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         Ross Sir Ronald:     more books (27)
  1. The Mosquito Man: The story of Sir Ronald Ross by John Rowland, 1963
  2. Great Malaria Problem and Its Solution: From the Memoirs of Ronald Ross (Keynes Press S) by Sir Ronald Ross, 1988-12
  3. Report on the Prevention of Malaria in Mauritius by Sir Ronald Ross, 2009-12-21
  4. The Prevention of Malaria by Sir Ronald Ross, 2009-12-22
  5. Mosquito Brigades and How to Organize Them by Sir Ronald Ross, 2010-10-14
  6. Mosquito Brigades and How to Organise Them by Sir Ronald Ross, 2009-12-23
  7. Malarial Fever; Its Cause, Prevention and Treatment; Containing Full Details for the Use of Travellers, Sportsmen, Soldiers, and Residents in by Sir Ronald Ross, 2009-12-29
  8. Indian Medical Service Officers: Ronald Ross, Sir Trevor Lawrence, 2nd Baronet, George Christopher Molesworth Birdwood, Pares Chandra Datta
  9. Malaria. A Neglected Factor in the History of Greece and Rome. With an Introduction bu Col Sir Ronald Ross and a Concluding Chapter by G G Ellett. by W H S Jones, 1920
  10. THE FRANKENSTEIN OMNIBUS: The Reanimated Man; Transfromation; The Mummy; The New Frankenstein; The Bell Tower; The Vivisector; The Future Eve; The Incubated Girl; The Surgeon's Experiment; Some Experiment's With A Head; The Man Who Made A Man; It by Peter (editor) (Mary Shelley; Jane Webb; William Maginn; Herman Melville; Sir Ronald Ross; Villiers De L'Isle Adam; Fred T. Jane; W. C. Morrow; Dick Donovan; E. E. Kellett; Harle Oren Cummins; Leonard Merrick; Robert S. Carr) Haining, 1995
  11. In Exile by Sir Ronald Ross, 1997
  12. Report On The Prevention Of Malaria In Mauritius
  13. Studies on Malaria by Sir Ronald Ross, 1928
  14. Solid Space-Algebra. The Systems of Hamilton and Grassmann Combined … With Extracts from his Paper The Algebra of Space, 1901. by Sir Ronald. ROSS, 1918

41. VBS - MyEurope - Nobel Prizes
the Third Reich in 1938, but only after he had been compelled to instruct the Swedishbank in Stockholm to transfer the nobel Prize money sir ronald ross (1902
http://www.univie.ac.at/Romanistik/Sprachwst/site/spratscher/vbs_myEurope_spring
Nobel Prizes Vienna Business School myEurope Deutsch Englisch ... Home
From 1901 onwards Nobel Prizes have been awarded in Chemistry Physics Physiology or Medicine Literature (66) and Peace (46), and since 1969 also in Economics (17) to 391 scientists, economists, peace activists/organisations and writers from today's EU member states or candidate countries. During their journey across Europe, our two Spring Students, Caroline and Marlene , have also tried to find out, who they were, when they were awarded the prize, which countries they came from and where they lived when they received the prize. In the list below you will find reference to the latter in brackets. All links below go to the marvelleous site of the Swedish Academy . So let me invite you to follow our two Spring Students on another, this time not political but scientific, trip across our continent. CHEMISTRY Austria Fritz PREGL Richard KUHN (1939; Prize for 1938)

42. Nobel Prize For Medicine
nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. For years not listed, no awardwas made. 1901. 1902. sir ronald ross (UK), for work on malaria. 1903.
http://homepages.shu.ac.uk/~acsdry/quizes/medicine.htm
Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine For years not listed, no award was made. Emil A. von Behring (Germany), for work on serum therapy against diphtheria Sir Ronald Ross (U.K.), for work on malaria Niels R. Finsen (Denmark), for his treatment of lupus vulgaris with concentrated light rays Ivan P. Pavlov (U.S.S.R.), for work on the physiology of digestion Robert Koch (Germany), for work on tuberculosis Charles L. A. Laveran (France), for work with protozoa in the generation of disease Paul Ehrlich (Germany) and Elie Metchnikoff (U.S.S.R.), for work on immunity Theodor Kocher (Switzerland), for work on the thyroid gland Albrecht Kossel (Germany), for achievements in the chemistry of the cell Allvar Gullstrand (Sweden), for work on the dioptrics of the eye Alexis Carrel (France), for work on vascular ligature and grafting of blood vessels and organs Charles Richet (France), for work on anaphylaxy Jules Bordet (Belgium), for discoveries in connection with immunity August Krogh (Denmark), for discovery of regulation of capillaries' motor mechanism In1923, the1922 prize was shared by Archibald V. Hill (U.K.), for discovery relating to heat-production in muscles; and Otto Meyerhof (Germany), for correlation between consumption of oxygen and production of lactic acid in muscles

