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         Blobel Gunter:     more detail
  1. Nestlé: Kaspar Villiger, Nestlé Boycott, Menier Chocolate, Nestlé Purina Petcare, Powwow Water, Edward George, Baron George, Günter Blobel
  2. Cell Biologist Dr. Gunter Blobel, Nobel Laureate on how cells work.: An article from: International Journal of Humanities and Peace by Jane Everhart, 2001-01-01
  3. Ehrensenator Der Technischen Universität Dresden: Hans Bredow, Günther Landgraf, Günter Blobel, Otto Buchwitz, Achim Mehlhorn (German Edition)
  4. People From Zagan County: People From Zagan, Adolf Engler, Günter Blobel, Lukasz Gargula, Constantine, Prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen
  5. Hochschullehrer (Rockefeller University): Karl Landsteiner, Abraham Pais, Frederick Seitz, Roderick MacKinnon, Günter Blobel, Saul Aaron Kripke (German Edition)
  6. TRANSFER OF PROTEINS ACROSS MEMBRANES. Parts I & II. by Gunter and Bernhard Dobberstein. Dr. Blobel is a Nobel Laureate in Medicine or Physiology. BLOBEL, 1975
  7. FUNCTIONAL INTERACTION OF PLANT RIBOSOMES WITH ANIMAL MICROSOMAL MEMBRANES. by Bernhard and Gunter Blobel. Dr. Blobel is a Nobel Laureate in Medicine or Physiology. DOBBERSTEIN, 1977
  8. Grandes pequeños descubrimientos.(análisis)(TT: Great little discoveries.)(TA: analysis): An article from: Siempre! by René Anaya, 1999-11-04

61. The Scout Report For Science & Engineering - October 13, 1999
laser technique to see how atoms in a molecule move during a chemical reaction. The nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to gunter blobel for the
http://scout.wisc.edu/report/sci-eng/1999/se-991013.html
go to text version The Internet Scout Project
Volume 3, Number 3
October 13, 1999
A Publication of the Internet Scout Project
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research

62. George Boxer Annual Lecture
Stanford) 1979 Stephen Kuffler (Harvard) 1980 Joseph Goldstein (UTexas, nobel Laureate1985) 1981 gunter blobel (Rockefeller, nobel Laureate 1999) 1982 Britton
http://www2.umdnj.edu/chinjweb/boxer.htm
Annual Boxer Lecture
Epigenetic Regulation of Development in Mammals
Monday, October 16, 2000
4:00 PM
Waksman Auditorium

Home Page

Previous Lecturers

George E. Boxer, PhD
Shirley Tilghman, PhD
2000 Boxer Lecturer Dr. Tilghman is the Howard A. Prior Professor of the Life Sciences in the Department of Molecular Biology at Princeton Univeristy. She is a founding member and first Director of The Institute for Integrative Genomics, a new initiative in life sciences at Princeton University.
She obtained her B.Sc. degree at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Following two years in Sierra Leone, West Africa, where she taught secondary school, she attended graduate school at Temple University where she received her PhD in Biochemistry. She did post-doctoral work with Dr. Philip Leder, who was then at the NIH and now is Professor and Chair of Genetics at Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Tilghman will talk about the phenomenon of 'Genomic imprinting'. The orderly development of the mammalian embryo requires the appropriate activation of genes. For the vast majority of genes, both the mother's and father's copies are expressed identically. However, for a small class of genes, only the mother's or father's copy is expressed. These genes are said to be imprinted. During the process that generates eggs or sperm, parentally imprinted genes are marked in a way such that the resulting embryo can distinguish the parental origin of the gene and express it accordingly. The genetic and biological implications of this process, while it involves only a few genes are significant.

