prize Bio blog: Dr Amanda Barnard grabs a bag of ‘firsts’ winning the Nobel Prize of nanoscience world: The Freynman Prize By blog.invest.vic.gov.au Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2015 15:39:00 +1000 The Feynman Prize for Nanotechnology was awarded last month to Dr Amanda Barnard. Often referred to as the Nobel Prize of nanoscience, the prize’s importance is remarkable in that it recognises prodigious talent in the sector and is a reliable predictor of scientific discoveries with a very high translational impact on industry. Full Article
prize OSCE Chairperson-in-Office Steinmeier and Secretary General Zannier offer condolences on passing of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel By feeds.osce.org Published On :: Sun, 03 Jul 2016 13:22:51 +0000 Berlin/Vienna, 3 July 2016 – OSCE Chairperson-in-Office Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Secretary General Lamberto Zannier today expressed deep sadness upon the passing of Holocaust survivor, peace activist and Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel. “We have lost one of the strongest advocates of peace, who raised his voice tirelessly against all forms of hatred. He fought intolerance and in all its manifestations and denounced oppression wherever it occurred”, said Steinmeier. Zannier stressed: “In a time when racism, xenophobia and intolerance threaten increasingly divided societies across the OSCE region, Elie Wiesel’s legacy will remain an inspiration and forever remind us of our commitment never to relent in our fight against all forms of discrimination, racism and violent extremism.” Steinmeier and Zannier extended their condolences to Mr. Wiesel's family and to the governments and people of the United States and Israel.Related StoriesOSCE Secretary General promotes inter-faith dialogue to prevent radicalization at Congress of Leaders of World and Traditional Religions in KazakhstanOSCE Secretary General visits Vienna’s West Station to meet refugees and representatives of Austria’s Interior Ministry, Police and humanitarian organizationsPartnership and co-operation takes Bosnia and Herzegovina forward on its reform path, says OSCE Secretary General Zannier Full Article Chairmanship Secretary General Tolerance and non-discrimination Western Europe and North America Austria Press release
prize The Third Edit: In Samantha Harvey’s Booker Prize win, outer space and inner lives By indianexpress.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 20:54:24 +0000 Full Article Editorials Opinion
prize Nagaland Sambad Lottery Dear Indus Winners 13 November 1 PM - Full Results And Prizes By www.oneindia.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:15:14 +0530 Nagaland Sambad Lottery Dear Indus Winners 13 November 1 PM. Discover the latest results and winning numbers for this weekly lottery. Full Article
prize Arunachal Pradesh Lottery Singam Pinnacle Noon Winners 13 November - Full Results And Prizes By www.oneindia.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:27:16 +0530 Arunachal Pradesh Lottery Singam Pinnacle Noon Winners 13 November. Discover the latest results and winning ticket numbers. Full Article
prize Nagaland Sambad Lottery Dear Cupid Winners 13 November 6 PM - Full Results And Prizes By www.oneindia.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 18:15:18 +0530 Nagaland Sambad Lottery Dear Cupid Winners 13 November 6 PM. Discover the latest winners and prize details for this exciting lottery event. Full Article
prize Arunachal Pradesh Lottery Singam Pinnacle Evening Winners 13 November - Full Results And Prize Details By www.oneindia.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 19:21:10 +0530 Arunachal Pradesh Lottery Singam Pinnacle Evening Winners 13 November. Discover the prize details and winning ticket numbers here. Full Article
prize British author wins Booker Prize for space novel By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:11:10 +0530 British author Samantha Harvey has won the 2024 Booker Prize for her 'ambitious and beautiful' Orbital, which becomes the first novel set in space to win the GBP 50,000 literary prize selected from a historic shortlist that was dominated by women this year. Full Article