43. Contenido Home
Translate this page Se presentarán aquí los galardonados con el Premio nobel de Medicina y Fisiología,desde esa fecha hasta el presente Año 1902 sir ronald ross (1857-1932).
http://www.antioxidantes.com.ar/12/Art042.htm
Comentario Editorial
Historia de la Medicina:
Los Premios Nobel
en Medicina y Fisiologial (1901-1910)
Alfred Bernhard Nobel fue un hombre talentoso que adquirió conocimientos en diversas disciplinas, fundamentalmente ingeniería y química.
Su ingenio inventor le permitió desarrollar a lo largo de su vida diversos descubrimientos, entre los cuales se destaca la invención de la dinamita.
Los ingresos económicos que percibió de sus numerosas patentes, tanto de su país, Suecia, como de Estados Unidos y Gran Bretaña le permitieron amasar una inmensa fortuna.
En su testamento entregó generosamente su riqueza a instituciones científicas para que anualmente concedan un premio "a todos aquellos que en el año precedente hayan brindado a la humanidad el más grande beneficio"
Nobel designó a la Royal Swedish Academy, el Royal Caroline Medico-Chirurgical Institute, y el Norwegian Nobel Committee, para que designen a los candidatos a recibir el premio Nobel de física y química, de fisiología y medicina, y de la paz respectivamente.
Las instituciones citadas comenzaron a otorgar el Premio Nobel a partir de 1901, cinco años después de la muerte de su creador. Con el transcurso del tiempo, el Premio Nobel, se transformó en la máxima distinción que una persona puede llegar a recibir en reconocimiento de su talento y creatividad.

44. Complete Health Care And Medical Information From India
These awards are granted in Stockholm and Oslo on 10th December (it is the anniversaryof Alfred nobel's death). 1903, Niels Ryberg Finsen. 1902, sir ronald ross.
http://www.medivisionindia.com/nobelprize/index.phtml
Home Doctor's Den 2B Docs Children ... Ask Medivision We subscribe to the HONcode principles
of the
Health On the Net Foundation
Site Updated on Sunday 20 April, 2003 Nobel Prize (1901-1999)
Introduction
Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833-1896)
Swedish chemist and industrialist. He elaborated the method of production of dynamite (1866) and other explosive materials. He is a founder of Nobel Prize.
Nobel Prize
It is the Swedish- Norwegian foundation ( which is situated in Stockholm). It was founded in 1900 year like a fulfillment of the wish of Alfred Nobel's testament. All income of this foundation is devoted to grant of equal-value international prize. They are awarded every year in five domains:
in the realms of physics and chemistry the prizes are granted by Royal Swedish Academy of Science
in the realm of medicine the prize is granted by Royal Swedish Institute of Medicine and Surgery.
in the realm of literature the prize is granted by Swedish Academy of Literature in the realm of economy the prize is granted by Swedish Bank - for activity for the world-wide peace is granted by Norwegian Nobel's Committee (attached to Norwegian Parliament. These awards are granted in Stockholm and Oslo on 10th December (it is the anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death).

45. ROE - SAGA
sir ronald ross. best example, on this list, of the renaissance man , ross qualifiedMRCS Anopheles mosquitoes, work for which he received the nobel Prize for
http://members.aol.com/dbryantmd/Page34.html
FRANCIS ROE Roe graduated M.B., Ch.B. from the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, in 1955. After further training in surgery, he began a career of practice and research, mainly in the United States, and has been on the teaching staff at Yale. In addition to works in the cancer field, he has written the books below, and may have written the "Dr. Jean Montrose mysteries," though I have yet to document that.

