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  1. Spectroscopy With Coherent Radiation: Selected Papers of Norman F. Ramsey With Commentary (World Scientific Series in 20th Century Physics , Vol 21) by Norman F. Ramsey, 1997-09
  2. Molecular Beams (The International Series of Monographs on Physics) by Norman F. Ramsey, 1990-04-12
  3. Laser Physics at the Limits
  4. MOLECULAR BEAMS (INTERNATIONAL SERIES OF MONOGRAPHS ON PHYSICS) by NORMAN F RAMSEY, 1956
  5. Vibrational and Centrifugal Effects on Nuclear Interactions and Rotational Moments in Molecules by Norman F. Ramsey, 1952-01-01
  6. Recent Advances in Science : Physics and Applied Mathematics (First Symposium on Recent Advances in Science Spring 1954) by I. I. Rabi, C. H. Townes, et all 1956
  7. Nuclear moments by Norman F Ramsey, 1954
  8. Molecular Beams (The International Series of Mono on Physics) by Norman F. Ramsey, 1990
  9. History of atomic clocks by Norman F Ramsey, 1980
  10. TRAVELLERS (Travelers) IN DARKNESS - The Souvenir Book of the World Horror Convention 2007: Dreaming of Mike; The Things He Said; The Vechi barbat; He Will Be Legend; Dark Times; Wild Things Live Here; The Good Witch of the North; Wishful Thinking by Michael Marshall Smith, Joe R. Lansdale, et all 2007-03
  11. TRAVELLERS IN DARKNESS - The Souvenir Book of the World Horror Convention 2007 by Stephen Jones, Michael Marshall Smith, et all 2007-03
  12. Imagination Fully Dilated: The Literated Works of Alan M. Clark. Volume I.
  13. The London Mystery Magazine, No 33, June 1957 by L. B.; Rosemary Timperley; F. L. Pugh; C. J. Riehle; Tom Girtin; Wallace Nichols; S. W. Bartrum; Denys Val Baker; Peter Thornhill; Micahel Jacot; Roswell B. Rohde; Shamus Frazer Gordon, 1957

1. Norman F. Ramsey - Autobiography
norman F. ramsey – Autobiography. 45. The Electric Dipole Moment of the Neutron.Physical Scripta T22, 40 (1988). From Les Prix nobel, 1989.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1989/ramsey-autobio.html
I was born August 27, 1915 in Washington, D.C. My mother, daughter of German immigrants, had been a mathematics instructor at the University of Kansas. My father, descended from Scottish refugees and a West Point graduate, was an officer in the Army Ordnance Corps. His frequently changing assignments took us from Washington, DC to Topeka, Kansas, to Paris, France, to Picatinny Arsenal near Dover, New Jersey, and to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. With two of the moves I skipped a grade and, encouraged by my supportive parents and teachers, I graduated from high school with a high academic record at the age of 15.
Columbia gave me a Kellett Fellowship to Cambridge University, England, where I enrolled as a physics undergraduate. The Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge was then an exciting world center for physics with a stellar array of physicists: J.J. Thomson, Rutherford, Chadwick, Cockcroft, Eddington, Appleton, Born, Fowler, Bullard, Goldhaber and Dirac. An essay I wrote at Cambridge for my tutor, Maurice Goldhaber, first stimulated my interest in molecular beams and in the possibility of later doing my Ph. D. research with I.I. Rabi at Columbia.
After receiving from Cambridge my second bachelors degree, I therefore returned to Columbia to do research with Rabi. At the time I arrived Rabi was rather discouraged about the future of molecular beam research, but this discouragement soon vanished when he invented the molecular beam magnetic resonance method which became a potent source for new fundamental discoveries in physics. This invention gave me the unique opportunity to be the first graduate student to work with Rabi and his associates, Zacharias, Kellogg, Millman and Kusch, in the new field of magnetic resonance and to share in the discovery of the deuteron quadrupole moment.