63. PREMIOS NOBEL DE MEDICINA
PREMIOS nobel DE MEDICINA. AÑO, PREMIADO. 1901, EMIL ADOLF VON BEHERING. 1902,RONALD ROSS. 1999, gunter blobel. 2000, ARVID CARLSSON PAUL GREENGARD - ERIC R.KANDEL.
http://es.geocities.com/historalia/premios_nobel_medicina.htm
PREMIOS NOBEL DE MEDICINA AÑO PREMIADO EMIL ADOLF VON BEHERING RONALD ROSS NIELS RYBERG FINSEN IVAN PETROVICH PAVLOV CAMILLO GOLGI - SANTIAGO RAMON Y CAJAL CHARLES LOUIS ALPHONSE LAVERAN ILYA ILYCH MECHNIKOV - PAUL EHRLICH EMIL THEODOR KOCHER ALBRECHT KOSSEL ALLVAR GULLSTRAND ALEXIS CARREL CHARLES ROBERT RICHET ROBERT BARANY JULES BORDET SCHACK AUGUST STEENBERG KROGH ARCHIBALD VIVIAN HILL - OTTO FRITZ MEYERHOF FREDERICK GRANT BENTING - JOHN JAMES RICHARD MACLEOD WILLEM EINTHOVEN JOHANNES ANDREAS GRIB FIBIGER JULIUS WAGNER-JAUREGG CHARLES JULES HENRI NICOLLE CHRISTIAN EIJKMAN -SIR FREDERICK GOWLAND HOPKINS KARL LANDSTEINER OTTO HEINRICH WARBURG SIR CHARLES SCOTT SHERRINGTON - EDGAR DOUGLAS ADRIAN THOMAS HUNT MORGAN GEORGE HOYT WHIPPLE - GEORGE RICHARDS MINOT - WILLIAM PARRY MURPHY HANS SPEMANN SIR HENRY HALLET DALE - OTTO LOEWL ALBERT VON SZENT-GYORGY NAGYRAPOLT CORNEILLE JEAN FRANÇOIS HEYMANS GERHARD DOMAGK HENRIK CARL PETER DAM - EDWARD ADELBERT DOLSY JOSEPH ERLANGER - HERBERT SPENCER GASSER SIR ALEXANDER FLEMING - ERNST BORIS CHAIN - SIR HOWARD WALTER FLOREY HERMANN JOSEPH MULLER CARL FERDINAND CORI - GERTY THERESA RADNITZ-CORI - BERNARDO ALBERTO HOUSSAY PAUL HERMANN MULLER WALTER RUDOLF HESS - ANTONIO CAETANO DE ABREU FREIRE EGAS MONIZ EDWARD CALVIN KENDALL - TADEUS REICHSTEIN - PHILIP SHOWALTER HENCH MAX THEILER SELMAN ABRAHAM WAKSMAN HANS ADOLF KREBS - FRITZ ALBERT LIPMANN

64. The Scientist - Observers Fear Funding Practices May Spell The Death Of Innovati
write and what they do are two different things, asserts gunter blobel, a Howard MartinRodbell, a 1994 nobel Prize winner in physiology or medicine and an
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1995/june/risk_950612.html
The Scientist 9[12]:, Jun. 12, 1995
News
Observers Fear Funding Practices May Spell The Death Of Innovative Grant Proposals
By Billy Goodman Innovative Grant Proposals With fewer applications for support making the cut, novel ideas are the first to go, investigators contend Author: Billy Goodman
Point Grants NIGMS' Marvin Cassman agrees that risky proposals don't get funded. The traditional, romantic notion of scientific research is of a glorious, serendipitous journey into the unknown. But this ideal is belied, in the perception of many scientists, by the apparent reality that much of what gets funded these days is less exploratory and more predictable_cloning and sequencing a gene, for example. While not denying the importance of such predictable studies, the scientific community shares a nearly universal conviction that proposals for risky, innovative research stand very little chance of being funded by federal granting agencies. Grant administrators themselves acknowledge that unconventional ideas or those with a short or disputed track record rarely make the cut. "Controversial areas will not do as well as applications where there is broad consensus," states Marvin Cassman, acting director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS). "Given the degree of difficulty in funding these days, some applications [in areas] where there is [scientific] disagreement will inevitably find themselves outside the bounds of the funding range." Grant-seeking scientists and funding agency staff also cite the very low percentage of all proposals that are funded as the major reason for the difficulty of getting support for risky research.