FICTION -
Doctors and Doctors' Wives (1989)
Intensive Care (1991)
Dangerous Practices (1993)
The Surgeon (1994)
Second Opinion (1995)
Under the Knife (1998)

PETER DAMIEN ROGERS After graduating with an M.D. degree from the University of Tennessee in 1970, Rogers became a pediatrician, on the teaching staffs at Northeast Ohio University Colleges of Medicine and Case Western Reserve Medical School. In 1985 he was a faculty member of New York University's Summer Writers' Conference. I can't tell how much of the book below, dealing apparently with the author's substance abuse, is fiction and how much is nonfiction.

BACKGROUND -
Contemporary Authors
NONFICTION -
A Private Practice (1984)

JOAO GUIMARAES ROSA Rosa studied medicine at Belo Horizonte, then practiced general medicine in his home town, and as a military doctor, before he joined the Brazilian foreign service. A diplomatic career followed, including service as ambassador. For his innovative fiction, he was elected a member of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.

46. 16 September - Today In Science History
sir ronald ross. (source), Died 16 Sep 1932 (born 13 May 1857) British bacteriologistwho received the nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his
http://www.todayinsci.com/9/9_16.htm
SEPTEMBER 16 - BIRTHS Born 16 Sep 1920
French physical geographer and climatic geomorphologist known for his extensive regional studies in South America and Africa. Marvin P. Middlemark Born 16 Sep 1919; died 1989.
Inventor, TV "rabbit ear" antenna: one of many patents for consumer electronics (and lesser ideas like a water-driven potato peeler) was awarded to Marvin Middlemark, a self-made millionaire from Old Westbury, between 1956 and 1968. When he died, he left a a Long Island mansion surrounded by vinyl tube fencing stuffed with used tennis balls, housing eight dogs, "nine miniature horses and eight miniature donkeys, 18 Chinese tractors, dozens of cement statues of Greek gods, stained glass windows of Marilyn Monroe and Albert Einstein, and 1,000 pairs of woolen gloves (one size fits all)." Albert Szent-Gyorgyi Born 16 Sep 1893
Hungarian biochemist whose discoveries concerning the roles played by certain organic compounds, especially vitamin C, in the oxidation of nutrients by the cell brought him the 1937 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. Karen Horney
(source)
Born 16 Sep 1885; died 4 Dec 1952.

47. May 13 - Today In Science History
sir ronald ross. (source), Born 13 May 1857; died 16 Sep 1932. British bacteriologistwho received the nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his
http://www.todayinsci.com/5/5_13.htm
MAY 13 - BIRTHS Henry Murray
(source)
Born 13 May 1893; died 23 Jun 1988.
Henry (Alexander) Murray was an American psychologist who developed a theory of human personality based on an individual's inborn needs and his relationship with the physical and social environment. In 1938 he was asked by the U.S. Government to put together a psychological profile on Adolph Hitler. During WW II, he served the U.S. Army by helping the forerunner of the CIA assess the psychological fitness of its agents. Murray's main interest included personology, Melville and the welfare of the world in the atomic age. In his Basic Concepts for a Psychology of Personality , (Journal of Psychology, 15, 1936), he described personology as "the disciplined study of human nature." Sir Ronald Ross
(source)
Born 13 May 1857; died 16 Sep 1932.
British bacteriologist who received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his work on malaria. His discovery of the malarial parasite in the gastrointestinal tract of the Anopheles mosquito led to the realization that malaria was transmitted by Anopheles.

48. Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Medicine Or Physiology
Taken from The nobel Prize Internet Archive. sir ronald ross for his work on malaria,by which he has shown how it enters the organism and thereby has laid
http://www.manbir-online.com/htm3/nobel-med-list.htm
Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology Taken from - The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
The prize was awarded jointly to: A RVID C ARLSSON ... REENGARD and E RIC K ANDEL for their discoveries concerning signal transduction in the nervous system. The prize was awarded to: G ÜNTER B LOBEL , for the discovery that proteins have intrinsic signals that govern their transport and localization in the cell. The prize was awarded jointly to: R OBERT F F ... GNARRO and F ERID M URAD for their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signalling molecule in the cardiovascular system. S TANLEY B P ... RUSINER for his discovery of Prions - a new biological principle of infection The prize was awarded jointly to: P ETER C D ... OHERTY and R OLF M Z ... INKERNAGEL for their discoveries concerning the specificity of the cell mediated immune defence. The prize was awarded jointly to: E DWARD B L ... OLHARD and E RIC F W ... IESCHAUS for their discoveries concerning the genetic control of early embryonic development. The prize was awarded jointly to: A LFRED G G ... ILMAN and M ARTIN R ODBELL for their discovery of G-proteins and the role of these proteins in signal transduction in cells.