2. Norman F. Ramsey - Nobel Lecture
norman F. ramsey – nobel Lecture. norman F. ramsey AutobiographyCurriculum Vitae nobel Lecture Banquet Speech Other Resources.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1989/ramsey-lecture.html
Experiments with separated oscillatory fields and hydrogen masers Nobel Lecture, December 8, 1989
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990. The Lecture in pdf-format Download
Adobe Acrobat Reader is free software that lets you view and print Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) files. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1989
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The 1989 Prize in:
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3. Norman F. Ramsey Winner Of The 1989 Nobel Prize In Physics
norman F. ramsey, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. norman F. ramsey. 1989 nobel Laureate in
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1989a.html
N ORMAN F R AMSEY
1989 Nobel Laureate in Physics
    for the invention of the separated oscillatory fields method and its use in the hydrogen maser and other atomic clocks.
    and the other half jointly to:
Background
    Born: 1915
    Residence: U.S.A.
    Affiliation: Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
Featured Internet Links Nobel News Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
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4. Index Of Nobel Laureates In Physics
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSICS. Name, Year Awarded. Rainwater,James, 1975. Raman, Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata, 1930. ramsey, norman F. 1989.
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSICS
Name Year Awarded Alferov, Zhores I. Alfven, Hannes Alvarez, Luis W. Anderson, Carl David ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

5. Ramsey, Norman Foster
ramsey, norman Foster. (b. Aug. 27, 1915, Washington, DC, US), American physicistwho received onehalf of the nobel Prize for Physics in 1989 for his
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/493_95.html
Ramsey, Norman Foster
(b. Aug. 27, 1915, Washington, D.C., U.S.), American physicist who received one-half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1989 for his development of a technique to induce atoms to shift from one specific energy level to another. (The other half of the prize was awarded to Wolfgang Paul and Hans Georg Dehmelt .) Ramsey's innovation, called the separated oscillatory fields method, found application in the precise measurement of time and frequency. Ramsey studied physics at Columbia University, N.Y., and received a Ph.D. degree there in 1940. He also earned a D.Sc. degree from the University of Cambridge in 1954. After teaching at various American universities in the 1940s, he taught at Harvard University from 1947, becoming Higgins professor of physics there in 1966. In 1949 Ramsey perfected a method to study the structure of atoms by sending them through two separate oscillating electromagnetic fields. The rapid energy-level transitions thereby induced in a beam of atoms produced an interference pattern that could provide important data about the structure and behaviour of atoms. When synchronized with a microwave oscillator, the atoms' oscillations could also be used to measure the passage of time with extreme accuracy, thus providing the basis for the modern cesium atomic clock, which sets present time standards. In the 1950s Ramsey helped develop the hydrogen maser, a microwave-emitting relative of the laser.

6. Nobel Prize Winners P-R
ramsey, norman Foster, 1989, physics, US, development of the atomic clock, Rowland,F. Sherwood, 1995, chemistry, US, explanation of processes that deplete Earth's
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/win_p-r.html
Article Year Category Country* Achievement Literary Area Palade, George E. physiology/medicine U.S. research on structural and functional organization of cells peace France Pasternak, Boris Leonidovich (declined) literature U.S.S.R. novelist, poet Paul, Wolfgang physics West Germany methods to isolate atoms and subatomic particles for study Pauli, Wolfgang physics Austria discovery of the exclusion principle of electrons Pauling, Linus chemistry U.S. study of the nature of the chemical bond Pauling, Linus peace U.S. Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich physiology/medicine Russia work on the physiology of digestion Paz, Octavio literature Mexico poet, essayist Pearson, Lester B. peace Canada Pedersen, Charles J. chemistry U.S. development of molecules that can link with other molecules Penzias, Arno physics U.S. discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation, providing support for the big-bang theory Peres, Shimon peace Israel peace Argentina Perl, Martin Lewis physics U.S. discovery of tau subatomic particle Perrin, Jean

7. Curriculum Vitae Norman F. Ramsey
nobel Prize in Physics 19012000 http//www.nobel.se, norman F.ramsey.Born 27 August 1915 in Washington Copyright The nobel Foundation,
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1989/ramsey_cv.html

8. Norman F. Ramsey
nobel Prize in Physics 19012000 http//www.nobel.se, norman F. ramsey.I was born August Copyright The nobel Foundation,
http://physics.uplb.edu.ph/laureates/1989/bio_ramsey.html

