Posted by
whoyg1900 on Tuesday, November 10, 2009 8:44:22 PM
STOCKHOLM -— The first Nobel prizes of the new millennium were awarded
at ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo on Sunday, with Peace Prize
laureate Kim Dae-jung of South Korea vowing to devote the rest of his
life to peace and human rights.
King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden awarded the prizes for sciences,
economics and literature to 12 laureates in Stockholm, while South
Korean President Kim received the Peace Prize in Oslo.
Kim, 75, received the peace prize for his work for democracy and human rights across Asia, especially for his efforts to
wheat pearl promote closer ties with North Korea.
In his acceptance speech, Kim praised Stalinist North Korea for easing Cold War tensions.
''I humbly pledge before you that...I shall give the rest of my life to
human rights and peace in my country and in the world, and to the
reconciliation and cooperation of my people,'' Kim told an audience
including Norway's King Harald.
The prizes, founded in the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel,
the inventor of dynamite, are each worth nine million Swedish crowns
this year ($929,300).
The other laureates received their prizes at a traditional ceremony in Stockholm's Concert Hall, attended by 1,800 people.
They later took part in the Nobel banquet, a glittering climax to the
year's Nobel festivities, attended by 1,373 guests in Stockholm's City
Hall.
This year's choice of literature laureate -- Chinese-born writer Gao
Xingjian -- angered the authorities in Beijing who said the award had
political motives, and the Chinese embassy in Stockholm declined an
invitation to attend the ceremonies.
Gao, the first Chinese-born writer to win the prize, left China after
its army massacred pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square in
1989, and his works have been banned in China since 1986.
In a speech to the banquet, Gao recalled the hardships he had had as a
writer in China and in exile, and the miracle of winning the
prestigious prize.
''Suddenly, here he is in this brilliant hall, receiving this precious
award from the hands of His Majesty the King. Is it a fairytale or
freshwater pearl jewelry is it reality?'' Gao said.
Scientists who laid the foundations of the computer revolution and
pioneered plastics that can conduct electricity won the physics and
chemistry prizes.
Their work paved the way for computers, compact discs and mobile phones
without which modern life is unimaginable. And true to form, a mobile
phone rang out loudly during the speech praising the three physics
laureates, Jack Kilby and Herbert Kroemer of the United States and
Russia's Zhores Alferov.
Alan MacDiarmid of New Zealand, Japan's Hideki Shirakawa and Alan
Heeger of the United States shared the Nobel honours for chemistry,
while the medicine prize was awarded to Swede Arvid Carlsson,
Austrian-born Eric Kandel, today a U.S. citizen, and Paul Greengard of
the United States. James Heckman and Daniel McFadden, both of the
United States, are this year's economics laureates.
Two guests absent from the banquet were Swedish Prime Minister Goran
Persson and Foreign Minister Anna Lindh who had to stay in the French
city of Nice where a marathon European Union summit ran into an
unscheduled fourth day.
In Stockholm, physics co-winner Alferov noted in his acceptance speech
that physics had brought both benefits and disasters to mankind in the
20th century and warned that the mass media could be abused in the
wrong hands.
''Knowledge is power, but power must be based on knowledge,'' he said.
Alferov recalled his years of research into lasers in St Petersburg on a light-hearted note in verse:
``Our purpose was both great and bright no more the dark! Let there be light! So to
wholesale pearl
release eternal light we did the work all day and night. And when we
could neither work nor think we had the Russian vodka drink...''