Nobelist

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Synonyms for Nobelist

winner of a Nobel prize

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
What if Bobby agreed with the Nobelists and with NOAA and all the agencies issuing warnings, and felt that climate change was real and needed to be accommodated in local government policy?
But in a Continent liberated by American blood and treasure, this ''peace'' activist can, along with fellow European Nobelists Harold Pinter, Dario Fo and Jose Saramago, bash the U.S.
Today, with more than 24,000 members in 140 countries, the Academy counts among its Board of Governors and President's Council the current and two preceding Nobel-Prize-winning Presidents of Rockefeller University, 20 other Nobelists and the chairmen, CEOs and presidents of world-renowned companies, academies and national funding agencies.
Many unabashedly mention the number of Nobelists among its faculty members and alumni in their prospectus.
Once the Shockley connection was out, and Graham couldn't persuade any other Nobelists to donate, he was forced to turn to the next tier down in his pantheon of geniuses, accomplished Renaissance men who were young, smart, athletic, and handsome.
Other contemporaries included future Harvard Nobelists John F.
However, Oppenheimer's habit in seminars of interrupting the speakers to demonstrate his own superior grasp of every topic so irritated his fellow students (some of them future Nobelists) that they circulated a petition threatening to boycott the seminar unless he was stopped.
Preceding lecture on women chemist Nobelists and should-have-been Nobelists.
Stiglitz and contributions from other American Nobelists, including Kenneth Arrow and the late James Tobin, as well as numerous Russians, this book is less fact-filled than Granville and Oppenheimer's tome but more readable.
Millikan began a tradition: Among Caltech Nobelists are chemist Linus Pauling and physicist Richard Feynman-- and its current president, Baltimore, who earned his prize for work in virology.
Four years later she became a Swedish citizen, which entitled her to become a full member, which in turn, ironically, permitted her a voice in the selection of Nobelists. She was awarded medals, prizes, had an Institute of Nuclear Research named for her, was feted on her return visits to Germany.
In 1988, when the German firm that held the patent, Hoechst AG, refused to produce RU-486, the French government forced its French subsidiary to do so, declaring the drug, in the words of its creator, Etienne Beaulieu, "the moral property of women." In the early nineties, the Feminist Majority gathered more than 700,000 petitions from US women, and statements from dozens of doctors and scientists, including a dozen Nobelists, to force the European manufacturers to make it available in America.
And a Scandinavian, surely - or was there more than one?" But before I get back to the Nobel Prize and relieve that particular itch, I should describe the project as a whole and how the Nobelists (hint: there have been eight, so far) came into my labors.