prize CHURCH HISTORY - Underprized: William Tyndale and the English Bible by David Teems By www.cbn.com Published On :: CBN.com -- 2011 was the 400th anniversary of the publication of the King James Bible (1611). And it is only right that we celebrate. According to scholars, the King James Bible continues to hold its place with the works of William Shakespeare as the greatest work of prose in the English language. The offspring of a poetic age, the KJB is part of our deepest cultural memory, and after 400 years, this great Bible not only remains a testament to what has proven excellent in our linguistic past, it has allowed God to speak to us in his accustomed beauty and highness, and with an English voice. But that is not the whole story. Truth is, each of the passages above had their beginning not with the King James translators, but in the translation of William Tyndale some eighty-five years earlier, at a time when an English translation of the Bible was not only against the law in England, it was punishable by death. While it certainly deserves the honors it has received, the King James Bible gets the applause that rightfully belongs to William Tyndale (1494-1536). 90% or more of the King James New Testament is Tyndale's translation, and most often word for word. Tyndale also translated roughly a third of the Old Testament (Genesis - II Chronicles, and Jonah). The following are Tyndale translations: Let there be light, Bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh, In the cool of the day, Am I my brother's keeper, Let my people go, Entreat me not to leave thee, The Lord bless thee and keep thee, A small still voice. Any study of Tyndale's wordcraft must also include his single word innovations such as: Jehovah, thanksgiving, passover, intercession, holy place, atonement, Mercy seat, judgement seat, chasten, impure, longed, apostleship, brotherly, sorcerer, whoremonger, viper, and godless. What is dumbfounding to me, and which is the point of this article, is how hidden Tyndale remains, how misprized, and how thoroughly uncelebrated. In his 2011 book, The Shadow of a Great Rock: A Literary Appreciation of the King James Bible, renowned literary critic and Yale professor, Harold Bloom, said that "Nearly everything memorable in the English New Testament is the achievement of the matchless William Tyndale and not of the early Christian authors. ... No honest critic able to read the koine original could resist the conclusion that Tyndale throughout transcends his proof-text [original ms] to a sublime degree." In his book, Jesus and Yahweh, Bloom, vociferously non-Christian, says also that William Tyndale is the "only true rival of Shakespeare, Chaucer, and Walt Whitman as the richest author in the English language," that only Shakespeare's prose "is capable of surviving comparison with Tyndale's." This is an endorsement of the first order. -- A memorial was placed in Vilvorde (Belgium) near the spot where Tyndale was martyred (there is a William Tyndale Museum in Vilvorde as well). In London, a statue of Tyndale was erected in 1884, and a stone monument overlooks the town of North Nibley, Gloucestershire, England, where he is thought to have lived as a child. He has been given a day of recognition by the Anglican Church (October 6), and a brief prayer (collect proper). These honors are well deserved, doubtless, but for his contribution to the English language, to English thought and piety, for all he has done to effect growth, aesthetics, motion, architecture and sound of the English language, Tyndale has been given what amounts to a formal nod, a gold watch, and a citation for his service. What fascinates me perhaps even more about William Tyndale are the conditions by which he translated the Bible. He was outlaw. His translation was outlaw. His very thoughts were outlaw. He was exile. He lived in poverty. He was continually hunted, and therefore he was forced to be on the move continually. And yet these elements, far from crippling the text, only empowered it. There is something magnificently alive in Tyndale's translation of "Romans 8:35. Who shall separate us from the love of God? shall tribulation? or anguish? or persecution? or hunger? or nakedness? or peril? or sword? As it is written: For thy sake are we killed all day long and are counted as sheep appointed to be slain. Nevertheless in all these things we overcome strongly through his help that loved us." -- The life Tyndale was forced to live was not unlike the Paul he translated. Much more than an exercise of the mind, his translation represents a kind of linguistic empathy. There is a certain cooperation between Tyndale and Paul in all that Greek. Indeed, something