9. Norman F. Ramsey - Project Alberta
The nobel Prize in Physics 1989. norman F. ramsey. Deputy Director Project Alberta. Los Alamos - Tinian Island. I was born August
http://www.childrenofthemanhattanproject.org/HF/Biographies - Men/ramsey.htm
Children of the Manhattan Project
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1989 NORMAN F. RAMSEY Deputy Director - Project Alberta Los Alamos - Tinian Island
I was born August 27, 1915 in Washington, D.C. My mother, daughter of German immigrants, had been a mathematics instructor at the University of Kansas. My father, descended from Scottish refugees and a West Point graduate, was an officer in the Army Ordnance Corps. His frequently changing assignments took us from Washington, DC to Topeka, Kansas, to Paris, France, to Picatinny Arsenal near Dover, New Jersey, and to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. With two of the moves I skipped a grade and, encouraged by my supportive parents and teachers, I graduated from high school with a high academic record at the age of 15.
Columbia gave me a Kellett Fellowship to Cambridge University, England, where I enrolled as a physics undergraduate. The Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge was then an exciting world center for physics with a stellar array of physicists: J.J.. Thomson, Rutherford, Chadwick, Cockcroft, Eddington, Appleton, Born, Fowler, Bullard, Goldhaber and Dirac. An essay I wrote at Cambridge for my tutor, Maurice Goldhaber, first stimulated my interest in molecular beams and in the possibility of later doing my Ph. D. research with I. I. Rabi at Columbia.
After receiving from Cambridge my second bachelors degree, I therefore returned to Columbia to do research with Rabi. At the time I arrived Rabi was rather discouraged about the future of molecular beam research, but this discouragement soon vanished when he invented the molecular beam magnetic resonance method which became a potent source for new fundamental discoveries in physics. This invention gave me the unique opportunity to be the first graduate student to work with Rabi and his associates, Zacharias, Kellogg, Millman and Kusch, in the new field of magnetic resonance and to share in the discovery of the deuteron quadrupole moment.

10. 41 Nobel Laureates Sign Against A War Without International Support
to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon; norman F. ramsey,a Manhattan In addition to winning nobel prizes, 18 of the signers have
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines03/0128-01.htm
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Published on Tuesday, January 28, 2003 by the New York Times 41 Nobel Laureates Sign Against a War Without International Support by William J. Broad Forty-one American Nobel laureates in science and economics issued a declaration yesterday opposing a preventive war against Iraq without wide international support. The statement, four sentences long, argues that an American attack would ultimately hurt the security and standing of the United States, even if it succeeds. The signers, all men, include a number who at one time or another have advised the federal government or played important roles in national security. Among them are Hans A. Bethe, an architect of the atom bomb; Walter Kohn, a former adviser to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon; Norman F. Ramsey, a Manhattan Project scientist who readied the Hiroshima bomb and later advised NATO; and Charles H. Townes, former research director of the Institute for Defense Analyses at the Pentagon and chairman of a federal panel that studied how to base the MX missile and its nuclear warheads. In addition to winning Nobel prizes, 18 of the signers have received the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest science honor.

11. 5 College Alumni Nobel Laureates Are Alexander Hamilton Winners
1981;. norman F. ramsey, Jr. '35, nobel laureate in Physics in 1989;.Melvin Schwartz '53, who won the nobel in Physics in 1988, and.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/record/archives/vol21/vol21_iss10/record2110.15.html
5 College Alumni Nobel Laureates Are Alexander Hamilton Winners
Photograph : Leon N. Cooper, '51.
Photograph : Roald Hoffman, '58.
Photograph : Norman F. Ramsey Jr. '35.
Photograph : Melvin Schwartz, '53.
Photograph : Julian S. Schwinger, '36.
Columbia College, which has graduated more Nobel laureates in science than any other American college, will present to five of them its highest honor, the Alexander Hamilton Medal, this Thursday in Low Rotunda. "These are humanist-scientists, at home with Hamlet and the atom, whose shared experience of Columbia's famed core curriculum sets them apart," said President Rupp. They are:
  • Leon N. Cooper '51, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1972;
  • Roald Hoffmann '58, winner of the Nobel in Chemistry in 1981;
  • Norman F. Ramsey, Jr. '35, Nobel laureate in Physics in 1989;
  • Melvin Schwartz '53, who won the Nobel in Physics in 1988, and
  • Julian S. Schwinger '36, posthumously, winner of the Nobel in Physics in 1965. Clarice Schwinger, his widow, will accept the award.
A total of nine Nobel Prize winners in science (physics, chemistry and physiology or medicine) are graduates of the College, the record for undergraduate degrees earned at any one school. The other four received the Hamilton Medal in a similar celebration 34 years ago, in 1961. Generally, the medal is awarded to only one individual each year. The medal has been given since 1947 to honor faculty, former faculty or alumni for "distinguished service and accomplishment in any field of human endeavor." Previous winners also include Columbia President Dwight D. Eisenhower and alumni Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II.