65. Benessere_sezioni
Translate this page Il nobel alla medicina ’99 gunter blobel ha insistito sull’aspetto «farmacologico»del vino rosso,indicando nella dose giornaliera ottimale uno o due
http://www.gdmland.it/benessere/benessere_sezione.asp?ID_SEZIONE=84&offset=1428

66. LLAMAMIENTO POR LA RATIFICACION DEL ESTATUTO DE ROMA DE LA CORTE PENAL INTERNACI
Translate this page Gore Vidal, Escritor, EE..UU. gunter blobel, Premio nobel en Medicina, Alemania.HMQ Noor de Jordania,. Jimmy Carter, Ex Presidente de Estados Unidos.
http://www.abogarte.com.ar/llamamientocpi.htm
LLAMAMIENTO POR LA RATIFICACION DEL ESTATUTO DE ROMA DE LA CORTE PENAL INTERNACIONAL
Nosotros, los firmantes hombres y mujeres de ciencia, de letras, gobernantes, militantes de la causa de los derechos humanos allá en donde resulten violados, dirigimos un solemne llamamiento a los gobiernos y a los legisladores de todo el mundo, a todos los hombres y mujeres de buena voluntad, en sus diferentes responsabilidades, para que colaboren de manera concreta a poner fin a una epoca marcada por la violencia contra la vida humana, el
Derecho y los derechos, una época que ha garantizado la impunidad de los responsables de los mayores crímenes, conscientes de que no puede haber paz duradera sin un eficaz sistema de justicia internacional, justo e independiente.
Convencidos firmemente de la necesidad de nuevas leyes, de nuevos proyectos y de nuevas iniciativas políticas que estén dirigidas, en el ámbito nacional e internacional, a la tutela y salvaguardia urgente de toda mujer y todo hombre de genocidios, de matanzas, de limpiezas étnicas y de torturas; requerimos urgentemente a todos los legisladores y a todos los gobiernos del mundo que aún no lo hayan hecho:
- A que ratifiquen sin reserva alguna el Estatuto de Roma del Tribunal Penal Internacional Permanente para que este pueda entrar en funcionamiento y llevar a juicio a quienes se manchan con crímenes contra la humanidad, crímenes de guerra y genocidio;

