Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Mathematicians - Wolf Prize

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-97 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

         Wolf Prize:     more books (31)
  1. Wolf Prize in Mathematics
  2. Wolf Prize in Medicine 1978-2008
  3. Wolf Prize in Agriculture
  4. Wolf Prize in Agriculture
  5. Wolf Prize in Chemistry Laureates: Ryoji Noyori, John Pople, Richard R. Ernst, Ahmed Zewail, Carl Djerassi, Ada Yonath, Elias James Corey
  6. Wolf Prize in Arts
  7. German Film Awards: Teddy Award, Golden Bear, Deutscher Filmpreis, Bambi, Bavarian Film Awards, Bundesfilmpreis, Konrad Wolf Prize
  8. Wolf Prize Laureates: Wolf Prize in Chemistry Laureates, Wolf Prize in Mathematics Laureates, Wolf Prize in Medicine Laureates
  9. Wolf Prizes: Wolf Prize in Mathematics, Wolf Prize in Physics, Wolf Prize in Medicine, Wolf Prize in Agriculture, Wolf Prize in Chemistry
  10. Wolf Prize in Medicine Laureates: Barbara Mcclintock, Roger Wolcott Sperry, Stanley B. Prusiner, Jean-Pierre Changeux, Roger Y. Tsien
  11. Wolf Prize in Physics Laureates: Roger Penrose, Freeman Dyson, Benoît Mandelbrot, Leon M. Lederman, Riccardo Giacconi, John Archibald Wheeler
  12. Wolf Prize in Mathematics
  13. Agriculture Awards: Wolf Prize in Agriculture, Rafi Ahmed Kidwai Award, President's Award for Agricultural Development
  14. Wolf Prize in Medicine

81. News & Publications -- University Of Utah Development
GENETICIST CAPECCHI WINS wolf prize February 11, 2003 In May Mario R. Capecchiwill travel to Israel to accept its top honor in medical research.
http://www.ugive.utah.edu/newspub/mario.html
GENETICIST CAPECCHI WINS WOLF PRIZE February 11, 2003 - In May Mario R. Capecchi will travel to Israel to accept its top honor in medical research. Capecchi will share the Wolf Prize with two other distinguished researcher-Oliver Smithies of the University of North Carolina and Ralph R. Brinster of the University of Pennsylvania. Capecchi and Smithies, working independently, developed techniques for targeted gene mutation in mammals, enabling researchers to create strains of mice with mutations in virtually any gene. Brinster developed a way to modify genes in mice embryo by injecting the eggs with RNA. The techniques developed by Capecchi, Smithies, and Brinster have given researchers powerful tools for investigating human biology and its misregulation in disease, according to the Wolf Prize jury. "These methods have enabled the development of models for a wide variety of diseases including hypertension, degenerative neurological diseases and cancer," the jury said.

82. Life Science Newswire
NOTATION Danforth Center President Dr. Roger Beachy To Receive Prestigious WolfPrize The Israelbased Wolf Foundation is announcing that the 2001 wolf prize
http://www.lifesciencesgateway.org/lsgnews/index.asp
NEWS Kansas City Area Life Science Institute Board Appoints New Interim Executive Director Missouri’s Urbana Laboratories To Distribute the USDA’s Inoculant Fourth Life Sciences Conference Call Builds Gateway to Communication Missouri Rolls Out the Red Carpet for the 2001 World Congress ... Biotech Holds Key To Future, Holden Says
VIEWPOINT A Voice for Research, By Andrea Ernst
LEADERS Forget Jurassic Park, UMR Researcher Mormile May Have Discovered Evidence of Older Life
BUSINESS MO-SCI – Glass and Ceramic Specialty Products By the Ton or the Fractions of an Ounce Missouri’s “Retooling” Economy: The DED Predicts A Shifting Pace BioTech Blowout Sigma-Aldrich Is Distributing Success Worldwide
NOTATION Danforth Center President Dr. Roger Beachy To Receive Prestigious Wolf Prize
NEWS
Missouri Rolls Out the Red Carpet for the 2001 World Congress
Approximately 600 agricultural leaders from around the world will travel to St. Louis in May for the World Agricultural Forum’s 2nd World Congress. They will gather together to discuss this year’s theme “A New Age in Agriculture: Feeding the World” and they
READ FULL STORY >>