12. Rupp Warns Against Diversion From Basic Science
1981. norman F. ramsey, Jr. '35, nobel laureate in Physics in 1989.Melvin Schwartz '53, who won the nobel in Physics in 1988. Julian
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/record/archives/vol21/vol21_iss11/record2111.22.html
Rupp Warns Against Diversion from Basic Science
Photograph : From left: Leon N. Cooper '51; Roald Hoffmann '58; Clarice Schwinger, widow of Julian S. Schwinger '36; Norman F. Ramsey, Jr. '35, and Melvin Schwartz '53. Photo Credit: Joe Pineiro.
President Rupp said last Thursday that great universities should resist pressure to perform applied research at the expense of pure science. "Universities must not be construed as simply job shops for industry, just as college teams should not be considered a farm league for professional football," he said. "It is crucial to our very identity as a great research university that we resist pressures to become preoccupied with short-term economic payoffs at the cost of the disciplined, long-term, fundamental inquiry that is our irreplaceable contribution. A failure to resist those pressures would endanger both research and education." Speaking at a ceremony to award Columbia College's highest honor, the Alexander Hamilton Medal, to five Nobel laureates in science who graduated from the school, Rupp said: "Today there are potent pressures on universities to produce research that is more and more applied: that promises economic benefits in relatively short order, that will support, or even initiate, a resurgence of American capacity to capture market share." These are important national goals, he said, and Columbia's scientists and engineers play a major role in such research, maintaining "solid working relationships with industrial partners." But, he said, "we must resist pressure that deflects us from our central purpose."

13. PhysicsWeb - Nobel Laureates Oppose War Against Iraq
Fortyone American nobel laureates have signed a declaration opposing war with A Penzias,Martin L Perl, William D Phillips, norman F ramsey, Robert Schrieffer
http://physicsweb.org/article/news/7/1/14

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Previous News for January 2003 Next Nobel laureates oppose war against Iraq
29 January 2003 Forty-one American Nobel laureates have signed a declaration opposing war with Iraq. The declaration was organised by Walter Kohn, a theoretical physicist at the University of California at Santa Barbara, and former adviser to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon. The signatories include 19 winners of the physics prize. The declaration reads: "The undersigned oppose a preventive war against Iraq without broad international support. Military operations against Iraq may indeed lead to a relatively swift victory in the short term. But war is characterized by surprise, human loss and unintended consequences. Even with a victory, we believe that the medical, economic, environmental, moral, spiritual, political and legal consequences of an American preventive attack on Iraq would undermine, not protect, US security and standing in the world." The signatories include Norman Ramsey, who worked on the Manhattan Project, and Charles Townes, a former research director of the Institute for Defense Analyses at the Pentagon. Townes was also chairman of a federal panel that studied nuclear warheads.

14. Truth Now
41+ nobel Laureates In Science Economics Sign Declaratio Against a Defense AdvancedResearch Projects Agency at the Pentagon; norman F. ramsey, a Manhattan
http://www.truth-now.com/nobel_laureates_dissent.htm
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The signers included Democrats and Republicans alike as well as several who have advised the federal government or played important roles in national security. Among them are Hans A. Bethe, an architect of the atom bomb; Walter Kohn, a former adviser to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon; Norman F. Ramsey, a Manhattan Project scientist who readied the Hiroshima bomb and later advised NATO; and Charles H. Townes, former research director of the Institute for Defense Analyses at the Pentagon and chairman of a federal panel that studied how to base the MX missile and its nuclear warheads.
http://www.nytimes.com/auth/login?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/28/national/28NOBE.html