lives in Tyndale's Paul beyond mere equivalents of language. William Tyndale's story is one of true greatness, and yet he continues to suffer a curious injustice. Compared to English writers of greater name, but much less weight per pound, he is magnificently underprized, and thus remains in a kind of exile. Eventually his life was demanded of him. He was held in the dungeon of a castle in Vilvorde, Belgium for 500 days. He was denied both light and visitors. He suffered a mock trial, was led to a scaffold, strangled, and then burned at the stake. No symbol went unused. By strangling Tyndale, the Church thought to silence him forever. Full Article Christian Study End Times Summit 2012
prize Grammy nominations 2025: Who's up for the biggest prizes? By www.bbc.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 18:11:41 GMT See the list of nominees for the 67th Grammy Awards, which will take place in February 2025. Full Article
prize Lucy Gilson and Johan Rockström awarded the Virchow Prize 2024 By www.prleap.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Jul 2024 01:40:00 PDT The Virchow Prize 2024 will be bestowed upon Lucy Gilson and Johan Rockström for their holistic and systems-based approach to safeguarding human and planetary health. Full Article
prize X PRIZE for Longevity By www.mwilliams.info Published On :: Fri, 01 Dec 2023 11:50:49 -0600 I've been wondering for a long time why we haven't seen anything like this: X PRIZE Healthspan. The XPRIZE Foundation is proud to announce its newest competition, XPRIZE Healthspan. XPRIZE Healthspan is a 7-year, $101 million global competition to revolutionize the way we approach human aging. Modern medicine focuses on treating symptoms of injury, illness, or disease once they develop. This reactive system extends life, but doesn't proactively improve health, leaving millions grappling with poor quality of life and related economic challenges in their later years. Success from XPRIZE Healthspan would profoundly change our approach to aging and positively affect quality-of-life and healthcare costs. Working across all sectors, we can democratize health and create a future where aging is full of potential. The thing is... if I found a way to reverse aging I could probably make more than $101m selling it. Full Article Science Technology & Health
prize British author Samantha Harvey wins Booker Prize By news.sky.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:43:00 +0100 British author Samantha Harvey has won this year's Booker Prize with her book Orbital. Full Article
prize Hasan Nasrallah is dead. Is Syria the actual prize? By www.linuxquestions.org Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 06:24:12 GMT Yesterday Israel killed Hasan Nasrallah, Hezbollah's leader for more than 20 years. In doing so Israel allegedly flattened 6-8 residential apartment blocks with bunker buster bombs. According to... Full Article General
prize Nigeria: Nigerian-Born Bodybuilder Wins 2024 Mr Olympia, Gets Historic $600k Prize By allafrica.com Published On :: Mon, 14 Oct 2024 06:17:25 GMT [Leadership] A Nigerian-born United Kingdom-based bodybuilder, Samson Dauda, has won the prestigious 2024 Mr. Olympia bodybuilding title, securing the largest prize ever awarded in the sport's history. Full Article Athletics Nigeria Sport West Africa
prize Talkio Mobile runs draw for customers ordering SIMs online, prizes include iPhone 16 Pro Max By www.telecompaper.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:58:00 +0100 (Telecompaper) New Ugandan operator Talkio Mobile has launched a festive campaign giving over 10,000 customers who book a Talkio SIM online automatic entry to a... Full Article
prize Booker Prize Is Awarded to Samantha Harvey’s ‘Orbital’ - The New York Times By news.google.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 09:45:00 GMT Booker Prize Is Awarded to Samantha Harvey’s ‘Orbital’ The New York TimesSamantha Harvey wins the Booker prize for “Orbital” The Economist‘This is a book we need now’: Sara Collins on choosing this year’s Booker winner The GuardianOrbital by Samantha Harvey: the Booker prize-winner set to go 'stratospheric' The WeekThe inconvenient truth about this year’s Booker Prize winner The Independent Full Article