49. TIP NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ
TIP nobel ÖDÜLLERI. 1901. VON BEHRING, EMIL ADOLF. 1902. ross, sir ronald. Ingiltere,Üniversitesi College, Liverpool, d. 1857 (Almora, Hindistan), ö. 1932
http://www.tubitak.gov.tr/nobel/fizyotip-nodul.html
TIP NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ VON BEHRING, EMIL ADOLF Almanya, Marburg Üniversitesi, d. 1854, ö.1917: “Serum tedavini geliþtirerek özellikle difteriye karþý verdiði mücadeleyle, hastalýk ve ölümlere karþý, hekimlerin ellerine muzaffer bir silah vererek, týp bilimin hareket alanýnda yeni bir yol açtýðý için” ROSS, Sir RONALD Ýngiltere, Üniversitesi College, Liverpool, d. 1857 (Almora, Hindistan), ö. 1932: “Sýtma hastalýðý konusunda, organizmaya nasýl bulaþtýðýnýn keþfini de içeren çalýþmalarýyla hastalýða karþý mücadele yollarý konusunda baþarýlý araþtýrmalar yaptýðý için” FINSEN, NIELS RYBERG Danimarka, Finsen Medical Light Institute, Kopenhag, d. 1860, ö. 1904: “Hastalýklarýn, özellikle lupus vulgarisin yoðun ýþýk demeti ile tedavisine yaptýðý katkýlarla týp biliminin önüne yeni yeni ufuklar açtýðý için” PAVLOV, IVAN PETROVICH Rusya, Askeri Týp akademisi, St. Petersburg d. 1849, ö. 1936: “Sindirim konusunda yaptýðý çalýþmalarla, konunun yaþamsal yönlerine ýþýk tuttuðu için” KOCH, ROBERT Almanya, Institut für Infektions-Krankkheiten (Enfeksiyonlu Hastalýklar Enstitüsü), Berlin, d. 1843, ö. 1910: “Tüberkülozla ilgili keþif ve incelemeleri için” GOLGI, CAMILLO

50. Baby Names
this name presidential candidate ross Perot; TV characters ross (Friends) Geller,Dr. Douglas (ER) ross; nobel Prize physiologist sir ronald ross From The
http://www.americanbaby.com/ab/CDA/baby_names_detail/0,1745,13794,00.html
search e-mail password
baby name traits
name style quiz baby-naming tips most popular names Baby names content adapted from The Baby Name Survey Book
Click here to order

search more names
Ross
origin:
Old French, Scottish Gaelic, Latin
meaning: red king, headland, rose
traits: People picture Ross as either a well-groomed, clean-cut, good-looking, sexy TV actor or character, like George Clooney's character Dr. Ross in ER , or a short, boring, businesslike, determined man, like Ross Perot. In either case, Ross is a name wit
famous people with this name: presidential candidate Ross Perot; TV characters Ross (Friends) Geller, Dr. Douglas (ER) Ross; Nobel Prize physiologist Sir Ronald Ross
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send to a friend Post your comments on this name ... Read what people think of this name Learn more about your favorite name. Enter it in the space below. Find a name that meets your criteria! Use the pulldown menus to sort names by first letter, gender, and/or origin. 1st letter gender origin - all A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z - all boy girl unisex - all african american american indian american-hebrew arabic aramaic aramaic-hebrew armenian babylonian basque celtic chinese cornish dakota dutch egyptian english ethiopian flemish french french-slavic german german-spanish greek greek-french gypsy hawaiian hebrew hebrew-english hindi hindu hungarian irish irish gaelic italian japanese korean lakota latin latin-french latin-greek latin-italian middle english native american nigerian north american indian old dutch

