|  Reactions to the Nobel NewsLast week, Kurt Wüthrich, who is Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Visiting 
        Professor of Structural Biology at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) 
        and a member of TSRI's Department of Molecular Biology and Skaggs Institute 
        for Chemical Biology, was awarded the 2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 
        applying the technique of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to solving 
        the structures of biological macromolecules. 
        News&Views asked Wüthrich (who is also professor at Eidgenössische 
        Technische Hochschule Zürich (ETHZ) in Switzerland), members of his 
        laboratory, and several of his colleagues at TSRI where they were when 
        they heard the announcement and what their initial reaction to the award 
        was. 
        
         
       
         
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 Kurt WüthrichCecil H. and Ida M. Green Visiting Professor of Structural 
              Biology
  I was in a classroom with my students [in Zürich], getting 
              updated on the research that was being done. (I had been out of 
              the office for three weeks). My secretary [abruptly interrupted] 
              and called me out of the room to tell me the news. 
              Someone told me later that when they told me, I [just stood there] 
              and didn't say anything for two minutes and several seconds. I wasn't 
              aware of that. This is great! 
               
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 Peter WrightChair, Department of Molecular Biology and Cecil H. and Ida 
              M. Green Investigator in Medical Research
 About 8 AM, I was just about to leave for work. I got a phone call 
              from my administrator, Ruby, who said, "The press wants to speak 
              to you." I was absolutely delighted. It was long overdue. 
              It is not often that these things happen to colleagues, and it's 
              great to see Kurt get the prize. It's fantastic for the field of 
              NMR structural biology. It's fantastic for Scripps. And it's fantastic 
              for Kurt. I'm really delighted he won the prize. 
             Kurt's prize is extremely important because it is recognition for 
              NMR as a method for determining the structures of biological macromolecules 
              in solution. It really helps put the field on the map. 
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 Jamie Williamson Professor, Associate Dean of the Kellogg 
              School of Science and Technology 
              I heard in the morning when I came to work. Someone had sent me 
              an email that said, "He did it." 
             The news brought a smile to my face because he has been in the 
              running for a long time and he really did make a fundamental contribution 
              to making NMR something that people could use. He's the one who 
              got in the trenches and did protein structures. He is the one who 
              showed that NMR is really a structural biology tool. 
              Besides that, he has spent a career advancing the field to a fine 
              art. And he has solved a lot of structures. 
              It is about time. This is great for him and uplifting for the 
              whole field. 
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 Gary SiuzdakDirector of Mass Spectrometry
  I was at a conference in New Jersey. It was incredible because 
              they first announced John Fenn, who I know and who is a great guy. 
              I was still amazed [by] that when they mentioned Wüthrich. 
              That was fantastic! I was ecstatic that both Fenn and Wüthrich 
              won and that the prize went to analytical chemistry. 
              [NMR and mass spectrometry] are the major analytical tools in 
              chemistry today. Their impact for every chemist [and biologist] 
              in the world has been huge. 
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 John Chung Director, BioMolecular NMR Facility
 I was in bed at 7AM, when the phone rang. It was a former postdoc 
              here at TSRI who now works in New Jersey who'd gotten wind of the 
              news on the East Coast right about then. 
              It woke me upthat's for sure. I hurried into the lab since 
              I figured that there'd be some reaction from the community to the 
              announcement. Some people from Union Tribune came out to 
              take photos with Dr. Wuthrich's postdocs. 
              
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 Wolfgang PetiResearch Associate, Wüthrich lab
  It was 3 o'clock in the morning, and I was at home. One of my 
              best friends called me from Cambridge [England] and told me. 
              I wasn't sure if he was joking, so I called my parents in Austria 
              and asked them to check it out on the internet. 
              I thought, I have to wake up the other guys, too, so I called 
              them. Unfortunately, they were asleep and didn't wake up when I 
              tried to ring. That was the only disappointment of the day! 
              
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  Linda Columbus Research Associate, Wüthrich lab
 I was at home, and I knew they were announcing the Nobel Prize 
              for Chemistry, so I checked the web [as soon as I got up]. I screamed 
              to my husband, "You are not going to believe this..." 
               
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 Torsten HerrmannResearch Associate, Wüthrich lab
 I heard about this award early in the morning. I was sitting outside, 
              and I saw a note on my car. At first I thought the police had come 
              by or something. 
              The note was from this guy who was living in my apartment complex, 
              and it said that Kurt won the prize. I was totally surprised, but 
              I wasn't sure this guy was not playing a joke. 
              I called Switzerland, and [then] I was sure that it was absolutely 
              true. I immediately went to my roommate and knocked loudly on his 
              doorhe was afraid that it might be a fireand then we 
              sat on the balcony with coffee discussing and laughing because it 
              [came as] a total surprise. 
               
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 Touraj EtezadyGraduate Student, Wüthrich lab
  I heard someone knocking on the door, and I thought, "My God, 
              what is happening? An earthquake?!" 
              Then Torsten came in and said, "You won't believe itKurt 
              won the Nobel prize!" 
              I couldn't believe it. We started to scream. It was unbelievable. 
              He deserves ithe has worked so hard for it. 
              I remember back home [in Zürich] at the university. In the 
              first lecture I had with him, he took off his belt and showed us 
              how protein folding works. I am happy for him. 
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