prize 2024 Earthshot Prize Winners Announced In Cape Town By cleantechnica.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 14:22:00 +0000 The 2024 Earthshot Prize awards were announced last week. Two winners have new technologies that could benefit the entire world. The post 2024 Earthshot Prize Winners Announced In Cape Town appeared first on CleanTechnica. Full Article Green Economy Research Advanced Thermovoltaic Systems Earthshot Prize Keep It Cool
prize Keep Your Eyes on the Prize By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-07-14T02:21:03+00:00 Fr. John Whiteford concludes his series of homilies from the Psalms on by discussing where the wicked and the righteous end up, and why we should put our hope in God. (PSALM 26:25-40) Full Article
prize Innovators and entrepreneurs: XPRIZE as catalyst By www.mackinac.org Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 05:59:00 -0500 Economic freedom is positively associated with job creation Full Article
prize British writer Samantha Harvey wins Booker Prize for space novel Orbital - Al Jazeera English By news.google.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 02:30:19 GMT British writer Samantha Harvey wins Booker Prize for space novel Orbital Al Jazeera EnglishSamantha Harvey’s ‘beautiful and ambitious’ Orbital wins Booker prize The GuardianSamantha Harvey wins the Booker prize for “Orbital” The EconomistBritish writer Samantha Harvey’s space-station novel ‘Orbital’ wins 2024 Booker Prize CNNBooker Prize Is Awarded to Samantha Harvey’s ‘Orbital’ The New York Times Full Article
prize PCB announces Rs 30 million prize for Champions One-Day Cup winners By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 24 10:12:38 +0500 The opening clash between Rizwan’s Markhors and Shadab’s Panthers adds anticipation to the tournament’s start. Full Article Cricket Pakistan
prize British writer Samantha Harvey wins Booker Prize for her novel 'Orbital' By www.geo.tv Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:51:49 +0500 British writer Samantha Harvey and Booker Prize 2024 winner for her book "Orbital" poses on the red carpet upon arrival for the Booker Prize Award announcement ceremony, at the Old Billingsgate, in London, on November 12, 2024. — AFPBritain's Samantha Harvey won the 2024 Booker... Full Article
prize British writer Samantha Harvey's novel 'Orbital' wins the Booker Prize for fiction By www.washingtontimes.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:35:09 -0500 British writer Samantha Harvey won the Booker Prize for fiction on Tuesday with "Orbital," a short, wonder-filled novel set aboard the International Space Station. Full Article
prize PERPLEXING PLOTS Prize By www.davidbordwell.net Published On :: Sat, 10 Aug 2024 17:15:39 +0000 Back on February 10, less than three weeks before his death, David blogged about the positive reception that Perplexing Plots had had including a nomination for an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. He didn’t live to learn the result, but it didn’t win. Now, however, comes news that the International Crime Fiction […] Full Article PERPLEXING PLOTS (the book)
prize Nobel Prize in medicine honors two Mass. professors for their discovery of microRNA By www.boston.com Published On :: Mon, 07 Oct 2024 12:34:58 +0000 “Their groundbreaking discovery revealed a completely new principle of gene regulation that turned out to be essential for multicellular organisms, including humans,” the Nobel Assembly said. The post Nobel Prize in medicine honors two Mass. professors for their discovery of microRNA appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News Harvard University Health Local News Massachusetts General Hospital Massachusetts News Science UMass World News
prize Pioneers in artificial intelligence win the Nobel Prize in physics By www.boston.com Published On :: Tue, 08 Oct 2024 12:33:46 +0000 “This year’s two Nobel Laureates in physics have used tools from physics to develop methods that are the foundation of today’s powerful machine learning,” said the Nobel committee. The post Pioneers in artificial intelligence win the Nobel Prize in physics appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News Business Health Science Technology World News
prize Nobel Prize in chemistry awarded to 3 scientists for work on proteins, building blocks of life By www.boston.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Oct 2024 12:45:24 +0000 Heiner Linke, Chair of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry, said the award honored research that made connections between amino acid sequence and protein structure. The post Nobel Prize in chemistry awarded to 3 scientists for work on proteins, building blocks of life appeared first on Boston.com. Full Article News Science World News
