All "put of for" means is that someone who on the committee chose to make the proposal, so it doesn't signify much. Except, perhaps, the increasing decadence of the Nobel Prize Committee ...
Fortunately for the Nobel Prize People...saintjudasApril 24 2008, 04:38:31 UTC
It didn't come from them. No-One on the Prize Committee made such a proposal according to them (I think they finally responded a day ago to the assertion that Stein had been nominated - the reply was "For what exactly would he have been nominated?")
Re: Fortunately for the Nobel Prize People...jordan179April 24 2008, 05:53:28 UTC
Ah, well then it's totally meaningless, like when news reporters say "some say" or "it is said," which simply means that someone, somewhere, has said something :)
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