Singapore Science Centre Resources Scientists Awards Nobel robert F furchgott Born in Charleston, South Carolina, in 1916. He is a pharmacologistaffiliated robert F furchgott Department of Pharmacology Box 29 http://www.science.edu.sg/ssc/detailed.jsp?artid=3649&type=4&root=142&parent=142
Singapore Science Centre Resources Scientists Awards Nobel robert F furchgott, (Department of Pharmacology, SUNY Health Science Center, In 1980, robert F furchgott demonstrated in an ingenious experiment that http://www.science.edu.sg/ssc/detailed.jsp?artid=3648&type=4&root=142&parent=142
[ISI Highly Cited Researchers Version 1.1] Highly Cited Researcher furchgott, robert F. ISI Assigned Category,Pharmacology. ISI Indexed Name, furchgott RF furchgott. ISI Notes http://hcr3.isiknowledge.com/author.cgi?&link1=Browse&link2=Results&id=921
[ISI Highly Cited Researchers Version 1.1] Highly Cited Researcher furchgott, robert F. Moncada, S., Higgs, A., furchgott,R.. XIV International Union of Pharmacology nomenclature in nitric http://hcr3.isiknowledge.com/formViewCharacteristic.cgi?table=Publication&link1=
The Lasker Foundation | 1996 Winners robert F. furchgott and Ferid Murad For the landmark discovery of endotheliumderivedrelaxing factor (EDRF), now known to be nitric oxide, http://www.laskerfoundation.org/awards/library/1996basic.shtml
Biolinks Files: Nobel Prize robert F. furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro and Ferid Murad robert F. furchgottProfessor at the University of Miami School of Medicine. He is 82. http://www.biolinks.com/files/nobel/medicine.html
Extractions: Robert F. Furchgott, Ph.D., one of three scientists to receive the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, was a member of the School of Medicine faculty more than 40 years ago. Formal presentation of the awards will take place Dec. 10 in Stockholm, Sweden. Furchgott, a pharmacologist at the State University of New York (SUNY), and two other Americans, Ferid Murad, M.D., and Louis J. Ignarro, Ph.D., received the prize earlier this month for their work concerning nitric oxide as a signaling molecule in the cardiovascular system. Furchgott came to the medical school in 1949 to work in the laboratory of world-renowned researcher Oliver H. Lowry, M.D., Ph.D., who was professor and head of the Department of Pharmacology. Furchgott previously had been an assistant professor of biochemistry at Cornell University. He joined the pharmacology department here as an assistant professor and was one of six faculty members in the 1950s. He was promoted to associate professor in 1952. He studied the effects of drugs on heart rate and rhythm, and, in particular, the action of drugs on the smooth muscle of blood vessels. F. Edmund Hunter, Jr., Ph.D., professor emeritus of pharmacology, recalled that Furchgott, now 82, was one of Lowry's first recruits after being named head of pharmacology.
Medical News Nobel Prize winner robert furchgott served on School of Medicine faculty. robert F.furchgott, Ph.D., one of three scientists to receive the 1998 Nobel http://record.wustl.edu/archive/1998/10-29-98/medical.html
Extractions: Lustman: Diabetes researcher School of Medicine investigators have found that a form of psychotherapy called cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is an effective treatment for depression in patients with diabetes, restoring mental health and significantly improving control of blood sugar levels. Cognitive behavior therapy treats depression by involving patients in social and physical activities, teaching problem-solving skills to resolve stressful situations, identifying distorted thought patterns that lead to depression and replacing them with more positive and useful views. The researchers report the findings of this first-ever controlled trial of CBT in diabetes in the Oct. 15, 1998 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. They found that a 10-week program of therapy helped relieve depression in the majority of patients with diabetes. In the months after CBT, these patients also achieved better control of their blood glucose levels. Click to see entire article Robert F. Furchgott, Ph.D., one of three scientists to receive the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, was a member of the School of Medicine faculty more than 40 years ago.
Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: News Archive robert F. furchgott, a pharmacologist at the State University of New York HealthScience Center in Brooklyn, studied the effect of drugs on blood vessels http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/news/archive.19.shtml
Extractions: Four Sigma Xi Members Receive 1998 Nobel Prizes Election to Sigma Xi has been an early milestone in many distinguished careers, the first professional honor many young scientists receive in recognition of their potential to make meaningful contributions to research. Many Sigma Xi members have gone on to win major awards. In the Society's history, more than 175 members have received the Nobel Prize. Four members joined this illustrious group in 1998. 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Robert F. Furchgott and Louis J. Ignarro For their discoveries concerning nitric oxide as a signaling molecule in the cardiovascular system. Robert F. Furchgott , a pharmacologist at the State University of New York Health Science Center in Brooklyn, studied the effect of drugs on blood vessels but often achieved contradictory results. The same drug sometimes caused a contraction and at other times, a dilatation. Furchgott wondered if the variation could depend on whether the surface cells (the endothelium) inside the blood vessels were intact or damaged. In 1980, he demonstrated in an ingenious experiment that acetylcholine dilated blood vessels only if the endothelium was intact. He concluded that blood vessels are dilated because the endothelial cells produce an unknown signal molecule that makes vascular smooth muscle cells relax. He called this signal molecule EDRF, the endothelium-derived relaxing factor, and his findings led to a quest to identify the factor. He was elected to membership in Sigma Xi by the Northwestern University Chapter in 1939.
96-08-21 Six To Receive Commencement Honors SIX RECEIVE SPECIAL robert F. furchgott, Doctor of Science robert F. furchgott of Brooklyn, NY, apioneer research scientist and academician, has made notable contributions to http://www.osu.edu/osu/newsrel/Archive/96-08-21_Six_to_Receive_Commencement_Hono
Extractions: 96-08-21 Six to Receive Commencement Honors SIX RECEIVE SPECIAL COMMENCEMENT HONORS AT OHIO STATE COLUMBUS A journalist, a scientist, a sociologist and two businessmen will be recognized with special honors during The Ohio State University's summer quarter commencement ceremonies Aug. 29 in St. John Arena. Honorary doctorates will be presented to journalist Barbara Reynolds who will give the commencement address, entrepreneur George H. Alber, and research scientist Robert F. Furchgott. The Distinguished Service Award will be presented to retired executive Richard J. Denman and to Simon Dinitz, professor emeritus of sociology. Barbara A. Reynolds, Doctor Of Humane Letters Barbara Reynolds of Camp Springs, Md., nationally known journalist and commentator, is president of Reynolds News Services, which supplies columns and commentaries to news organizations, including National Public Radio, Pacific News Service and various national newspapers. A native of Columbus, Reynolds was a start-up editor of USA Today's Op-Ed page and a columnist for eight years. She is a 1967 graduate of Ohio State with a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism. Reynolds worked briefly for the Columbus Call and Post before becoming a police reporter for the now-defunct Cleveland Press in 1968. She became an assistant editor at Ebony magazine later that year. She joined the staff of the Chicago Tribune in 1969, becoming an urban affairs reporter and later the newspaper's Washington correspondent, covering the Carter Administration's urban policies. While at the Tribune, Reynolds began airing regular radio commentaries for WBBM-Radio and freelance writing for such magazines as Essence, Playboy, The New Republic, and Black Family. She cofounded Dollars and Sense, a magazine for African American professionals. As the magazine's international editor, Reynolds covered the drought and famine in Ethiopia, the rise of the Japanese business class in Tokyo, and the women's liberation movement in Italy. Four months after the founding of USA Today in 1983, Reynolds joined its editorial board and helped launch the Inquiry Page, of which she was the editor. She became a columnist for the paper in 1988, writing some 450 columns on subjects including the Gulf War, affirmative action, pay equity for women, school prayer, and the Supreme Court's decision to knock down majority- black voting districts. She left the paper in July. As the second black woman to receive a Nieman Foundation Fellowship, Reynolds studied constitutional law at Harvard University in 1976. She graduated from Howard University's School of Divinity in 1991 and is an ordained minister. She is currently working on her doctorate at the United Theological Seminary in Dayton. George H. Alber, Doctor of Business Administration