prize Wege Prize Adds Judges to Boost Students’ Real-World Sustainability Innovations By www.wconline.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0500 Wege Prize has announced a larger and more diverse pool of judges than ever before, promising to help students advance their game-changing concepts for a sustainable future. Now in its 12th year, the competition offers five more preliminary judges, bringing the total to 15. Full Article
prize Wege Prize’s Legacy of Advancing a Circular Economy Accentuates Earth Day’s Ideals By www.wconline.com Published On :: Sun, 21 Apr 2024 12:00:00 -0400 As Earth Day 2024 spotlights ways to eliminate plastics, the Wege Prize is shining a spotlight on its innovative student teams that have created real-world solutions recently. Full Article
prize 2019 Templeton Prize Winner: Atheism Is Inconsistent With the Scientific Method By www.salaf.com Published On :: Thu, 21 Mar 2019 06:25:07 GMT Full Article
prize Respirator Fit Evaluation Challenge: NIOSH offering $350K in prize money By www.safetyandhealthmagazine.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Jan 2023 00:00:00 -0500 Washington — Do you have an idea for improving fit testing of respirators? NIOSH is offering $350,000 in total prize money as part of its Respirator Fit Evaluation Challenge. Full Article
prize Cersaie 2024 Unveils New Trends, Design Competition Winners + Pritzker Prize Keynote By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 22:00:00 -0400 The annual trade show offered attendees a window into the latest design and color trends in ceramics as well as the newest advancements in sustainable production and cutting-edge technologies. Full Article
prize Dominick Argento, Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, dead at 91 By minnesota.publicradio.orghttps Published On :: Thu, 21 Feb 2019 12:40:07 -0600 Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Dominick Argento died Wednesday. He was 91. Known for his eclectic range of work, he composed operas such as "Casanova's Homecoming", "The Dream of Valentino" and "Miss Havisham's Fire." Full Article
prize Author Han Kang Wins 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature By world.kbs.co.kr Published On :: Thu, 10 Oct 2024 20:14:21 +0900 [Culture] : South Korean author Han Kang has won the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature. The Swedish Academy made the announcement Thursday, making Han the second South Korean ever to win a Nobel Prize and the first to attain the honor in literature. The academy said it was awarding Han the prize “for her intense poetic ...[more...] Full Article Culture
prize Nobel Literature Prize Goes to S. Korean Han Kang for "Intense Poetic Prose" By world.kbs.co.kr Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2024 11:46:52 +0900 [Culture] : Anchor: South Korean author Han Kang has won the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature. The Swedish Academy made the announcement Thursday, and Han became the second South Korean ever to win a Nobel Prize and the first to attain the honor in literature. Kim Bum-soo has more. Report: South Korean writer Han ...[more...] Full Article Culture
prize Han Kang ‘Surprised,’ ‘Absolutely Honored’ to Win Nobel Prize By world.kbs.co.kr Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2024 14:35:57 +0900 [Culture] : South Korea's first Nobel laureate in literature, Han Kang, said she is surprised and absolutely honored to have won the prestigious prize. In a phone interview with the Swedish Academy, which awards the Nobel prizes, Han expressed appreciation for all the support she’s received. Asked for a comment ...[more...] Full Article Culture
prize 'Exhuma,' 'Handsome Guys' Win Prizes at 57th Sitges Int'l Fantastic Film Festival of Catalonia By world.kbs.co.kr Published On :: Tue, 15 Oct 2024 12:06:05 +0900 [Culture] : Two South Korean films, "Exhuma" and "Handsome Guys," won prizes at the 57th Sitges International Fantastic Film Festival of Catalonia, Spain. According to the South Korean film distributor Showbox on Tuesday, director Jang Jae-hyun's occult thriller "Exhuma," which was invited to the official competition ...[more...] Full Article Culture