15. Le Web De L'Humanité
Translate this page espère que la majorité des quelque cent vingt prix nobel américains de Ph), MartinL. Perl (Ph), William D. Phillips (Ph), (*) norman F. ramsey (Ph), (*) J
http://www.humanite.presse.fr/journal/2003/2003-01/2003-01-31/2003-01-31-013.htm
20 avril 2003 12:57 99ème anniversaire de l'Humanité / Le journal de Jean Jaurès fait peau neuve sur le Web
En savoir plus
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Les ministres des Affaires sociales et de la Fonction publique présentent leur projet global à partir d'aujourd'hui aux syndicats et au patronat.

Alors que les sept confédérations syndicales réclament un haut niveau de retraites, le gouvernement a d'ores et déjà décidé de baisser fortement les pensions du public et du privé.

Après deux mois de rencontres bilatérales et de séances de concertation au sein d'un " groupe de travail confédéral " avec les partenaires sociaux, le gouvernement (...)

La Une en PDF
A la Une ... Sciences Un dégel sans redoux pour la recherche publique C'est mieux que si c'était pire, mais le pire n'est pas à exclure. Suite à l'annonce de l'annulation du gel de 20 % des crédits attribués à la recherche publique en 2003, on aurait pu croire la communauté scientifique apaisée. Elle en est loin. Soulagée, oui. (...)

16. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
October 13, 1989 Page 3 Section NATIONAL/FOREIGN At 74, norman F. ramsey isso hale and extroverted that reporters at yesterday's nobel news conference
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1989/1989k.html

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NORMAN F. RAMSEY
Author: By Richard Saltus, Globe Staff Date: Friday, October 13, 1989
Page:
Section:
NATIONAL/FOREIGN At 74, Norman F. Ramsey is so hale and extroverted that reporters at yesterday's Nobel news conference wanted his formula for living. Science, said Ramsey, "is a lot of fun, and it's nice to be paid for it too." But it seemed clear that the fun is the ingredient that, he says, deters any thought of giving up his research, even though he is officially retired. He said he will use some of his share of the $469,000 physics prize to pay for his trips to Grenoble, France, where he is participating in an international experiment on neutrons at the Institut Laue Langevin. Described in a newspaper 30 years ago as a "raw-boned Scot," Ramsey is an outdoor enthusiast. He has four daughters by the late Elinor Jameson, whom he married in 1940; two are in academic life. He is now married to Ellie Welch Ramsey. When possible, he said, the family gathers to trek or ski on land Ramsey owns in Vermont and around a lake in Nova Scotia.

17. Boston Globe Online / Table Of Contents
1 Section METRO Five scientists, three of them Americans, received nobel Prizesin and of the $469,000 prize money, went to norman F. ramsey of Brookline, a
http://www.boston.com/globe/search/stories/nobel/1989/1989i.html

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NOBEL WINNER AT HARVARD
Author: By Richard Saltus and Alison Bass, Globe Staff Date: Friday, October 13, 1989
Page:
Section:
METRO Five scientists, three of them Americans, received Nobel Prizes in physics and chemistry yesterday, including a Harvard physicist whose work led to the super-accurate "atomic clock" and two biochemists who made revolutionary discoveries about the origins of life. Half of the physics award, and of the $469,000 prize money, went to Norman F. Ramsey of Brookline, a homespun, 74-year-old Harvard professor whose achievements run the gamut from research on radar and the atomic bomb in World War II to evaluating the purported "cold fusion" breakthrough this year. Although he is officially retired, the outgoing Ramsey is forging ahead in research on a problem he has studied for more than 40 years bearing on the question of why the universe contains more matter than its mirror image, antimatter. Sharing in the other half of the physics prize were Hans G. Dehmelt of the University of Washington in Seattle and Wolfgang Paul of the University of Bonn in West Germany. They developed a method for isolating individual electrons and ions and making exact measurements of them.

