Rosalyn S. Yalow nobel Lecture Radioimmunoassay A Probe For Fine Structure Of Biologic Systemsby Dr. rosalyn S. yalow American Endocrinologist/nobel Laureate. http://gos.sbc.edu/w/yalow/yalow.html
Extractions: American Endocrinologist/Nobel Laureate December 8, 1977 at at Stockholm Concert Hall, Stockholm, Sweden To primitive man the sky was wonderful, mysterious and awesome but he could not even dream of what was within the golden disk or silver points of light so far beyond his reach. The telescope, the spectroscope the radiotelescope - all the tools and paraphernalia of modern science have acted as detailed probes to enable man to discover, to analyze and hence better to understand the inner contents and fine structure of these celestial objects. Man himself is a mysterious object and the tools to probe his physiologic nature and function have developed only slowly through the millenia. Becquerel, the Curies and the Joliot-Curies with their discovery of natural and artificial radioactivity and Hevesy, who pioneered in the application of radioisotopes to the study of chemical processes, were the scientific progenitors of my career. For the past 30 years I have been committed to the development and application of radioisotopic methodology to analyze the fine structure of biologic systems. From 1950 until his untimely death in 1972, Dr. Solomon Berson was joined with me in this scientific adventure and together we gave birth to and nurtured through its infancy radioimmunoassay, a powerful tool for determination of virtually any substance of biologic interest. Would that he were here to share this moment.
Extractions: Fig. 7. Number of papers using radioimmunoassay published by Yalow and Berson (Y and B, left) and by all others in American journals of endocrinology and diabetes through 1969. Papers before 1965 are shown in black; 1965 and later are cross-hatched. (JCI, Journal of Clinical Investigation; JCE, Journal of Clinical Endocrinology; Endocrinol, Endocrinology.) Back to Yalow Lecture
Super Scientists - Rosalyn Yalow net; rosalyn yalow Assaying the unknown American Chemical society; Contributionof 20th Century Women to Physics UCLA Physics Department; Autobiography nobel e http://www.energyquest.ca.gov/scientists/yalow.html
Extractions: Yalow was born in New York City in 1921. She attended Hunter College in New York. She graduated at the age of 20, then began graduate school, the only woman among 400 grad students. Yalow received her Ph.D. in nuclear physics in 1945 from the University of Illinois. In 1977, she received the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine. In between, her work included finding ways to use radioisotopes in medicine, and in particular, developing with other scientists a way to measure the amount of proteins like insulin in the body, using radioisotopes. More about Rosalyn Yalow Links to other Websites: Bio-sketch Wish-net
Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Yalow, Rosalyn (L-Z) Looking for the best facts and sites on yalow, rosalyn? This HomeworkCentral sectionfocuses on 'LZ' and 'Physiology Medicine' and 'nobel Prize Winners' and http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/Sci
Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: L-Z (Physiology & Medicine) Hall of Fame); McClintock, Barbara (1983 nobel Prize). PAVLOV, IVAN(1904) Biography; Theory. yalow, rosalyn World Book Online Article http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/Bio
Yalow, Rosalyn Sussman yalow, rosalyn Sussman, 1921, American medical physicist, b. New York City,Ph.D. Univ. For her work, yalow was awarded the 1977 nobel Prize in http://www.factmonster.com/cgi-bin/id/A0852935
Biography-center - Letter Y Yagudin, Alexei www.olympic.org/uk/athletes/heroes/bio_uk.asp?PAR_I_ID=98498;yalow, rosalyn www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1977/yalowautobio.html; http://www.biography-center.com/y.html
Extractions: random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish 42 biographies Yagudin, Alexei
Extractions: Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-xii 1 A Passion for Discovery, pp. 1-8 2 Marie Sklodowska Curie, pp. 9-36 3 Lise Meitner, pp. 37-63 4 Emmy Noether, pp. 64-90 5 Gerty Radnitz Cori, pp. 91-116 7 Barbara McClintock, pp. 144-174 8 Maria Goeppert Mayer, pp. 175-200 9 Rita Levi-Montalcini, pp. 201-224 10 Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, pp. 225-253 11 Chien-Shiung Wu, pp. 254-278 12 Gertrude Belle Elion, pp. 279-302 13 Rosalind Elsie Franklin, pp. 303-331 14 Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, pp. 332-354 15 Jocelyn Bell Burnell, pp. 355-377 Afterword, pp. 406-407 Notes, pp. 408-429 Picture Acknowledgments, pp. 430-432 Index, pp. 433-459 About the Author, pp. 460-460