67. »²¤¯¤j¾Ç_²z¤u¾Ç°|_¥Íª«§Þ³N¬ãµo¤¤¤ß
Junona Moroianu, Aurelian Radu, and gunter blobel Karyopherin beta 2 microbiology.scu.edu.tw/micro/people/blobel.htm.2. http//life.ac.cn/xyls/nobelmed99c.htm.
http://brc.se.fju.edu.tw/nobelist/199x/p1999.htm
¦~¿Õ¨©º¸¥Í²zÂå¾Ç¼ú Gunter Blobel ¦¨¤H­ÓÅé¥Ñ¦Ê¥ü­Ó²Ó­M²Õ¦¨¡A¨C­Ó²Ó­M§t¦³ http://microbiology.scu.edu.tw/micro/people/Blobel.htm http://www.medlib.ncku.edu.tw/people/1999.html
³J¥Õ°T¸¹²z½×
SRP ªº¿ëѦӼȰ±¦X¦¨¡Aµ¥¨ì¸Ó³J¥Õ³Q±a¨ì¾A·íªº¤º½èºô½¤¡] endoplasmic reticulum membrane ¡^¦ì¸m¡A§¹¦¨°e¹F¡] targeting ¡^¤u§@¦AÄ~Äò¦X¦¨³J¥Õ¡A¨¥B¦P®ÉÂǤÀ¸Ñ GTP ¯à¶q¨Ó¶i¦æÂà¦ì¡] translocation ¡^¶i¤J¤º½èºô¡A¦A±q¤º½èºô´Â°ªº¸°òÅ骺²Ó­M¥~¤è¦V¿é°e¡C³oºØ¡u³J¥Õ°T¸¹¡v²z½×¤w¸g³Q¼sªx¦a¹B¥Î©ó¸ÑÄÀ²É¸¢Åé¡B¸­ºñÅé¡B¿Ä×QÅé (lysosome) . ³J¥Õ½èªº¡u°T¸¹§Ç¦C°²»¡¡v. ²Ó­M¤º³J¥Õ½è¬O¥ÑÁpµ²¦b¤º½èºô ¹Ï¤G .³J¥Õ½è¬Oª½±µ¸g¥Ñ°T¸¹§Ç¦C©Ò´C¤¶¿é°e ¥t¤@­Ó¨Ò¤l¬O®a±Ú¿ò¶Ç«¬°ªÁx©T¾J¦å(familial hypercholesterinemia)¡A¦]¬°¯f¤H¿é°e§C±K«×¯×³J¥Õ¨ü¾¹¨ì²Ó­Mªí­±ªº¯à¤O¦³¯Ê³´¡A©ÎªÌ§C±K«×¯×³J¥Õ¨ü¾¹³J¥Õ¥»¨­¦³¯Ê³´¡AµLªk¥NÁÂÁx©T¾J¦Ó¨Ï¦å²G¤¤§t¶q°ª¥X¥¿±`­È«Ü¦h¡A±`¾É­P¯f¤H¦bµ£¦~§Y¦º©ó¤ßŦ¯f¡C¨ä¥Lªº¨Ò¤lÁÙ¥]¬A¨àµ£µÇµ²¥Û¦³öªº­ìµo©Ê°ª¯ó»ÄÆQ§¿¯g(primary hyperoxaluria)¤ÎÅn¸~ÅÖºû¯fÅÜ(cystic fibrosis)¡C ³J¥Õ°T¸¹²z½×»P³J¥Õ¿é°eªº°ò¦¬ã¨s¡A¤]¼s¥Æ¦aÀ³¥Î©ó»sĤιA·~¥Í²£¡CÄ´¦p·sªñ¬ãµoªº´XºØªvÀøÀù¯gªº·sÄ´N¬O­PÀù³J¥ÕRas¦b¤º½èºô¯×¤Æªº§í¨î¾¯¡A³o¤@þªºÄ¥¿¬O¹B¥Î³J¥Õ¿é°e­ì²z¡A¨Ï­PÀù³J¥Õ­×¹¢¤£§¹¥þ¦ÓµLªk¿éÂ÷¤º½èºô¡A­¢¨ÏÀù²Ó­M¤Àµõªº°T®§¶Ç»¼¤£¨¬¦Ó¬r¦ºÀù²Ó­M¡C°£¤F¤W­z§ÜÀùĪ«¡AªvÀø¿ò¶Ç¯e¯f¥Îªº¯Ø®q¯À¡B¥Íªø²üº¸»X¡B»¯Àµ¥¡A³£¥i¥H§Q¥Î³J¥Õ°T¸¹²z½×¨Ó½Õ¾ã²Ó­M¤º³¡³J¥Õ¿é°e¡A¤j¤j´£°ª³J¥ÕĪ«ªº²£¯à¡C ¿ò¶Çªº¯e¯f¬O¦]¬°³J¥Õ½è°e¿ù¤F¦a¤è
¬°¨u¨£¯e¯f¨à·Ó«G¥Í¸ô
²Ó­M°T®§¶Ç»¼ ¥¼¨Ó§ÜÀù§Ü·R´þöÁä

