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         Lee Yuan T:     more detail
  1. Ethnic Chinese Nobel Laureates: Charles K. Kao, Roger Y. Tsien, Steven Chu, Gao Xingjian, Tsung-Dao Lee, Yuan T. Lee, Chen Ning Yang
  2. Chinese Chemists: Yuan T. Lee
  3. Yuan T. Lee
  4. Members of Academia Sinica: Yuan T. Lee
  5. Interviews and Speeches by Y. T. Lee, Yuan Tseh Lee, 1994-06
  6. Zu ji (Mandarin Chinese Edition)

41. Harvard Gazette: Twelve To Receive Honorary Degrees
yuan T. lee won a nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1986 and currently is president ofthe Academia Sinica, a governmentsponsored research institution in Taiwan.
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2002/06.06/01-honorarydegrees.html
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June 06, 2002
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News, events, features Science/Research Latest scientific findings Profiles The people behind the university Community Harvard and neighbor communities Sports Scores, highlights, upcoming games On Campus Newsmakers, notes, students, police log Arts Museums, concerts, theater Calendar Two-week listing of upcoming events
HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Twelve to receive honorary degrees
Nine men and three women will receive honorary degrees at Harvard's 351st Commencement Exercises this morning, including the Hon. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who will speak at the Commencement Afternoon Exercises. In alphabetical order, the recipients are Sydney Brenner, Doctor of Sciences ; Peter Brown, Doctor of Laws ; Katherine Dunham, Doctor of Arts ; Albert O. Hirschman, Doctor of Laws ; Yuan T. Lee, Doctor of Science; Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Doctor of Laws ; Howard Raiffa, Doctor of Laws ; Mamphela Aletta Ramphele, Doctor of Laws ; Julius B. Richmond, Doctor of Science; Neil L. Rudenstine

42. Zeal.com - United States - New - Library - Sciences - Chemistry - Chemists - Oth
5. DOE yuan T. lee's Crossed Molecular Beam Experiment provides an illustrationof lee's beam experiment 6. Ernst, Richard R. - 1991 nobel Autobiography http
http://www.zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=554801

43. About
Dr. yuan T. lee, a nobel laureate in Chemistry in 1986, became Presidentof Academia Sinica in 1994. Under his leadership, Academia
http://www.sinica.edu.tw/~tigp/about.html
Dr. Yuan T. Lee About TIGP F ounded in 1928, Academia Sinica is the most important research institution in Taiwan. More than one thousand researchers from Taiwan and abroad, most of them revered scholars in their respective fields, work diligently within the Academia Sinica's twenty-six research institutes. The mission of the Academia Sinica is to undertake in-depth academic research on various subjects in the sciences and humanities, and to provide guidelines, channels of coordination, and incentives geared toward raising academic standards in this country. Dr. Yuan T. Lee, a Nobel laureate in Chemistry in 1986, became President of Academia Sinica in 1994. Under his leadership, Academia Sinica has been transformed into a modern research institution. Among other things, Dr. Lee has succeeded in inviting numerous top-notch scholars to visit Taiwan or to head research teams at this institution. As a result, Academia Sinica is currently able to work and contribute on an international level. Academia Sinica has also focused on three core research disciplines: mathematics and physical sciences; humanities and social sciences; and life sciences.

44. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
University professor of chemistry and two colleagues were jointly awarded the NobelPrize in Herschbach shared the award with Taiwanborn yuan T. lee of the
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1986/1986j.html

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HARVARD CHEMIST AWARDED NOBEL
Author: By David L. Chandler, Globe Staff Date: Thursday, October 16, 1986
Page:
Section:
METRO A Harvard University professor of chemistry and two colleagues were jointly awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry yesterday for work that an American Chemical Society spokesman said "opened up important new fields of chemistry and . . . has really dramatic implications." The professor, Dudley R. Herschbach, who has taught chemistry at Harvard since 1963, said winning the recognition is "a lot of fun. Work that you do out of pure love is now being recognized." Herschbach shared the award with Taiwan-born Yuan T. Lee of the University of California at Berkeley and John Polanyi of the University of Toronto. The research, done independently by the three chemists, has allowed scientists to zero in on the behavior of individual molecules in a chemical reaction rather than just looking at the overall behavior of a large mass. The new understandings made possible by this research, according to Eric Leber of the American Chemical Society, could have profound applications in such varied areas as improving the efficiency of industrial chemical reactions, improving the ability to burn coal and other fuels cleanly and understanding reactions in the earth's atmosphere such as the depletion of the protective ozone layer by various chemicals.

45. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
chemistry at Harvard. Sharing the 1986 nobel Prize in Chemistry were yuan T. lee, 49, a professor of chemistry at Berkeley. Born in
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1986/1986i.html

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NOBELIST'S CONCERNS GO BEYOND CHEMISTRY
HERSCHBACH'S INTERESTS SPAN ARTS, ATHLETICS
Author: By Brad Pokorny, Globe Staff Date: Thursday, October 16, 1986
Page: Section: METRO At a press conference yesterday, Dudley R. Herschbach downplayed his musical talents, compared basic research to the fine arts and made the scientific discovery for which he received the Nobel Prize in chemistry sound deceptively simple. And then he donned a baseball cap and joked about the Red Sox. "The exciting thing about the Red Sox is the improbability of it all," said the Harvard University chemistry professor, referring to the team's comeback in the American League playoffs. "There must be divine intervention here. That's the only way to explain it." Longtime friends say Herschbach's performance was typical of the professor, whose outside interests extend from athletics to the arts to canoeing. In addition to being a top-notch research scientist, they said, he has a rare degree of human warmth and compassion. Throughout his teaching career, they added, he has expressed a special concern for undergraduates. Six years ago, they said, Herschbach, along with his wife, Georgene, agreed to serve as comasters at Currier House, a large residence hall on the Harvard- Radcliffe campus.

46. Asia Pacific Transcripts
would offer the premiership to the nobel laureat, Dr WU lee yuantseh is such a highlyrespected figure in close associates have told him, they don't want him
http://www.abc.net.au/ra/asiapac/archive/2000/mar/raap-30mar2000-1.htm
TAIWAN PRESIDENT-ELECT CHOOSES DEFENCE MINISTER AS PREMIER
In Taiwan, President-elect Chen Shui-bian says the Defence Minister Tang Fei has accepted his offer to serve as premier for all of Taiwan.
Mr Chen says Tang Fei IS the most suitable choice for the post after Taiwan's Nobel Laureate, Dr Lee Yuan-tseh whom he had long courted for the premier's post, declined to leave academia for the world of politics.
Taiwan analyst, Dr Joseph Wu told Asia Pacific's Sen Lam that Tang Fei is an astute political choice.
WU: Tang Fei has been serving as Minister of Defence for a couple of years, and he's been respected in a society in general. And he is also highly respected among the military. He is quite competant with American scholars who deal with the Cross-Strait policy, and deal with the regional security issues, (they) have all say that Tang Fei is very competant and very energetic military officer.
LAM: Do you think that in appointing Tang Fei that the President-elect might hope that it could have a positive effect on Cross-Strait relations with China?
WU: I'm not sure whether Tang Fei's appointment would improve the Cross-Strait relations. But as you may know, the Cross-Strait relations are not very good recently because China has such a negative influence, or a negative view on Chen Shui-bian and on the DPP as a whole, and if the tension continues to grow, we need to have somebody who is well informed about the Cross-Strait relations and about the military. So having Tang Fei out there as a premier will have a force of psychological stability among the people here in Taiwan. People will feel more secure once conflict erupts...we'll have somebody out there to defend Taiwan.

47. Days Of Cal | Cal Nobel Prize Winners
Cal has had more nobel Laureates than any other American university except Harvardand the University of Chicago. 1986, yuan T. lee (Chemistry) Professor of
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/calhistory/nobel.html
Cal Nobel Prize Winners
The University of California, Berkeley, can boast of having 17 Nobel Laureates in its distinguished history of research and discovery. Beginning with Ernest O. Lawrence in 1939, these professors represent a wide range of scholarly pursuits: from physics to economics, from molecular and cell biology to slavic languages and literature. Cal has had more Nobel Laureates than any other American university except Harvard and the University of Chicago.
Award Year Recipients Ernest O. Lawrence (Physics) (d. 1958) Wendell M. Stanley (Chemistry) (d. 1971) John H. Northrop (Chemistry) (d. 1987) William F. Giauque (Chemistry) (d. 1982) Edwin M. McMillan, Chemistry (Chemistry)
Professor of Physics, Emeritus
Director Emeritus, Lawrence Berkeley
Laboratory (d. 1991) Glenn T. Seaborg (Chemistry)
University Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus
Associate Director, Lawrence Berkeley
Laboratory (d. 1999) Owen Chamberlain (Physics)
Professor of Physics Emilio G. Segre (Physics)
Professor of Physics, Emeritus (d. 1989) Donald A. Glaser (Physics)