51. PIB Press Releases
ross received the nobel Prize for his brilliant work, a great discovery, in 1902and this was the only medical To the memory of sir ronald ross and the
http://pib.nic.in/feature/feyr2002/faug2002/f160820021.html
16th August, 2002 HEALTH
FROM ANOPHELES TO DESIGNER MOSQUITOES A.Vasantha *
One hundred and fifty years ago, an Almora-born Briton, named Ronald Ross (1857-1932) designated August 20 th as " Mosquito Day " to commemorate his victory over the mosquito mystery. The war waged by Ross against malaria still continues as it is as elusive as ever in spite of the persistent efforts to combat it. Malaria still remains one of the devastating public health menaces in the world killing more than one million people every year. It causes about 30-500 million infections worldwide and the children are the major victims. It is now regarded as deadly disease as tuberculosis. Causes The cause of malaria was baffling the British doctors who were manning the health services of India in the pre-Independence days. There were many theories about its causation. It was often attributed to inhalation of foul marshy air emanating from damp marshy places. Hence the name malaria. Some thought it was caused by drinking infected water. While these speculations were being debated, the disease was taking a heavy toll every year in India. Doctors like Ross and others had to fight the disease bravely under extremely trying conditions as nothing was known about its cause or cure. It was seen that quinine could mitigate the disease to some extent and it was used extensively.

52. A Sting In The Tale
The link was made by a Scots doctor, sir ronald ross, who was working for theIndian medical service. It also brought ross the nobel prize in 1902.
http://www.cpa.ed.ac.uk/edit1/14/sting.html

CPA

Latest News
The Directory of Experts The Prospectuses ... Contact Quick Links... Academic Units Alumni Computing Counselling Disability Office Events Exams Health Service Human Resources Library Maps News Prospectuses Students' Assoc. Student Guide Student Services Support Services Term Times
A Sting in the Tale
I know this little thing
A myriad men may save.
O Death, where is thy sting?
Thy Victory, O Grave?
THE EARLY CLINICAL manifestations and complications of the disease were described as early as the 5th century BC by Hippocrates but it was not until the late 19th century that the role of the mosquito in transmitting the world's most serious infectious disease became clear. The link was made by a Scots doctor, Sir Ronald Ross, who was working for the Indian medical service. In 1897, he located parasites in the stomach wall of mosquitoes which had previously fed on a patient with malaria. The following year he charted the complete life cycle of the parasite through its different stages in the stomach, to the mosquito's proboscis, and then into its injected saliva. For the first time in the history of mankind, a foundation had been laid to help combat a disease which had contributed to the decline of great civilisations and been responsible for untold misery and suffering. It also brought Ross the Nobel prize in 1902. This year, scientists will gather in Edinburgh to mark the centenary of Ross's achievement but the mood is likely to be less celebratory than the famous meeting of 1898. Today, malaria is still a major killer and is responsible for the deaths of between 1.5 and 2.7 million people a year, most of them young children in Africa. It is increasing in prevalence and extending its geographical boundaries. If that was not worrying enough, there is growing resistance of the parasite to anti-malarial drugs, including multi-drug resistance in several countries. Control of the carrier mosquitoes has also become more difficult because of insecticide resistance and man-made problems such as changing agricultural practices, wars and refugee movements.

53. Home Page Home Departments Stamps Features Departments
sir ronald ross (1857–1932), depicted on the red Swedish stamp honoring his1902 nobel Prize, was a surgeonmajor in the Indian Medical Service who
http://www.childsdoc.org/fall96/stamps/stamps.asp

Home

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Stanford T. Shulman, MD,
Head, Division of Infectious Diseases, collects stamps with medical themes. As a regular Feature of The Child's Doctor, Dr. Shulman provides some of his favorite stamps and a brief commentary on them. Contact us Search
still a formidable world health problem STANFORD T. SHULMAN, MD MALARIA CONTINUES
to be one of the world's major killers of children and adults. Estimates suggest that every year 1.5 to 2.7 million people die from malaria and that 300 to 500 million people contract new infections. Historians refer to malaria as the greatest killer in all human history, and many believe that it was responsible for the decline of the Greek civilization. This stamp column is devoted to this serious disease as a reminder that malaria is seen in Chicago as well as in the developing world. In 1993, Drs. Ben Emanuel, Neil Aronson and I reported in Pediatrics 20 children with imported malaria diagnosed in Chicago, and in the summer of 1996, we treated six additional children with imported malaria from India, Zaire, Nigeria and Honduras.
The red Cuban stamp depicts the intra-erythrocytic forms of Plasmodium
Anopheles
in August 1897 and also in the female's salivary glands, ready to be injected into man.