¬ã¨s²Ó­M¤º³J¥Õ½è°T¸¹§Ç¦Cªº¬ã¨s¡A¸Ñµª¥Íª«Åé²Ó­M¤º¥¿±`¹B§@¤§Æ_¡C³oºØ·¥¬°°ò¦ªº¬ã¨s¡A¥~¬É¬Ý¦ü§Nªù¡A¨ä¹ê¡A³o¤£¶È¬O¤À¤l¥Íª«¾ÇªººVªù¿j¡A¤]¬O³Ìªñ¥Íª«Âå¾Ç¬ã¨sªº¥D¬y¡C

68. Nature Publishing Group
cell cycle, prions, synaptic and nitric oxide signalling, the Lasker prize for proteindegradation, and of course the 1999 nobel prize to gunter blobel for the
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/ncb/journal/v4/n10/full/ncb1002

69. 25 Aprile
Translate this page Lao pour les Droits de l'Homme (France) • Nhat Vo Tran Executive Secretary -Vietnam Committee on Human Rights (France) • gunter blobel nobel Prize in
http://www.radicalimarche.it/attuali/afghanwomen.htm
1 DICEMBRE:GIORNATA MONDIALE DI DIGIUNO E NONVIOLENZA PER LE DONNE NEL GOVERNO PROVVISORIO AFGHANO Un satyagraha - "giornata mondiale di digiuno e nonviolenza per le donne nel governo di provvisorio afghano" - è stato indetto dal Partito Radicale Transnazionale con Radicali Italiani, con le altre organizzazioni "Non c'è Pace senza Giustizia", "Nessuno Tocchi Caino", "ERA esperanto radicala asocio" e con gli eletti radicali al Parlamento europeo per sabato, 1 dicembre
Il Governo Provvisorio Afghano deve essere costituito anche da donne.
Questa presenza è condizione assolutamente necessaria, anche se di per se non sufficiente, per assicurare il progresso civile, sociale, umano, giuridico, politico di un nobile e martoriato paese e dell'intera regione che ne condivide e determina le sorti.
Occorre evitare che ci si riduca a meri auspici o petizioni di principio o problemi marginali posti a quanti hanno il compito di assicurarne costituzione e insediamento.
Occorre che questo obiettivo politico venga immediatamente perseguito anche con la mobilitazione e il concorso delle pubbliche opinioni, delle forze e delle persone che nel mondo vogliano effettivamente sconfiggere il terrorismo e i regimi violenti che opprimono tanta parte del mondo, con le grandi armi della nonviolenza gandhiana, della democrazia politica, dei principi di giustizia e di libertà, della tolleranza e della umana solidarietà degli stati di diritto.

70. Dominican Health - La Salud Dominicana En Un Solo Lugar...
Translate this page Premios nobel. 1999 gunter blobel, por el descubrimiento de que las proteínas tienenseñales intrínsecas que gobiernan su transporte y localización en la
http://www.dominicanhealth.com/premiosnobel.htm
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71. Nobel
Translate this page No ano passado, o ganhador do nobel de Medicina foi o biólogo molecularalemão gunter blobel, de 64 anos. Residente nos Estados
http://orbita.starmedia.com/meustrabalhos/meionobel.htm
var logDomain = "starmedia"; var logChannel = "paginaspersonales"; var logPath = "otros"; P R Ê M I O N O B E L D E M E D I C I N A
Premio Nobel de Medicina vai para "química do cérebro "
Medicina 2000 é de estudos sobre Parkinson Fonte: Jornal do Brasil. ESTOCOLMO - Os neurocientistas Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard e Eric Kandel foram os ganhadores do Prêmio Nobel de Medicina este ano por desvendarem a química do cérebro humano, explicando como os impulsos elétricos se propagam no sistema nervoso. Os nomes foram revelados ontem por uma comissão de 50 pesquisadores nomeados pelo Instituto Karolinska, na capital sueca. Os vencedores dividirão um prêmio de US$ 915 mil. O sueco Arvid Carlsson, de 77 anos, ex-professor de Farmacologia da University of Gothemburg, coordenou estudos na década de 50 que identificaram a falta do neurotransmissor dopamina como a causa do Mal de Parkinson, doença que leva ao descontrole dos movimentos. Ao detalhar como a dopamina age sobre o cérebro, Carlsson permitiu que medicamentos para combater a doença fossem desenvolvidos. A comunicação entre os mais de 100 bilhões de neurônios que existem no corpo humano só é possível graças aos pontos de contato entre as células nervosas, as chamadas sinapses. As mensagens são transmitidas de neurônio para neurônio por unidades químicas chamadas neurotransmissores, entre os quais a dopamina.

