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after the facts

By Jeffrey S. Nordhaus

Baird Professor of Science Dudley R. Herschbach proved that nice guys don't always finish last. This week, the Swedish Academy of Sciences announced that Herschbach--the former master of Currier House and one of the University's most popular science professors--was the recipient of the 1986 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. He will share the $290,000 award with two other chemistry colleagues.

As a tribute to this year's laureate, here's a cursory glance at how 'the good guys' have done in previous years with different national competitions:

. All-time number of Nobel Prizes awarded to Harvard professors: 30.

. Total number of Nobel Prizes awarded to University of Chicago professors: 41.

. Total number awarded to Stanford University professors: 10.

. Years in which Harvard profs snagged two Nobels: 1934 (both in Medicine); 1965 (Physics and Chemistry); 1979 (both in Physics); 1980 (Medicine and Chemistry).

. Years in which Harvard faculty members garnered three Nobels: 1954 (all in Medicine); and 1981 (two in Medicine and one in Physics).

. Nobel laureate for whom Harvard claims credit even though he didn't teach here when the award was made: Frederick C. Robbins, in 1954, who was cited for research conducted while he was a Harvard faculty member.

. All-time number of Pulitzer Prizes awarded to Harvard professors: 27.

. Total number of Pulitzers awarded to Stanford professors: 5.

. American university which has sent the most Rhodes Scholarship winners to Oxford: Harvard, with 227.

. All-time number of Rhodes scholars from other schools, in descending order: Yale (166); Princeton (158); Stanford (52); University of Chicago (34); and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (22). Sources: Harvard University, University of Chicago, Stanford University, National Rhodes Scholarship Committee.

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