5Vote!
Sigmund, Carl and Alfred (Free subscription) | 11/04/2009
Adelson Institute: Next month, Professor Ada Yonath will be awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry, becoming the fifth Israeli scientist to win this award. This has sharpened, once again, the grim statistics regarding the scarcity of Nobel laureates in the Muslim and Arab worlds. While Jews, who are only around 0.2% of the world population, have [...]
4Vote!
Tzvee's Talmudic Blog (Free subscription) | 10/25/2009
The science behind the Nobel Prize award to Israel's Weizmann Institute scientist Ada Yonath and the story of the winner are told brilliantly by the Jewish Standard of Teaneck's expert science correspondent Dr. Miryam Wahrman in this week's cover story.
4Vote!
Netizen News Brief (Free subscription) | 10/19/2009
Subject: txt gwot libs edu - The world finally has a definitive answer to the age-old question about whether intelligence is the same thing as common sense. That answer, in case you've ever wondered, is a conclusive " no ." Last week Israel Army Radio interviewed Dr. Ada Yonath, professor of structural biology at the Weizmann Institute of Science, on her selection for a Nobel Prize for Chemistry....
3Vote!
People Daily (Free subscription) | 10/19/2009
by David Harris, Deng Yushan October 7 marked the culmination of a lifetime dedicated to science for Israeli chemist Ada Yonath. She became the ninth Israeli Nobel laureate and the first woman to pick up the prize for chemistry in some 45 years. &$ &$Israeli scientist and Nobel prize winner Ada Yonath attends a press conference in Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, south of Tel Aviv,...
3Vote!
Tony Greenstein's Blog (Free subscription) | 10/19/2009
An interesting article by Haaretz commentator, Ari Shavit, on how Israel's strength is being undermined politically by its growing illegitimacy. Tony Greenstein Israel needs legitimacy to wage war and peace By Ari Shavit, Haaretz Correspondent It seems as if everything is fine. Israel's borders are quiet, the state is stable, the economy is recovering. Hezbollah and Hamas have been deterred, real estate...
4Vote!
The Telegraph India (Free subscription) | 10/19/2009
Cambridge, Oct. 18: Venkatraman Ramakrishnan had raced two others in his bid to unlock the secret of ribosomes, the cell's "protein factory", and all three shared this year's Chemistry Nobel. So how had the chemistry been between him and rivals Thomas Steitz and Ada Yonath?
7Vote!
J O S H U A P U N D I T (Free subscription) | 10/18/2009
While a certain Nobel Peace prize recipient may have received a great deal more press, the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry winner is not without interest. She is Dr.Ada Yonath of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, who received the Prize for over four decades of ground breaking work on protein "factories" in cells. This research is invaluable in trying to overcome antibiotic-resistant...
8Vote!
feminist blogs (Free subscription) | 10/16/2009
Originally posted at Girl w/Pen It seems like every other story in the past month had a science grrl at its core. Some were good, some not so much. I honestly couldn’t make up my mind on which story to write about, so I’ll write a little about all of them: Elinor Ostrom is the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Economics . The best part of her story? That her high school advisor told...
Explore : Business,
Canada,
Chemistry,
Elinor Ostrom,
Feminism,
Jethro Tull,
Music,
Nobel Prize in chemistry,
Nobel Prize in economics,
Nobel Prize in medicine,
Progressive rock,
Sciences
7Vote!
Science Mag (Free subscription) | 10/15/2009
This year's Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded to three scientists who revealed the atomic structure and inner workings of the ribosome: Ada Yonath of the Weizmann Institute of Science; Thomas Steitz of Yale University; and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan of the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology. Author: Robert F. Service
7Vote!
Babylon & Beyond (Free subscription) | 10/14/2009
The Nobel Prizes take people from the forefront of their particular fields into the public eye. The intentions are good, a recognition of outstanding merit and achievement, of contribution to humanity. And it is humanity's nature to be curious about...
6Vote!
Digital Cheeseburger (Free subscription) | 10/13/2009
Digital Cheeseburger - your daily diet of irresistible unhealthy stuff is an entertainment post from: Digital Cheeseburger - covering Celebrity News, Hollywood Rumors, Celebrity Gossip, Celeb Opinion Here is a list of all the 2009 Nobel Prize winners for their respective categories, and the reasons given by The Nobel Prize committee for awarding prizes to these recipients. Physiology or Medicine:...
Explore : Barack Obama Nobel Peace Prize Winner,
Biology,
Books,
Business,
Celebrity,
Charles Kuen Kao,
Chemistry,
Cinema,
Elinor Ostrom,
Fine Arts,
George Elwood Smith,
Herta Mûller,
Howard Hughes,
Jack Szostak,
Life Sciences,
Nobel Prize,
Nobel Prize in chemistry,
Nobel Prize in economics,
Nobel Prize in literature,
Nobel Prize in medicine,
Nobel Prize in physics,
Physics,
Sciences,
Thomas Steitz,
Venkatraman Ramakrishnan,
Willard Sterling Boyle,
Yale University
15Vote!
The Huffington Post (Free subscription) | 10/12/2009
This year a record five women were honored by the Nobel committees. In total, only 40 women have won the prestigious prizes, including Marie Curie who took the 1903 physics prize and the 1911 chemistry prize. The 2009 winners include: _ Elinor Ostrom, 76, who made history by being the first woman to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, sharing it with fellow American Oliver Williamson...
Explore : Books,
Business,
Chemistry,
Doris Lessing,
Elinor Ostrom,
Fine Arts,
Jack Szostak,
Marie Curie,
Nobel Prize,
Nobel Prize in chemistry,
Nobel Prize in economics,
Nobel Prize in literature,
Nobel Prize in medicine,
Nobel Prize in physics,
Oliver Williamson,
Physics,
Sciences,
Thomas Steitz,
Toni Morrison,
Venkatraman Ramakrishnan,
Women,
Women's rights
8Vote!
Media Blog (Free subscription) | 10/12/2009
This is a follow-up to my story about the British paper The Guardian removing Israelis from its Nobel Prize winners list . Israel has won more Nobel Prizes per capita in science - by far - than any other country. This year was no exception as the 2009 Nobel Prize for Chemistry (for a discovery which sounds as though it has major medical implications) is shared between three winners, one in the U.S.,...
4Vote!
People Daily (Free subscription) | 10/12/2009
&$ &$The Royal Swedish Academy of Science announces that American scientists Venkatraman Ramakrishnan (L) and Thomas A. Steitz (C), and Ada E. Yonath of Israel won the 2009 Nobel Prize in chemistry "for studies of the structure and function of the ribosome." This is a combo photo of three winners.(Xinhua/Wu Ping)&$ &$ Three researchers won the 2009 Nobel Prize in chemistry...
4Vote!
rekon | 10/08/2009
ndian-American Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, Thomas Steitz from United States and Ada Yonath of Israel won the 2009 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their pioneering work on the ribosomes, which may help develop new medicines in decreasing the sufferings of the humanity. Chemistry Nobel Prize 2009
5Vote!
rekon | 10/08/2009
This year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry awards Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, Thomas A Steitz and Ada E Yonath for having showed what the ribosome looks like and how it functions at the atomic level,
11Vote!
krishpatel1212@gmail | 10/08/2009
Nobel Prize for Chemistry of Life | Nobel Chemistry Prize: Venkatraman Ramakrishnan Cracking chemistry's mystery may be a hard nut for many, but for this trio, including two US citizens Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, Thomas A Steitz and an Israeli Ada E Yonath, playing with chemistry is merely a fun. For their acumen and expertise in chemistry, they have been awarded 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. The announcement