Posted: July 3, 2007

Buckyball discovery team reunion featured at nanoTX'07

(Nanowerk News) Discovery of the Buckyball at Rice University in 1985 that led to a Nobel Prize for three of the five team members, and ushered in the modern era of nanotechnology, will be recalled by surviving team members October 2 in Dallas, Texas.
Moderating this historic evening will be Dr. Malcolm Gillis who was president of Rice University when the Nobel Prize for discovery of Carbon60 (dubbed “buckminsterfullerene” or buckyball) was awarded. This event will reunite two men who shared the Nobel Prize with Rick Smalley and one of the two students who were key members of the team. Dr. Harold Kroto is flying in from an engagement in Taiwan and Dr. Robert Curl will arrive from Rice University in Houston. Dr. Sean O’Brien, currently with Texas Instruments, is back in Dallas from assignment in Belgium.
“We are missing two important people,” said Greg Magel, a member of the nanoTX’07 Advisory Board, Managing Partner of TIPRA, and former president of Rice Alumni—Dallas. “Dr. Norman Hackerman, who was president of Rice when C60 was discovered, and a respected chemist himself, just passed away two weeks ago at 95. We were very much hoping that he could join us. We are also hoping Dr. James Heath, who was a student member of the buckyball team, and who has gone on to become a professor at Caltech and a leader in nanoelectronics, might be able to attend.”
The Nobel Laureate Legends evening, sponsored by SIA and IEEE, is held in a comfortable library room-like setting on stage in front of a live audience at the elegant Dallas Convention Center Theatre. Past Nobel evenings have been improvisational, natural and spontaneous, with friends and colleagues reliving old times. For historical purposes it will be captured on camera and copies will be made available to university libraries. Those wishing to be added to the waiting list for an invitation may apply at http://www.nanotx.biz/index.php?content=nobelLaureates.
Source: nanoTX'07