prize Seesaws Built On U.S. Border Wall Win Prestigious Design Prize By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 19 Jan 2021 12:40:12 -0800 American and Mexican families play with a seesaw installation at the border near Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, in July 2019. London's Design Museum recognized the project with an award for best design of 2020.; Credit: Luis Torres/AFP via Getty Images Bill Chappell | NPRAn art project that turned the border wall at the U.S.-Mexico border into the temporary base for pink seesaws – inviting children on each side to come play together – has won the London's Design Museum award for best design of 2020. "We are totally surprised by this unexpected honor," said Ronald Rael, who designed the project with fellow architect Virginia San Fratello. They share the award, he said, with the Ciudad Juárez, Mexico-based art collective Colectivo Chopeke. "That's amazing," San Fratello said in a video feed announcing the prize. The seesaw installation won both the overall prize and in the transportation category. "Most importantly, it comes at a time when we are hopeful for change and that we start building more bridges instead of walls," Rael added. "The Beazley Designs of the Year are the Oscars of the design world," said Razia Iqbal, a journalist who chaired the Design Museum's panel of judges. The award, she noted, highlights work that pushes boundaries of creativity and innovation. The metal wall was meant to be a stark barrier dividing the U.S. and Mexico, the centerpiece of President Trump's aggressive immigration policies. But in one spot, it became a junction point instead – a fulcrum for a series of seesaws that let children in the two countries share a playground toy. The project, officially named Teeter-Totter Wall, was first installed in July 2019 when workers slid steel beams through the slats of the border near El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juárez. "For the first time, children from both El Paso, Texas, and the Anapra community in Mexico were invited to connect with their [neighbors], in an attempt to create unity at the politically divisive border," the museum said. "Everyone was very happy and excited to engage the seesaws," Rael told NPR at the time. The installation went smoothly, turning an idea that had been growing for 10 years into a reality. "It was peaceful and fun — a day at a park for the children and mothers of Anapra," Rael said. "The project resonated with people around the world in a way that we didn't anticipate," San Fratello said when the award was announced. "It speaks to the fact that most people are excited about being together, and about optimism and about possibility and the future. And the divisiveness actually comes from the minority." Rael is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley; San Fratello teaches at San José State University. The seesaw project was chosen out of more than 70 nominees from dozens of countries, including a customized "stab-proof vest" that the artist Banksy designed for musician Stormzy. Also considered: the gray and red rendering of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Commissioned by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and designed by Alissa Eckert and Dan Higgins, the famous sphere, with its menacing clusters of crowns, won the design award in the graphics category. The Impossible Burger 2.0 won in the crowded product category, which also included Lego Braille bricks and a self-sanitizing door handle. Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
prize She Owes Her Big Environmental Prize To Goats Eating Plastic Bags By www.scpr.org Published On :: Wed, 23 Jun 2021 11:20:07 -0700 Gloria Majiga-Kamoto, an activist from Malawi, is one of six recipients of the 2021 Goldman Environmental Prize. Majiga-Kamoto has been instrumental in implementing Malawi's ban on thin plastics.; Credit: /Goldman Environmental Prize Julia Simon | NPRFor Gloria Majiga-Kamoto, her great awakening to plastic pollution started with goats. She was working for a local environmental NGO in her native Malawi with a program that gave goats to rural farmers. The farmers would use the goat's dung to produce low-cost, high-quality organic fertilizer. The problem? The thin plastic bags covering the Malawian countryside. "We have this very common street food, it's called chiwaya, and it's just really potato fried on the side of the road and it's served in these little blue plastics," Majiga-Kamoto says. "So because it's salty, once the goats get a