72. Rockefeller University - News
a postdoctoral fellow in the cell biology laboratory of Professor Emeritus PhilipSiekevitz, Ph.D., and nobel laureate George Palade, MD blobel was appointed
http://www.rockefeller.edu/pubinfo/blobelbio.html
Related Links: Nobel Prize Press Release Protein Trafficking Timeline Protein Targeting and Translocation Animation RU Nobel Laureates ... HHMI
Issued: October 11, 1999
Updated: January 18, 2000
runews@rockvax.rockefeller.edu Contact: Joe Bonner An average cell possesses about a billion protein molecules that exist in thousands of types and constantly need replacement. Making proteins and shipping them to appropriate destinations, such as the cell's internal organelles, is a vital activity in cells. Proteins are manufactured by cellular structures called ribosomes. Pioneering research by Blobel and his associates revealed how proteins are transported from ribosomes and integrated into other organelles or transported out of the cell. Work in Blobel's laboratory revealed the existence of a zip code system in the cell. Each newly made protein has an organelle-specific address, a stretch of the protein referred to as a signal sequence that is recognized by receptors on an organelle's surface. Blobel and his colleagues also showed that, for at least one organelle called the endoplasmic reticulum, the binding of the signal sequence to its receptor opens a watery channel in the membrane through which the protein can travel. Blobel now works on identifying similar channels in other organelles.

73. Medicine 1999
Günter blobel Autobiography Curriculum Vitae nobel Lecture Banquet SpeechInterview nobel Diploma Prize Award Photo Other Resources. 1998, 2000.
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1999/
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1999
"for the discovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell" Günter Blobel USA Rockefeller University, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
New York, NY, USA b. 1936
(in Waltersdorf/Silesia, Germany) The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1999
Press Release

Presentation Speech

Illustrated Presentation
...
Other Resources
The 1999 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

74. Charlie Rose Shop - Product Information
blobel Date 10/19/1999 gunter blobel talks with Charlie Rose about the NobelPrize and his hypothesis on the transmission of proteins across the membrane.
http://www.charlierose.com/shop/showTapesbyguest.asp?intProdID=3508

75. Press Release Archives #409-99- MAYOR GIULIANI HONORS ROCKEFELLER UNIVERSITY PRO
Press Release 99 -MAYOR GIULIANI HONORS ROCKEFELLER UNIVERSITY PROFESSORGUNTER blobel ON WINNING THE 1999 nobel PRIZE IN MEDICINE.
http://www.nyc.gov/html/om/html/99b/pr409-99.html
Archives of the Mayor's Press Office
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date: Thursday, October 14, 1999
Release #409-99
Contact: Sunny Mindel/Matthew Higgins (212) 788-2958
MAYOR GIULIANI HONORS ROCKEFELLER UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR GUNTER BLOBEL ON WINNING THE 1999 NOBEL PRIZE IN MEDICINE
At a City Hall ceremony today, Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani honored the winner of the 1999 Nobel Prize in Medicine, Dr. Gunter Blobel, by presenting him with a proclamation declaring October 14, 1999, "Dr. Gunter Blobel Day." Dr. Blobel, a longtime New York City resident and distinguished professor at Rockefeller University, received the Nobel Prize on Monday for his pioneering research on how newly manufactured protein molecules are properly transported within cells. Since cells cannot function without the accurate distribution of protein molecules, Blobel's research revealing the existence of a mapping system within cells has implications for many diseases, including cystic fibrosis, Alzheimer's disease and AIDS. "On behalf of all New Yorkers, I congratulate Dr. Blobel on receiving the prestigous Nobel Prize in Medicine for his groundbreaking lifework in cell biology," the Mayor said. "This year, New York City had the distinction of being home to two Noble Prize winners, Dr. Blobel and Columbia University professor Robert A. Mundell, reflecting our City's long tradition of being a hotbed of innovation and the birthplace of cutting edge ideas. " The Mayor continued, "Many of the world's leading scholars in such diverse fields as economics and physics choose New York City as the place to pursue their ideas. Not only is Dr. Blobel considered one of the preemeninent scientists in his field, he represents the best of New York City's thriving academic and research community. "