VIEWPOINT
A Voice for Research, By Andrea Ernst

83. Public Searches - Detail
Title wolf prize. Agency Address Wolf Foundation PO Box 398 Herzlia Bet 46103Israel. Contact Rosely Encarnacion. Hyperlink www.aquanet.co.il/wolf/.
http://research.mednet.ucla.edu/funding/PublicSearches_Detail.cfm?ID=546

84. Computer Science Department - Technion - General Information/News
Google TM local search. Department News January 12, 2003. We would like to congratulateour graduate students who won the prestigious wolf prize for this year.
http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/GeneralInformation/News/newsWOLF_item.html
Home Technion
General Information
About the Department

News
Announcements
Colloquia and Seminars
... Directions
People
Faculty

Graduate Students

Staff

Directory

Academics Course Information Teaching Schedule (pdf) Office Hours Undergraduate Studies Graduate Studies Research Research Areas Research Laboratories Technical Reports Resources Libraries: CS Central Computing Services Photo Gallery Google TM local search Department News January 12, 2003 We would like to congratulate our graduate students who won the prestigious Wolf prize for this year. The winners are: Julia Chuzhoy Wolf prize for outstanding Ph.D. students Niv Buchbinder Wolf prize for outstanding M.Sc. students The competition for the Wolf prize is a very tough one and both the winners and the other candidates for the prize are all students with excellent achievements. we are all proud of them! all department news Technion - Israel Institute of Technology Contact hamo@cs.technion.ac.il with comments. How to update information

85. Computer Science Department - Technion - General Information/News
Department News 2002 2003 IN THE SPOTLIGHT. We would like to congratulateour graduate students who won the prestigious wolf prize for this year.
http://www.cs.technion.ac.il/GeneralInformation/News/news.html
Home Technion
General Information
About the Department

News
Announcements
Colloquia and Seminars
... Directions
People
Faculty

Graduate Students

Staff

Directory

Academics Course Information Teaching Schedule (pdf) Office Hours Undergraduate Studies Graduate Studies Research Research Areas Research Laboratories Technical Reports Resources Libraries: CS Central Computing Services Photo Gallery Google TM local search Department News IN THE SPOTLIGHT On Sunday, March 16, the (by now traditional) CS faculty Purim party exploded into the night with a mind-boggling blend of sights, sounds, smells and tastes. As young and quasi-young bodies swayed ever so gracefully to the beat of the masterful music, as the smooth beer cascaded into our eagerly awaiting veins and brains, as the dazzling brightness of the clever costumes tormented our eyes and tantalized our minds, we could almost, for a single fleeting sweet moment, forget that we are nothing but the same old bunch of "chnunim". Viva la Purim Party! See you all in 2005!! March 12, 2003 KLA-Tencor donated a KLA 5200XP, a wafer inspection system worth $0.5 M, to ISL. This system includes a state of the art optical system that can notice less than a micron defects in wafers used by chipmakers...

86. Beachy And Womack Awarded Wolf Prize For Agriculture
Beachy and Womack Awarded wolf prize for Agriculture. On Monday, Jan.8, The Wolf Foundation awarded the 2001 wolf prize for agriculture
http://www.whybiotech.com/html/con622.html
Beachy and Womack Awarded Wolf Prize for Agriculture
Beachy is a member of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and is a recognized expert in plant virology and biotechnology of plants. Beachy pioneered the first method of protecting crops from viruses by incorporation of virus genes into the plant genome. His development of a virus-fighting gene built the base for other researchers to create their own forms of plant defenses. Womack, also a member of the NAS, launched the discipline of livestock genomics with his initial map of the bovine genome. According to the Wolf Foundation, Womack’s work with cows signifies "a whole new generation of scientists will use techniques provided by Womack to clone the genes affecting economically important traits in mammals." Five Wolf prizes are awarded annually to scientists and artists. Winners are chosen from such fields as agriculture, chemistry, mathematics, medicine, and physics. The prize will be presented May 13 in Israel.