taste of the salt, they just eat the plastic because they can't really tell that it's inedible. And they die because it blocks the ingestion system — there's no way to survive." The goats were supposed to reproduce for the program, with the goat kids going on to new farmers. But because of plastic deaths the whole goat chain started falling apart. "It was a lot of expectation from the farmers waiting to benefit. So you had this farmer who had this one goat and then they lost it. And that means that in that chain of farmers, that's obviously affected quite a number of farmers who won't get their turn." For Majiga-Kamoto, her experience at the NGO with the plastic-eating goats was the moment it all changed. All of a sudden she started noticing how plastics were everywhere in the Malawian environment and food system — affecting people's livelihoods and health. The fish in Lake Malawi were eating plastic trash. The country's cows were eating plastic. Researchers found that in one Malawi town 40% of the livestock had plastic in their intestines. "We're choking in plastics," Majiga-Kamoto says, "And so what it means is that in one way or the other, we as humans are consuming these plastics." Majiga-Kamoto was also seeing how plastics contributed to the growth of disease. Huge piles of plastic trash were blocking off Malawi's many waterways, creating pungent breeding grounds for mosquitoes that carry malaria and for bacteria that cause cholera. The 30-year-old says she remembers a time when Malawians didn't rely so much on thin, single-use plastic. "I remember back in the day when we'd go to the market and buy things like fish, like dried fish, you'd get it in newspapers." But thin plastics have taken off in the last decade or so as new manufacturers sprung up in Malawi, selling products like thin plastic bags at cheap prices that made them affordable and accessible even in the most undeveloped parts of the country. A 2019 UNDP funded report found that Malawi produces an estimated 75,000 tonnes of plastic a year, with 80% reportedly single-use plastic. Single-use plastic refers to bags, straws and bottles that can't be recycled, and thin plastic refers to plastic that's under 60 microns in thickness. The proliferation of this thin plastic waste led to the Malawian government's 2015 decision to ban the production, distribution and importation of single-use thin plastic. But before the ban could go into full effect, Malawi's plastics manufacturing industry filed an injunction at the country's High Court. The ban stalled. When Majiga-Kamoto and a group of her fellow environmental NGO-workers and activists heard about the injunction they were angry and frustrated. "It sort of caught our interest to say, 'Wait a minute, you mean that there's actually people in our society who think that this is not a problem and that we should actually continue to live this way?'" Galvanized, Majiga-Kamoto led a group of local environmental activists and NGOs to actually implement the single-use plastics ban, organizing marches on the judiciary where the decision would be decided. She kept her job at her NGO, the Centre for Environmental Policy and Advocacy, and did this work on her own time. She rejected the plastic industry's argument that the ban would hurt Malawi's economy — and even debated an industry lobbyist on TV. Finally in 2019, after multiple injunctions filed by the plastics industry, the High Court ruled in favor of the single-use thin plastic ban. The following year the Malawian government began closing down illegal plastic manufacturers. Last week Majiga-Kamoto was named one of the six winners of the 2021 Goldman Environmental Prize for her work on this issue. Michael Sutton, executive director of the Goldman Environmental Foundation, says Majiga-Kamoto's fight with the plastic lobby epitomizes the spirit of the prize. "She mustered the troops, the grassroots communities, to take on the government and big industry and won several times," Sutton says, "She not only won the ban in law, but is now holding the government's feet to the fire to enforce it." And Majiga-Kamoto isn't letting up her pressure to uphold the single-use plastic ban anytime soon. Although she is trying to get some summer vacation time with her family — that is, if she isn't interrupted. "I was just at the lake a couple of weeks ago and we were there just enjoying the beautiful lake and along come these pieces of plastic." Three plastic bags floated up closer to her, her son and her niece as they played in the water. Majiga-Kamoto grabbed for the bags. "My family was laughing to say, 'You shouldn't be working! You're at the lake!' And I'm like, 'But I can't just leave them in there!'" Julia Simon is a regular contributor to NPR's podcasts and news desks focusing on climate change, energy, and business news. Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
