Headlines
2015 Nobel laureates receive awards, pay rich tributes to early mentors
Stockholm, Dec 11
From being a "failure in chemistry class" to a believer in "slow understanding", the Nobel laureates of 2015 might not have been the brightest of kids in their school days but when it came to discoveries that led to "greatest benefits for the mankind", they were honoured by the King of Sweden at a glittering ceremony here on Thursday.
The 2015 Nobel laureates in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature and economic sciences received their awards from the hands of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden at the Stockholm Concert Hall, in the presence of over 1,000 guests, including royals, international star academics and foreign dignitaries.
The event that was organising after Sweden raised its terror threat alert to what the local media here described as "historically high levels" passed off without any disruption even as placards asking for a Nobel prize in ecology or environment to combat climate change in 2016 welcomed the dignitaries outside the Concert Hall.
Addressing the guests at the Nobel Banquet at the Stockholm City Hall that followed the award ceremony, Swedish chemistry laureate Tomas Lindahl said he once failed in chemistry in school.
Even as the dignitaries present on the occasion broke into laughter, he said scoring low in school was not fun for him then as he wanted to secure a medical seat.
"Today, I realise how important our teachers can be," he said.
"Without outstanding teachers, it would have been impossible for me to be standing in front of you tonight," he added.
"Some of the scientific discoveries we celebrate today have already proved to be extraordinarily useful for mankind in the treatment of certain disease. These examples illustrate that research can solve many problems and contribute to a better world," added professor Carl-Henrik Heldin, chairman of the Board of the Nobel Foundation.
Angust Deaton, who was awarded the prize in economic sciences in memory of Alfred Nobel, said he became economist by accident as he drifted from one topic to another, adding he was helped in his career by distinguished mentors.
Chinese scientist Tu Youyou received the Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine at the glittering ceremony.
Tu, William Campbell from the US and Satoshi Omura from Japan received the medicine prize for unlocking revolutionary treatments for malaria and roundworm, helping to roll back two parasitic diseases that blight millions of lives.
"The discovery of Artemisinin has led to development of a new drug that has saved the lives of millions of people, halving the mortality rate of malaria during the past 15 years," said Professor Hans Forssberg, member of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine, when presenting Tu's scientific contributions.
The concert hall awards ceremony was followed by a lavish evening banquet at the Stockholm City Hall.
(Gokul Bhagabati is visiting Sweden at the invitation of City of Stockholm to attend the Nobel Prize ceremony. He can be contacted at gokul.b@ians.in)
The 2015 Nobel laureates in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature and economic sciences received their awards from the hands of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden at the Stockholm Concert Hall, in the presence of over 1,000 guests, including royals, international star academics and foreign dignitaries.
The event that was organising after Sweden raised its terror threat alert to what the local media here described as "historically high levels" passed off without any disruption even as placards asking for a Nobel prize in ecology or environment to combat climate change in 2016 welcomed the dignitaries outside the Concert Hall.
Addressing the guests at the Nobel Banquet at the Stockholm City Hall that followed the award ceremony, Swedish chemistry laureate Tomas Lindahl said he once failed in chemistry in school.
Even as the dignitaries present on the occasion broke into laughter, he said scoring low in school was not fun for him then as he wanted to secure a medical seat.
"Today, I realise how important our teachers can be," he said.
"Without outstanding teachers, it would have been impossible for me to be standing in front of you tonight," he added.
"Some of the scientific discoveries we celebrate today have already proved to be extraordinarily useful for mankind in the treatment of certain disease. These examples illustrate that research can solve many problems and contribute to a better world," added professor Carl-Henrik Heldin, chairman of the Board of the Nobel Foundation.
Angust Deaton, who was awarded the prize in economic sciences in memory of Alfred Nobel, said he became economist by accident as he drifted from one topic to another, adding he was helped in his career by distinguished mentors.
Chinese scientist Tu Youyou received the Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine at the glittering ceremony.
Tu, William Campbell from the US and Satoshi Omura from Japan received the medicine prize for unlocking revolutionary treatments for malaria and roundworm, helping to roll back two parasitic diseases that blight millions of lives.
"The discovery of Artemisinin has led to development of a new drug that has saved the lives of millions of people, halving the mortality rate of malaria during the past 15 years," said Professor Hans Forssberg, member of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine, when presenting Tu's scientific contributions.
The concert hall awards ceremony was followed by a lavish evening banquet at the Stockholm City Hall.
(Gokul Bhagabati is visiting Sweden at the invitation of City of Stockholm to attend the Nobel Prize ceremony. He can be contacted at gokul.b@ians.in)
8 minutes ago
Brad Pitt has plans for a simple Thanksgiving
9 minutes ago
Mammootty-starrer 'Kalamkaval' to now hit screens on December 5
10 minutes ago
Karan Johar attends the London leg of 'Homebound' screening hosted by Gurinder Chadha
11 minutes ago
Priyanka Chopra marks her homecoming with an adorable selfie
11 minutes ago
Tiger Shroff calls it an ‘honour’ to perform for soldiers and their families
12 minutes ago
Nicole Kidman loves that one ‘break’ can change course of anyone's life
12 minutes ago
Soha Ali Khan urges urgent action as AQI touches severe levels: We are breathing in toxic fumes
15 minutes ago
Kriti Sanon shares a candid moment of filmmaker Aanand L. Rai calmly sleeping on a flight
16 minutes ago
First single 'Gira Gira Gingiraagirey' from Pradeep Advaitham's sports drama 'Champion' is a mellifluous delight
18 minutes ago
Kareena Kapoor calls BFF Natasha Poonawalla ‘queen’ in sweet birthday shout-out
25 minutes ago
Kejriwal hails ‘politics done with honesty’ as AAP marks Foundation Day
27 minutes ago
Facing restrictions in Tamil Nadu, Vijay plans December 5 roadshow in Puducherry
30 minutes ago
Rana plays cat-and-mouse game: Extradited 26/11 accused dodges investigators with ISI-honed tactics