87. FWD: Wolf Prize 2000 In Mathematics By Antreas P. Hatzipolakis
FWD wolf prize 2000 in Mathematics by Antreas P. Hatzipolakis. reply tothis message post a message on a new topic Back to mathhistory-list
http://mathforum.org/epigone/math-history-list/spanfluldwox
FWD: Wolf Prize 2000 in Mathematics by Antreas P. Hatzipolakis
reply to this message
post a message on a new topic

Back to math-history-list
Subject: FWD: Wolf Prize 2000 in Mathematics Author: xpolakis@otenet.gr Date: The Math Forum

88. [HM] Wolf Prize
a topic from HistoriaMatematica Discussion Group HM wolf prize. 5 Feb 2001 HMwolf prize, by Avinoam Mann 13 Feb 2001 Re HM wolf prize, by Laszlo Filep
http://mathforum.org/epigone/historia_matematica/zhooswooclil
a topic from Historia-Matematica Discussion Group
[HM] Wolf prize
post a message on this topic
post a message on a new topic

5 Feb 2001 [HM] Wolf prize , by Avinoam Mann
13 Feb 2001 Re: [HM] Wolf prize , by Laszlo Filep
The Math Forum

89. College Of Agriculture And Life Sciences
2002/3 wolf prize In Agriculture Announced The 2002/3 wolf prize inAgriculture will be awarded to Professor Fuller W. Bazer, of
http://coals.tamu.edu/WolfAward.htm
Home Overview Prospective Students Current Students ... Search Dr. Fuller W. Bazer Associate Director,
Texas Agricultural Experiment Station
Associate Vice Chancellor and
Executive Associate Dean,
Agriculture and Life Sciences 2002/3 Wolf Prize In Agriculture Announced The 2002/3 Wolf Prize in Agriculture will be awarded to Professor Fuller W. Bazer, of Texas A&M University, and to Professor R. Michael Roberts, of the University of Missouri, for "discoveries of Interferon-tau and other pregnancy-associated proteins, which have clarified the biological mystery of signaling between embryo and mother to maintain pregnancy," stated the Wolf Prize jury in this field. Impact on Animal Production and Human Health While it has been long known that chemical communication between embryo and mother is essential for successful pregnancy in mammals, little was known about the details of this process before the two scientists began their collaboration to elucidate on these relationships. Their pioneering joint research has identified essential molecules responsible for maintaining pregnancy in ruminants and swine.

90. SMF - The Wolf Foundation 2002/3 Prize In Mathematics
THE 2002/3 WOLF FOUNDATION PRIZE IN MATHEMATICS. The Prize Committee for Mathematicshas unanimously decided that the 2002/3 wolf prize be jointly awarded to
http://smf.emath.fr/InfoDiverses/PrixWolf2002.html
ACM Annuaire MaTeXo MathDoc ... SMAI SMF THE 2002/3 WOLF FOUNDATION PRIZE IN MATHEMATICS The Prize Committee for Mathematics has unanimously decided that the 2002/3 Wolf Prize be jointly awarded to:
Mikio Sato
Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences Kyoto University Kyoto, Japan for his creation of algebraic analysis', including hyperfunction and microfunction theory, holonomic quantum field theory, and a unified theory of soliton equations.
and
John T. Tate Department of Mathematics University of Texas Austin, Texas, USA
for his creation of fundamental concepts in algebraic number theory.
Mikio Sato description of soliton equations in the context of tau functions and infinite dimensional Grassmann manifolds. This was extended by his followers to other classes of equations, including self dual Yang-Mills and Einstein equations. Sato has generously shared his ideas with young mathematicians and has created a flourishing school of algebraic analysis in Japan.
John T. Tate (born 1925, USA). For over a quarter of a century, John Tate's ideas have dominated the development of arithmetic algebraic geometry. Tate has introduced path breaking techniques and concepts, that initiated many theories which are very much alive today. These include Fourier analysis on local fields and adele rings, Galois cohomology, the theory of rigid analytic varieties, and p-divisible groups and p-adic Hodge decompositions, to name but a few. Tate has been an inspiration to all those working on number theory. Numerous notions bear his name: Tate cohomology of a finite group, Tate module of an abelian variety, Tate-Shafarevitch group, Lubin-Tate groups, Neron-Tate heights, Tate motives, the Sato-Tate conjecture, Tate twist, Tate elliptic curve, and others. John Tate is a

