to the application of physiological and chemical methods to pathology. The area that commanded most of his interest was the physiology of the cells in the gut, inflammatory reactions, and atherosclerosis. However, his main area of work was guided by the paper written ten years previously by Alexander Fleming, on the anti-bacterial effects of the Penicillin mould. Florey developed the unique therapeutic properties of penicillin, a development which has probably done more than any other in medical history to relieve human suffering.
Lord Howard Florey - Papers howard walter florey, Baron florey of Adelaide and Marston re the award of the Nobelprize 1945 Portrait of howard florey publication to accompany exhibition http://www.library.adelaide.edu.au/ual/special/florey.html
Extractions: Folder 2 presented by various donors, largely through the agency of Dr. Richard Brock. These include Florey receiving his D.Sc. and at the opening of the Florey laboratories at the ANU (1958), Florey's former home Coreega and the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology] 3. Miscellaneous articles, letters and family history notes.
Untitled to become a member of the lord florey Society through the leadership of the Nobelprizewinner of Lincoln College, Professor Sir howard walter florey, OM, later http://www-student.linc.ox.ac.uk/florey/welcome.htm
Extractions: Dear Lincoln Postgraduate: We are pleased to invite you to become a member of the Lord Florey Society. The Society was established in May 1997 to provide current Lincoln College postgraduate students a forum to discuss their intellectual interests, and to support and maintain a network by which former Lincoln postgraduates might maintain close relations with one another and with the College. The Society is closely connected to and a vital part of the Lincoln College Middle Common Room (MCR). Lincoln's MCRthe oldest in Oxfordwas founded through the leadership of the Nobel prize-winner and Fellow of Lincoln College, Professor Sir Howard Walter Florey, OM, later Baron Florey of Adelaide, in the Commonwealth of Australia, and Marston, in the County of Oxfordshire. The primary function of the Society is to provide graduates with a forum in which to present their ideas and meditations to other Lincoln colleagues and friends. Beginning in Michaelmas Term 1997, the Society has held at least two such gatherings each term. Though meetings originally saw members present papers connected with their academic work, we now encourage speakers to address any topic which they judge both interesting and stimulating. We aim to provide good conversation rather than just another lecture. Over the past year we have enjoyed presentations which ranged over Renaissance Literature, Synthetic Organic Chemistry, Minoean Archeaology and the art of comedy. all Lincoln's postgraduate students Lord Florey Society members.
AIM25: Royal Society: Florey, Howard Walter, Baron Florey (1898-1968) into three subfonds HF/1 howard walter florey's papers HF Society in 1968 from Ladyflorey, widow. University holds his correspondence with lord Cherwell; the http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search2?coll_id=5981&inst_id=18
Extractions: Pictorial Collection Neg. 4583 Barry York discusses the work of Howard Florey, the medical scientist responsible for turning penicillin into a dispensable drug which saves countless lives worldwide L ooking back on the twentieth century, it is difficult to nominate an individual Australian whose contribution to the welfare of humanity was greater than that of Howard Florey. In 1945, Florey, Alexander Fleming and Ernst Chain jointly received the Nobel Prize. Their contribution was the new wonder drug, penicillin. Prior to the mass production of penicillin, the simplest infectiona scratch or pinprickcould spell amputation of a limb or even death. Infection was a fearful word for the parents or grandparents of most people reading this article. Today, we take much for granted; the overwhelming majority of infections are cured painlessly with antibiotics, of which penicillin remains the most common. Fleming had accidentally discovered a mould containing Penicillium notatum in 1928. Noting its antibacterial qualities, he tested its effectiveness as an antiseptic in treating open wounds and wrote an article for the British medical journal, the
Facts And Figures About South Australia nobel Prize winners Sir William Henry Bragg and Sir William Lawrence howard Walterflorey (lord florey) in 1945 (medicine) for discovery of penicillin and its http://www.decs.sa.gov.au/corporate/a8_publish/modules/publish/content.asp?navgr
Behind The Name: Nobel Prize Winners By Category nobel Prize Winners by Category. Name, Years, Type, Also Known As. LordAlexander R. Todd, 1957, Chemistry, Sir howard walter florey, 1945, Medicine, http://www.behindthename.com/namesakes/nobelchro.html
