Entries from December 2004
December 11th, 2004 · Comments Off on More about Sweden’s unique “space high school”
I mentioned our plans to ride in a Kiruna dogsled, but didn’t say enough about Sweden’s space high school. Sverker Fredriksson told us:
It has national recruitment, and VERY good pupils. Many of them come from southern
Sweden, 2000 km away. It takes real enthusiam to move that far from their
parents at the age of 16, in order to study space for three years.
I just got some interesting blog-email with more information and links to photos:
Odd Minde [1] sent this email to you through Betsy Devine: Funny Ha-Ha or Funny Peculiar? [2] regarding this page [3].
Hello! I found on Web in your Nobel-blogging: “…Finally some news: Ingrid Sandahl [physicist and expert on auroras] is a great person, who knows almost everyone in Kiruna. She has arranged a dog sled for you on Thursday evening, after our visit to the Space High-School…..”
Here you have a picture of that Space High-School. The name of the school: Rymdgymnasiet in Kirun. Our astronomical observatory is named Bengt Hultquist observatory. Picture you find here:
http://www.malmgruppen.com/t1pubhttpdocs/temp/282422793974968_BHO_mini.jpg
Odd Minde
Project Manager
Teacher
[1] http://w1.171.telia.com/~u17106184/skolan.JPG
[2] http://BetsyDevine.weblogger.com/
[3] http://betsydevine.weblogger.com/
Thanks to Odd Minde for letting me share this email!
Tags: Nobel
December 11th, 2004 · 1 Comment
It’s traditional for the King and Queen to invite new Nobel laureates to dine at the palace on the next day after prize awards–so today’s birthday dinner will be hard to live up to.
I might add that in addition to a charming prince who remembered today was my birthday, Sweden also has a very charming prime minister. Thanks to my table companions Göran Persson and Finn Kydland for sharing my enthusiasm for speculating about economic issues, a much safer pastime than speculating in currency.
The Grand Hotel, which does nothing in a small way, sent a huge vase full of flowers with birthday wishes. (This advantage of having hotels check your passport had never occurred to me before.)
Frank gave me a beautiful necklace of amber beads–Amity gave me a cellphone holder with a huge script ‘B’ picked out in cute diamond-oids–Mira gave me a huge chocolate cigar full of marzipan–mmm–and Joi Ito’s birthday best wishes linked to my blog.
This was such a good birthday, I think I’ll just have to stop getting older. No more birthdays for me!
Tags: Nobel
December 11th, 2004 · Comments Off on Line up the usual suspects, but in evening clothes
Wilczeks et al., waiting for Nobel Prize ceremony, Dec. 10, 2004.
Tags: Nobel
December 11th, 2004 · 1 Comment
Why settle for garnishing food with fresh-ground pepper–or even my mother’s four wicked secret tricks
The Nobel banquet staff dessert “presentation” requires a Mozart mini-opera prelude, plus hundreds of waitstaff marching in unison, holding trays high with one hand and ringing small bells with the other.
Those three flights of marble stairs add dramatic tension, and I’m told waiters aren’t allowed to help serve dessert until they are veterans of previous Nobel banquets.
Beautiful photo borrowed from
Dagens Nyheter
Tags: Nobel
December 11th, 2004 · Comments Off on Food “presentation” that will be hard to live up to
Why settle for garnishing food with fresh-ground pepper–or even my mother’s four wicked secret tricks?
The Nobel banquet staff dessert “presentation” requires a Mozart mini-opera prelude, plus hundreds of waitstaff marching in unison, holding trays high with one hand and ringing small bells with the other.
Those three flights of marble stairs add dramatic tension, and I’m told waiters aren’t allowed to help serve dessert until they are veterans of previous Nobel banquets.
Tags: Nobel
December 11th, 2004 · Comments Off on Other people’s pictures: Swedish TV
The Swedish television Nobel page links to lots of fun jsp popups that don’t have independent URLs of their own. For the benefit of my non-Swedish readers, I’ve mis-translated a few of the links you might click.
-
Nobelpriser och festmingel:
- Nobel ceremony and party-mingle (Still shots of Nobel ceremony and banquet.)
-
Vem bar snyggaste klänningen?
- Who is wearing the most beautiful clothing? (Royalty and others walk downstairs to banquet hall.)