76. Reflected Glow
Junona Moroianu (Biology), last week's news that gunter blobel had won the NobelPrize in Physiology or Medicine was met with more than professional interest.
http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/rvp/pubaf/chronicle/v8/o28/moroianu.html
Reflected Glow
BC biologist is protege of recent Nobel Prize winner
For Asst. Prof. Junona Moroianu (Biology), last week's news that Gunter Blobel had won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was met with more than professional interest. Moroianu worked with Blobel in his laboratory for three years during her doctorate and post-doctorate training. "Gunter is one of the brilliant biologists of the century and I was very fortunate to work in his lab," said Moroianu, who paid a congratulatory visit to her mentor at Rockefeller University shortly after the award was announced. Blobel, Moroianu said, revolutionized the study of cell biology when he hypothesized and proved that proteins have intrinsic signals that guide them from their formation in a cell's cytoplasm to a specific destination within the cell. Her own work in an off-shoot of Blobel's. Moroianu is working under an American Cancer Society grant to determine how macromolecules of human papillomaviruses, which are strongly associated with cervical cancer, enter and exit the nuclei of human cells. Moroianu said she was drawn to BC by the opportunity to design her own lab in the renovated Higgins Hall and the sense of community at BC. "You feel like science matters here," she said, "that this is a good place to do good science."

77. Nobel Conference® XXXVII
1992 nobel Laureate in Medicine/Physiology nobel Prize Citation and AutobiographyGunter blobel, 1999 nobel Laureate in Medicine/Physiology nobel Prize
http://www.gustavus.edu/events/nobel/archive/2001/resources/
A note from Conference Director Tim Robinson:
1) A Century of Great Discoveries Survey
This past century perhaps witnessed more changes than any other in recorded human history. For the past century many of the individuals or organizations responsible for these changes have been honored with the award of a Nobel Prize. Which discoveries have affected our lives the most? I've put together a survey with two lists: 1) Great Scientific Discoveries; and 2) Great Engineering Achievements ( compiled by the National Academy of Engineers ). I've asked groups that I've spoken to to list the five in each category which affected our lives the most in the past century. I'm collecting the results and will announce them at the conference.
This might be a good way to get your students to think about how science and other world events affected the lives of people in the last century. It might also be interesting to compare their responses with that of their parents or grandparents. I'd also be interested in what your students think. You can download the survey from our website and if you collect your student's responses and send them to me (robinson@gustavus.edu) I'll announce them at the conference.
2) Learn About the Nobel Prizes and the Nobel Foundation
Nobel Prizes have been awarded to scientists, authors, and other individuals or organizations which have "conferred the greatest benefit on mankind." The best place to learn about the history of the foundation, the prizes themselves, and the prizewinners is to visit the

