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Return to Virginia Business - January 2003

Two Virginia Nobels in one year

by Paula C. Squires

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The news wasn’t all bad last year for Virginia’s colleges and universities. Two faculty members received academia’s most coveted distinction — a Nobel Prize. John B. Fenn a research professor in the chemistry department at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond was one of three recipients of the chemistry prize. Vernon L. Smith, a professor of economics and law at George Mason University in Fairfax County, won in economic sciences along with Princeton University Professor Daniel Kahneman.

“To have two Nobel laureates in the same year in the commonwealth and to have them receive their awards on the same day — that is highly unique,” says VCU President Eugene P. Trani. He and GMU President Alan Merten traveled to Stockholm, Sweden, last month for the festivities and Fenn’s and Smith’s Nobel lectures.

The prizes include a $1 million award and raise the profile of the winning faculty members’ universities. “This is a great thing for Virginia, Richmond, VCU and GMU,” says Trani, who has headed one of the state’s largest urban universities for 13 years. However, both professors won for work they did largely before coming to Virginia.
Fenn, 85, was honored for research in mass spectrometry, specifically a method he pioneered in 1988 called electrospray ionization. It enables researchers to analyze large molecules that inhabit human cells, such as proteins, with great accuracy, helping with the development of new pharmaceuticals. Fenn joined VCU in 1994 as a professor of analytical chemistry after more than 20 years at Yale University. His current research, supported by National Science Foundation grants, focuses in part on analyzing particulate matter that might offer answers on how atmospheric pollutants cause diseases.

GMU’s Vernon Smith, 75, won for his contributions to experimental economics. Fifty years ago, he developed laboratory experiments to evaluate the performance and measure of markets. Smith joined GMU in 2001 after the university received a $3 million grant to assist in the recruitment of Smith and other economic scholars. He is the second GMU scholar to receive a Nobel Prize. Economics professor James Buchanan received the award in 1986 for groundbreaking work in public choice theory.

Return to Virginia Business - January 2003


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