Extractions: t h e e t y m o l o g y a n d h i s t o r y o f f i r s t n a m e s Nobel Prize Winners by Category Name Years Type Also Known As Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff Chemistry Hermann Emil Fischer Chemistry Svante August Arrhenius Chemistry Sir William Ramsay Chemistry Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer Chemistry Henri Moissan Chemistry Eduard Buchner Chemistry Ernest Rutherford Chemistry Wilhelm Ostwald Chemistry Otto Wallach Chemistry Marie Curie Chemistry Paul Sabatier Chemistry Victor Grignard Chemistry Alfred Werner Chemistry Theodore William Richards Chemistry Chemistry Fritz Haber Chemistry Walther Hermann Nernst Chemistry Frederick Soddy Chemistry Francis William Aston Chemistry Fritz Pregl Chemistry Richard Adolf Zsigmondy Chemistry The Svedberg Chemistry (Theodor) Heinrich Otto Wieland Chemistry Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Chemistry Arthur Harden Chemistry Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin Chemistry Hans Fischer Chemistry Carl Bosch Chemistry Friedrich Bergius Chemistry Irving Langmuir Chemistry Harold Clayton Urey Chemistry Chemistry Chemistry Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus Debye Chemistry (Peter) Paul Karrer Chemistry Walter Norman Haworth Chemistry Richard Kuhn Chemistry Adolf Friedrich Johann Butenandt Chemistry Leopold Ruzicka Chemistry George de Hevesy Chemistry Otto Hahn Chemistry Artturi Ilmari Virtanen Chemistry James Batcheller Sumner Chemistry John Howard Northrop Chemistry Wendell Meredith Stanley Chemistry Sir Robert Robinson Chemistry Arne Wilhelm Kaurin Tiselius Chemistry William Francis Giauque Chemistry Kurt Alder Chemistry Otto Paul Hermann Diels
Review On Cambridge By Ashford -- MouthShut.com Sir James Chadwick (physics), lord howard florey (medicine), Francis Amartya Sen (economics),lord Rutherford, Francis John Popple and walter Gilbert (chemistry http://www.mouthshut.com/readreview/12007-1.html
Extractions: Join Free Login Tell a Friend Community Center Search in All Products Members Automobiles Books Business Computers Education Electronics Entertainment Fashion Government Household Internet Media Personal Finance Sports Travel Browse : All Products Automobiles Books Business Computers Education Electronics Entertainment Fashion Government Household Internet Media Personal Finance Sports Travel Home Travel Overseas Destination Europe ... Cambridge >>ashford's opinion About The Author MS ID: ashford Name: Ray Interest : Travel, Formula I motor racing,food and wine Trusts 28 members
Australia Now - Australia's Scientific Achievements Professor Cory is director of the walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Researchin Melbourne and has Sir howard (later lord) florey shared the http://www.dfat.gov.au/facts/sci_achv.html
Extractions: Home Travel Countries Global Issues ... Index Image of nano-machine courtesy of AMBRI. A team of scientists at the Australian Membrane and Biotechnology Research Institute (AMBRI) have built a functioning nano-machine, which is a device with parts of molecular size. Initially this technology will be used to make extremely sensitive biosensors, but it has a wide range of potential applications. Australia's tradition of inventiveness affects the everyday lives of millions of people in many countries. Techniques and processes as commonplace as industrial refrigeration, the ready-mix system of transporting concrete and the balloon-in-a-box cask for wine were devised in Australia. Australia prints its money on polymer, not paper, and other countries are beginning to use this technology. When people around the world use the telephone or the Internet, they rely on basic research associated with scientists who work in Australia. Australians adopted the Internet early, and many Australian websites feature in international 'hot lists', particularly those associated with academic research. Some Australian inventions are not for everyday use: gene shears for genetic engineering; the Synroc system for storing radioactive waste; the Interscan microwave aircraft landing system; smart proton probes for research into materials and living cells; and nano-machines for bio-sensing.
Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine The nobel Prize Internet Archive. SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING , SIR ERNST BORIS CHAIN andLORD howard walter florey for the discovery of penicillin and its curative http://home.uchicago.edu/~llcai/indexpic/NOBEL-Prizes/medicine.html
Extractions: S TANLEY B ... RUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection The prize was awarded jointly to: P ETER C D ... OHERTY and R OLF M Z ... INKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence. The prize was awarded jointly to: E DWARD B L ... OLHARD and E RIC F W ... IESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. The prize was awarded jointly to: A LFRED G G ... ILMAN and M ARTIN R ODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells.
Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Physiology Or Medicine The nobel Prize Internet Archive SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING , SIR ERNST BORIS CHAIN andLORD howard walter florey for the discovery of penicillin and its curative http://phyux2.ks.ac.kr/khs/index/b/project/chap. 4/ë ¸ë²¨ë°ë ¸ë²
Extractions: The Nobel Prize Internet Archive The prize was awarded jointly to: A RVID C ARLSSON ... REENGARD and E RIC K ANDEL for their discoveries concerning signal transduction in the nervous system. The prize was awarded to: G B LOBEL , for the discovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell. The prize was awarded jointly to: R OBERT F F ... GNARRO and F ERID M URAD for their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system. S TANLEY B P ... RUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection The prize was awarded jointly to: P ETER C D ... OHERTY and R OLF M Z ... INKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence. The prize was awarded jointly to: E DWARD B L ... OLHARD and E RIC F W ... IESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. The prize was awarded jointly to: A LFRED G G ... ILMAN and M ARTIN R ODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells.
Oxford University Gazette, 19 November 1998: News Pages building named in honour of howard florey, the nobel centenary of the birth of Lordflorey, nobel Prize winner Sir walter Bodmer Sir walter Bodmer, FRC.Path http://www.ox.ac.uk/gazette/1998-9/weekly/191198/news/list.htm
Extractions: No. 4492 Thursday 19 November 1998 Vol. 129 New companies move into Oxford Science Park : Links between the University and Oxford Science Park, the 75-acre development area dedicated to scientific research and business activities near Sandford-on-Thames, have been boosted with the completion of a new building named in honour of Howard Florey, the Nobel Prize-winning Oxford pathologist. Florey centenary sparks Oxford celebrations : The centenary of the birth of Lord Florey, Nobel Prize winner for his role in the discovery of penicillin, has been celebrated with a series of world-wide events throughout 1998. Chair for number theorist : Dr David Heath-Brown, currently Reader in Pure Mathematics and Fellow of Magdalen College, has been elected to a new Chair of Pure Mathematics, succeeding Professor Bryan Birch, holder of a personal Chair in Arithmetic. Robot sheepdog herds animals with `less stress' : Sir Walter Bodmer: Sir Walter Bodmer, F.R.C.Path., F.R.S., Principal of Hertford College, has been appointed as Chairman of the National Radiological Protection Board, an independent statutory body which conducts research and provides advice on issues including the effects and risks of radiation, monitoring radon in homes, and the environmental impact of nuclear discharges. Oxford Academic Scheme: Participants in the Oxford Academic Travel Scheme (OATS) will now be eligible to apply for small travel grants to cover any additional travel and accommodation costs. OATS, set up in 1991 by the External Relations Office to help link University academics with overseas alumni and friends' groups, is being re-launched this term in response to the growing number of invitations from overseas groups. For further information, please contact Ms Wendy Fuggles on (2)78113, and see in `Notices' in this
AAS-media Releases-Nov 96 Doherty joins the select company of lord florey, Sir William Thank you very muchJohn howard, Prime Minister, Peter it was fostered at the walter and Eliza http://www.science.org.au/academy/media/doherty2.htm
Extractions: (November 1996) Prime Minister's reception for Professor Doherty, Nobel Laureate for medical research, Wednesday, 6 November 1996, Members Hall, Parliament House TRANSCRIPT Peter McGauran Ladies and Gentlemen, Prime Minister the Honourable John Howard, the Hon. Gareth Evans, Acting Leader of the Opposition, the Hon John Moore, Minister for Industry Science and Tourism, Prime Ministerial, Senatorial and House of Representatives colleagues, excellencies and distinguished guests one and all. Welcome and thank you for coming to this quite unique and indeed historic event at which we honour Australia's Nobel Prize winner for medicine, Professor Peter Doherty. Australian scientists and all Australians will feel enormous pride at the achievements and in the reflected honour this brings to our country. We also offer at this time our warmest congratulations to Dr Rolf Zinkernagel of Switzerland, who shares this award with Professor Doherty. As most if not all of you know, the research was carried out at the John Curtin School of Medical Research, part of the Australian National University's Institute of Advanced Studies and internationally renowned for its basic research in medicine. It is quite extraordinary that three of the four Australian Nobel Prize Winners in Medicine have had close connections with the John Curtin School: Howard Florey who was instrumental in setting up the school; Sir John Eccles, Professor of Physiology there, and now Professor Doherty.
Imperial College London - Nobel Laureates 1948, BLACKETT, lord Patrick Maynard Stuart FRS (18971974 1937, HAWORTH, Sir WalterNorman FRS (1883-1950 Sir Ernst Chain and Sir howard florey for discovering http://www.ic.ac.uk/P606.htm
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