prize Daniel Kahnemans Thinking, Fast and Slow Wins Best Book Award From Academies - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Slate Magazine, and WGBH/NOVA Also Take Top Prizes in Awards 10th Year By Published On :: Thu, 13 Sep 2012 05:00:00 GMT Recipients of the 10th annual Communication Awards were announced today by the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and Institute of Medicine. Full Article
prize Computer Science Pioneer to Receive the 2018 Charles Stark Draper Prize for Engineering By Published On :: Wed, 03 Jan 2018 06:00:00 GMT The National Academy of Engineering announced today that the 2018 Charles Stark Draper Prize for Engineering will be awarded to Bjarne Stroustrup. Full Article
prize Team From University of Maryland, Baltimore, Wins Grand Prize in 2018 D.C. Public Health Case Challenge By Published On :: Wed, 17 Oct 2018 05:00:00 GMT The winners of the sixth annual D.C. Public Health Case Challenge were announced at this year’s National Academy of Medicine (NAM) Annual Meeting. Full Article
prize NAS Honors 10 U.S. Nobel and Kavli Prize Laureates By Published On :: Wed, 10 Apr 2019 05:00:00 GMT From revolutionizing cancer care to modeling the economic impact of climate change, recent winners of Nobel and Kavli Prizes have explored virtually every angle of science. Full Article
prize Team From University of Maryland, Baltimore, Wins Grand Prize in 2019 D.C. Public Health Case Challenge By Published On :: Tue, 22 Oct 2019 04:00:00 GMT The winners of the seventh annual D.C. Public Health Case Challenge were announced at this year’s National Academy of Medicine (NAM) Annual Meeting. The challenge aims to promote interdisciplinary, problem-based learning around a public health issue of importance to the Washington, D.C., community. Full Article
prize First Nobel Prize Summit to Be Held in Washington, D.C. April 29-May 1, 2020 By Published On :: Tue, 10 Dec 2019 05:00:00 GMT The first-ever Nobel Prize Summit, Our Planet, Our Future, will bring together Nobel Laureates and other world-renowned experts and leaders to advance new insights into global sustainable development and explore actions that need to be taken to ensure humanity’s future on a prosperous, stable, and resilient planet. Full Article
prize Nobel Prize Summit ‘Our Planet, Our Future’ To Be Held April 26-28 - Registration Now Open By Published On :: Wed, 17 Mar 2021 04:00:00 GMT The first Nobel Prize Summit “Our Planet, Our Future” will bring together Nobel Prize laureates and other esteemed leaders in the sciences, policy, business, the youth movement, and the arts to explore actions that can be achieved this decade to put the world on a path to a more sustainable, more prosperous future for all. Full Article
prize Key Leaders of the Nobel Prize Summit “Our Planet, Our Future” Stress Urgency for Action, International Collaboration By Published On :: Fri, 16 Apr 2021 04:00:00 GMT On the heels of President Biden’s Leaders Summit on Climate, the first Nobel Prize Summit “Our Planet, Our Future” will bring together Nobel Prize laureates and other esteemed leaders in the sciences, policy, business, the youth movement, and the arts to explore actions that can be achieved this decade to put the world on a path to a more sustainable, more prosperous future for all. Full Article
prize Nobel Prize Laureates and Other Experts Issue Urgent Call for Action After ‘Our Planet, Our Future’ Summit By Published On :: Thu, 29 Apr 2021 04:00:00 GMT This statement was inspired by the discussions at the 2021 Nobel Prize Summit, issued by the Steering Committee and co-signed by Nobel Laureates and experts. Full Article
prize Ceremonial Presentations of Nobel Prizes to be Held at U.S. National Academy of Sciences Locations in Washington and Irvine – Dec. 6 and 8 By Published On :: Tue, 30 Nov 2021 05:00:00 GMT During Nobel Week 2021, ceremonial presentations of Nobel Prize medals and diplomas to 2021 laureates who are based in the United States will take place at the National Academy of Sciences. Full Article