Barbara McClintock (1902-1992) Library Of Congress Citations Examines the lives of Barbara McClintock, Maria Mayer, rosalyn yalow, and Rita LeviMontalcini,women scientists who won the nobel Prize against extraordinary http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/cit/citlcmcclintock.htm
Extractions: The Little Search Engine that Could Down to Name Citations National Library of Canada LC Online Catalog ... Free Email from Malaspina Book Citations [7 Records] Author: Keller, Evelyn Fox, 1936- Title: A feeling for the organism : the life and work of Barbara McClintock / Evelyn Fox Keller. Published: San Francisco : W.H. Freeman, c1983. Description: xix, 235 p. : ill., ports ; 22 cm. LC Call No.: QH429.2.M38 K44 1983 Dewey No.: 575.1/092/4 B 19 ISBN: 0716714337 071671504X (pbk.) Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Subjects: McClintock, Barbara, 1902- Geneticists United States Biography. Control No.: 82021066 Author: McClintock, Barbara, 1902- Title: The discovery and characterization of transposable elements : the collected papers of Barbara McClintock. Published: New York : Garland Pub., 1987. Description: xv, 635 p. : ill. ; 29 cm. Series: Genes, cells, and organisms ; 17 LC Call No.: QH462.I48 M33 1987 Dewey No.: 574.87/3282 19 ISBN: 0824013913 : $40.00 Notes: Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Insertion elements, DNA. Corn Genetics. Control No.: 87025105 //r96 Author: Kittredge, Mary, 1949- Title: Barbara McClintock / Mary Kittredge. Published: New York : Chelsea House Publishers, c1991. Description: 103 p. : ill. ; 25 cm. Series: American women of achievement LC Call No.: QH429.2.M38 K58 1991 Dewey No.: 575.1/092 B 92 20 ISBN: 1555466664 0791004422 (pbk.) Notes: "Introductory essay by Matina S. Horner"Cover. Includes bibliographical references (p. 98) and index. A biography of the geneticist who won the 1983 Nobel Prize for her discovery that certain genes can change their position on the chromosomes of cells. Subjects: McClintock, Barbara, 1902- Juvenile literature. Women geneticists United States Biography Juvenile literature. McClintock, Barbara, 1902- Geneticists. Control No.: 90001957 /AC
The Bronx, New York - Bronxites - Rosalyn Yalow Dr. rosalyn yalow graduated from Hunter College in 1941, and she received herPh.D. in nuclear physics from the Dr. yalow received the nobel Prize in http://www.the-bronx.org/biography/bios/yalow_r.asp
Extractions: Resident: Kingsbridge, The Bronx Dr. Rosalyn Yalow graduated from Hunter College in 1941, and she received her Ph.D. in nuclear physics from the University of Illinois in 1945. She then returned to Hunter College to teach physics and she accepted a part-time position with the Bronx Veterans Administration Hospital where she and Dr. Bernard Rosewit developed a laboratory for the use of radioisotopes in medical research. In 1950 she left Hunter College to take a full-time position on the staff of the Bronx VA Hospital. In that year she first worked with Dr. Solomon Berson in a research collaboration that was to continue until his death in 1972. Their first investigations were in the application of radioisotopes in blood volume determination, clinical diagnosis of thyroid diseases and the kinetics of iodine metabolism. Further studies brought the era of radioimmunoassay (RIA), begun in 1959. RIA is now used to measure hundreds of substances of biologic interest in thousands of laboratories in our country and abroad. Dr. Yalow received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1977 "for the development of radioimmunoassays of peptide hormones." Dr. Yalow holds the title of Distinguished Service Professor from The Mount Sinai School of Medicine. She is a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Honors include Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award, A. Cressy Morrison Award in Natural Sciences of the New York Academy of Sciences, Scientific Achievement Award of the American Medical Association, Koch Award of the Endocrine Society, Gairdner Foundation International Award, American College of Physicians Award for distinguished contributions in science as related to medicine, Eli Lilly Award of the American Diabetes Association, First William S. Middleton Medical Research Award of the VA, and 39 honorary degrees.