48. The Back Page: Discovering Our Roots: The PhD Lineasge Contest Winners
as a 60th birthday present to Sibener's advisor, yuan T. lee, and Dudley Herschbachof Harvard University, with whom lee shared the 1986 nobel Prize, along
http://www.aps.org/apsnews/0399/039916.html
March 1999 Edition
THE BACK PAGE
Discovering Our Roots: The PhD Lineage Contest Winners
Most frequently cited forbears: J. J. Thomson and Ernest B. Rutherford
The Winner's Circle
  • Earliest Ancestry: Steven Sibener, University of Chicago
  • Earliest U.S. Ancestry: Michael Gerver, MIT
  • Most Generations: Robert Lanier, Livermore National Lab
  • Earliest Date/Fewest Generations: David Lockwood, National Research Council of Canada
  • Shortest Lineage: George Snow, University of Maryland
  • Most "Nobel" Lineage (tie): Martin Perl, Stanford University E. Raymond Andrew, University of Florida, Gainesville
  • Most Frequently Cited Forebears (tie): J.J. Thomson and Ernest B. Rutherford L ast March, APS News announced a PhD lineage contest, in which entrants were asked to trace their professional "family tree" - i.e., the production of doctoral level physicists by their thesis advisors - as far back as possible. We received many entries, often containing fascinating historical details, and were impressed at the considerable effort expended by certain members to trace their academic lineage. In many cases, the submissions included substantial, detailed commentary based on exhaustive research. The further back in time our amateur geneologists went, the more blurred the lines between the disciplines became. Chemists, mathematicians, medical doctors, and apothecaries appear regularly prior to the 19th century, along with geologists involved with mining concerns. Those APS members strongly rooted in chemistry had something of an unfair advantage, thanks to an established tradition of tracking intellectual lineage in chemistry. Many can track their ancestry back to such 18th-century luminaries as Claude-Louis Berthollet and Antoine Lavoisier. In the spirit of professional inclusion, the judges did not quibble as to whether a lineage was strictly in "physics," provided the submission was made by an APS member.

49. Digital Chem1A - Lab Manual - Experiment 5
professor yuan T. lee established a new understanding of chemical reactions byusing gas phase molecular beams. In 1986 Prof. lee shared the nobel prize in
http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~chem1a/labmanual/expt5.htm
Lab Manual Experiment
Molecular Weight

Tips

page 1 of 3 Introduction
Experimental Investigation
In the write-up
Introduction to the Laboratory Experiment 1:
Take A Breath
Experiment 2:
Comrades, Start Your Airbags
Experiment 3:
How The Nose Knows
Experiment 4:
Atoms,

Molecules, and Light
Experiment 5: Molecular Weight: The Mystery Revealed Experiment 6: Gas Laws Experiment 7: Products and Reactants: The Dynamic-Duo of Equilibrium Experiment 8: How Hot Is That Flame? Experiment 9: Heat Capacity of an Unknown Metal Experiment 10: Solubility, Spontaneity, and the Big Picture Appendix I Appendix II Appendix III Introduction
Chem-Connections
Web-in-sight Nobel Prize winners: http://nobelprizes.com/nobel/chemistry/1986b.html

50. Nobel Prize In Chemistry - Wikipedia
http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html. Bruce Merrifield 1985 HerbertA. Hauptman, Jerome Karle 1986 Dudley R. Herschbach, yuan T. lee, John C
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Chemistry
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Nobel Prize in Chemistry
(Redirected from Nobel Prize/Chemistry Winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry , listed by year of award in ascending order.
Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff Hermann Emil Fischer Svante August Arrhenius Sir William Ramsay ... Richard Adolf Zsigmondy The (Theodor) Svedberg Heinrich Otto Wieland Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Arthur Harden Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin ... Robert Curl , Sir Harold Kroto Richard Smalley Paul D. Boyer John E. Walker ... Koichi Tanaka
Source: http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html
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51. ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN CHEMISTRY. Name, Year Awarded.Alder, Kurt, 1950. Langmuir, Irving, 1932. lee, yuan T. 1986. Lehn, JeanMarie,1987.
http://www.bioscience.org/urllists/nobelc.htm
FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE;
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN
CHEMISTRY, PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE

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

52. The Star Archive - Yuan T. Lee
Listing last updated on November 2nd, 2002, AD yuan T. lee. (nobel chemistrylaueate 1986). Academia Sinca Taipal 11529 Taiwan Rep Of China.
http://www.stararchive.com/starc2000/sl/34653.html
More Autographs Links Add Information Link to this Page Print Listing last updated on November 2nd, 2002 AD:
Yuan T. Lee
nobel chemistry laueate 1986
Academia Sinca Taipal
11529 Taiwan Rep Of China
Link to this page!