78. Emil's Epilogue
in Physiology/Medicine Stanley Prusineer 1997 nobel Laureate in Physiology/MedicineGunter blobel -1999 nobel Laureate in Physiology/Medicine Sir John Maddox
http://www.gustavus.edu/oncampus/academics/psych/Epilogue/emil-October-01.html

Click here
for biographical information on Carl Emil Seashore. Volume 11, Issue 11, October 2001
Dr. Tim Robinson leads
Nobel Conference XXXVII

This year's conference, The Second Nobel Century: What is Still to be Discovered? took place on the Gustavus campus on Tuesday and Wednesday, October 2 - 3. Dr. Tim Robinson, Conference Director and Gustavus psychology professor said of the event, "This year we are celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Nobel Prizes by reflecting on the great discoveries, works of art, and accomplishments in the pursuit that, in the words of Alfred Nobel's will, 'conferred the greatest benefit on mankind'." Questions as "What's next to come?", "What can science possibly discover in the next century?", "What are the really pressing global issues that need to be addressed?", "Can science and technology be counted on to improve conditions as they did in the last century"' were discussed by a distinguished panel including: Sir Harold Kroto -1996 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Roald Hoffmann -1981 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Erling Norrby - Secretary General, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences

79. Winners Announced For Year 2000
In 1999, two former KFIP winners were awarded nobel Prizes Gunterblobel (Medicine) and Ahmed Zewail (Science). Professor blobel
http://www.kff.com/winners/2000/winners_announced.htm
WINNERS ANNOUNCED FOR KING FAISAL INTERNATIONAL PRIZES Riyadh, 15 February 2000. HRH Prince Khaled Al Faisal, Director-General of King Faisal Foundation today announced the winners for the 2000 King Faisal International Prizes. The Selection Committees have this year chosen seven laureates for the five Prize topics. Addressing an audience of nearly 400 academics and journalists, Prince Khaled thanked the committee members and expressed his appreciation of their choices. "The objectives of King Faisal International Prize are to reward excellence and to encourage research that benefits mankind. The outstanding contributions made by this year's winners are sure to have meaningful consequences for many people." This year's category for Science was Biology . The prize was jointly awarded to Professor Edward Osborne Wilson of Harvard University and Dr. John Craig Venter of the Institute for Genomic Research. Both laureates are American. Professor Wilson is one of the most outstanding biologists of the century. He has been a pioneer of major scientific disciplines: the field of sociobiology which seeks to elucidate the genetic basis of human and animal behaviour, the study of species within ecosystems, and the conservation of the biological diversity of species. In addition, he has made an ambitious attempt to bring together, in a single conceptural framework, various fields of knowledge, from natural and social sciences to humanities and the arts. Dr. Venter has established novel techniques for the rapid identification of genes and the fast and economical sequencing of entire genomes. These approaches have already revealed the complete genetic make-up of several species of micro-organisms, including agents of human disease. Dr. Venter's work has contributed significantly to the elucidation of the human genome.

80. SCIENG 10/99
The 1999 nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to gunter Blobelfor the discovery that proteins have instrinsic signals that govern their
http://www.lib.adfa.edu.au/scieng/newsletter/scieng10.htm
SCIENG Newsletter SCIENG Newsletter is sent out once a month to let the Science and Engineering Schools know about new developments in the ADFA Library. The print edition of SCIENG is also available in the library. 1. Nobel Prizes The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded the 1999 Nobel Prize in Physics jointly to Professor Gerardus 't Hooft, University of Utrech, and Professor Emeritus Martinus J. G.Veltman, Bilthoven. The two researchers are being awarded the Nobel Prize for having placed particle physics theory on a firmermathematical foundation. They have in particular shown how the theory may be used for precise calculations of physical quantities. The 1999 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to Gunter Blobel for the discovery that "proteins have instrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell". The 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry has been awarded to Professor Ahmed H. Zewail, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, USA, for showing that it is possible with rapid laser technique tosee how atoms in a molecule move during a chemical reaction. 2.PubSCIENCE

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