54. Trinamul Manifesto
Just to vilify the Left Front she says that though sir ronald ross had been awardedthe nobel Prize for invention of the medicine to cure malaria three hundred
http://www.ganashakti.com/old/1999/990927/bengal1.htm
NEWS NOTES
Howlers in the Trinamul Congress Manifesto It's CPI(M) all the way in Darjeeling
N o upset in Darjeeling
Midnapore Still with Indrajit Gupta

A gain Midnapore for CPI
Trinamool Manifesto

H owlers and howlers
DiDi

R elinquishing the DoctorHood Staff Reporter M Funny things have been incorporated in the manifesto. Obviously one can surmise that Banerjee had a hand in the preparation of it. One need not read the document between the lines as a cursory glance even projects the glaring mistakes in it. To revert to the earlier manifesto of the Trinamul Congress issued before the last Lok Sabha election in 1998. In it Banerjee and her party put in the mouth of Balgangadhar Tilak the famous observation made by Gopalkrishan Gokhale. Gokhale’s observation is "What Bengal thinks today, India thinks tomorrow." Whatever the Trinamul Congress says, takes it with a grain of salt. After science and history we can switch to literature too. The Trinamul Congress manifesto quotes a few lines of the famous poem of Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore titled "Gandharir Abedan (Appeal of Gandhari) In Bengali it is (Danditer Sathe Dandadata Kande jabe saman aghate, srbashresetha se Bichar) (When the person who awards the punishment cries equally in pain with the person punished being hurt the judgment is unparallel). The Trinamul Congress or its leader might have though it wise to ‘improve’ uon the poem and then incorporated it in the Trinamul Congress manifesto. It however quoted Tagore as saying ‘Danditer Sathe dandadata kande jabe samna niswase sarbashresestha se bichar. ‘ Of course Mamata Banerjee or her party never bothers to be meticulous about what they write or say.

55. Nobel Prizes
nobel prizes – Microbiologi, Virologi, Genetisti, Immunologi. 1902 ronald ross. 1945sir Alexander Fleming, Ernst Boris Chain, sir Howard Walter Florey.
http://150.217.100.14/didonline/anno-ii/microbiologia/2001-2002/Lezioni/nobel_pr
UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI FIRENZE DIPARTIMENTO DI SANITÀ PUBBLICA (Direttore: Prof. Nicola Comodo) Sezione di Microbiologia "Renzo Davoli" Accesso n°
Nobel prizes – Microbiologi, Virologi, Genetisti, Immunologi
Cliccando sull’anno o sul nome si va al sito ufficiale, dove si trovano le foto, le biografie, le motivazioni, e altro. Emil Adolf von Behring Ronald Ross Robert Koch Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran ... Stanley B. Prusiner

56. Nobel For Medicine: All Laureates
Karl Landsteiner 1929 Christiaan Eijkman, sir Frederick Gowland Petrovich Pavlov 1903Niels Ryberg Finsen 1902 ronald ross, The nobel Prize A History of Genius
http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/med-list.html
NOBEL
Read More
on the Nobel Prize:

Nobel Minds

2001 Awards

John Nash

Women Nobel Prize
...
Prize Amounts

MINI ALMANAC
Calendar
Moon phase Popular Science Highlights:
IG Nobel 2002 The invention of :-) West Nile Virus Asteroid Impact? ... Book: Russell Read also: Nobel Prize Women in Science : Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries by Sharon Bertsch McGrayne THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR MEDICINE: ALL WINNERS 2001 Leland H. Hartwell, R. Timothy Hunt, Paul M. Nurse 2000 Arvid Carlsson, Paul Greengard, Eric R. Kandel 1999 Günter Blobel 1998 Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro, Ferid Murad 1997 Stanley B. Prusiner 1996 Peter C. Doherty, Rolf M. Zinkernagel 1995 Edward B. Lewis, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, Eric F. Wieschaus 1994 Alfred G. Gilman, Martin Rodbell 1993 Richard J. Roberts, Phillip A. Sharp 1992 Edmond H. Fischer, Edwin G. Krebs