This listing has been last updated on November 2nd, 2002

53. Lee, Yuan Tseh. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
lee, yuan Tseh. In 1986, lee shared the nobel Prize in Chemistry with
http://www.bartleby.com/65/le/Lee-Yuan.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Lee, Yuan Tseh

54. Herschbach, Dudley Robert. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
In 1986, Herschbach shared the nobel Prize in Chemistry with yuan T. lee and JohnC. Polanyi for helping to apply the technology and theory of physics to
http://www.bartleby.com/65/he/Herschba.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Herschbach, Dudley Robert

55. John Polanyi Official Website Nobel Statement, Signatories, Statement By Nobel L
Statement by nobel Laureates on the occasion of the onehundredth anniversary ofthe nobel Prize. Leon M. Lederman (Physics, 1988); yuan T. lee (Chemistry, 1986
http://www.utoronto.ca/jpolanyi/nobelstatement/signatures.html
Signatores, Statement by Nobel Laureates
on the occasion of the one-hundredth anniversary of the Nobel Prize
  • Zhores I. Alferov (Physics, 2000) Sidney Altman (Chemistry, 1989) Philip W. Anderson (Physics, 1977) Oscar Arias Sanchez (Peace, 1987) J. Georg Bednorz (Physics, 1987) Bishop Carlos F. X. Belo (Peace, 1996) Baruj Benacerraf (Physiology/Medicine, 1980) Hans A. Bethe (Physics, 1967) Gerd K. Binnig (Physics, 1986) James W. Black (Physiology/Medicine, 1988) Guenter Blobel (Physiology/Medicine, 1999) Nicolaas Bloembergen (Physics, 1981) Norman E. Borlaug (Peace, 1970) Paul D. Boyer (Chemistry, 1997) Bertram N. Brockhouse (Physics, 1994) Herbert C. Brown (Chemistry, 1979) Georges Charpak (Physics, 1992) Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (Physics, 1997) John W. Cornforth (Chemistry, 1975) Francis H.C. Crick (Physiology/ Medicine, 1962) James W. Cronin (Physics, 1980) Paul J. Crutzen (Chemistry, 1995) Robert F. Curl (Chemistry, 1996) His Holiness The Dalai Lama (Peace, 1989) Johann Deisenhofer (Chemistry, 1988) Peter C. Doherty (Physiology/Medicine, 1996) Manfred Eigen (Chemistry, 1967)
  • 56. John Polanyi Official Website Nobel Statement, Statement By Nobel Laureates
    Statement by nobel Laureates on the occasion of the onehundredth anniversary ofthe nobel Prize. Leon M. Lederman (Physics, 1988); yuan T. lee (Chemistry, 1986
    http://www.utoronto.ca/jpolanyi/nobelstatement/statement.html
    Statement by Nobel Laureates
    on the occasion of the one-hundredth anniversary of the Nobel Prize
    THE NEXT HUNDRED YEARS
  • Zhores I. Alferov (Physics, 2000) Sidney Altman (Chemistry, 1989) Philip W. Anderson (Physics, 1977) Oscar Arias Sanchez (Peace, 1987) J. Georg Bednorz (Physics, 1987) Bishop Carlos F. X. Belo (Peace, 1996) Baruj Benacerraf (Physiology/Medicine, 1980) Hans A. Bethe (Physics, 1967) Gerd K. Binnig (Physics, 1986) James W. Black (Physiology/Medicine, 1988) Guenter Blobel (Physiology/Medicine, 1999) Nicolaas Bloembergen (Physics, 1981) Norman E. Borlaug (Peace, 1970) Paul D. Boyer (Chemistry, 1997) Bertram N. Brockhouse (Physics, 1994) Herbert C. Brown (Chemistry, 1979) Georges Charpak (Physics, 1992) Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (Physics, 1997) John W. Cornforth (Chemistry, 1975) Francis H.C. Crick (Physiology/ Medicine, 1962) James W. Cronin (Physics, 1980) Paul J. Crutzen (Chemistry, 1995) Robert F. Curl (Chemistry, 1996) His Holiness The Dalai Lama (Peace, 1989) Johann Deisenhofer (Chemistry, 1988) Peter C. Doherty (Physiology/Medicine, 1996) Manfred Eigen (Chemistry, 1967)
  • 57. Yuan T. Lee: Awards Won By Yuan T. Lee
    123Awards hardwork is paid in form of awards. Awards of yuan T. lee. OTHERnobel,1986, CHEMISTRY. Enter Artist/Album. Partner Sites. Stardose.com. RealLyrics.com.
    http://www.123awards.com/artist/3883.asp
    hardwork is paid in form of awards Awards of Yuan T. Lee OTHER-NOBEL CHEMISTRY Enter Artist/Album
    Partner Sites
    Stardose.com RealLyrics.com OnlyHitLyrics.com Biography Search Engine ... privacy