Rosalyn S. Yalow rosalyn S. yalow. (1921 ). By Seymour Sy Brody. rosalyn S. yalow becamethe second woman to ever win the nobel Prize in medicine, 1977. http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/biography/Yalow.html
Extractions: Rosalyn S. Yalow By Seymour "Sy" Brody Rosalyn S. Yalow became the second woman to ever win the Nobel Prize in medicine, 1977. Her achievement was the development of RIA, an application of nuclear physics in clinical medicine that makes it possible for scientists to use radiotropic tracers to measure the con- centration of hundreds of pharmacologic and biologic substances in the blood and other fluids of the human body and in animals and plants. She invented this technique in 1959 to measure the amount of insulin in the blood of adult diabetics. She was born on July 19, 1921, in the Bronx, New York, of Jewish parents, Clara and Simon Sussman. She attended the New York City public school system and in Walton High School she was encouraged by her chemistry teacher to pursue a career in science. She graduated Hunter College and accepted a teaching fellowship in physics at the University of Illinois. In 1945, she became the second woman to receive a Ph.D. degree in physics from Illinois. She met A. Aaron Yalow, a fellow physics student who was the son of a rabbi and they were married on June 6, 1943. They returned to New York where she accepted a lecturer's post in physics, which she held until 1950. During this period, they had two children, Benjamin and Elanna.
STNote 21 CAOLD Is New! are there articles by the nobel Laureate rosalyn yalow on immunoassay of insulin?what patents by Burroughs Wellcome cover antibiotics or antiviral agents? http://www.cas.org/ONLINE/STN/STNOTES/stnote21.html
Extractions: May/June 1999 You can now search online for CAOLD author names, patent assignees, and title keywords. This addition of data, extends chemical literature and patent searching back to 1907. Easy online access to chemical literature and patents on STN has been extended from 1907 to the present. You can now search in CAOLD the title keywords, author names, and patent assignees from 1907 to 1966. With this additional data you now have more comprehensive and more convenient online access to: Now you can search CAOLD and, in a matter of minutes, answer questions such as these: When you find your answers, use the PAGE format in the DISPLAY command to view or print the page image from printed CA where the hit occurred.
What Being Jewish Means To Me - Rosalyn Yalow rosalyn yalow nobel Laureate, 1977 Physiology Medicine As a Jew, Ishare a strong commitment to the Jewish intellectual tradition. http://www.ajc.org/JewishLife/BeingJewishDetail.asp?did=199&pid=298
Diabetes Forecast November 2002 - Your Healthy Heart If you would like to learn more about Dr. yalow's personal and scientific life, I'dsuggest reading the biographical memoir rosalyn yalow, nobel Laureate Her http://www.diabetes.org/main/community/forecast/nov_2002_healthy_heart.jsp
Pagina Nueva 1 yalow, rosalyn Sussman. Després de doctorarse en física nuclear, yalow començàa treballar en el El 1977 rebé el Premi nobel de Medicina per les seves http://www.pangea.org/amcomas/biografies/b27.htm
Extractions: YALOW, Rosalyn Sussman Física nuclear nord-americana (Nova York,1921). Després de doctorar-se en física nuclear, Yalow començà a treballar en el departament de radioisòtops de l'Hospital de Veterans del Bronx, servei del qual fou nomenada cap el 1970. El 1977 rebé el Premi Nobel de Medicina per les seves investigacions relacionades amb les hormones peptídiques i pels seus avenços en el diagnòstic i tractament de les malalties del tiroides, la diabetis, anomalies del creixement, tensió alta i esterilitat. Desenvolupà la tècnica del radioinmunoassaig en col.laboració amb el metge S.Berson, que morí cinc anys abans del lliurament del premi. Tornar a biografies
Pagina Nueva 1 Biografies Dones Premi nobel. ADDAMS, Jane WILLIAMS, Betty, 1976; WILLIAMS,Jody, 1997; yalow, rosalyn Sussman, 1977. Altres ALEU, Dolors http://www.pangea.org/amcomas/biografies/biografies.htm
Yalow, Rosalyn Sussman yalow, rosalyn Sussman (1921). US physicist who developed the brain. Sheshared the nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine 1977. Sussman was http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/Y/Yalow/1.html
Extractions: Yalow, Rosalyn Sussman US physicist who developed radioimmunoassay (RIA), a technique for detecting minute quantities of hormones present in the blood. It can be used to discover a range of hormones produced in the hypothalamic region of the brain. She shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine 1977. Sussman was born in New York and studied at Hunter College and at the University of Illinois. In the 1940s she started working in the Radioisotope Unit of the Veterans Administration Hospital in the Bronx, New York, with a medical doctor, Sol Berson. When he died 1972, Yalow was appointed director of the laboratory. To measure the concentration of a natural hormone, a solution containing a known amount of the radioisotope-labelled form of the hormone and its antibody is prepared. When a solution containing the natural hormone is added to the first solution, some of the labelled hormone is displaced from the hormone-antibody complex. The fraction of labelled hormone displaced is proportional to the amount of the natural hormone (which is unknown).