George H. Alber of Marion, entrepreneur, community leader and philanthropist, is the founder of Marion Plant Life Services, which, when he sold it in 1971, was the largest privately owned fertilizer company in the country. A 1929 graduate of Ohio State with a degree in business administration, Alber began his fertilizer business in 1937, eventually expanding it into five subsidiaries throughout Ohio. A native of Toledo, Alber established the Dorothy and George H. Alber Endowed Scholarship Fund to aid students at The Ohio State University's Marion campus, and has provided for the construction of the campus Alber Bell Tower. Alber serves as a member of the Ohio State-Marion Volunteer Committee for the university's current fund-raising campaign. The first campus-based economic development resource center in Ohio has been named the George H. Alber Enterprise Center. A joint venture of the state of Ohio and The Ohio State University Extension, the center will be a catalyst for economic development in Ohio's seven-county North Central region. Robert F. Furchgott, Doctor of Science Robert F. Furchgott of Brooklyn, N.Y., a pioneer research scientist and academician, has made notable contributions to the fields of biology, physiology and pharmacology. A native of Charleston, S.C., Furchgott is a distinguished professor at the State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn and adjunct professor in the University of Miami School of Medicine's Department of Pharmacology. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of North Carolina in 1937 and a doctorate in biochemistry from Northwestern University in 1940. He was on the medical faculty of Cornell University Medical College from 1943-49 before joining the pharmacology department at Washington University School of Medicine. Furchgott is internationally known for his research in cardiovascular pharmacology, vascular pharmacology and physiology. His work on vascular relaxation and drug receptor theory has been vital in the development of new drugs to prevent sudden coronary-related death. Richard J. Denman, Distinguished Service Award Richard J. Denman of Palm Desert, Calif., an Ohio State alumnus, is the retired president of Symedix, a Johnson and Johnson subsidiary formed in 1982 to collaborate with Philadelphia's Thomas Jefferson University on a new method for treatment of stroke. A loyal supporter of the university since his graduation in 1957 with a degree in business administration, Denman and his wife established the Richard J. and Martha D. Denman Professorship for Clinical Research in Epilepsy, to provide support for an eminent scholar in neurological research. Denman also holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Toledo and a Master of Business Administration from Long Beach State University. He founded Kyle-Richard Medical Inc., an artificial kidney supply distributor and provider of patient services, in 1975. He sold the company in 1982 to Johnson and Johnson Cardiovascular and assumed the position of vice president for business development. Denman has served the university as a volunteer leader in development activities in the health sciences and in California. He is a charter member of the National Campaign Committee and the Ohio State University Foundation. He is a member of The Presidents Club, a life member of the College of Medicine's Order of Hippocrates, and a life member of The Ohio State University Alumni Association. Simon Dinitz, Distinguished Service Award Simon Dinitz of Bexley, emeritus professor of sociology, served on The Ohio State University faculty from 1951 to 1991, gaining an international reputation for distinguished scholarship in criminology, corrections and mental health. In his 40-year tenure at Ohio State, Dinitz taught thousands of undergraduates and guided numerous graduate students towards their degrees. He was the first faculty member to receive both of the university's top faculty awards: the Alumni Award for Distinguished Teaching and the Distinguished Scholar Award. He was chosen as one of the Big Ten's 10 most exciting teachers by the Chicago Tribune in 1969. He was chosen as one of six Teachers of the Year in 1981 and as one of the 25 outstanding U.S. professors in 1982 by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education. Dinitz joined the Ohio State sociology faculty as an instructor, rising through the ranks to full professor in 1963. He also held the posts of senior fellow in the university's Academy for Contemporary Problems from 1975 to 1982 and research associate in psychiatry from 1957 to 1974. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from Vanderbilt University in 1947 and his master's and doctoral degrees in sociology from the University of Wisconsin in 1949 and 1951. # Contact: Tracy Turner, University Communications, (614)688-3682. [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Wed, 21 Aug 1996 10:15:19 -0400] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.
