| Yan, Chen Ning (1922-) |
|
Yang was brought
up in the peaceful and academically inclined atmosphere of the campus
of Tsinghua University, just outside of Peiping, China, where his father
was a Professor of Mathematics. He received his college education at the
National Southwest Associated University in Kunming, China, and completed
his B.Sc. degree there in 1942. His M.Sc. degree was received in 1944
from Tsinghua University, which had moved to Kunming during the Sino-Japanese
War (1937-1945). He went to the U.S.A. at the end of the war on a Tsinghua
University Fellowship, and entered the University of Chicago in January
1946. At Chicago he came under the strong influence of Professor E. Fermi.
After receiving his Ph.D. degree in 1948, Yang served for a year at the
University of Chicago as an Instructor. He has been associated with the
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, U.S.A., since 1949,
where he became a Professor in 1955. Dr. Yang is a prolific author, his numerous articles appearing in the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, The Physical Review, Reviews of Modern Physics, and the Chinese Journal of Physics. Professor Yang has been elected Fellow of the American Physical Society and the Academia Sinica, and honoured with the Albert Einstein Commemorative Award (1957). The U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce named him one of the outstanding young men of 1957. He was also awarded an honorary doctorate of the Princeton University, N.J. (1958). In 1950 Yang married Chih Li Tu and is now the father of three children: Franklin, born 1951; Gilbert, born 1958; and Eulee, born 1961. Dr. Yang is a quiet, modest, and affable physicist; he met his wife Chih Li Tu while teaching mathematics at her high school in China. He is a hard worker allowing himself very little leisure time. From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962. |