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  • 站长名称:watches169
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    星期四   
    [ 2010-1-7 10:14:47 | watches169 ] 
    Enterprising five reap rewards

              A bicycle exporter, palaeonlogist and teacher are among the winners of this year's Rolex Awards for Enterprise. The winners were chosen for TAG Heuer Replica Watches innovative work in the fields of science and medicine; technology and innovation; exploration and discovery; the environment; and cultural heritage. Selected from 2005 applicants from 124 countries, the five winners each received their 75,000 [pounds sterling] awards and a gold Rolex chronometer at a ceremony in New York City.                                                                  It was while undertaking voluntary work in Ecuador that US teacher and carpenter David Sweidenback saw how owning a bicycle could radically change a poor person's life. This led him to set up Pedals for Progress, a non-profit organisation that collects unwanted bicycles in the USA and ships them to developing countries. He will use his award to continue this work. Nigerian teacher Mohammed Bah Abba won his award for his pot-in-pot cooling system -- which uses inexpensive earthenware pots to keep food cool and therefore preserve it.                          Also working towards improving standards of living in rural areas is Maria Eliza Manteca Onate. She was awarded for her work setting up Seiko Watches a nature reserve near her home in Ecuador. Laurent Pordie, a young French anthropologist and ethnopharmacologist, will use his award to re-establish traditional Amchi medicine in Ladakh, northern India. In this area the introduction of conventional modern medicine has prompted a decline in traditional Amchi skills.                          Finally, Elizabeth Nicholls was awarded for her dedicated work to extract a 23-metre ichthyosaur fossil from the wilderness of British Columbia. This 200-million-year-old specimen, the largest marine reptile ever discovered, could open up whole new areas of knowledge of Earth's prehistory.            
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