Yalow, Rosalyn Translate this page yalow, rosalyn (1921-). Je suis né monde. Il a semblé comme si chaqueexpérience principale a apporté un Prix nobel. Le curie http://www.cartage.org.lb/fr/themes/Biographies/mainbiographie/Y/Yalow/Yalow.htm
Extractions: Yalow, Rosalyn Je suis né le 19 juillet 1921 à New York et résidais toujours et ai travaillais là à part 3 1/2 des années où j'étais un étudiant de troisième cycle à l'Université de l'Illinois. Peut-être les mémoires les plus premières que j'ai ont d'être un têtues, l'enfant décidé. Par les années ma mère m'a dit qu'il était chanceux que j'ai voulu faire des choses acceptables, car si j'avais choisi autrement personne n'aurait pu me faire dévier de mon chemin. En septembre je suis allé à la Plaine-Urbana, la maison de l'Université de l'Illinois. A la première réunion de la Faculté(corps enseignant) du Collège(université) d'Ingénierie de je découvert j'étais la seule femme parmi ses 400 membres. Le Doyen de la Faculté(corps enseignant) m'a félicité sur mon accomplissement et m'a dit que j'étais la première femme là depuis 1917. Il est évident que le projet de jeunes hommes dans les forces armées, même avant l'entrée américaine dans la Guerre mondiale, avaient rendu possible mon entrée dans l'école de diplômé. C'était un temps occupé. J'ai été enchanté de recevoir un droit un dans deux des cours, Un un dans le cours la moitié du cours dans l'Optique et un "un" dans son laboratoire. Le Président du Département de Physique, regardant ce rapport(record), pourraient seulement dire "Que" un "confirme que les femmes ne réussissent pas dans le travail de laboratoire". Mais je n'étais plus un têtu, l'enfant décidé, mais plutôt un têtu, l'étudiant de troisième cycle décidé. Le travail dur et la discrimination subtile n'avaient d'aucun moment.
Women Of Achievement and particularly government to take the initiative in providing for expert highqualityday-care for children. rosalyn yalow, nobel Laureate and mother. http://www.undelete.org/woa/woa11-17.html
Extractions: will be published here in the future. 11-17 TABLE of CONTENTS: Excerpt from Eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and EVENTS QUOTES by Rosalyn Yalow and Simone de Beauvoir. Virgin Birth "The New Testament 's presentation of the Virgin Birth should not be understood as expressing hostility to sex and marriage, although it has been misunderstood in this sense. The Old Testament did not promise a biological Virgin Birth, nor did the New Testament wish to describe such a birth as a historical event. "Matthew I and Luke I use the Virgin Birth as a metaphor, like other metaphors in the New Testament . As for the prophet Isaiah (8th century B.C.) he never speaks of a Virgin Birth at all. The supposed promise of the Virgin Birth by the prophet does not correspond to the Hebrew text. In Isaiah 7:14 it says: Behold, a young woman (alma) shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.'