Previous Gairdner Foundation Winners robert F. furchgott, David H. MacLennan, Kary B. Mullis. 1990, Francis S. Collins,John R. Riordan, LapChee Tsui. Victor Ling, Oliver Smithies http://www.gairdner.org/priorwinner.html
Extractions: The Foundation is proud to present a complete list of winners from previous years and congratulate all of them on their impressive list of achievements and their contributions to our understanding of health, healing and the natural world. To return to the Foundation home page, click here Jeffrey M. Friedman Douglas Coleman Craig C. Mello ... James D. Watson (Award of Merit) Clay Armstrong Bertil Hille Roderick MacKinnon Marc Kirschner ... Janet D. Rowley Bruce M. Alberts Arthur Kornberg Roger Y. Tsien Pamela J. Bjorkman Don C. Wiley Tony Hunter Anthony J. Pawson Donald Metcalf Mario R. Capecchi Oliver Smithies Alvin R. Feinstein Stanley B. Prusiner Michel M. Ter-Pogossian Leland H. Hartwell Yoshio Masui Paul M. Nurse Richard Peto Bert Vogelstein Robert A. Weinberg John R. Evans (Wightman) Sydney Brenner John E. Sulston M. Judah Folkman Robert F. Furchgott David H. MacLennan Kary B. Mullis Francis S. Collins John R. Riordan Lap-Chee Tsui Victor Ling Oliver Smithies Edwin M. Southern E. Donnall Thomas Mark M. Davis Tak W. Mak Jean-Marie Ghuysen Louis M. Kunkel
Medizin Aspekte - Online Journal: Robert F. Furchgott Translate this page Aktuelles zu Medizin und Gesundheitspflege, Fitness und Wellness, Familie undBeruf im Online Journal MEDIZIN ASPEKTE - jeden Monat neu und kostenlos. http://www.medizin-aspekte.de/1003/beruehmte_aerzte/furchgott.htm
Nobel Prize: Medicine 1998 Laureates (1/3) robert F. furchgott Born in Charleston, South Carolina, he earned hisdoctoral degree in biochemistry at Northwestern University in Illinois. http://library.thinkquest.org/TQ0313040/med1998.html
Extractions: Robert F. Furchgott - Born in Charleston, South Carolina, he earned his doctoral degree in biochemistry at Northwestern University in Illinois. His research led him to the discovery that the human body uses the gas nitric oxide (a poisonous gas that if released into the air can cause lung and skin problems) to relax blood vessels in muscles to let more blood flow. This discovery later led to the creation of the drug Viagra. For his work he received a portion of the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1998. Louis J. Ignarro - Born in Brooklyn, New York, he earned his doctoral degree in pharmacology from the University of Minnesota. His research led him to the discovery that the human body uses the gas nitric oxide (a poisonous gas that if released into the air can cause lung and skin problems) to relax blood vessels in muscles to let more blood flow. This discovery later led to the creation of the drug Viagra. For his work he received a portion of the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1998. Ferid Murad - Born in Whiting, Indiana, he earned his doctoral degree in pharmacology from Case Western Reserve University. After he completed his doctoral degree he wanted to study the effects of nitric oxide on chest problems. His research led him to the discovery that the human body uses the gas nitric oxide (a poisonous gas that if released into the air can cause lung and skin problems) to relax blood vessels in muscles to let more blood to flow. This discovery later lead to the creation of the drug Viagra. For his work he received a portion of the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1998.
Nobelists Who Attended CSHL Symposia furchgott, robert F. 193841, 49, MP/98. Gajdusek, Daniel Carleton, 1953, 64, 65,MP/76. Gasser, Herbert S. 1933, 36, 52, MP/44. Gilbert, Walter*, 1961,63, http://library.cshl.edu/archives/archives/Nobelists who attended Symposia.htm