91. Physics & Astronomy Brochure
(1982), wolf prize, 1997 (Ph.D. 1933 and BHL 1977 Johns Hopkins). Freeman Dyson,Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton (1990), wolf prize, 1981.
http://www.pha.jhu.edu/brochure/lect.html
These lectures were established in 1981 and are funded by an endowment provided by one of our alumni, Professor Ferdinand G. Brickwedde (B.A. '22, M.A. '24, Ph.D. '25), and his wife, Langhorne Howard Brickwedde. Professor Brickwedde has had a distinguished research and academic career. He was a co-discoverer of deuterium, a heavy isotope of hydrogen. He was long associated with the National Bureau of Standards and was dean of the College of Chemistry and Physics at Pennsylvania State University from 1956 to 1963. Each academic year, at least one outstanding individual is invited for a three-day period. During this time, the visitor delivers a public address and the weekly departmental colloquium, the latter being geared to the scientific community. At other times, visitors are invited for shorter or longer periods to give a colloquium, teach and/or conduct specialized seminars. As stipulated by the Brickweddes, the visitors are asked to spend generous amounts of time with students. Informal discussions and social activities are arranged so that all students have the opportunity to have close contact with our guests. The list of Brickwedde lecturers, with the year of their visit, is given below: E.M. Purcell, Harvard Univ. (1981), Nobel laureate in physics, 1952.

92. News Tips Jan - Mar 2000
7 February 2000 Neutrino pioneers win the wolf prize Raymond Davis, from the BrookhavenNational Laboratory in New York, and Masatoshi Koshiba, from the
http://hepweb.rl.ac.uk/ppUK/PressReleases/2000/pr_tips00a.html
News Tips
Items of news in particle physics from throughout the world, updated regularly. Last modified 16 May 2001
25 February 2000
Dark matter searches yield conflicting results
Results reported at the Fourth International Symposium on Sources and Detection of Dark Matter/Energy in the Universe, at Marina del Rel, California, show conflicting evidence for the existence of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs). The DAMA experiment reports preliminary evidence for WIMPS, while the CDMS experiment observes no such signals. Both experiments, which employ different techniques, are located in the Gran Sasso Laboratory in Italy.
For further information see the press release at: http://www.lngs.infn.it/ 23 February 2000
Superconducting electron laser generates first radiation
An international team of scientists at the German research centre DESY have succeeded in producing ultraviolet radiation with a wavelength around 110 nanometres with a free electron laser (FEL). This is the smallest wavelength ever achieved with such a device. It is the first proof that the new principle on which the FEL is based works for wavelengths around 100 nanometres, and is is a decisive milestone on the way to the X-ray laser of the TESLA (TeV-Energy Superconducting Linear Accelerator) project at DESY.
For further information, see the web:

93. Hannibal Courier-Post Feature Story MU Animal Scientist To Share In Wolf Prize 0
Home Features Web posted Wednesday, January 29, 2003 MU animal scientistto share in wolf prize. COLUMBIA Pregnancy - the act of
http://www.hannibal.net/stories/012903/fea_0129030011.shtml

AP Top News
Archive Business Calendar ... Weddings
Easy Keyword Navigation
How to use our Keyword Navigation
current/forecast
current/forecast

current/forecast
...
March
S M T W T F S
Upcoming Events:
March 15: Red Cross to host First Aid Blitz
March 17: Stardust Drive will close
Stories
Web Classifieds Keyword
Free web-based e-mail is just a click away. Sign up now for your free "@hannibal.net" account. Click here to sign up for a new account. username: password: Subscribe to the e-mail edition of Hannibal.net. Heaven goes by favor. If it went by merit, you would stay out and your dog would go in. Mark Twain Click here for more on Mark Twain Home Features Web posted Wednesday, January 29, 2003 MU animal scientist to share in Wolf Prize COLUMBIA - Pregnancy - the act of one organism coexisting, developing and thriving inside another - remains one of the true mysteries of science. Roberts and Bazer were notified of their award Jan. 7 by Yaron Gruder, director general of the Wolf Foundation. The Israel-based foundation, established by inventor and diplomat Dr. Ricardo Wolf in 1978, awards prizes in each of five scientific areas: agriculture, chemistry, mathematics, medicine and physics. A sixth prize, for arts, rotates among the subjects of architecture, music, painting and sculpture. Roberts and Bazer will receive the award, including a shared $100,000 cash prize, at a ceremony in the Israeli Knessat in Jerusalem, May 11.