18. Pictures Gallery Of The Nobel Prize Winners In Physics
Translate this page The nobel Prize in Physics. 1998. Robert B. Laughlin Horst L. Störmer DanielC. Tsui 1997. 1989. norman F. ramsey Hans G. Dehmelt Wolfgang Paul 1988.
http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physpicnobel.html
The Nobel Prize in Physics
Robert B. Laughlin
Daniel C. Tsui
Steven Chu
...
Hannes Olof Gosta Alfven

Louis Eugene Felix Neel
Murray Gell-Mann
Luis Walter Alvarez
Hans Albrecht Bethe
Alfred Kastler
Richard Phillips Feynman

Julian Seymour Schwinger

Sin-Itiro Tomonaga
Nikolai Gennadievich Basov
Alexander Mikhailovich Prokhorov

Charles Hard Townes
Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen

Maria Goeppert-Mayer
...
Sir Edward Victor Appleton
Percy Williams Bridgman
Wolfgang Ernst Pauli
Isidor Isaac Rabi
Otto Stern
None
None
None
Ernest Orlando Lawrence
Enrico Fermi
Clinton Joseph Davisson

Sir George Paget Thomson
...
Sir James Chadwick
None
Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac
Werner Karl Heisenberg
None
Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman
Prince Louis-Victor Pierre Raymond de Broglie
Sir Owen Willans Richardson
Arthur Holly Compton

Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
Jean Baptiste Perrin
James Franck

Gustav Ludwig Hertz
Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn
Robert Andrews Millikan
...
Albert Einstein
Charles Eduard Guillaume
Johannes Stark
Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck
Charles Glover Barkla
None
Sir William Henry Bragg
Sir William Lawrence Bragg
Max Theodor Felix von Laue
Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
... Guglielmo Marconi
Gabriel Jonas Lippmann
Albert Abraham Michelson
Sir Joseph John Thomson
Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard
John William Strutt (Lord Rayleigh)
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Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
Donated by Christopher Walker, University of Ulster

19. The Manila Times Internet Edition | LIFE & TIMES > Nobel Laureates Oppose War Ag
Fortyone American nobel laureates have signed a declaration opposing war A. Penzias,Martin L. Perl, William D. Phillips, norman F. ramsey, Robert Schrieffer
http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2003/mar/11/life/20030311lif4.html
Home About Us Contact Us Subscribe ... Sports Tuesday, March 11, 2003 SCIENCE Nobel laureates oppose war against Iraq By Belle Dumé Forty-one American Nobel laureates have signed a declaration opposing war with Iraq. The declaration was organized by Walter Kohn, a theoretical physicist at the University of California at Santa Barbara, and former adviser to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency at the Pentagon. The signatories include 19 winners of the physics prize. The declaration reads: “The undersigned oppose a preventive war against Iraq without broad international support. Military operations against Iraq may indeed lead to a relatively swift victory in the short term. But war is characterized by surprise, human loss and unintended consequences. Even with a victory, we believe that the medical, economic, environmental, moral, spiritual, political and legal consequences of an American preventive attack on Iraq would undermine, not protect, US security and standing in the world.” The signatories include Norman Ramsey, who worked on the Manhattan Project, and Charles Townes, a former research director of the Institute for Defense Analyses at the Pentagon. Townes was also chairman of a federal panel that studied nuclear warheads.

20. MIT Nobel Prize Winners
Eight from MIT win 2001 nobels in 5 fields MIT news release, October 12, 2001;Theses of MIT Alumni nobel Prize Winners norman F. ramsey, Physics, leader
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/nobels.html

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56 MIT-related Nobel Prize winners
include faculty, researchers, alumni and staff
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Fifty-six current or former members of the MIT community have won the Nobel Prize . They include 22 professors, 23 alumni (including three of the professors), 13 researchers and one staff physician. Twenty-five of the Nobel Prizes are in physics, ten in chemistry, eleven in economics, eight in medicine/physiology, and two in peace. Eight Nobel prizes were won by researchers who helped develop radar at the MIT Radiation Laboratory. Nobelists who are current members of the MIT community are Drs. Horvitz (2002), Ketterle (2001), Molina (1995), Sharp (1993), Friedman (1990), Tonegawa (1987), Solow (1987), Modigliani (1985), Ting (1976) Samuelson (1970), and Khorana (1968). H. Robert Horvitz

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