‘Nobel medal to be buried’

Published December 16, 2008

TOKYO, Dec 15: Japanese Nobel physics laureate Toshihide Maskawa said on Monday he planned to bury his medal in the ground as the camera-shy professor returned from the ceremony in Sweden.

Maskawa, who has charmed Japan with his eccentricities, made his first-ever foreign trip to collect the prize. He said he had never gone to conferences abroad as he was petrified about speaking English.

Asked by journalists on his return to Japan what he would do with the medal, Maskawa said in an apparent joke: “Well, I’ll dig a hole and bury it below.” But Maskawa, a 68-year-old professor at Kyoto Sangyo University, later turned serious as he addressed journalists at Osaka’s Kansai International Airport.

Maskawa shared the Nobel Prize with two other Japanese-born physicists, Makoto Kobayashi and Yoichiro Nambu. In the 1970s, Maskawa and Kobayashi came up with a theory on why antimatter sometimes does not obey the same rules as matter.—AFP

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