-
Snillen och glitter på tidigare fester
- Nobel glittererati of the past, including Nobel ice cream from years ago and two photos of Gunter Grass jitterbugging!
-
Toner av Mozart underhöll gästerna
- Mozart’s music adds tone to any occasion (Video from ceremony and banquet.)
Tags: Feedster
December 11th, 2004 · Comments Off on Marble stair anxiety
 |
The Nobel banquet’s menu and music are secrets, right up to the day itself. But the seating arrangement–and the processional order for going in–are featured in Swedish newspapers days beforehand.
I was a bit nervous to hear that I would be walking down three flights of marble stairs on the arm of His Royal Highness Prince Carl Philip.
Longtime readers of this blog no doubt expect here some jokes about the handsome (and charming) princes in fairy tales. On the other hand, I can imagine the kind of teasing a twenty-something young man would get from friends if he’s the topic of such a blogpost, no matter how admiringly I would mean it.
I had a wonderful time at dinner, between the charming and computer-graphics-savvy Prince on my left and my fellow opera-fanatic Richard Axel on my right–for even more Nobel gossip, see Svenska Dagblad and Dagens Nyheter. |
Tags: Nobel
December 11th, 2004 · Comments Off on Swedish blogger, Aron Ambrosiani
One of the many charming people I’ve met here is Swedish blogger Aron Ambrosiani. I met him amid the whir and buzz of the Nobel Museum events, and saw him again last night surrounded by glitter and dance music at the post-banquet Nobel Ball.
I’m hoping to read some Nobel party news from a Swedish point of view (relying on this free Swedish-to-English translator (which translates “Frank Wilczek” into “Stamp Wilczek” but still works better than trying to guess what words mean) ) but Aron may be as sleepy as I am this morning.
Keep blogging, Aron!
Tags: Nobel
December 10th, 2004 · 2 Comments
Someone described Nobel Week as a series of “can you top this?” experiences. December 10 was a full day of such events.
The first big event was rehearsing the Nobel Prize ceremony. That is, Frank and the other laureates rehearsed marching and getting medals from the King while wives and reporters rehearsed sitting in the audience.
The part of the King was played by a very distinguished Nobel Board member–Michael Sohlman, I think–and I took several photos of the pre-event for this blog but was asked not to post them in fairness to newspapers, who had been told the rehearsal was off-limits to photos.
Then Harold drove us back to the Grand Hotel, whose fitness center serves a great salad lunch. Frank did some exercising, took a sauna, and walked to the Nobel Museum to buy more toys while the two girls and I had our hair done at the hotel…so much fun, many thanks to Morgan Johansson and his team.
Ten big black limos lined up at the Grand Hotel to ferry laureates to Stockholm Concert Hall. We rode through the twilight streets and into a courtyard illuminated by lighted torches that some pre-teen scouts were waving to welcome us.
Then, after clambering around various backstage corridors, Frank went to wait with the other laureates while I went to sit in the audience with other family. (Non-family guests, friends, and colleagues sat somewhere else.)
Frank’s Uncle Walter and Aunt Billie were already sitting down when I arrived. We had great seats, in the second row from the front. I’d already showed Frank my assigned seat that morning–#84, right in the middle. For the actual ceremony, I was sitting between our daughter Amity and the Austrian ambassador. (He was there on behalf of literature laureate Elfrida Jelinek.)
I won’t describe the ceremony–it’s 3 a.m., and newspapers will do it better. All the laureates shook hands with the king properly, and nobody forgot to do all the right bows. The music was lovely, especially a Rossini aria sung by the young Swedish soprano Susanna Andersson. (Both the Prince and the King, when I met them later on, mentioned how very much they’d enjoyed her singing.)
After the final music and formal exits, family members rush up on stage to reclaim their own laureates. I said to Frank, “Show us your medal,” and he said, “Here’s the box, you open it and show us.” Wow. So, that’s the moment the photo above is showing.
Tags: Nobel
December 10th, 2004 · Comments Off on Wow, a Nobel honor for blogging!
This is a first–the official Nobel Prize website now links to this blog from its page on “Other Resources” for Frank Wilczek!
Now (Friday morning, December 10) we have to go practice marching to our places in the Stockholm Concert Hall. No fancy clothes needed for this exercise, although white tie and tails for all the men were delivered to the Grand Hotel last night.
Tags: Nobel