Extractions: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives Nobelists Symposium Year Won Arber ,Werner MP/78 Altman, Sidney C/89 Baltimore, David* MP/75 Beadle,George Wells MP/58 Benacerraf ,Baruj MP/80 Berg, Paul* C/80 Bishop, John Michael MP/89 Blobel, Günther MP/99 Bloch, Konrod F. MP/64 Blumberg, Baruch S. MP/76 Burnet, Sir Frank M. MP/60 Calvin, Melvin C/61 Cech, Thomas R. C/89 Claude, Albert MP/74 Cohen, Stanley* MP/86 Cori ,Carl F. MP/47 Cori ,Gerty T. MP/47 Cournand, Andre F. MP/56 Crick, Francis H.C.* MP/62 Dale, Sir Henry H. MP/36 Delbrück, Max* MP/69 Doherty, Peter MP/96 Du Vigneaud ,Vincent C/55 Dulbecco, Renato* MP/75 Eccles ,Sir John Carew MP/63 Edelman ,Gerald M. MP/72 Furchgott, Robert F. MP/98 Gajdusek, Daniel Carleton MP/76 Gasser, Herbert S. MP/44 Gilbert, Walter* C/80 Gilman, Alfred MP/94 Glaser, Donald A. P/60 Hartline, Haldan Keffer MP/67 Hershey ,Alfred D.* MP/69 Hill ,Archibald V.* MP/22 Hodgkin ,Dorothy C. C/64 Hodgkin, Alan Lloyd MP/63 Holley, Robert W. MP/68 Hubel, David H. MP/81 Huber, Robert C/88 Huxley, Andrew Fielding
Furchgott - Robert F. Translate this page furchgott - robert F. dieses Keyword ist leider offline. Jetzt informieren!von Benutzern eingegebene Ergänzungen zu diesem Thema. Autor http://www.unister.de/Unister/wissen/sf_lexikon/ausgabe_stichwort25538_328.html
Extractions: Skripte ... Community - Startseite Uni - Flirt Uni - Chat Uni - Parties Alumni ... Reise - Rubrik Startseite Studium Karriere Wissen Community Uni-Reisen Hinweis zum Lexikon: unser Buch - Tipp Skript zusammenstellen Beachte auch unseren Buchtipp ! Handbuch Ethik von Marcus Düwell. Das Handbuch bietet allen, die in den unterschiedlichen Kontexten mit ethischen Fragen befasst sind, fundiertes Hintergrundwissen. Furchgott - Robert F. dieses Keyword ist leider offline von Benutzern eingegebene zu diesem Thema Autor zu diesem Stichwort wurden noch keine Ergänzungen gemacht
Geschichte (allgemein) Lexikon Translate this page furchgott - robert F. Förster - Carl Fritz Wilhelm. Galenus. Geiger - Johannes (Hans)Wilhelm. Gocht - Hermann. Graefe. Greatbatch - Wilson http://www.unister.de/Unister/wissen/sf_lexikon/ausgabe_stichwoerter328_y.html
Extractions: Hilfe Tipp: Lexikon - Startseite Geschichte (allgemein) D as Studienfach - Lexikon Geschichte (allgemein) unser Buch - Tipp Beachte auch unseren Buchtipp ! Handbuch Ethik von Marcus Düwell. Das Handbuch bietet allen, die in den unterschiedlichen Kontexten mit ethischen Fragen befasst sind, fundiertes Hintergrundwissen. Geschichte (allgemein) Stichwort Stichwort anzeigen Timoféeff-Ressovsky - Nikolai Wladimirovich Adler - Alfred Al-Razi Alexander - Béla Alzheimer - Alois Antibiotika - Entwicklung Apgar - Virginia Aschoff - Ludwig Avicenna Banting - Frederick Grant / Best - Charles Herbert Bárány - Robert Barnard - Christiaan Neethling Barton - Clarissa (Clara) Harlowe Bassini - Edoardo Baunscheidt Béclère - Antoine Louis Gustave
The Middle East Times : News From Egypt And The Region 1998 furchgott, robert F. 2000 - Kandel, Eric R. 2000 - Greengard, Paul Physics1907 - Albert Abraham Michelson 1908 - Gabriel Lippmann http://www.hasbara.us/jewish_hall_of_fame.html
Extractions: Jews Comprise Only 0.2 to 0.3% of the World's Population Nobel e - Museum: "The Nobel Prize is the first international award given yearly since 1901 for achievements in physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and peace." Contribution of the Jewish People to Human Development: Abrahams monotheism Isaac Jacob Joseph Moses rule of law We are all Jews (James Woolsey, FrontPage Magazin, Oct 5, 2003): "Its not only the other two great Abrahamic religions, Christianity and Islam, that owe a substantial debt to Judaism, its the world as a whole. The reason is that between three and four millennia ago something happened in the Sinai among a tribe of refugees from Egyptian oppression that introduced the world to the concept of the rule of law the idea that the law is not the whim of, but rather has its source above, those who rule. This concept is at the heart of what makes decently-governed societies possible, whether you sign on to Jeffersons formulation that we are "endowed by our Creator" with basic rights or prefer the more secular notion of natural law."