57. Apothecaries - Worshipful Company, London, Doctors, Medicines, Dispensing
ross, the second nobel Prizewinner in Medicine or Physiology (1902), qualified LSAin 1881. Honorary Freedom of the Society awarded to sir ronald ross in 1915
http://www.apothecaries.org.uk/society_f/medi_f.html
MEDICAL REFORM AND EDUCATION AND PHARMACY TRAINING Apothecaries frequently flouted the authority of the Physicians by dispensing medicines without a prescription. The College of Physicians countered this by asserting its right to inspect apothecaries' shops and by imposing stringent quality controls on raw drugs and medicinal preparations. The Society and the College were at bitter variance over these issues for many years until a test case went to appeal in the House of Lords in 1704. William Rose, a freeman of the Society, was prosecuted by the Physicians for visiting a sick man in his home, prescribing medicines for him and dispensing them. Bowing to recognised common practice, the Lords ruled in favour of the Apothecary, for Physicians were relatively few in number and most people could not afford their fees. This judgment ratified their status as members of the medical profession, and thus apothecaries evolved into general practitioners of medicine (today's GPs). Medical reform and regulation of the profession, especially with regard to education and training, became a major concern at the close of the eighteenth century. Members of the Society were at the forefront of the movement which gathered momentum between 1810 and 1814 and resulted in the Apothecaries' Act of 1815. Court of Examiners (1880) This statute empowered the Society to institute a Court of Examiners to conduct examinations and to grant licences to successful candidates to practice Medicine throughout England and Wales, as well as the duty of regulating such practice, which the Society effectively did until the General Medical Council was set up by an act of parliament in 1858.

58. Nobel Peace Prize
nobel Peace Prizes. Pieter Zeeman Neth, Hermann Emil Fischer Ger, ronald rossUK, Christian 1904, Lord Rayleigh UK, sir William Ramsay UK, Ivan Petrovich
http://din-timelines.com/1901s-npp.shtml
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59. Who's Who On Swedish Stamps
sir ronald ross (18571932) Professor of Tropical Medicine in Liverpool. nobel prizein medicine 1902 in recognition of his work concerning malaria and the
http://www.asis.com/~edenson/swewho.html
Swedish philatelic home page Sweden's Nobel Prize Stamps
Who's Who on Swedish Stamps
  • Svante Arrhenius. Chemist. (1859-1927) Awarded the Nobel prize in Chemistry 1903 "in recognition of the extradinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation" (FDC insert quote from award). See a simulation of his dissertation. . Arrhenius in 1896 was the first to predict that industrial society would change the climate. The theory is now called global warming.
  • 100th Anniversary of birth. 1959. Scott 547-49, 549a. Facit 507-08, H130. Read FDC text
  • Facit 553, H 160.
  • Nobel Prizewinners in Chemistry: 100th anniversary of the Swedish Chemical Society. 1983. Portrays schematic of battery. Facit 1281 Nobel pages
  • Johann Fredrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer, (1835-1917) Germany. Nobel prize in Chemistry in 1905 "in recognition of his services concerning the evolution of the organic chemistry and the chemical industry through his works on organic colorants and hyrdo aromatic combinations." (FDC insert quoting the award.)
  • 60th Anniversary of 1905 Nobel prize for Chemistry .
  • 60. Redhotcurry.com - Books By Asian Authors. The Calcutta Chromosome By Amitav Ghos
    Murugan is obsessed with sir ronald ross, the discoverer of the malariallife cycle who won the nobel Prize for it in 1902. Murugan
    http://www.redhotcurry.com/entertainment/books/aghosh1.htm
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    Click to view larger image. The Calcutta Chromosome
    by Amitav Ghosh

    Published in Paperback (2001)
    By Harper Collins
    ISBN 380 81394 7
    311 pages Reviewed by Sushmita Sen
    Rating: (4 flames)
    Click here to buy this book today!

    In 'The Calcutta Chromosome' respected writer and anthropologist Amitav Ghosh has unleashed his fantastical imagination to produce a strangely hypnotic work of science fiction. Aficionados would argue that as pure science fiction the book lacks novel ideas and attention to detail, but as a story it is a fast paced and entertaining thriller - a sort of "Invasion of the Body Snatchers meets the X-Files" tale! It is extremely difficult to review the book in detail without revealing some of the plot. The story starts some time in the future. Antar an Egyptian home-worker sits at his computer console in New York, sifting through virtual records for the International Water Council, his employer. He discovers an old, burnt-out ID card belonging to L Murugan, a former employee of subsidiary LifeWatch, who was reported missing in August 1995.

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