94. CJNews Health Page
Thursday February 19, 1998 Shvat 23, 5758, SUBSCRIBE NOW. Weizmann professors awardedwolf prize. REHOVOT — Profs. The first wolf prize was awarded in 1978.
http://www.cjnews.com/pastissues/98/feb19-98/health/health.htm
Weizmann professors awarded Wolf Prize
REHOVOT — Profs. Michael Sela and Ruth Arnon of the Weizmann Institute of Science have been jointly awarded the 1998 Wolf Prize in Medicine.
The prize committee announced that Sela and Arnon are being honored "for their major discoveries in the field of immunology."
In citing their achievements, the committee noted that the two scientists were the first to introduce synthetic polypeptides, or protein fragments, into immunological research. Through their concept of synthetic vaccines, they paved the way for the production of safe and effective vaccines against infectious diseases, as well as specific peptides for autoimmune disorders.
The prize committee also cited Sela and Arnon for developing Copaxone (copolymer-1), a new drug for the treatment of multiple sclerosis.
The Wolf Prize, which is bestowed annually for outstanding achievements in agriculture, chemistry, mathematics, medicine, physics and the arts, and involves an award of $100,000 (US), will be presented to Sela and Arnon by President Ezer Weizman at the Knesset on May 10.
Two other Weizmann Institute scientists are
previous recipients: Prof. Leo Sachs (1980) and Prof. Meir Wilchek (1987), also for achievements in medicine.

95. Wolf's Prize List
Matchbox Miniature A $ 16.00, I Home I Showroom I The Medium I About wolf IWin a prize I Other Links I How to Order I. wolf's Craft ,Wynyard 7325 Tas.
http://www.wolfscraft.com/price.htm
Wolf's Craft Miniatures from Tasmanian Huon Pine The Price List Please note that all prices quoted should serve as a general guide only.
Each creation is unique and prices will vary up or down by a few Dollars.
Please 'Click the Picture' for enlargements and the most important descriptive comments. Settlers Cottage: A $ 28.00 Traders Wagon: A $ 480.00 Miners Cottage: A $ 110.00 Riverside Cottage: A $ 48.00 Workshop: A $ 560.00 The Pub: A $ 85.00 Hilltop Cottage: A $ 65.00 Colonial Kitchen: A $ 495.00 Matchbox Miniature: A $ 16.00 I Home I Showroom I The Medium I About Wolf I Win a Prize I Other Links I How to Order I
Wolf's Craft ,Wynyard 7325 Tas. Australia
Fax/Phone: + (03) 64421166
Site last updated 30. September,2002
Email wolf@wolfscraft.com