    58. The Glory Of Nobel Prize
    Even though every citizen has the right to vote, the political framework isn't perfect. Afterbidding farewell to Dr. yuanTseh lee, I kept on thinking of
    http://www.pcsh.tpc.edu.tw/1/li.htm
    The Glory of Nobel Prize. Dr. Yuan-Tseh Lee by Ying-Yuen Hong
    Dr. Lee 1961 B efore the age of 50, it seemed that his whole life was spent in the laboratory. Today, he is always busy training the next generation of talented scientists. The sudden desire came upon me to shout out to him, "Thank you Dr. Lee." Only a Chinese person would probably have such deep feelings for him.....
    When I saw this old photo, I had the following thoughts...
    Dr. Lee 1999 F rom 1840, due to a total disregard and lack of knowledge of contemporary science and technology, the Chinese were defeated on their own soil time and again by technologically superior countries such as Great Britain, France and Japan. Perhaps out of aggravation over their losses, the Chinese people in Taiwan emphasized science and technology within education. After Dr. Yuan-tseh Lee won the Nobel Prize in 1986, he gave up his high-paying job abroad and returning to Taiwan, devoted himself serving his fellow Taiwanese in the academic world. His life achievements far exceeded that of an ordinary leader. It makes me feel honored and privileged to have had the opportunity to interview Dr. Lee. Dudley Herschbach, Yuan-tseh Lee, and J. Polanyi jointly won the Nobel Prize in 1986.

    59. Nobel Laureate Can't Help Chen
    nobel laureate can't help Chen. ee yuantseh announced his resignation as presidentof the However, it seems unlikely that lee's support will help Chen win more
    http://www.taiwanheadlines.gov.tw/20000315/20000315o1.html
    Updated daily Monday through Friday Wednesday, March 15, 2000 Nobel laureate can't help Chen Published: March 15, 2000
    Source: The China Post ee Yuan-tseh announced his resignation as president of the prestigious Academia Sinica on Monday to make himself available to be DPP presidential candidate Chen Shui-bian's chief adviser on national policies, if Chen wins the election. The 1986 Nobel Prize-winning chemist's move is likely to give Chen's performance a boost in Saturday's poll, given his outstanding academic status and active devotion to educational and social reforms since his return from the United States six years ago.
    However, it seems unlikely that Lee's support will help Chen win more votes on the crucial issue of Taiwan's relations with mainland China an area where Chen is politically vulnerable. By endorsing Chen's campaign at this moment, Lee apparently hopes to help him overcome that weakness, seen by many as Chen's Achilles' heel.
    In his resignation announcement, Lee said that, as the chief adviser in a Chen administration, he would give first priority to addressing relations with mainland China and easing cross-strait tensions.
    However, Lee will first have to dispel Beijing's suspicion of Chen's intentions. Recently, Beijing openly warned Taiwan voters not to back Chen, threatening that it will refuse to deal with a new independence-minded leader.

    60. Chen Vows Cross-strait Roles For Koo, Lee Yuan-tseh
    endorsement of nobel prize winning academic lee yuantseh, the about his possibleappointment both from lee and Chen as long as academics didn't openly stump
    http://www.taiwanheadlines.gov.tw/20000313/20000313p2.html
    Updated daily Monday through Friday Monday, March 13, 2000 Chen vows cross-strait roles for Koo, Lee Yuan-tseh Published: March 13, 2000
    Source: The China Post iding on the prestige generated by the tacit endorsement of Nobel prize winning academic Lee Yuan-tseh, the Democratic Progressive Party's (DPP's) Chen Shui-bian said yesterday that he is elected president, Lee would guide cross-strait relations but that the Kuomintang's (KMT's) top Beijing negotiator, Koo Chen-fu would be retained in a central role, a suggestion greeted with scorn by President Lee Teng-hui yesterday.
    Chen yesterday also released more names of well-known academics willing to serve on his proposed national policy advisory committee.
    "The DPP is already totally prepared for talks with the mainland," Chen told a crowd yesterday morning.
    Chen said Lee, president of the Academica Sinica and the highest ranking member of his planned national policy advisory group, would lead cross-strait negotiations but he also planned to seek the assistance of Koo Chen-fu, chairman of Taipei's semi-official organization for negotiating with Beijing, the Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF).
    Koo's vast and valuable experience would have him playing an important role, Chen said, and together they would mobilize national consensus so that "cross-strait negotiations can become negotiations by and of the people."

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