96. Math-Prize
The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.mathnet.or.kr/math_prize/wolf.htm
¿ïÇÁ»ó(Wolf Prize)
    »ç¾÷°¡ Wolf°¡ ±âºÎÇÑ 1000¸¸´Þ·¯ÀÇ ±â±ÝÀ» °¡Áö°í Àηù¸¦ À§ÇÏ¿© °úÇаú ¿¹¼úÀÇ ¹ßÀüÀ» ÁõÁø½Å²´Ù´Â ¸ñÀûÀ¸·Î ¼³¸³ÇÑ »ó. 1978³âºÎÅÍ ¸Å³â À̽º¶ó¿¤ ¿¹·ç»ì·½¿¡¼­ ¿ïÇÁÀç´Ü¿¡ ÀÇÇØ ³óÇÐ, È­ÇÐ, ¼öÇÐ, ÀÇÇÐ, ¹°¸®ÇÐ, ¿¹¼ú ºÐ¾ß¿¡¼­ ¼ö¿©µÈ´Ù. ½»ó½Ä¿¡´Â À̽º¶ó¿¤ ´ëÅë·ÉÀÌ Á÷Á¢ Âü¼®ÇÏ¿© ¼ö»óÀڵ鿡°Ô »óÀå°ú 10¸¸´Þ·¯ÀÇ »ó±ÝÀ» ¼ö¿©ÇÑ´Ù. 3~5¸íÀÇ Àü¹®°¡µé·Î ±¹Á¦½É»çÀ§¿øȸ°¡ ±¸¼ºµÅ ¾öÁ¤ÇÑ ½É»ç¸¦ °ÅÄ ¼ö»óÀÚ¸¦ ¼±Á¤ÇÑ´Ù. ƯÈ÷ ÀÇÇаú ¹°¸®ÇÐ ºÐ¾ßÀÇ ¼ö»óÀÚµéÀº ±×ÇØ ³ëº§»óÀ» ¹Þ´Â °æ¿ì°¡ ¸¹¾Æ¼­ ¿ïÇÁ»óÀ» Pre-Nobel Prize·Î ºÎ¸£±âµµ ÇÑ´Ù. 1988³â ½ºÆ¼ºì ȣŷ ¹Ú»ç°¡, 1996³â ¿ÍÀÏÁî ±³¼ö°¡ ÀÌ »óÀ» ¼ö»óÇÑ ´ëÇ¥ÀûÀÎ »ç¶÷ÀÌ´Ù.
The Wolf Foundation was established in 1976 by Dr. Ricardo Wolf (1887-1981), inventor, diplomat and philanthropist, and his wife Francisca Subirana-Wolf (1900-1981), "to promote science and art for the benefit of mankind". Born in Hanover, Dr. Wolf emigrated to Cuba before the WW1. In 1961 he was appointed Cuban Ambassador to Israel and held this position until 1973 when Cuba severed diplomatic ties. He decided then to stay on in Israel where he spent his final years. The Foundation has the status of a private non-profit organization. The Trustees, members of the Council, and selection Committees , perform their duties on a voluntary basis. Only the annual income from the investments is used for the award of prizes, scholarships and to cover the annual expenses. The Rules are embodied in the “Wolf-Foundation Law-1975? aproved by the Knesset. The Foundation is subject to the control of the State Comptroller of Israel.

97. CJNews
May 6, 1999 Iyar 20, 5759, SUBSCRIBE NOW. Canadian prof. awarded WolfPrize in chemistry. By DIANE KOVEN Staff Reporter OTTAWA Raymond
http://www.cjnews.com/pastissues/99/may6-99/front2.htm
Canadian prof. awarded Wolf Prize in chemistry
By DIANE KOVEN

Staff Reporter
OTTAWA - Raymond Lemieux, a professor emeritus at the University of Alberta, is no stranger to accolades and awards.
This week, Lemieux was to be presented with the prestigious Wolf Prize in chemistry by Israeli President Ezer Weizman, at a special ceremony at the Knesset.
Lemieux was also honored at a recent luncheon hosted by David Sultan, the Israeli ambassador to Canada, and Henri Rothschild, president of the Canada-Israel Research and Development Foundation.
The luncheon, attended by senior public servants, scientists and academics, members of Parliament and the Senate, as well as representatives of various Jewish organizations, was an opportunity for the Canadian diplomatic and scientific communities to pay tribute to Lemieux.
"Not only has he honored himself, but through him we are all honored as Canadians," Deputy Prime Minister Herb Gray said of Lemieux. "We appreciate, as Canadians, the honor given to a fellow citizen by the Wolf Foundation."
The Wolf Prize was established in 1978 by the late German-born Ricardo Wolf, who served for many years as the Cuban ambassador to Israel. The prize is awarded annually to outstanding scientists and artists. In a career spanning half a century, Lemieux has contributed significantly to the study of the chemistry of carbohydrates. Some of his work, including fundamental studies on complex carbohydrate-protein interactions and molecular recognition, has important medical and medicinal applications.

Page 5     81-97 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

free hit counter